That book
May 3rd, 2007 by flo
So we talked about doing a book on the future of digital marketing or online advertising or whatever you want to call it. I’ve put my thinking cap on and would like to propose the following as a format. Each individual writes a piece about digital now, in ten years and in 50 years. Check out my genius sketch.
Below is my stab at it (runs for cover). Discuss!
The Filter
The future of (digital) marketing now in 10 and 50 years
There is a lot of talk about Web 3.0, but this is a contradiction in terms because the new internet won’t be a web anymore, but an organism, a brain.
What do I mean by that? Currently in the 2.0 world people are being busy filling the web with information, experiences and applications. This is akin to building the most comprehensive, up to date, ever-changing living and breathing database on this planet. What will be increasingly important is how people cut this data, how it’s being accessed and how relevant nuggets are being presented to the user. I believe that people won’t use search engines to look for these nuggets. They will come to them.
This means the new web will act more like a Filter on the old 2.0 web. This is being fuelled by the fact that the current IP address structure (i.e having a unique URL for a site) will be defunct. Currently people access content on, say www.example.com through this unique URL. This will change. We will have unique IP addresses for each piece of information. There will be an infinite number of unique addresses available, so each thought, image, word, pixel or whatever will have a unique address. Web addresses like www.example.com will loose it’s relevance and it’s value to marketing and browser based web access is going to become less and less important. Imagine each brick of a house having it’s own postcode. How are you going to say where you live?
The consequence of this is that traditional online advertising will die. No-one will visit websites with physical space for banners anymore. People’s opinions will replace advertising and what comes through the Filter is the content that people create.
Advertising will live in applications like internet “TV” (Joost being the first of many to come). Secondlife and Google Earth will have evolved into a living and breathing Parallel Universe pretty much like The Matrix along with a renaissance of the more traditional advertising like virtual TV spots and virtual billboards.
On the 2.0 layer there will still be unique URLs closed campaign sites and traditional online advertising. This place won’t be visited very often though.
The place to look to advertise to people is on the Filter. How do we do this since there is no digital real estate for sale on this level? We need to create marketing that surfaces on this layer. People won’t buy brands as entertainment they want products that entertain. Something people connect with and will want to engage with. This means we need to look at a new type of marketing. We need to work with clients and not for them. The traditional Internet will be an invisible place and brands need to work with agencies to operate on the Filter to give people what they are looking for. We need to develop unique and exciting products with our clients. Good products don’t need to be advertised. The Filter will find them for you. Without you searching for it. Knowledge about great products flies around the globe in no time. Good stuff (and unfortunately the shit) will surface through the Filter and float.
The new web will also be less about recreating realty with heavy video experiences. People will live this for ”real” in the Parallel Universe as described above. The old way of telling people about a brand or product through the means of a metaphor is outdated. Why would I want to control a pre-recorded video with my keyboard and mouse if I can put on a virtual chicken suit and dive into the Parallel Universe.
If you want your brand to still matter in 50 years you need to put all the emphasis on having a great product. And that’s what people are prepared to pay for. The more digital our world becomes the pricier live experiences become. Theatre, art exhibitions, live music are the sort of events people will pay for.
This means being a musician and making money by selling music to people will not be a business model anymore. Artists will make money by licensing their music to brands but not by selling it to people. People won’t pay for downloads. The same goes for the film industry. People won’t pay for film on DVDs anymore. Why should they? But they will pay premium for a live cinema experience. Live is going to be expensive. Everything digital will be free.
alelariu, on May 3rd, 2007, at 6:58 pm
Agree that we need to develop unique and exciting products with our clients and a couple of other things you wrote
BUT
not sure if the whole book should be about The future of (digital) marketing now in 10 and 50 years. The whole thing could potentially become very utopian and if this book is for clients, I kinda think we need some really simple, direct write ups on different topics on how to get smart with brands/products in the digital world.
Talk about smart, Barbarian are now developing their own software http://software.barbariangroup.com/ – Go Benjamin!
Damianov, on May 5th, 2007, at 12:08 pm
Hi Flo, we’re thinking along the same lines. How do I get to meet you? Like to talk to you further please.
Damiano
damianovukotic@gmail.com
The way i see it « The way things go, on May 9th, 2007, at 10:47 am
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