Hell Freezes Over: Google and the Super Bowl

While the UK slept last night, it appears there was some sort of sporting tour­na­ment across the Atlantic and that the world’s most-​​used search provider advert­ised its search cap­ab­il­ities and new(ish) browser. It’s quite a nice advert, telling a (cliched) story in an original manner with a clean style.

The excite­ment over Google advert­ising Chrome and Search during the Super Bowl comes from two hot-​​spots of media attention:

  1. Google Search is con­tinu­ally used as the prime example of the power of word-​​of-​​mouth over tra­di­tional forms of mar­keting: ‘…and they never spent a dollar on advert­ising it!’ says the social media guru.
  2. The slots between segments of the Super Bowl are famously the most expensive and sought-​​after TV ad-​​spots of the year. (On the official site, linked above, a link to a video of the com­mer­cial slots was the top item when I looked!)

The Internet and the Super Bowl last inter­sected so heavily ten years ago, in 2000, called — at the time — ‘dotcom bowl’, when ten heavily-​​funded, but mostly imprac­tical internet start-​​ups spanked $40mn in venture capital in order to secure the slots, at an average of $2.2mn for 30 seconds. Twelve months later, all but two of those start-​​ups had gone bust. Internet com­panies have tended to avoid the Super Bowl since then for obvious reasons.

So you might take this appear­ance as an indic­a­tion that either Google has given in to Old Media; or con­versely that the value of old media has dropped so low that even the biggest advert­iser on the Internet will give it a go.

Personally, I take it as a sign of changed under­stand­ings of old and new media and of how per­sua­sion through advert­ising works. Hell freezes over indeed.

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Firstly, dividing old and new media into two separate, enemy camps that will have nothing to do with each other is nonsense. You aren’t a Luddite if you use TV; you aren’t pro­gressive if you use the Web. This false dicho­tomy has held both sides back for too long. Old media still have massive reach compared to the Web: and telling more people about your stuff is mostly good, espe­cially if you have a consumer product, like a new web browser, to give them. To give an example: the highly favoured Compare the Meerkat campaign — created by VCCP – had digital end-​​locations but depended on a massive TV, news­paper and outdoor campaign to create its success (400% increase in traffic and 80% more quo­ta­tions given for client Compare the Market).

Second, Internet advert­ising isn’t a very good platform for per­sua­sion. Sorry. You have one five-​​or-​​so-​​word oppor­tunity and (maybe) a graphic that has to fit into a fairly small space. Most people ignore you. The people that click on your ad are stupid, bored and poor. Or are your com­pet­itors and their agents. What’s good about it is that it’s so cheap that you can throw a small amount of money at it (compared to tra­di­tional media) and create a lot of clicks, it gen­er­ates great CPA inform­a­tion and, if cor­rectly targeted at long-​​tail keywords, then yes, it sells.

It won’t change people’s minds, though. You need longer periods of time and richer engage­ment to do that. I read today that cinema advert­ising revenues went up 5% [PDF] last year. What’s that about – apart from creative agencies loving them? It’s about the real­isa­tion that advertising-​​as-​​experience (and there­fore, ‘some­thing that might influ­ence someone’s opinion’) still doesn’t happen very often, pre­dict­ably or inex­pens­ively on the Web.

This is the truth. We live our lives not offline or online, but inline. We’re con­tinu­ally in both spaces and don’t draw much dis­tinc­tion between them, contrary to what a lot of com­ment­ators would have us believe. This is espe­cially true of younger people, who’ve grown up with the Net at their side. We don’t ‘jack-​​in’, as Neuromancer and count­less suc­cessors imagined, we accommodate.

[PS. Throwing irony upon irony, this is also the year that Pepsi, long a Superbowl standard, decided not to bother and devote the money to social media *cough* phil­an­thropy instead.]

[PPS. What I wonder about is why Google cares so much about Chrome? It’s given none of its other products, consumer or business, remotely the same funding or attention…]

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