Halfway-serious webvertising predictions for 2010
Most predictions are either easy, safe, or just wrong. So why not add a few more to the list? I dare you to go on the record on which ones of these are wrong.
- Mobile Web will become even bigger.
- The kids will continue to text at an alarming rate – it’s private you know.
- Social media will become more important to businesses – especially B2B, entertainment, and high-involvement products and services.
- Television will still be very important to consumer marketing.
- SEO will still not be understood by many ad agencies, nor will they care.
- Flash will still be over used.
- Bad ads will be ignored even more easily.
- Tribilization of users, listeners, and viewers will further fragment audiences and confuse marketers.
- Boomer execs will struggle with understanding social media, much less understanding how to implement it strategically.
- “Guru” will become a four letter word when put after “social media.”
- Clients will still not buy your best ideas but you’ll still be pressured to present it.
- Agencies will be slow to hire, even people they need.
- Web video will continue to blow up and frustrate old school production companies trying to make a profit.
- Begrudgingly marketing executives will accept that Twitter isn’t a fad but still think it’s stupid – then turn on their NASCAR.
- “Microsite” will be removed from the urban dictionary for lack of coolness.
- Foursquare will create real returns for smart business and some guys in New York.
- That Apple tablet will finally appear and so will another iPhone that will make you want to throw away your lame and old 3GS.
- Interactive agencies will leverage their bandwidth and expertise to wrench away agency of record agreements from traditional shops – especially in B2B and tech categories.
- Very-small agencies will be at a disadvantage pitching accounts since most clients will be looking to see strong and expansive digital capabilities from their agency partners.
- Very-large agencies will have a hard time changing course to create true digital capabilities and still meet the new, tightwad, cost expectations of clients.
- Agency people will still be prattling about how cool their iPhones are.
- Same agency people will still be presenting “iPhone App” ideas to clients using Blackberries, Palms, Microsoft, and Google smart phones.
- 13% of Art directors will burn out and start presenting the same layouts in different colors for all concepts, clients, and mediums.
- Salaries will remain flat.
- Your boss or client will buy a Porsche but feel the need to make excuses about how it was too good a deal to pass up.