Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBruce Hardy Modified over 9 years ago
2
Plugging the advertising trust gap Jim Nail Principal Analyst Forrester Research
3
Theme Marketers need a new approach to stitch together shattered consumer trust.
4
Agenda Consumers are skeptical of advertising Even consumers with positive attitudes seek verification of ad claims Advertising doesn’t persuade; consumers persuade themselves
5
Background Partners: Forrester Research and Intelliseek’s PlanetFeedback unit Methodology: Email invitation to online survey, early December 2003 Respondents: 470 members of PlanetFeedback »Skew female, tech-savvy, “connectors” »Affluent: mean income $62,500
6
Consumers admit ads have some benefits… Base: 470 responses Source: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
7
…but ads and marketers are losing credibility Base: 470 responses Source: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
8
One-third admit ads influence their purchases “I buy products because of ads for them.” “Accepters” “Rejecters” Base: 470 responses Source: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
9
Consumers understand the ad model, but still want to block ads… “I’d be interested in a product, device, or service that would skip/block…” % Agree somewhat/completely “Without ads I’d have to pay more for TV programs and Internet content” Base: 470 responses Source: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
10
…and are blocking them where they can. “I’ve signed up for or use…” % Currently use/have signed up for Base: 470 responsesSource: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
11
All consumers feel ad overload “What has caused you/would cause you to sign up for services/products that block/skip ads?” % Agree somewhat/completely
12
Only one quarter believe companies are truthful “Companies generally tell the truth in ads.” “Believers” “Skeptics” Base: 470 responses Source: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
13
The trust gap in traditional advertising % Trust somewhat/completely “Indicate your level of trust in the following types of ads” Base: 470 responsesSource: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
14
The trust gap narrows for digital marketing % Trust somewhat/completely “Indicate your level of trust in the following types of ads” Base: 470 responsesSource: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
15
More trust = More data for targeting % Agree somewhat/completely Base: 470 responsesSource: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
16
The story so far…. Consumers are tired of the volume of interruptive, irrelevant, untrustworthy ads – and they are taking action to block them Sneaking around the blocks doesn’t earn trust Consumers want trusted sources – like their own eyes
17
Plugging the Gap #1 – Let go of the hard sell % Trust somewhat/completely “Indicate your level of trust in ads for the following types of products” Base: 470 responsesSource: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
18
Plugging the Gap #1 Let go of the hard sell % Trust somewhat/completely “Indicate your level of trust in ads for the following types of products” Base: 470 responsesSource: Forrester Research, Inc and Intelliseek
19
Plugging the Gap #2 Prepare to defend your claims with facts Base: online consumers Source: Forrester’s Consumer Technographics® 2003 North American Benchmark Study Percent of consumers who go online at least once per week to research a product or service purchase Percent of consumers who have increased online research activity vs last year
20
Plugging the Gap #3 Engage with consumers in a dialogue about your brand Weaving together digital and physical channels to engage consumers’ emotions, deliver brand experiences, and form ongoing relationships Integrated Marketing
21
Jim Nail +1 617/613-5796 jnail@forrester.com www.forrester.com Thank you Entire contents © 2004 Forrester Research, Inc. All rights reserved.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.