Harry Potter and the Obtuse Client
Almost 2 months from now, on July 21, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows will hit bookshelves. Already, stores are taking pre-orders and planning midnight release parties. Fans are craving every nugget of plot detail they can find on the Internet.
According to Amazon.com, itâll be a 784-page book. Who has time to read all of it? Who has that kind of attention span? Who reads anything these days?
Apparently, lots of people do. Combined, the books in the Harry Potter series have sold over 250 million copies worldwide. Somebodyâs reading all those words. Words that are typeset on pages. Pages that are bound in book form.
So why the hell do my clients think a paragraph with 3 sentences of copy is âtoo longâ for their audience?
Itâs not consumers who have the short attention spans. Itâs the clients. Because todayâs clients arenât concerned with brand equity, customer relationships, or long-term initiatives. Itâs a project-to-project, deliverable-to-deliverable existence. Theyâre worried about their jobsâand surviving in those jobs for one more month.
For a CMO, the figure thatâs popularly kicked around is 18 monthsâas average tenure on the job. Add to that all the underlings who report to that CMO. They all need to kiss ass and meet their numbers, whatever those numbers may be. Marketingâs middle managers subsist from PowerPoint deck to PowerPoint deck. So itâs no wonder that theyâre smitten with bullet points, three-word sentences and immediate gratification. Context? Forget it. Storytelling? No time. Patience? âFuck that, we have to get this piece out ASAP.â
These days, you canât even explain to a client the importance of a well-written or well-designed ad. Why? Because theyâre not paying attention. Theyâre checking their BlackBerry or stare into space, preoccupied with that afternoonâs meeting with the boss.
Thatâs why they donât believe consumers read. Most of us, and our clients, can no longer remember what itâs like to be on the receiving end of an ad message.
The problem isnât that consumers donât read. Itâs that they donât give a fraction of a shit about the products or services our clients make. Our clientâs product is not the solution to some perceived problem. Itâs just another widget on the shelf. No one cares, and bullet points arenât the answer.
The problem isnât that consumers donât read. Itâs that creatives rarely give them anything worth reading these days. No clever turns of phrases. Nothing to make a reader or viewer think, pause, or reflect. Nothing to make them even go, âWhat the fuck are they talking about?â No, the message is dumbed down to the same dull copy points every time.
The problem isnât that consumers donât read. Itâs that weâve given up on them. The idea that people wonât listen to us has become a self-fulfilling prophecy in the ad industry. They wonât read or listen, so we wonât try to say anything interesting. In turn, the work increasingly stinks, consumers increasingly turn away, and our work becomes increasingly ineffective. Quite a death spiral, if you ask me.
Actually, not everyone believes todayâs conventional wisdom. Hereâs one example. StrawberryFrog recently placed an ad for itself in Fortune magazine. An ad with no whacked-out visuals or Web 2.0 components. Just a simple headline that asked a question and 3 paragraphs of body copy that answered the question and explained the agencyâs core beliefs. It feels so retro it actually seems daring, even more so given that they bothered to advertise themselves. This from an agency often cited as one of the ânew breedâ of agencies thatâve cropped up lately. Obviously, theyâre out to find that rare CMO or CEO who does read.
Of course, technology has truncated everyoneâs timelines and attention spans. That wonât change. The massive stream of information has given us all a bit of A.D.D. But itâs especially brutal in the ad industry, because technology plays such an integral role in how we create the work we createâand how our work is seen or heard by the public. But beyond our profession lies a world full of people who are living, breathing, eating, shopping and yes, reading without the innate desire to be plugged in to the latest gadget or the latest craze at every waking moment. I wonder if we still know how to reach them.
Harry Potter and the PowerPoint Deck? Sure you could sum up a book with bullet points, but it will be shortly forgotten. Nor will it seep down to readersâ imaginations. And of course, you wonât sell 250 million copies.
Because to do that, youâd truly need to be living in a fantasy world.
No related posts.
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.
March 10th, 2010 at 2:26 am
[...] Harry Potter and the Obtuse Client | Emma Watson Pics [...]
March 11th, 2010 at 12:44 pm
[...] Harry Potter and the Obtuse Client | Emma Watson Pics [...]