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Transcript of Cross media convergence

1
Dynamic Logic
Best Practices in Cross-Media Advertising Measurement
Return on Marketing Investment 2005
The New Era of Accountable Marketing
Miami, FL
January 2005

2
Outline
1. Background On Dynamic Logic2. Trends That Can No Longer Be Ignored3. CrossMedia Measurement Overview4. Media Synergy Case Studies
• General Motors XUV• Levi’s• Quaker Oats• Tylenol
5. Cost Effectiveness Case Study• Philips

3
Dynamic Logic Background
• Founded in 1999
– New York, London, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago
• Independent market research company
– Focus on measuring marketing effectiveness
• We have conducted studies for:
– 47 of the top 50 U.S. advertisers
– Top US Agencies like Carat, FCB, JWT and Ogilvy
– Major Media Companies like Dow Jones, AOL, Disney, Viacom, Yahoo!,Meredith
– Millions of surveys and over 1600 studies in all as of Dec 2004

4
Dynamic Logic CrossMedia Experience
• We have conducted more than 75 CrossMedia studies to date for leadingU.S. and European brands. Including 8 of the Top 10 Advertisers.

5
What People are Saying about DL Research
"Developing CrossMedia research tools and insights isthe number one research issue among advertiserstoday", said Bob Barocci, president of the ARF, "andwe support unequivocally the intelligent work ofDynamic Logic, a premier marketing effectivenessresearch company, who has done more crossmediastudies than any other company."(September 2004)

6
Trends
'Frasier' Finale: Amid Nostalgia, A Product Plug
“May 12, 2003. In tomorrow night's finalepisode of the NBC sitcom "Frasier," oneguest star is crisp, sweet and inanimate-- and symbolizes the lengths to whichmarketers and media are going thesedays to capture consumers' attention.”
TV
Magazine (TV Guide)
Online (Email)
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108432262147108863-email,00.html

7
65%
73%
9%
39%38%
77%
45%
68%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Morning Daytime I Daytime II Early Fringe Early News Prime Time Late Fringe Late NightInternet TV Magazines Newspapers Radio
Total Media Audience By DaypartAt Work Users
Media Consumption
Source: Online Publishers Association/MBIQ Media Consumption Study, May 2003Q. M1-2/M2-2/M2-5b/M3-2/M4-2: How much time did you spend on the following <media> yesterday between <daypart>? Base: At Work (1053)
RadioInternet TelevisionTelevision NewspaperMagazines

8
Multi-Tasking
70% of consumers, at one time or another, use mediasimultaneously:
Radio: 57.3% simultaneously go online, 46.9% read newspaper and17.7% watch TV.
TV: 74.2% read the newspaper simultaneously, 66.2% go online
Newspapers: 52.4% watch TV and 49.6% listen to radio
Online: When waiting to download something 52.1% listen to radio,61.8% watch TV, and 20.2% read the newspaper.
Source: The Media Center and BIGresearch Oct 2003 Survey, n=13,414

9
Does this look like you?
TV
Radio
Magazine
Online
Media PlanningOrganizational Structure

10
Media and Marketing Trends We Can No Longer Ignore
• Media Fragmentation
• Multi-tasking
• Emergence of digital and “new” media
• Clutter and consumer push back
• Time-shifting and commercial avoidanceAnd…• The “A” word

11
Demand For Branding Measurement
"We need a method to determine the effectiveness of our efforts. We need to measure
how effective our advertising is at influencing purchase intent -- the ultimate goal.”
“We must find a way of measuring holistic marketing...I see e-mails every week on better
decisions we're making because of [marketing-mix modeling]," Mr. Stengel said. But while
marketing mix does a ‘great job of refining what you know’ he notes that the analysis still
primarily looks at how each part of the mix works independently rather than at
optimizing how all parts work best together”.
Jim Stengel, Global Chief Marketing Officer, Procter & Gamble
Source: Wall Street Journal, February 12, 2004

12
Cross Media and Holistic Measurement Today: MSS and CES
• Media Synergy Studies
– What was the branding effect of the various mediacomponents? How well did they work together?
– How did that differ across objectives and audiences?
– Recommendations for improving integrated campaigns
• Cost Effectiveness Studies includes the above, plus:
– What was the ROI in various media and in combination?
• Cost per impact
• Return on Marketing Investment
– Recommendations for optimizing budget allocation
MSS: Synergy Focus
CES: Cost and Optimization Focus

13
The Hierarchy of Advertising Effects
Brand AwarenessMeasures the level of familiarity respondents have with
the brand (aided and unaided)
Message AssociationMeasures the extent to which respondents can match the
message in the creative to the brand
Brand FavorabilityMeasures the extent to which respondents have a
positive or favorable opinion of the brand
How do you measurewhere consumers are
in the continuum?
First, consumersneed to be awareof a brand
Then they need tounderstand thevalue to them, orwhat the productis used for
The consumerforms an opinionabout the brand
Finally, the consumerconsiders whether he orshe is likely to consumeor use the brand
1.
2.
3.
4.
Purchase IntentMeasures the likelihood of
respondents to purchase the brandin the future

14
CrossMedia Methodology
• Respondents are recruited via web intercepts, reflective of the audience reachedby the integrated campaign
– Recruitment can be supplemented using phone interviews and subscriber lists
• Cross-media measurement is based on opportunity to see (OTS) advertising– Reported media consumption data determines offline exposure opportunity
– When Internet advertising is a component, electronic data is used as OTS measure
• Comparison of brand attitudes of different respondent groups (cells) is made todetermine impact of advertising campaign
• Two Types:
– Media Synergy Studies (focus on the media, audience, and combinations)
– Cost Effectiveness Studies (cost and ROI focus, media mix)

15
Cross Media Methodology: Schematic
Control
Magazine-Only
Web-Only
NO
MagazineExposure
Opportunity
Web+Magazine
NO
NO
Web ExposureOpportunity
NO

16
Cell Assignment/Analysis

17
General Motors – Envoy XUV
Sample of Online Creative Units Sample of Magazine Creative Units
GM was promoting the introduction of a new model of SUV, theEnvoy “XUV” which has a special retractable roof. GM ran amultimedia campaign with TV, Magazine, Online and Out of HomeThere was a relatively heavy and targeted magazine schedule whencompared to the other media.
Because TV ran first and with a relatively heavy weight ouranalysis focused on the combinations of other media in additionto TV.

18
GM Envoy XUV Case Study – Sample Learning
Aided Brand AwarenessHeavy TV Viewers
(25+ hrs/week)Index Vs. Control
Control=100
117
136
TV Only TV + Online
Index Vs. Control
Control=100
136 139
TV Only TV + Online
+16% +2%
Aided Brand AwarenessLight TV Viewers
(< 7 hrs/week)
It was somewhat surprising that the impact of OnlineAdvertising seemed to impact Heavy TV viewers (over 25 hoursper week) more than Light TV viewers (less than 7 hours perweek)

19
GM Envoy XUV - Persuasion Metrics (Magazines)
Brand FavourabilityTotal SampleIndex Vs. Control
Control=100
154 163 171 169
TV Only TV +Online
TV +Magazine
TV +Magazine +
Online
Index Vs. Control
Control=100
159146
180 192
TV Only TV +Online
TV +Magazine
TV +Magazine +
Online
Purchase ConsiderationTotal Sample
Brand Favorability, Purchase Consideration and Brand Attributesimpacted the most by the addition of Magazines in the mix.While we saw that all combinations of media impacted Brand Favorabilitypositively – the biggest increase was seen by those exposed to TV and Magazine.In terms of purchase consideration, Magazine had the biggest impact whencombined with TV – however even in this case the biggest lift still came fromthose exposed to all three media.

20
Levi’s Case Study – Excerpt from ESOMAR, Geneva 2004
In the Summer of 2003 Levi’s Celebrated it’s 150th birthdaywith the launch of “Levi’s Type 1 Jeans”. Levi’s incorporatedtelevision, cinema, print and online (Yahoo!) to attract the 13-24 year old target.
The media elements included:Network TV: That 70’s Show, Friends, Willand Grace, and Saturday Night Live.Cable: MTV, Fox Sports, and ESPN.
Magazines: Cosmopolitan, FHM, YM, Maximand Vibe.Cinema: Nationwide ran prior to featurefilms.Online: Yahoo! Network

21
Levi’s Various Analysis Matrices
Control
TV + Print
NO NO
TV, Print+ Online
NO
NO
Cinema only
Online only
Cinema+Online
Control NO NO
TV + Print+ Cinema
TV, Print+Cinema+ Online
NO NO
NO NO
Cinema/Online
TV+Print/OnlineTV+Print+Cinema/Online
TV (with andwithout otheroffline)
TV +Online
Control NO NO
NO
TV/Online
Control

22
Levi’s TV+Print+Online: Awareness Metrics
Message Association Advertising Awareness
10.4%
15.5%A19.6%AB
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
Control TV+Print TV+Print+Online
61.6%72.2%A 74.7%A
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
Control TV+Print TV+Print+Online
• Online advertising provided significant value in getting respondents to link thebrand with the message
• While TV+Print created a substantial increase in Ad Awareness; online did notadd significant incremental value to this combination of media
A/B/C = Statistically significant difference at a 90% confidencelevel
n=1210
A
n=478B
n=688C
n=1210
A
n=478B
n=688C

23
Levi’s Cinema/Online: Female Target Audience
A/B/C = Statistically significant difference at a 90% confidencelevel
Purchase Intent (Females 18-24)
51.7% 48.0% 46.6%
60.4%ABC
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
Control Cinema Only Online only Cinema+Onlinen= 497
An=100
Bn=296
Cn=106
D
In this example when looking at the female 18-24 target audienceit appears that exposure to either cinema or online alone has littleimpact, but the combination of the two created the desired effect,lifting purchase intent by 8.7 points (17% lift) .

24
Quaker Oats Case Study – Excerpt from ESOMAR, Geneva 2004
Online
MagazineIn August 2003, Quaker launched the Oatmeal BreakfastSquares – the first no bowl oatmeal. It unveiled a multi-platform program to present this product as thenutritious, hand held oatmeal ideal for the on-the-golifestyle. Primarily targeting 35-54 year old adults.
The media elements included:Network TV: Third Watch, West Wing,Friends, Alias,Today Show, and GoodMorning America.Cable: Food Network, History Channel, TVLand, Sci-Fi, American Movie Classics.Magazines: Good Housekeeping, Redbook,Southern Living, Newsweek, Time, Men’sJournal, and Jet.Online: Yahoo! Network

25
Quaker: Awareness Metrics
26% 24%
33%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
Pre-Wave TV/Mag TV/Mag/Online
Unaided Brand Awareness (Quaker)
• Combination of all 3 media created strongest brand awarenessmetrics
• After exposure to all three media, average Brand Awareness wasat 76%
58%67%
76%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
Pre-Wave TV/Mag TV/Mag/Online
Aided Brand Awareness
n=2082A
n=483B
n=969C
n=2082A
n=483B
n=969C
AB
AB
A
A/B/C = Statistically significant difference at a 90% confidence level

26
Quaker - Target Audience: Cumulative Effect Of All MediaPurchase Intent
• As with the awareness scores, online created a sizable increasePurchase Intent after exposure for those who have purchased acereal bar within the last 3 months.
43% 45%
66%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
Pre-Wave TV/Mag TV/Mag/Online
Purchase Intent
n=396A
n=286C
n=151B
AB
A/B/C = Statistically significant difference at a 90% confidence level*Purchased Cereal/Breakfast bar in the past 3 months

27
ESPN/J&J Case Study – Tylenol 8 Hour and the Weekend Warrior
In May 2003, Tylenol launched a new productextension, Tylenol 8 Hour specially formulated forthe extended relief of aches and strains associatedwith active pains. They partnered with ESPN toreach the critical “Weekend Warriors” men 18-34who exercise.
The media elements included:
ESPN Television NetworksESPN.com
ESPN the MagazineESPN Radio

28* Control = 501, ESPNMedia = 243
ESPN/Tylenol 8 Hour Case Study: Overall Results
48.9
83.1
20.6
63.4
3.6
37.4
4.6
47.7
27.2
56.8
39.5
60.5
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
70.0
80.0
90.0
100.0
Aided Brand
Awareness
Online Ad
Awareness
Message
Association
Sponsorship
Association
Brand
Favorability
Purchase
Consideration
/ Intent
Control ESPN Media Cumulative EffectPe
rcen
tage
%
This particular study highlights the potential benefits of working with a dedicatedmedia partner to pull together a program of various assets or channels.
Cumulative meansat least oneexposure to eachESPN media: TV,Magazine, Radio andOnline.Minimal freq. = 4

29
Cost Efficiency Calculation
Spend in Medium or Media Combination
Branding Effect x Target ReachCost PerPerson =
• Branding Effect = Exposed minus Unexposed brand scores
• Target Reach = Reach X Target market size

30
Web5%
Radio10%
Print15%
TV70%
Media Mix Recommendations:Overall Spend and ROI Based Media Decisions
Web5%
Radio5%
Print8%
TV82%
Campaign Allocation Recommended Allocation
Recommendations are provided for differentobjectives and target audiences
HolisticMeasurement:
ROMI, BCPP

31
Dependent Variables: Branding Metrics
$1.96$2.36$2.86$2.97$4.45Purchase Consideration
$2.29
$2.59
$1.29
$1.85
TV +Online
$2.18
$2.53
$3.58
$3.83
$2.56
$1.85
$2.29
$2.62
Online
$1.57$1.32Aided Brand Awareness
$1.93$1.65Unaided Brand Awareness
$2.01$2.62Brand Favorability
$2.17$3.26Message Association
TV + Online+Print
TV
$1.93$2.08$3.00$2.46$2.66Average per Medium$2.19$2.55$2.45$3.22$2.32Target Audience A
$2.66$2.09$4.71$1.96$2.45Target Audience B
• Impact of various combinations of media on traditionalbranding measures
• This data can complement brand tracking and media mixmodeling
Demonstration Data

32
Brand Metrics by Media Channel
A/B/C/D/E/F/G = Statistically significant difference at a 90% confidence level
An=497
Bn=227
Cn=173
Dn=224
En=292
Fn=523
Gn=354
Pre-Control Online Print TV TV + Print TV + Online TV + Print + Online
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
39% 41%35%
40%
51% 51%
59%ABCD ABCD
A-DF
Awareness by Media ExposureQuestion: Which of the following brands have you heard ofbefore?
• Exposure to two or more media was necessary to produce increases in “AwarenessA” Metric

33
Results: Cost Per Person $$$Dollars Indexed to Average of Media Sums (100)
• Television was generally ineffective when working by itself
• Print advertising was extremely cost-effective in this campaign, alone and in combination
• Online advertising alone was not cost efficient, but delivered good results when workingwith other media
•Combination of all media (TV+Print+Online) was cost efficient and had highest overallreach
61
163
44
193
41
0 100 200
TV+Print+Online
TV+Online
TV+Print
Online
Average per Medium

34
CrossMedia Learning: Magazines, Television, and Online
Effect of Medium on Brand MetricsAverage Percentage Point Increase over Unexposed Baseline in 8 CrossMedia Campaigns
Average Delta Increase (Percentage Points)
4.41.7 2.6
6.1
6.0
3.1
5.1
11.1
2.8
3.37.2
11.0
5.5
4.2
1.3
0
10
20
30
Aided BrandAwareness
Aided AdAwareness
MessageAssociation
BrandFavorability
Purchase Intent/Consideration
Avg
Del
ta
Magazine
Internet
TV
Excerpt: Good News for Magazines - By Wayne Eadie, SVP Research for MPA
“Importantly, they show that...magazines increase advertising ROI. The Dynamic Logic results supportprior studies that speak to how magazines add value to the mix, specifically in their ability toinfluence purchase behavior.”

35
Think of the CrossMedia Challenge Like a Cake
The Right Ingredients:
Don’t Guarantee the Best Results:

36
You need the right MEDIA PROPORTIONS:
1 _ cups 2 1 stick 2 cups 3 oz. 1 tsp. 2 tsp. 1 cup
MEASUREMENT makes it work!
Think of the CrossMedia Challenge Like a Cake

38
WIFM: Measurement Breeds Success
“Companies that measure marketing results increasedtheir annual marketing budgets an average 11.2% thisyear, while companies that don’t measure marketingresults increased their budgets by only 6%.”
B to B Magazine, March 8, 2004. Source: Black Friars Communications (n=100 Executives surveyed)
LESSON: Those marketing professionals that measuretheir efforts get budget increases nearly DOUBLEtheir counterparts who do not regularly measuremarketing effectiveness.