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Look beyond digital campaigns to long-term goals - Bookmarks judgeThe Bookmarks award judging is done and dusted, and by Thursday evening, 10 November 2011, ad land will know who has won what in the only award show dedicated to rewarding creativity and effectiveness in South Africa's digital marketing and publishing industries. ![]() This year Antti Kupila (@akupila), the technical director at Sid Lee in Amsterdam, was invited as an international representative on the panel judging advertising entries. He spoke to Bizcommunity.com about the standards of SA work, emerging trends in digital marketing and the lack of a global reputation in our digital sector. ![]() Antti Kupila, Sid Lee Amsterdam technical director, and 2011 Bookmarks international judge for advertising panel
The budgets in SA are generally smaller than in Europe but I was pleased to see how far people were able to take their ideas. In the end, it's all about good ideas anyway, not money.
In terms of trends, it's very similar to other places with using Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to create social interactions and discussion but deeper integration could be better, creating more conversation around the brand. Content is still king and simply putting a 'like' button on the site won't check the social checkmark. Another big part was mobile and using USSD and SMS for maximising reach while giving good value to the user. As mobile is so prevalent in Africa in general, I would like to see people utilise this even more, instead of following trends that are present in other markets.
From what I've seen, collaboration doesn't seem to be a problem here; people listen to each other and together do a great job. For interactive media, though, technology is such a big part of this and following a traditional model which has been present in other markets for a long time won't take it to the next level. Instead, I would see the fact that the industry is so new here as a good thing; create the industry instead of following dinosaurs from Europe! For interactive projects, include people with technical expertise from day one!
In addition, consumers here are very aware of cost, which often is more important to minimise, compared to maximising the experience. iPads etc are nice but it's pretty bad idea to introduce something only a handful of people can see. I would say technology in general, though, is not quite world-class. In fact, especially on the web, I think there's a lot of improvement that can be done there.
From a technical point of view, Apple did a good job in their attempt to kill Flash and a lot of agencies and clients are doing HTML for the sake of not doing flash. This, of course, doesn't always make sense but it is what it is. Still pretty much everything that's done now should work on both the web but also on iOS devices and other mobile phones and tablets. Responsive design is where it's going, though - doing something that works from a big 24" screen down to a small screen on a mobile device. The sites resize so that they fit the user, not the other way around, and leave out big assets in order to optimise performance on slower networks on mobile phones.
The Bookmarks Awards takes place on Thursday evening, 10 November. Remember to sign up for the workshops being held in Johannesburg on 8 November and in Cape Town on 9 November. The Bookmarks are powered by FNB; Bizcommunity is an online partner. ![]() For more:
Final question with its answer added at 10:28am on 11 November 2011. About Herman Manson: @marklivesThe inaugural Vodacom Social Media Journalist of the Year in 2011, Herman Manson (@marklives) is a business journalist and media commentator who edits industry news site www.marklives.com. His writing has appeared in newspapers and magazines locally and abroad, including Bizcommunity.com. He also co-founded Brand magazine. View my profile and articles... |