The
year ahead “will be transformative in relation to how new technologies
will impact our lives,” says Luca Penati, managing director of the
global technology practice at Ogilvy Public Relations. “We will see the
rise of the role of consumers in the enterprise, since we all want to
use our smartphone or tablet at work as we use it at home, with apps
that make our job easier and more fun.”
Jim Hawker, a principal
at UK consultancy Threepipe, best known for its work in the consumer
space, agrees. “Never before has technology been such a driver of
innovation with consumer marketing,” he says. “The brands that are
standing out and generating great results are those that are technology
aware and incorporating new techniques to provide deeper engagement
with consumers.
“The rise of smartphones and other mobile device
adoption means we are all carrying around serious bits of kit that
offer marketers a wonderful platform on which to engage with us both
online and in the real world. That is such a powerful opportunity that
is there for the taking and consumer and retail brands are moving fast
to take advantage.”
Ubiquity and Convergence
According
to Scott Friedman, regional director of Text 100 North America, “2012
is the year that technology moves from being an industry or a sector to
being a core part of every business regardless of discipline. Twenty
years ago technology was considered niche; 10 years ago it was
considered one of the fastest growing industries. Today it’s
everything.”
Global spending on consumer technology devices in
2012 is expected to top $1 trillion for the first time. “That’s not so
surprising in a world where there are now more connected devices than
people,” says Esty Pujadas, director of Ketchum’s global technology
practice, who points to a variety of devices that will continue to
proliferate in 2012: “The iPad 3, LTE smartphones, Internet-connected
TVs, cars with augmented-reality windshields, fridges that know what’s
inside.”
Pujadas predicts three trends: co-creation
(“collaboration between tech companies and experts in seemingly
unrelated fields, or customers, or major players in other industries”);
appification (“how we now experience much of life through the mobile
apps we download and how that shapes our expectations and behaviors”);
and integration (“consumers want either all-in-one devices or at least
a way to combine their personal data, and marketers want the insights
that come from analyzing all that resulting Big Data”).
“These
trends were front and center at the recent Consumer Electronics Show,”
she says, “especially if you consider how many non-tech companies like
Mercedes-Benz, Ford and Craftsman invested in having a big presence
there. Technology will not only be a growth sector in 2012, it is also
morphing and overlapping with other industry sectors at record speed.”
Heidi
Sinclair, global technology practice chair at Weber Shandwick, is
another who see the breakdown of traditional barriers between
technology and other practice areas.
Sinclair says that the
“consumerization” of IT “is forcing even non-consumer companies to
market to consumers thus driving the need for consumer technology
communications expertise.” At the same time, “we are squarely in The
Age of Innovation where every company has an innovation story to tell.
Technology communications know-how is being applied to everything from
telling the science story in shampoo to developer communications
programs geared to driving app development for automobiles.”
As a
result Pujadas sees an advantage for full-service firms: “This is a
real opportunity for agencies with multiple competencies: companies
will need help going far beyond product marketing and communications–
they’ll need help with corporate reputation, public affairs, issues and
crisis—especially around data privacy and security—influencer
strategies, audience targeting, social media and growth in emerging
markets.”
Conversely, Text 100’s Friedman believes the ubiquity
of technology and its convergence with other sectors and disciplines,
presents an opportunity for tech specialists to expand.
“There
isn't a single industry that isn't using technology to innovate and
build competitive advantage,” he says. “And given that technology has
been at the core of all that we do at Text 100, we're now seeing our
expertise translate into the media, digital, automotive, travel and
health sectors. Our 'technology' expertise is being sought in sectors
we never thought possible.”
Content
The
proliferation of high-tech devices has implications for technology
marketers and for everyone engaged in communications—a topic we will
cover at greater length in our look at what’s hot in digital and social
media.
But if there’s one area of activity that’s particularly
important for technology clients it’s the creation of original content
that can be delivered across all of these platforms.
“We’re also
seeing a surge in requests from our clients in all sectors—but in
particular in technology—for content that can be used across
platforms,” says Friedman. “This move to ‘branded journalism’ and
multi-platform content shows the shift in the way technology companies
are integrating their social, traditional, marketing and communications
platforms to achieve most relevance with their audiences.”
International Markets
And
while there are those who question the potential for growth in the
US—Anne Green of New York-based CooperKatz & Company says that
“over recent years our industry has benefited from growth in tech
start-ups, but it remains to be seen whether that rate of growth is
sustainable, particularly in key verticals that have seen a massive
influx of new companies and competition”—there’s no doubt that there’s
plenty of growth left in international markets.
The technology
sector presents a significant opportunity in the Indian market,
according to Varghese Cherian, who leads Edelman’s technology practice
there. He estimates the 50 percent of the top PR spenders in India are
technology companies.
That’s partly because technology companies
are “early adopters of being in the forefront of accepting and trying
out newer trends makes them the largest spenders” and also because
“technology companies have been exposed to global trends more than
other companies and hence they are part of an evolved cycle in using
modern age communications tools and a strategic approach.”
The other BRIC markets—and China in particular—are also likely to see increased activity.
Coming Clean
Finally,
when it comes to hot sectors in the technology arena, cleantech
continues to generate the greatest interest. Sinclair says green
technology “has moved from being in start-up mode to a fast-growth
business with the associated communications demands.”
Stuart Wragg of Australian firm n2n communications is another who sees growth in the cleantech arena.
“As
the need to reduce carbon emissions becomes increasingly important,
expect to see an acceleration of innovation in clean-tech as businesses
seek out solutions that help reduce carbon, increase efficiency and
support Australia’s transition toward a low carbon economy,” he says.
“And don’t expect big business to dominate share-of-voice. Watch out
for start-ups too, keen to grab their share of the action with some
disruptive communications.”
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