Tag: audio branding

  • The Quest For Brand Awareness

    The Quest For Brand Awareness

    It’s always fascinating to compare how you see your place in the market with how others see you. If you’re in a very small market like New Zealand and you look out, you see the whole world before you. There seem to be endless opportunities.

    But step around to the other side of the world and look back, and you see a market like New Zealand from a completely different perspective. It seems small and hard to find.

    The issue of course is not specific to place brands. It’s applicable to all brands that are small in comparison to the scaled markets they would like to reach. The brands themselves see a panorama. The world looking at all the choices available to them from so many sources discerns barely a speck.

    This is quite literally ‘funnel vision’. Your perspective depends entirely on what end of the funnel you are looking from – the scaled end or the narrow end.

    The only way that situation can change is when the brand at the narrow end finds ways to increase its profile and presence, so that it literally looms larger in the minds of those far away. Search and social media can help do that. Partnerships and supply chains can also add proximity.

    In the Southern Hemisphere, we talk a lot about the tyranny of distance. But in actual fact, the problems many of our brands face, like the problems small brands face in any scaled market, is the tyranny of profile.

    What is not seen is not missed.

     

  • Brands – the gateway to discovering new music

    Brands – the gateway to discovering new music

    We know that music means a lot to people. Thanks to a recent Heartbeats Creative Council member survey, we now also know that people listen to music at least once a day. Further, that more than 9 out of 10 respondents search the web for new music and artists every month and that 92.4% are positive towards brands collaborating with artists.

    The results show that 32% of the respondents listen to music 4-8 hours per day, 7.5% for more than 8 hours and just as many for almost all the time theyre awake. 20.7% listen to music between 2-4 hours per day. Only 5.6% listen to music for less than an hour, and unsurprisingly, no-one says they do not listen to music.

    HOW MANY HOURS DO YOU LISTEN TO MUSIC PER DAY?

    listen_piechart31

    We also wanted to know more about the respondents online habits in regards to looking for new music, and asked them about it. The survey results show that as many as 96.3% are actively looking for new music and artists online each and every month. 32% say they spend more than 10 hours a month and as many as 18.8% say they spend at least an hour a day online, searching for new music and artist on the web.

    HOW MUCH TIME DO YOU SPEND SEARCHING FOR NEW MUSIC AND ARTISTS ONLINE?

    search_piechart

    81.1% further say they have discovered new music and artists through a brand (through a campaign or TV-commercial or through a music site provided or sponsored by a brand such as Electronic Beats, Converse Music and Noisey.com).

    MORE THAN 8 OUT OF 10 DISCOVER NEW MUSIC AND ARTISTS THROUGH BRANDS

    8_10_men

    What about peoples approach to brands collaborating with artists then? Well, we asked the respondents about their opinion on this matter and the results show us that the vast majority are positive. As many as 83% say they are “really positive, as long as the brand and the artist match”. Almost 10% went as far as to say “its a must if the music scene is going to survive”. Only 7.5% say they think it would be better without brands supporting artists. No one agreed with the statement that they wouldnt listen to artists connected to a brand. Music truly means a lot, and the attitude towards brands supporting, promoting and exploring new artists and music is almost all good.

    MORE THAN 9 OUT OF 10 ARE POSITIVE TOWARDS BRAND AND ARTIST COLLABORATIONS

    9_10_men

    Besides getting to know peoples listening and searching habits in regards to music, as well as their opinion of brand and artist collaborations, we wanted them to let us know which global brands they think perform the best in regards to the artist collaborations (in any kind of way, i.e. using artists in campaigns, sponsoring them, etc.). We also wanted the respondents to tell us why they picked the brands they did.

    Red Bull clearly got first prize due to its Red Bull Music Academy. To quote one respondent, “Red bull with its academy is the best example ever, it’s really involved in discovering new talent but also in pointing out the experience of old school artists, and it’s global.” The first runner up is Coca-Cola, mostly due to the beverage brand’s collaboration with K’naan, and Converse. Close behind was Apple, Pepsi, Adidas, Levis and T-Mobile.
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    Font: Sounds Like Branding

  • A little Jack White with your burger?

    A little Jack White with your burger?

    DROSOPHYLA BAR : São Paulo :: A Sync Orginals Client

    Is a hyper-curated playlist the new house-made charcuterie? Whether a restaurant’s playing Lady Gaga or Langhorne Slim says as much about the place as its Mason jar drinking glasses or farm-to-table pickle plate. And in an era when even Facebook tracks one’s music choices, restaurants are paying more attention than ever to what goes with the hickory-roasted carrots — not just the za’tar-laced crème fraîche but, say, also Lambchop (the band, not the meat).

    (more…)

  • Why Music Plays A Big Role When It Comes To Branding

    Why Music Plays A Big Role When It Comes To Branding

    heart__music_wallpaper_by_sam_dragon-d31qsh8-600x375Not long ago I read a quote attributed to pop singer Adele in which she says “I don’t make music for eyes. I make music for ears.”

    Coming from an artist that makes perfect sense of course.

    However, in our world of marketing and advertising — especially in today’s highly visual world where Pinterest, Instagram and other image-based platforms are becoming more popular with each passing day — the need is paramount for the right music to be married to the right brand. Not to say that music in advertising was not always important. On the contrary. Last September, in a piece I wrote for Branding Magazine entitled Music to a Brand’s Ears, I made reference to a paper written by David Huron, a professor at School of Music at Ohio State University entitled “Music in Advertising: An Analytic Paradigm.”

    In the paper, which was written all the way back in 1989, Huron wrote that when it comes to the use of music in advertising and branding “music can serve the overall promotional goals in one or more of several capacities.”

    His words still ring  true today for sure.

    However, he was speaking solely of the ways music can help move the proverbial needle; to move some product— which of course is every marketer’s and advertiser’s ultimate goal, of course. Why Music Plays A Big Role When It Comes To Branding image heart  music wallpaper by sam dragon d31qsh8 600x375

    But, what about the role music can play in establishing, maintaining and even growing the equity of a given brand?

    How Does Music Build Value For a Given Brand? 

    It’s a very open-ended question and one that would surely solicit a wide array of responses.

    Why what do you know? Here’s some responses now.

    Eric Sheinkop, President/CEO, Music Dealers and co-author of Hit Brands: How Music Builds Value for the World’s Smartest Brands

    “Music brings value to a brand in three ways: identity, engagement, currency. Specifically, using music to establish an emotional connection with a brand, increases brand recognition, creates excitement and buzz beyond the brand’s core products or services, and can empower consumers, giving them valuable content to discover and share. Music creates the value that brands need to win the war for attention and develop a genuine connection with their consumers. When used correctly, music not only creates loyalty, but true advocacy.”

    Alex White, Co-Founder & CEO, Next Big Sound, Inc., leading provider of online music analytics and insights

    “Brands increasingly need to stand out in a cluttered world and music is one of the best ways to resonate with their customers. As for the role music can play – a song choice can reinforce the particular message the brand is trying to convey and demonstrate a brands’ personality.”

    Matthew Sommer, COO, Brolik, who has a degree in Music and has scored both commercials and films

    “Music helps brands to form an emotional connection with their target audience in a unique way, in that it affects a wider audience than most other forms of artistic expression. With so much competition for attention, advertisers can’t afford not to use every tool in their shed, especially one as emotive as music.”

    As for my thoughts on how music builds value for a brand. I agree with pretty much everything already said. Music absolutely hits that emotional nerve in all of us; a nerve that connects us as Sheinkop and Sommer say. Not sure I agree with Sheinkop when he says that music, when used correctly, can create loyalty and true advocacy. I won’t get too deep into the overall topic of brand loyalty, but I will say music can play a role in that creation, if you will, but it is surely not the only contributing factor.

    A Little Specificity Please

    Ok, so that’s some thoughts on how music can build value for a specific brand.

    But what about the role it plays in a specific TV spot and/or campaign?

    White: “Music is a universal language so I think that brands and ad agencies that are able to find the right music and sound for their product will dramatically improve the results of the campaign. For instance, if the brand stands for new and cool and is able to break a new artist as part of the campaign they will benefit from the song and potentially career growth of that act. Brands that use music as part of the campaign can drive the longevity and improve perception in the marketplace way more than if no music was selected.”

    Sommer: “Music is critical to the feel and tone of almost any piece of video content. Simply changing the backing track for a video can totally change the mood, and sometimes even the implied meaning of the content. Be careful about the ‘right’ piece of music, though. Just because the editor was cutting the video to the Rolling Stones, doesn’t mean you’ll have a Rolling Stones sized music licensing budget. There are plenty of the ‘right’ song out there if you’re willing to spend the time to look.

    Sheinkop:  ”Music has just as much of an impact as the visual on the screen. At the most basic level, music, when heard in conjunction with a visual, is designed to pull the viewer in and help them experience the feeling of the story. Music is the emotional connection to anything visual. The right music makes the visuals more valuable and the product seemingly more meaningful. If there isn’t any music, the visuals better be hilarious or that campaign could suck. Music is what will make you look over at the TV when washing dishes after dinner. Music makes people talk about campaigns and share them with their networks.

    For example, one of the most emotional campaigns on TV recently is the P&G Moms Olympic spots (example below). Watch those spots without music and see if you even know what’s going on. Without music, a brilliant campaign can go unnoticed. With music, a subpar creative production can go viral.”
    [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57e4t-fhXDs&w=560&h=315]
    My take? Well, the guys above are again, right on the money. There’s no question that the right music paired with the right brand in the right spot/campaign can increase the success of it exponentially. Music is that missing piece when it comes to advertising if you think about it.

    A print ad, at least most print ads, cannot include music so they rely on the words and the images to tell the story. Same with outdoor and so on. Radio advertising obviously relies heavily on music along with copy.

    But TV and video? Music becomes that missing link; that third piece to the puzzle. The piece that ties it all together.

    Assuming of course the right music is paired with the right brand in the right spot/campaign.

    Music & Advertising – What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

    One final question I posed to Sheinkop, Sommer and White was “Are there negative consequences to not having the right music/artist paired with the right product?”

    I liked all the replies I received to this query but one part of the reply I got from Sheinkop encapsulated perfectly my own take on this topic.

    “A classic example of a common mistake brands make in their use of music is thinking like fans first. Specifically, not pairing the right artist with the right product but instead using their personal favorite well-known, popular personality instead of an artist loved by their consumers and who represents the brands personality and values.”

    One word: Amen.
    Read more at http://www.business2community.com/branding/music-plays-big-role-comes-branding-0773299#v2j2uYgHj20GWccS.99

  • sound knowledge: an audio branding reading list

    sound knowledge: an audio branding reading list

    ivgroupWhen it comes to harnessing the power of sound, a working knowledge of the fundamentals of audio science and design is vital. An aptitude for composition/production certainly yeilds creative results, but it’s only one part of the audio branding equation. Research is necessary to balance out our instincts with demonstrable facts, helping us shape the creation of audio assets and manage their implementation as well.

    Fortunately, there’s a wealth of information available. New studies are continually being published in academic journals and agency/brand white papers. Emerging technologies offer new audio touch points for brands to explore. Keeping up on the latest trends and best practices in our discipline is a full time job!

    If you’re interested in the latest news, you might want to follow our iV audio branding daily and our audio branding scoop.it page where we’re constantly curating new content relevant to the industry.

    Additionally, we thought it might be helpful to supply you with a “must read” list – a bibliography for the serious audio branding enthusiast. So we went to our book shelves and pulled what we thought were a few of the essential titles of the moment. We’ve listed them for you here, with easy amazon links (just select the title) and a short description. There’s a wide variety of thought represented here – everything from branding to neuromarketing to the role of silence in a noisy world.

    We offer these with hopes that they’ll expand your knowledge – and with it allow for more informed discussions. If there’s a work that’s been influential in your approach to audio branding that we’ve not included in our list, feel free to leave a comment and let us know. We always enjoy adding to our library.

    Happy reading!

    Handbook of Consumer Psychology – Edited by Curtis Haugtvedt, Paul Herr and Frank Kardes

    This Handbook contains a unique collection of chapters written by the the leading researchers in the field of consumer psychology, offered with the common goal of attaining a better scientific understanding of cognitive, affective, and behavioral responses to products and services, the marketing of these products and services, and societal and ethical concerns associated with marketing processes. The research in this area focuses on fundamental psychological processes as well as on issues associated with the use of theoretical principles in applied contexts. The chapter on sound in a consumer context is worth the “price of admission.”

    The Social and Applied Psychology of Music – Adrian North and David Hargreaves

    Music is so ubiquitous that it can be easy to overlook the powerful influence it exerts in so many areas of our lives – from birth, through childhood, to old age. North and Hargreaves consider the value of music in everyday life, answering perennial questions that include: What aspects of music are crucial in determining whether or not you will like it? How does the structure of the music industry affect the music that we hear on the radio and buy? How does musical ability develop in children, and how does this relate to more general theories of how intellectual skills develop? Do musical skills develop independently of other abilities? How does musical ability develop in children, and how does this relate to more general theories of how intellectual skills develop? Do musical skills develop independently of other abilities? Exceptionally broad in scope, and written in a highly accessible style by the leading researchers in this field, it should be required reading as an introduction to the field.

    Emotion and Reason in Consumer Behavior – Arjun Chaudhuri

    In the last twenty five years, the role of emotion in information processing has been widely acknowledged. Research demonstrates that we need to understand both emotion and reason if we want to understand the real meanings that products and services have for consumers. Chaudhuri offers new insights into the effects that emotion and rational thought have on marketing outcomes, using sound academic research at a level that both students and professionals can understand.

    Handbook of Music and Emotion: Theory, Research, Applications – Edited by Patrik Juslin and John Sloboda

    The predecessor to this book, Motion and Emotion (OUP, 2001) was critically and commercially successful and stimulated further work in this area. In the years since, empirical research in this area has blossomed, and the Handbook of Music and Emotion offers a comprehensive coverage of the many approaches that define the field of music and emotion. The first section offers multi-disciplinary perspectives on musical emotions from philosophy, musicology, psychology, neurobiology, anthropology, and sociology. The second section features methodologically-oriented chapters on the measurement of emotions via different channels (e.g., self report, psychophysiology, neuroimaging). Sections three and four address how emotion enters into different aspects of musical behavior, both the making of music and its consumption. Section five covers developmental, personality, and social factors. Section six describes the most important applications involving the relationship between music and emotion. In a final commentary, the editors comment on the history of the field, summarize the current state of affairs, and propose future directions.

    The World in Six Songs: How the Musical Brain Created Human Nature – Daniel J. Levitin

    The follow up to This Is Your Brain on Music, Levitin demonstrates how the brain evolved to play and listen to music in six fundamental forms—for knowledge, friendship, religion, joy, comfort, and love. Blending scientific findings with his own experiences as a musician and music-industry professional, Levitin further supports his conclusions with interviews with Sting, Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell and David Byrne, along with classical musicians and conductors, historians, anthropologists, and evolutionary biologists.

    Sonic Branding: An Introduction – Daniel Jackson

    Jackson’s seminal work was one of the first to hit the market, helping to draw attention to sonic branding. The ideas outlined here shaped the development of an audio branding process that formed the foundation of many of the industry best practices that exist today.

    Audio Branding: Brands, Sound and Communication – Edited by Kai Bronner and Rainer Hirt

    Bronner and Hirt are two of the founders of the Audio Branding Academy, the only professional organization currently devoted to the discipline of audio branding. This book is a collection of articles dealing with a broad range of pertinent topics, including the function of sound, the basics and principles of brand communication and audio branding, multi-sensory aspects of brand communication, and legal matters concerning soundmarks. In case studies on projects with international brands, leading experts provide insight into what audio branding actually means in practice. This compilation is based on the German publication Audio-Branding, previously released in 2007.

    Brainfluence: 100 Ways to Persuade and Convince Consumers with Neuromarketing – Roger Dooley

    Neuromarketing studies the way the brain responds to various cognitive and sensory marketing stimuli. Analysts use this to measure a consumer’s preference, what a customer reacts to, and why consumers make certain decisions. Dooley, who also publishes a blog devoted to the subject, outlines how neuromarketing has helped many well-known brands and companies determine how to best market their products to different demographics and consumer groups. He devotes two chapters in particular to the use of sound as a means to shape consumer behavior and brand recall.

    Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain – Oliver Sacks

    Sacks explores the place music occupies in the brain and how it affects the human condition. Of particular interest is his exploration of what he calls “musical misalignments.” Among them: a man struck by lightning who suddenly desires to become a pianist at the age of forty-two; an entire group of children with Williams syndrome, who are hypermusical from birth; people with “amusia,” to whom a symphony sounds like the clattering of pots and pans; and a man whose memory spans only seven seconds – for everything but music.

    Brand Sense: Sensory Secrets Behind the Stuff We Buy – Martin Lindstrom

    Martin Lindstrom reveals how the world’s most successful companies and products integrate touch, taste, smell, sight, and sound into their marketing strategies. In conjunction with renowned research institution Millward Brown, Lindstrom’s worldwide study unveils the extent to which we are slaves to our senses — and how these senses can be used to unwittingly seduce consumers.

    This Is Your Brain On Music: The Science of a Human Obsession – Daniel J. Levitin

    Why does music evoke such powerful moods? Levitan draws on neuroscience and evolutionary psychology to find the answer to that question. Along the way, even more questions are revealed and explored: Are our musical preferences shaped in utero? Is there a cutoff point for acquiring new tastes in music? What do PET scans and MRIs reveal about the brain’s response to music? Is musical pleasure different from other kinds of pleasure? It’s a compelling read.

    In Pursuit of Silence: Listening for Meaning in a World of Noise – George Prochnik

    Prochnik travels across the country, meeting and listening to doctors, neuroscientists, acoustical engineers, monks, activists, educators, marketers, and aggrieved citizens. He examines why we began to be so loud as a society, and what it is that gets lost when we can no longer find quiet. For those of us engaged in giving brands a voice, this book may help us think twice about the relevance of sound – and silence – in a world full of noise.

    Listening to Noise and Silence: Towards a Philosophy of Sound Art – Salomé Voegelin

    Salomé Voegelin explores the concepts of listening to sound artwork and the everyday acoustic environment, establishing an aesthetics and philosophy of sound and promoting the notion of a sonic sensibility.  Sound works are discussed, by lesser known contemporary artists and composers (for example Curgenven, Gasson and Federer), historical figures in the field (Artaud, Feldman and Cage), and that of contemporary  artists such as Janet Cardiff, Bill Fontana, Bernard Parmegiani, and Merzbow. Informed by the ideas of Adorno, Merleau-Ponty and others, Voegelin attempts to critique sound art within the context of its soundings rather than in relation to abstracted themes and pre-existing categories.

    ComMUSICation: From Pavlov’s Dog to Sound Branding – John Groves

    Fellow  colleague  and audio branding pioneer John Groves documents the birth of audio branding. He shares personal experiences and anecdotes, offering up scientific findings in his own conversational (and often humorous) style. John ends his book with a walk-through of a structured system for developing and managing “Brand Sound Identities.”

    Sound Business – Julian Treasure

    Treasure is another of the preeminent voices in audio branding theory and practice. In this book, he explores the ways in which sound can change our moods, our behavior and our performance, offering a practical guide to planning and managing sound for increased profit in all aspects of business.

    Brand Meaning – Mark Batey

    Understanding that how a company ‘positions’ a brand is not necessarily how the consumer perceives that brand, Batey takes a comprehensive and holistic look at how consumers find and create meaning in brands. He explores the fundamental conscious and unconscious elements that connect people with products and brands, questioning traditional marketing concepts in the process and offering a new framework for brand meaning.

    The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable – Nassim Nicholas Taleb

    A black swan is an event, positive or negative, that is deemed improbable yet causes massive consequences. Taleb’s groundbreaking work on the subject contends that  Black Swan events explain almost everything about our world, and yet we are blind to them. A must read, particularly for those in search of ways to make their marketing go “viral.”

    The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do In Life and Business – Charles Duhigg

    Award-winning New York Times business reporter Charles Duhigg explores the science behind why habits exist and how they can be changed. It’s a fascinating look at how “habit designers” can shape behavior – and the role big data can play. While not specifically about “sound”, it provides food for thought regrading the potential for audio to be a behavioral  trigger in habit formation.

    The End of Business as Usual – Brian Solis

    Solis believes that today’s biggest trends—the mobile web, social media, real-time—have produced a new consumer landscape. People expect to access information anywhere, anytime, and on any device. Collaborative, cloud, and video technologies are leading this change. He explores this complex information revolution, how it has changed the future of business, media, and culture, and suggests what companies can do to take advantage of the evolving landscape and lead the way.

    Obsessive Branding Disorder: The Illusion of Business and the Business of Illusion – Lucas Conley

    Conley paints the picture of a world obsessed with branding. Americans encounter anywhere between 3,000 and 5,000 ads a day, and increasingly brands vie for our attention from insidious angles that target our emotional responses – with sound being a prime “offender.” From the fertile crescent of branding (Cincinnati) to the laboratories of sensory specialists (musicologists, and “noses”), he investigates the phenomenon of rampant commercialism and offers a portrait of an age of branding obsession.

    Brand Hijack: Marketing Without Marketing – Alex Wipperfürth

    Wipperfürth presents an alternative to conventional marketing wisdom, one that addresses such industry crises as media saturation, consumer evolution, and the erosion of image marketing. He proposes untraditional, even counterintuitive practices: Let the marketplace take over. Stop clamoring for control and learn to be spontaneous. Be bold enough to accept a certain degree of uncertainty in the definition of your brands. Embrace the value of being surprising and imperfect. Draw the line between promotion and the adbusting trinity of manipulation, intrusion and co-option. It’s an exploration into the power of chaos to feed creativity – and suggests that control of your brand image is, at best, an illusion.

    Primal Branding – Patrick Hanlon

    Hanlon identifies seven definable assets that he believes construct the belief system behind every successful brand, whether it’s a product, service, city, personality, social cause, or movement. Referring to these assets as “the primal code,” Halon illustrates how they can be used to form a powerful emotional attachment to the brand, offering the opportunity to move from being just another product on the shelf to becoming a desired and necessary part of consumer culture.

    Emotional Branding – Marc Gobé

    Emotional Branding explores how effective consumer interaction needs to be about senses and feelings, emotions and sentiments. Design in this book is considered a new media, the web a place where people will share information and communicate, architecture a part of the brand building process, and people as the most powerful element of any branding strategy. Gobé emphasizes the need to transcend the traditional language of marketing–from one based on statistics and data to a more compelling form of communication that fosters creativity and innovation.

    originally posted at blog.ivgroup.cc