Musings from GroupM: What is Social Creativity? - Rob Norman - MediaBizBloggers

Social creativity.

Messaging in the stream. Not a new Kenny Rogers / Dolly Parton collaboration, rather the aspiration of marketers wishing to bathe in the warmth of earned media. The idea goes like this. The brand creates a social home that people can join, like or check in to and as a consequence allow the brand to join their news feed and the streams of those they know. This feels good. "N" people take an action and "N x friends of N" are potentially exposed to the resultant flow of comments or messages. This makes for a fine CPM calculation and thus one rather "media like" basis for valuing a friend or a follower.

Am I alone in finding this a little unsatisfying? It pays to spend a little while in brand sponsored social environments, before gifting your client virtual Kool Aid, simply to follow the type and volume of exchanges that take place. The sad fact is that most of it is somewhere between lame and prosaic and its dissemination is unlikely to be of any real value.

The wise Miles Young, CEO of Ogilvy, has taken to quoting Abraham Lincoln on the subject of social media. Lincoln posited that "character is like a tree, reputation is like its shadow". This is a useful reference and pushes one towards the necessary question "what does your tree look like?"

If you are Pepsi (Refresh Everything) or American Express (Members Project) you have a pretty good answer to the tree question. You have created participation with purpose. The same is not true for everyone and suggests that more time and energy needs to be devoted to developing a real social strategy in which participation in the stream creates value for the participant and the interlocking streams of their social graph.

This brings us to the question of "what is social creativity?" Put simply, it's creativity that people want to keep and share. It does not have to be social as in socially responsible but that's as good a space to start as any. It can also be socially valuable; inside information that it's worth being on the inside of (Bergdorf Goodman for example) or service / experience enhancing (Best Buy, Dell, Jet Blue, Macy's, Starbucks). All these cases are ones where the value exchange between the brand and its friends are clear.

The attraction of these strategies is also that they support long term marketing objectives in a channel that has been dominated by short term tactics and the pursuit of the last click. The good thing about trees is that they live long lives and cast long shadows.

Rob Norman is a member of the GroupM Global Executive Committee and is CEO of GroupM Interaction Worldwide. Rob’s principle tasks are developing the interaction organization within GroupM, developing positioning and thought leadership and leading the interaction contribution to business development. Rob can be reached at rob.norman@groupm.com.

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Rob Norman

Rob Norman works with multiple enterprises in media distribution, creation and research, and companies developing new technologies in advertising and marketing. Rob continues to advise GroupM where he served as Global Chief Digital Officer until the end o… read more