Bit of free time, so writing up my notes from Morning 2 of the
Financial Times Digital Media & Broadcasting conference 2 weeks ago. Big takeaway is that everyone expects the near past to look like the near future:
Firstly, that old chestnut, Books - Engaging readers in the digital age had Chris Cleave, New York Times #1 bestselling novelist; John Makinson, Chairman and CEO, Penguin Group and Richard Palk, General Manager at Digital Reading Business Europe, Sony on teh panel. My notes abiut Things I had not heard before are:
- iPad adoption speed incredible, no one is sure what it eans but unlikely to be bale to charge silly prices like you can on e-Readers. 70% margisn are going to come off Amazon/Kindle.
- Stormclouds are gatehering for current eBook pricing model, as free downloads start to take off.
- DRM is not the answer
- iPad creates a new media cohesiveness that Kindle, laptop cannot match easily
- Increasingly not enough for author to write have to pre-market, post market, engage with audience
- the "Novel" is a recent phenomenon - Dickens was serialised for example (yes, you knew that) but everyone thinks the serial lends itself better to interactive media.
- Music is different, in that songs are different to chapters, but not different to short stories - but people don't really go for short stories - but if properly written would read instead of newspaper on way to work
Then came the obligatory New markets, new models session - with Tony Chambers, General Manager, Emerging Markets, The Walt Disney Company, EMEA; Mark Read, Director of Strategy, WPP and Caleb Weinstein, Senior Vice President, Discovery Networks, Emerging Markets. New Points noted are:
- Where is the growth? - not BRICS et al, they can't pay western prices so piracy is endemic - long term game. ROI > 5 years
- US, Europe has people and money in next 5 years
- We will see lots of "wiggling" of business models
Then comes the even more obligatory "Next-generation advertising and marketing" featuring Jeff Levick, President of Global Advertising and Strategy, AOL; William Eccleshare, President & CEO, Clear Channel International; Matt Brittin , Managing Director, Google UK and Guy Hayward, CEO, JWT UK Group. New points made:
- There has been very little innovation in Display ads over last 10 yaers, the system was built by technologists in dotcom era but marketers are starting to change it now
- Digital outdoor media is something to watch over next 5 years
- Smart clients are using mixed media
- Mobile - still small, growth potential probably overstated - needs further smartphone penetration and single standard - also a good payment device (estimated 2-5 years out).
- 1 in 3 use location on mobile vs 1 in 5 on web.
- Still darned hard to work out what happens with Social Media - to quote:
"Advertising that interrups people when they don't want to be interrupted doesn't work"
The Google chap said that they had not given up with Google TV, but will iterate from what they have learned.
My summary - After 2 days at the conference, I think apart from the more rapid growth of the iPad, and the entrance of a 2nd wave of "adventure capital" into Video, the heavy duty work we did in this space in 2008 stands up pretty well - ie it was all largely predictable. I sat down this morning with my notes trying to scry trends and threads and connections just "below the surface", or anything that looks truly disruptive. I know wveryone want to believe in "mobile", but I just don't see it in the short term as the essential economic limits in the mobile broadband value chain - too much variety, too few standards, cr*p cost structure - just haven't changed much since 2005 when we first looked at this area. What will happen is "Big Smart Mobiles" - ie Tablets - will take the broadband media content load (and payola) as quite simply a mobile screen is
just too darned small.