Kevin Roberts - Big Data is the real deal.
The muscular left brain has rolled up to the advertising altar with a diamond
promise of marketing perfection. This tech-driven juggernaut heralds fantastic
advances in discovering, organizing and manipulating the information deluge to
achieve diverse objectives. Outcomes range from awesome to scary – the Edward
Snowden N.S.A. surveillance disclosure has
revealed just how powerful the data munching is.
We’re in a new era of
data mining, excavating, crunching, modeling, measuring, predicting,
visualizing, automating, tracking, monitoring, targeting and deciding. Every
industry, every institution and every individual is impacted by Big Data.
Old-world marketing, personalized healthcare, crime prevention, workforce
design, risk management, fertility tracking, energy provision… it goes on. Big
Data is our “De-terminator,” a machine programmed to enhance value, but with
power to destroy it.
The robot has even
reached Hollywood in the form of script analysis to predict hit movies, with
mixed receptions. In any industry, the dream
side is wont to downplay the machine side of the value equation (and vice
versa), but in the future I think they are partners in the sublime. An
Oscar-winning writer was recently reported to have been instructed by a
producer to get a script analyzed by a data
cruncher. Initially resistant, the writer said that “It was a complete shock,
the best notes on a draft that I have ever received.”
For the last 15
years, at Saatchi & Saatchi we’ve occupied the right-brain territory in the
communications market. We have assiduously invested in understanding the
emotional connections that drive humans, fully mapped this space, won by
creating Lovemarks for clients, and watched Big Data play catch up. Now the
muscular left brain has rolled up to the ad altar with its diamond promise.
I’m excited by the moment.
Digital is quarterbacking the future of advertising, making it direct and
relevant, personal, immediate and irresistible – and shuffling the players on
the board. It’s going to be a fun ride.
Gartner says that by 2017
the CMO will spend more on IT than the CIO. Data will be in the midst of
everything. It’s a dream scenario for brands to find their audiences, know
individuals backwards, discover what counts for them, and deliver at warp
speed.
How much of the future will
be machine-driven versus meaning-driven? Everything that can be machine-driven
in advertising will be – buying space, pricing, calibrating, discovering,
locating, personalizing and even shaping the message. Here’s where Big Data
needs Big Love, because the programs will never read humans quite the way
humans do, nor will they respond to humans quite the way humans can.
The Big Data machine can
read the lines, but not well between them.
It can turn up at the perfect moment, but not ignite it. It can spit out
stories based on what came before, but it can’t dream the difference that
builds loved brands. In the crunch, the crazies break through. Spock to Kirk: “Captain, we are checkmated.” Kirk to Spock: ‘Not Chess Mr Spock – poker. Do
you know the game?’
Big Data + Big Love are an
arranged marriage the future can’t do without. It’s time for the two to show
respect and openness for what each can bring to the party. They need to find
ways to work together, not to discount each other as they often do.
Love can’t do without logic
because it will never reach its potential. It needs to find the right road,
meet the right people, pick the right moment and then throw caution to the wind.
Albert Einstein: “Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is
simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves.”
Logic can’t do without Love
because efficiency without quality is an end game. Without a surge in the
moment, the nirvana of customized one-to-one real time marketing comes up
short. The closer Big Data flies everyone’s optimal offer into us all, the more
the distribution side gets commoditized, and the more the spark in the message
becomes a priceless thing. We decide emotionally, and this won’t change. Big
Data leads to conclusions. Big Love leads to action through the three elements
of a Lovemark – Mystery, Sensuality, and Intimacy.
Watch as Big Data + Big
Love plays out at decision points in every industry, from purchase through to
performance. Thanks to Big Data we’re going to learn a lot more about
ourselves. Thanks to Big Love we’ll never understand everything about
ourselves. Until the data is flesh and blood, it will be the incalculable
factors, the unexplainable pulses, and the mind-blowing ideas that fly the
machine over the line.
Kevin Roberts is CEO
Worldwide of Saatchi & Saatchi and author of Lovemarks: the Future
Beyond Brands.