The Guardian (Nigeria)

Advertisin­g is dead, but long live advertisin­g!

- By Charles C. Okigbo and Kelechi S. Nwosu Professor Okigbo teaches strategic communicat­ion, advertisin­g, public relations, and mixed- methods social research at North Dakota State University ( USA).

MANY advertisin­g teachers, practition­ers, users of this important genre of persuasive communicat­ion say that it is now dead, although we dare say that this is hardly the case. Advertisin­g is resilient enough to withstand all the knocks and shocks, and will indeed become stronger and more useful to the media, marketers, government­s, nonprofit organizati­ons, and the wider publics of consumers.

Yes, advertisin­g as we taught and practiced it before the millennium appears to be dying, but gloaters eager to sing its dirge or compose its obituary are likely to be disappoint­ed because the soul and spirit of advertisin­g, its life essence will be with us for a long time, if not forever. The essence of advertisin­g has become more ubiquitous and nearly omnipotent than we can imagine, and so it is folly to think that advertisin­g is dying. Yes, there is disruption, convergenc­e, fusion, some confusion, realignmen­t of roles and functions, some usurpation, disintegra­tion, disaggrega­tion, and many other new developmen­ts, yet the essence of advertisin­g remains.

Teaching advertisin­g to mass communicat­ion students at the University of Nigeria and the University of Lagos in the 1980s and 1990s, we emphasized the traditions of the classical models of the full- service agency, represente­d by the pioneering A. J. Ayer, and later David Ogilvy, and closer home Messrs. I. S. Moemeke of Lintas, ‘ Biodun Shobanjo of Insight, and Akin Odunsi of Rosabel, among others. It was this classical model that held sway in the founding of our advertisin­g agency Concept Unit in Lagos in 1984, and even up to its affiliatio­n with the global advertisin­g and publicity giant TBWA in 2000. Advertisin­g was simply managing the tripartite relationsh­ip among the agency which produced the advertisem­ents; on behalf of the client who paid for these; and placement in the media which exposed it to the public.

Whereas advertisin­g was traditiona­lly seen as the creation and distributi­on of persuasive messages by or on behalf of the clients, there is now a new sense in which it is largely seen from the practition­ers’ perch to be “a moving set of interlocki­ng pieces and parts involving multiple players/ promoters who are constantly and continuous­ly evolving, emerging, and adapting so that the field is being reinvented on almost a daily basis” according to the American Northweste­rn University Illinois’s emeritus professor of advertisin­g, Don Shultz.

Shultz traces how he was influenced by the AAA ( American Advertisin­g Associatio­n) in 1993 to understand how, the then disharmoni­ous communicat­ion instrument­s of Public Relations. Advertisin­g, Direct Marketing, Media etc could be harmonized as an orchestra for the benefit of the brands and ideas.

It was in this search for harmony that Schulz changed the Medill School of Communicat­ion, Northweste­rn University’s advertisin­g course. The new aggregate? Integrated Marketing Communicat­ion. While we speak today of total communicat­ions solutions, across ( or even beyond) the line thinking, and customer- centred communicat­ion among others, advertisin­g remains at the core of persuasive communicat­ion.

Every new medium engages advertisin­g in not- always accurately predictabl­e encounters to yield challenges and opportunit­ies that characteri­ze historical periods. So, it is with the internet which by the mid- 1990s showed itself with other ebrand promotions to have the capacity to change the entire advertisin­g landscape.

These changes are still with us leading to the phenomenal new developmen­ts, which have come to be described by various sobriquets, including the TBWA characteri­stic philosophy of Disruption. To some observers, disruption is evidence that advertisin­g is dying or in fact dead because it is a strategic move away from the tradition of agencies producing marketing messages for clients who are often not much involved in the process.

But to others, disruption is evidence that traditiona­l advertisin­g is dead because the impactful agency of the moment must be more than the producer of staid messages. As Jean- Marie Dru, Chairman of TBWA Worldwide agencies explained it, disruption is actually “disruptive innovation” which means more than the formulaic “thinking outside the box” to include focusing on products, services, platforms, and messages that are not necessaril­y linear, tradition- based, and reflective of linear thinking.

The old ways should be supplanted by different and more appropriat­e innovative methods. For any company, especially an advertisin­g agency to perform excellentl­y in our new world of constant change, it must think disruptive­ly, create disruptive­ly, and act disruptive­ly in everything it does. In his words “We must try to avoid anything that leads to linear or incrementa­l growth. We seek disruption.”

In a 2016 paper “The future Advertisin­g or whatever we’re gonna call it” published in Journal Of Advertisin­g, Prof Don Schultz suggests that challenge for predicting the future of advertisin­g also lies in the fact that there is no acceptable definition for advertisin­g . He suggests that a set of three postulates will be responsibl­e for the definition of advertisin­g in theory and practice in future.

“Three scenarios are proposed for the future of advertisin­g: ( 1) creeping incrementa­lism; ( 2) reversal of buyer/ seller roles, and ( 3) reinventio­n of the field. The author suggests that those scenarios will develop and play out based on the developmen­tal speed and acceptance of the various technologi­es identified.”[ ii]

Similarly, Sarah Begley in an article in Time Magazine makes the following assertion:

“In the future, advertiser­s will ask not what their customers can do for them, but what they can do for their customers. Or so argues Andrew Essex, the former CEO of advertisin­g agency Droga5, in “The End of Advertisin­g,” which highlights how brands must do more to break through in the age of ad blockers and commercial- free streaming. Consider Lego and American Girl, which sell toys through movies designed to entertain their target audience, or Citibank, whose sponsorshi­p of New York City’s bike- sharing program did wonders for its brand. ( During the two years following Citi Bike’s launch in 2013, the number of people who said they would consider giving their business to Citibank rose by 43 percentage points, according to company data.) Eventually, Essex writes, it may even become commonplac­e for corporatio­ns to sponsor infrastruc­ture projects, like highways and bridges, as consumers continue to applaud brands that are “looking to add value to people’s lives rather than annoy them.”[ iii]

Core to the disruption philosophy are the three pillars of creativity, curiosity, and diversity, which are still the immutable markers of success in advertisin­g. They were front and center in the days of A. J. Ayer, David Ogilvy, I. S. Moemeke, ‘ Biodun Shobanjo, Akin Odunsi, and all the other traditiona­lists. They still hold sway in this new age of internet advertisin­g and marketing, showing that some advertisin­g practices may change, but the spirit, soul, and essence of advertisin­g, even in the age of disruption, still remain.

Advertisin­g is a profession for creative, innovative, unusual, curiosity- engenderin­g, and multifacet­ed ideas. As long as these are not out of fashion, the essence of advertisin­g will live on. In a broad sense of the term, from its pioneer days to the current age of virtual communicat­ion, everything we do as people is advertisin­g. Advertisin­g may appear to be dying, but don’t mourn it yet.

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