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The RESURGENCE Of Product Placement
Rance Crain, editor and smart guy over at AdAge.com
posted an editoral recently talking about product placements,
entitled "Why
Product Placement Does Not Equal Brand Building."
He made some decent points about how product placement
doesn't help build brand. He also made some points with
which I had to disagree, but I walked away from the
experience with a thought that won't leave my head:
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| How soon
will it be until you can click a button and somebody
from the concession stand runs a bag of the Pieces
up to your seat? |
Product placement is only going to grow to be a more
popular practice, and do so exponentially.
That's right, we see product placement as a bad thing
nowadays, but in reality, product placements are going
to be something most treasured in the near future. Every
single company will want their products featured prominently
in every movie and television show.
In fact, product placement is going to become such
a popular thing it's almost going to become necessary.
I wouldn't be surprised if product placements become
so profitable that some smart person will open a chain
of movie theaters that no longer charge for admission!
(Though they'll still make killings in overpriced soda
and popcorn)
You heard it here first, folks. Go tell your friends
-- Glennon says product placements are going to easily
make free movies a possibility (though I doubt most
theaters will jump on the bandwagon).
Why? Because technologies are already in place now
that make it possible for somebody watching a television
show or a movie to simply click on a screen and purchase
an item that sparks their fancy. Sure, they're not very
common -- yet -- but that's only a matter of time, not
of probability.
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| How good
does that look with me sitting next to Denis Leary?!? |
Imagine sitting on your couch watching Denis Leary's
show "Rescue
Me" (one of my favorites, by the way -- I'd
LOVE to have a bit part on that show, hint hint). One
of the characters walks in with a really cool jacket.
You hold up your remote and click a button. The show
goes on pause, and a shopping window pops up listing
all of the products in that scene. Within moments, you've
found the jacket, listed it in your size and preferred
color, spun it around a few times on the screen, placed
your order with a simple "buy me now" button
click, and hit play to go back to the show. Your cable
company already has your address and billing information
on file, the jacket is already in the mail, and you're
back into the show less than a minute later.
What companies wouldn't pay big money to have
that kind of service? Talk about removing the barriers
to a sale!
Imagine walking into a movie theater complex. You turn
your phone from ring to "Interactive Mode,"
and walk up to the sign just outside of theater #8.
You click a photo of the barcode on the sign, and walk
into your theater. Your phone has already gone online,
used the barcode information to connect your phone to
the specific movie, complex, and showing information
of your movie. While you're watching the movie, a character
walks into the scene wearing a jacket in which you're
interested. You simply click the "Remember"
button on your cell phone as you keep watching the movie.
Later on, you go home, and on your computer is a list
of all the scenes you wanted "remembered"
during the movie.
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| That watch
cap could be my signature piece -- kinda like
Kojak's lollipop! Isn't this image just inspiring? |
You then browse through the products listed in those
scenes, find the ones you want, and put them in your
shopping cart. Moments later, the sale is made, and
you go to bed, happy with your new purchases.
This is the future of product placements, though it's
only a limited view. I'm simply writing this article
using examples with the tools I know exist today. The
actual execution of these ideas will eventually be much
more robust, and strangely, familiar and non-invasive.
Getting back to Mr. Crain's points about brand building
-- who cares? The value of product placements is in
harnessing both impulse buying and in skipping over
the "work" a consumer has to go through trying
to figure out the manufacturers of the products in which
they are interested. Think about this: one product placement
allows a consumer to skip from seeing something to having
it in a shopping cart for evaluation and customization.
Don't worry about building brand in product placements
-- worry about making great brand building experiences
during that shopping cart/evaluation phase of your online
buying experience.
And, when your company explodes with growth, and you
find yourself living in Beverly Hills next to the producer
of "Rescue Me," do me a favor and walk over
to your neighbor and hook me up with a bit part, in
thanks. We'll call it even when I land the role.
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