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2015
RETHINK DIGITAL STRATEGY.
HOW THE LATEST INNOVATIONS
WILL SHAPE MARKETING
IN 2015.
#NE
XT
YEAR
!
Four paths to the NEXT Experience.
How winning brands will
be managed in 2015. Page 4
The perfect path to new customers.
Brands are carrying content
for themselves. Page 24
Challenge and opportunity meet
head-on. Amazon and Apple are
turning retailing on its head. Page 8
The key to campaign success is data.
But only if you can unlock their value.
Page 30
What’s NEXT? Digitalisation
is triggering leadership
­transformation. Page 34
#iNTRO
#COmmerce
Everything is connected and things
are starting to speak. Brands
are creating new uses through the
Internet of Things. Page 16
#CONNECTION
#COnTENT#CAMPAIGN
#OUTRO
#iN
DE
X
01 05–07 NEXT Experience
#In
TR
O
By NILS WOLLNY
5
#intronextExperience
NEXT EXPERIENCE
No more marketing routine.
Brands need digital user experiences with vision
6
#intronextExperience
“Services such as
UBER or Netflix are
showing how it is
done. They combine
commerce with
connection, content
and campaign to
create an out­
standing offering.”
NILS WOLLNY
MANAGING DIRECTOR STRATEGY
SINNERSCHRADER
Digitalisation marches on, changing every-
thing in its path. It impacts on every single
individual as well as on society as a whole,
on business models and on entire indus-
tries. This change sets new challenges for
companies as well as opening up new op-
portunities at the same time ... with one
prerequisite: an unconditional focus on the
user and his or her needs.
NEXT GENERATION:
I want it all, now
Together with the rheingold institute, Sinner-
Schrader carried out a qualitative study of
young people between the ages of 6 and 29,
asking about their digital life. The main
finding: no one in this age group can imag-
ine life without the smartphone or the ser-
vices that come with it. Intensive and mas-
terly interaction with digital technologies is
the norm. They distinguish less between
‘online’ and ‘offline’, and more between
‘onscreen’ and ‘offscreen’ – although this
boundary, too, is becoming increasingly
blurred.
Young people confront the daily torrent
of offers and information with an out-and-
out digital mind-set: quick decisions based
on a like or dislike logic, declining anything
that does not promise immediate utility.
The expectations of the digital experi-
ence that a brand can offer are based on its
user value and on the criterion of maxi-
mum simplicity. Established players like
Apple, Google or Facebook set the stand-
ards in terms of functionality, look and feel,
and design. Everything in the digital space
is compared with them. To continue to be
perceived as a brand in this context re-
quires focusing on the design of digital ex-
periences.
NEXT EXPERIENCE:
the four elements of a digital brand
More than ever, meeting the new demands
of the user necessitates a clear and decis-
ive rejection of well-established marketing
routines. This in turn requires a company
culture that is oriented towards the needs
and interests of the user in every way – with
leadership that is actively shaping the digi-
tal change. A major task here is to concei-
ve for the future, constantly developing and
refining digital user experiences. It is about
creating the blueprint for an entire NEXT
EXPERIENCE, consisting of four elements:
D
7
#intronextExperience
Nils Wollny
is Managing Director Strategy at Sinner-
Schrader. Working and thinking user-
centrically, he helps companies in diverse
sectors to accelerate innovation and
digitalisation.
Commerce – Transactions of goods and
services. Companies like Amazon have al-
tered the buying behaviour of people enor-
mously in the last two decades. The next
wave of innovations, which will again rev-
olutionise user behaviour, is imminent: mo-
bile payment, intelligent logistics and bea-
con technology.
Connection – connecting the physical and
virtual worlds. Products such as the Apple
Watch or Google Glass are raising the op-
portunities for wearables to a new level. At
the same time, technologies like beacons
and NFC are bringing about new types of
services. In addition, private 3D printers are
creating entirely new product categories.
Content – material which is of great inter-
est to the user. Traditional advertising cam-
paigns leave the NEXT GENERATION baf-
fled. At the same time the auction models
of the network giants are reducing the ef-
fectiveness of marketing spend. And ag-
gregators are becoming the gatekeepers
for digital offerings. For brands, therefore,
developing a content strategy that offers
genuine added value to the user is essen-
tial for survival.
Campaign – communication between a
brand and its public. Campaigns are cur-
rently undergoing a twofold evolution: a
change that is both systemic and content-
based. Thanks to new technologies, the
distribution side of campaigns and content
has become more effective, with message
and content becoming both ‘personalisa-
ble’ and adaptable in real time.
A well-conceived and integrated NEXT
EXPERIENCE can combine these four ele-
ments into a novel and convincing offering.
Services like UBER and Netflix are al-
ready transforming the transportation and
entertainment industries respectively, us-
ing: connection (vehicle tracking via smart-
phone or device-agnostic distribution), con-
tent (liberalisation of the travel business or
Netflix’ own programs) and campaigns (af-
filiate marketing or social media) to create
outstanding commercial propositions.
NEXT AGENCY:
The agency for a new age
Developing such outstanding offerings
and overseeing their realisation is only
possible with a new type of agency: one
that assists companies to keep pace with
the speed of technologies and users – be-
cause this is what they do themselves.
One that analyses people’s behaviour, gets
to the bottom of it, and is in a position to
alter it with its ideas. One that thinks in
terms of holistically conceived, living sys-
tems, which are designed to grow and
constantly change.
SinnerSchrader interfaces with tech-
nology, people and brands, developing and
implementing products and services that
add value, and always with the user at
heart. As the initiator of the international
conference NEXT, we have been influenc-
ing digital trends for years. We fuse crea-
tive ideas and technology to develop solu-
tions that make our clients successful. That
is our claim. That’s what makes us the
NEXT AGENCY.
02 09–12
13–15 Mobile Payment
#co
mm
erce
by Olaf KolbrückTHE Amazon challenge
by Meike Schreiber
9
#commerceAMAZONChallenge
What Amazon’s dominant position means
for costumers and marketers
the Amazon CHALLENGE
When Amazon chief Jeff Bezos stopped off
with friends at Mount Rushmore in 2001, he
was himself something of a tourist attrac-
tion – not as the CEO of a company that
was powerful even back then – but as the
guy from the Taco bell TV ads, at the time
for cheese tortillas. Perhaps Bezos has
harboured an ambivalent relationship with
advertising since then. For years Amazon
ran a mile from TV spots. Before the digital
giant did eventually book TV time for the
W
10
0
500
1,500
1,000
2,000
E-COMMERCE GLOBALLY
TURNOVER IN BILLION US-DOLLARS* PROGNOSIS
2012 to 2017
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
1,058
1,248
1,500*
1,763*
2,043*
2,345*
3.0 20.6
BILLION US-DOLLARS
1ST QUARTER 2007
BILLION US-DOLLARS
3RD QUARTER 2014
PARCEL VOLUME
IN GERMANY FROM
2000 TO 2013
AMAZON.COM TURNOVER FROM 2007 TO 2014
2.66 BILLION IN 2013
1.69 BILLION IN 2000
DOES SHOPPING EXHAUST YOU?
ONLINEIN SHOPS
YES
NO
57%
43%
23%
77%
People using mobile devices to shop online
MOBILE COMMERCE 2011/2014
NO USAGE
USAGE
81%
sources:eMarketer(2),bevh,boniversum,BIEK,KEConsult,Amazon,DHL-StudieEinkaufen4.0
38%
11
#commerceAMAZONChallenge
Kindle reader, Bezos viewed classical ad-
vertising as a sign of weakness: “Advertis-
ing is the price you pay for having an unre-
markable product or service.”
In future he would make the advertis-
ing industry pay. In all probability the ad
men didn’t even notice what was facing
them. One person who did grasp its signif-
icance is Google CEO Eric Schmidt: “Our
biggest search competitor is Amazon.”
After all, one in every three product search-
es is already carried out in Amazon and not
in Google. That means fewer clicks and
fewer AdWords dollars for Google. But it’s
not all about search.
With the exception of Eric Schmidt, the
rest of the world still sees Amazon above
all as an online sales platform, as a quasi-
monopolist even, which looks to gain ever
more market share with little thought for
profit. With good reason: almost every sec-
ond e-book in Germany is bought following
recommendations from Amazon. Amazon
has more than 40 percent share of the en-
tire book market (this, too, is only like read-
ing tea leaves). In 2013 its turnover in
books, music, electronics and clothing in
Germany totalled €7.7 billion. One in four
euros spent in Germany on e-commerce is
pocketed by Amazon.
And Bazos is doing his utmost to en-
sure customers stay with him. He is build-
ing a digital conglomerate that includes:
clearly subsidised Kindles, its own publish-
ing programme for authors, a digital library
with an ‘all you can read’ flat rate, content
suppliers with their own TV productions for
its ‘Instant Video’ play station and the ‘Fire
TV’ in-house TV set-top box. The purchase
of the Washington Post fits into the overall
picture too, strengthening the content of-
fering for the Kindle. The purchase of
‘Twitch’, a YouTube for gamers, ensures yet
more content and new sales leverage.
And then there’s the ‘Fire Phone’ To
date it hasn’t been a big sales hit. Nor does
it have to be. Bezos takes a long term view
of the smartphone. It not only triggers the
sale of more digital content, above all it
hoovers up data: with a single touch of a
button the user activates the purchase-fea-
ture and can buy products, music and vid-
eos taken by its camera and/or micro-
phone. In this way the mobile phone turns
the world into a showroom, and Amazon is
not only positioned right at the start of the
sales process, but makes even Google
search in part superfluous. Why bother typ-
ing into a search engine when a simple
photo will do?
There’s more: Amazon saves photos
taken with the ‘Firefly’ feature to improve
the functioning of its system.
Through additional GPS data, local
information and other metadata the com-
pany learns more about the user: where
they shop, what they do in their free time,
what interests them apart from shopping
and maybe what they have kept hidden
from Amazon up to now. For example, say
you take a picture of your child with the
recognition tool. Amazon can use this for
precise product recommendations and
more impactful advertising.
So while Google can only tell advertis-
ers what users are searching for and click-
ing on, Amazon can tell them what they are
actually buying, where and how often they
are buying it, and increasingly and more
“Our biggest
search competitor
IS Amazon.”
Eric Schmidt
Executive Chairman Google
12
#commerceAMAZONChallenge
precisely – with an ever closer eye on the
Customer Journey – why they are buying it.
Amazon has only really been a com-
petitor for Schmidt since the company has
been accused of going after more advertis-
ing spend and utilising its data goldmine to
this end. Amazon already wants to start its
own display advertising network in 2015
and to place advertising space similar to
AdWords. Firstly the advertising will appear
on its own website, and then later also on
other publishers’ sites. In doing so Amazon
is entering into direct competition with
Google.
And not just Google. The targeting gold-
mine impacts equally on marketers, tech-
nology providers and agencies. If Amazon
starts to peddle its own personalisation
algorithm and its data power, it will make
these service providers superfluous to
some extent. It is not just a case of Amazon
being able to achieve outstanding conver-
sion rates due to its data and its reach. With
each single click Amazon enhances its
know-how to improve its own products, its
own content and its own services.
There is a lesson in how this online giant
deals with its partners: if the data shows
that a new product is selling particularly
well in a seller’s marketplace, that is often
a cue for Amazon to sell it directly – under-
cutting all other prices in the process. If a
consumer goods manufacturer comes to
enjoy double-digit market share on Ama-
zon, Amazon puts on a real squeeze for re-
bates and new terms, as book publishers
in particular have found out, with corre-
sponding impact on sales too.
For Amazon is interested above all in
low prices – and cross-subsidisation of the
manufacturer’s and trader’s advertising
monies suits that goal perfectly. Charges
(effectively ‘tolls’) could work one day to
the detriment of these brands, if Amazon
were to support predatory pricing with
marketing monies, to force through its own
brands against the competition, for exam-
ple. Or to undercut in the trader’s market-
place. Ultimately, Amazon can always be
cheaper, because it alone can avoid the
Amazon charge.
Olaf Kolbrück
is founder and director of specialist
­e-commerce portal etailment.de
and author of the book ‘Erfolgsfaktor
Online-Marketing’. From 2000 to
2013 he was a reporter with HORIZONT
­magazine, with responsibility for
internet and ­e-business.
How to deal with amazon
#	Exploit presentation options
such as product descriptions, product
images, videos.
#	Utilise Amazon advertising
packages such as the Brand Store
to expand your own channels.
#	Offer only certain product lines on
Amazon.
#	Strengthen and/or diversify through
other sales channels.
#	Sell private labels and new
products initially through your own
channels only.
13
#commercemobilepayment
When your smartphone becomes your wallet
Mobile Payment
When Apple chief Tim Cook revealed the
iPhone 6 in autumn 2014, one new feature
in particular caused lively debate especial-
ly among the brand’s aficionados: the
‘Apple Pay’ mobile payment function. Cook
announced presumptuously: “Apple Pay
will forever change the way we buy.”
Time will tell. Owners of the new iPhone
have only been able to pay with it since
­October 2014 – and so far only at 220,000
contact points in the US. At its heart is
Near Field Communications (NFC) technol-
ogy, which transmits data by a radio signal
from mobile phone to a station. For secu-
rity, users must identify themselves by fin-
gerprint. In Europe, where NFC technology
is actually more widespread than in the
United States, the service is expected to be
available to iPhone users from 2015, by
which time wearers of the Apple Watch in
the US will also be able to use it.
One thing is clear: paying is getting
easier. A new technical revolution is around
the corner. With the introduction of iTunes,
Apple has already proven that people’s pur-
chasing behaviour can be radically altered.
For each Apple-Pay transaction of 100
dollars, the Americans pocket a 15 cent
charge from participating banks and card
providers – which Apple claims makes it
cheaper than other payment methods.
W
14
11 12 13 14 2015
+60 %
81 %
#commercemobilepayment
“Up to now no technology has been able to
establish itself on the mass market. The
latest push from Apple with various credit
card providers could change this in the me-
dium term, however,” wrote Deutsche Bank
in a study of the FinTech sector.
The trend is clear: in 2013 the volume
of cashless payments globally rose by 9.4%
to 366 billion transactions, compared to
2012. According to the latest Payment Re-
port by consultancy firm Capgemini, this
was “due to the strong growth in emerging
markets as well as increased use of cred-
it and debit cards, especially in electronic
and mobile payments.”
With more and more people using tab-
lets and smartphones, the lines between
online and mobile payments are becoming
increasingly blurred, according to Cap­
gemini. The consultancy anticipates an in-
crease in mobile payments worldwide of
around 60% per year from 2011 to 2015. For
online payments, on the other hand, Cap-
gemini has forecast a yearly rise of “only”
16% over the same period.
Even in Germany, long a mecca for
notes and coins, many more people are
likely to pay without cash in the near future.
The auditing and consulting firm PwC esti-
mates that the 176,000 end users in Germa-
ny who currently pay by mobile will rise to
11 million by 2020.
And Apple isn’t necessarily the trail-
blazer. Many start-ups, banks and mobile
phone operators already offer mobile pay-
ment options. And even the Ebay subsidi-
ary PayPal is currently testing an app for
mobile payments in Germany. However,
thus far, no system has established itself.
At present only 40,000 of the more than
740,000 payment terminals in Germany
can communicate with mobile devices or
special cards.
That may change: MasterCard recent-
ly compelled all its German retail partners
to convert their terminals to NFC technol-
ogy by 2018 at the latest. A survey by the
EHI Retail Institute of 55 retailers with a
total of 58,300 outlets found that 81 per cent
want to upgrade their cashier systems.
But what about the banks, whose core
business is, after all, payments? For the
time being they are relieved that Apple
continues to cooperate with them. The
German Sparkassen (savings banks), for
example, have already announced that they
Annual growth of mobile payments
from 2011 to 2015
Shops planning to adjust to mobile
payment by 2018
source:EHIRETAILINSTITUTE
15
#commercemobilepayment
wish to work together with Apple. As a pay-
ment is only completed when the custom-
er’s account has been debited. “The cake
has not yet been divided up,” contends
Deutsche Bank in its latest FinTech study.
Banks will not give up the commissions
that go along with payments without a
fight. Nor should they: experts at Deutsche
Bank believe that, in the current test phase,
the traditional finance providers have the
opportunity to play a part in formulating
digital payment solutions.
In marketing departments, too, espe-
cially those of manufacturers of consumer
goods, experts are musing over how Apple
Pay will influence purchase decisions. The
widely held view is that opportunities lie in
particular with Apple’s Passbook app for
loyalty programmes, which in all probabil-
ity will be linked to its payment system.
Marketing decision-makers need to ensure
that users can easily deposit their loyalty
programmes or coupons with the app. The
app can then advise the customer how
many points their current purchase is
worth or automatically pay for a product
with the appropriate coupon.
Anneke Neuhaus, marketing expert at the
Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences,
says: “Marketing decision-makers need to
ask what benefits the customer can draw
from it. Further information on the prod-
uct can be provided via smartphone, for
example. In the case of higher value prod-
ucts, why not offer an explanatory video or
an alternative model in a different price
category? The customer can acquaint
himself or herself with the product or take
advantage of a discount scheme or bonus
points by using the payment function.”
Moreover, manufacturers will understand
their customers better and utilise this
insight for product development or for im-
proving communications. “The opportuni-
ty to interact with the customer this way
can lead to some displacement in the
market, but equally to a genuine win-win,”
says Neuhaus.
The delicate issue surrounding data
protection raised by the NSA affair re-
mains. At Apple they are at least attuned to
the sensitivities of Europeans in particular.
“Apple doesn’t know what you have bought,
where you bought it, or how much you have
paid for it, ” swore the management at the
reveal of Apple Pay.
Meike schreiber
Meike Schreiber is a Frankfurt-based
journalist who has been reporting
for many years on the banking sector.
She founded the journalist agency
SchreiberDohms along with Heinz-Roger
Dohms. Both write for ‘Capital’, ‘manager
magazin online’ and ‘DIE ZEIT’, among
other titles.
“Most of our spending
right now happens
offline, and that’s
starting to shift.
All of our payments
are moving online.”
John Collison
CEO OF THE PAYMENT START-UP STRIPE
03
20
17–19
21–23
Beacons
Internet of things
Mobile connections
#co
nn
ect
ion
by Laurent Burdin
by Axel Averdung
by Peter Bihr
17
#connectioninternetofthings
INTERNET
OF
THINGS
Connecting things for fun and profit
18
#connectioninternetofthings
If everyday objects could talk, what would
they say? That is the question we should
ask ourselves when thinking about the
­opportunities offered by the Internet of
Things, or IoT for short. The IoT is what you
get by connecting physical objects – TVs,
cargo containers, bracelets, coffee makers,
cars or thermostats – to the internet: A
connected world, studded with sensors,
permanently exchanging data with both
machines and humans. And it is one of the
most influential trends in technology we
have seen since the advent of the consum-
er internet itself. How can IoT be beneficial
in the context of marketing?
Data and deep engagement
Over the last few years, we have witnessed
a wide range of experiments around the IoT.
Many of the more widely known ones were
driven by advertising. To name one well-re-
spected example, Budweiser built a big red
light that connected to the web and checked
a feed for ice hockey results. Whenever the
user’s favorite team scored a goal, the light
would flash, and a loud horn would sound.
It was a cute, well-executed and playful
way to engage with fans around a topic
they were passionate about. Hundreds of
these lamps were sold as these fans paid
money for an advertisement in their living
rooms. As advertising ideas go, this one
was very smart. And it just scratched the
surface of what is possible.
The IoT allows for a much deeper engage-
ment and has the advantage of allowing us
to collect and analyse data to build servic-
es that are valuable to both the audience as
well as marketers. Two areas offer partic-
ularly huge opportunities for fast movers
who overcome the (sometimes thorny)
challenge of balancing value-add versus
‘data collection creepiness’: Wearable tech-
nology and connected driving.
Wonderful Wearables
What happens if you strap a smart watch
to your wrist or place a fitness tracker in
your pocket? By putting on wearable tech-
nology (Wearables for short) you allow a
computer complete with sensors and inter-
net connectivity into your life. Most of us
don’t think much about it, after all we car-
ry a connected computer almost constant-
ly anyway: Our smartphone.
As sensors and chips get both smaller
and cheaper, Wearables evolve. Rather
than bulky smart watches, we see styl-
ish accessories: Jewellery and fashion
are increasingly connected, too. A ring
that subtly notifies you of a text message
from your spouse? New York startup Ring-
ly has created one. Clothing that tracks
your vital signs? Look no further than the
sports bras and running shirts that San
Francisco-based Sensilk is currently devel-
oping.
What today may sound like gadgets for
early adopters will be a normal part of life
within just a few years. If we build services
today that are so good, valuable or inter-
esting that users let them into their every-
day lives, it allows for huge engagement
opportunities.
I
19
#connectioninternetofthings
Crowdshaping
With new technologies at hand, data cap-
tured from people in the physical world
can be used to reshape experiences.
Wearable bracelets like the Lightwave, an
invention by Silicon Valley technologist
Rana June, can measure physical engage-
ment and energy levels of the people
wearing them – like in this case allowing
the DJ to play with the information and to
show the most active dancers on a leader
board. This kind of innovation cannot only
be applied to performances, it can also
­reshape the way we shop. Just imagine,
for example, advertisements that adjust in
real-time to the emotions of a TV-audience
or in-store offers reshaped by the energy
level of the shopping crowd.
Connected driving
Along with data, cars move into the cloud
– or rather, the cloud moves into the car.
Automobiles become another media sur-
face, another interface. As cars – owned
or shared – get connected to the internet,
the car stops being a mere means of
transportation.
By combining navigational data (where
you are now and where you want to go),
­intentional information (your calendar
knows where you want to go, why and with
whom) and external data sources (weath-
er, traffic, event information) we have a
treasure trove of data points to work with.
We can build true context-aware services.
This could range from subtle reminders to
more complex offerings. Two examples:
•  Shopping reminders: “Your fridge says
that you need milk. We are passing by a
supermarket with milk on offer in two
minutes. Do you want me to recalculate
your route?”
•  Media recommendations: “Based on
current traffic information, your drive
is estimated to last about 28 minutes.
Should I read you a few chapters of
your audio book?”
The key: respecting privacy
The key to success is, as always, to be sen-
sible. With the tools provided by the Inter-
net of Things, companies are tempted to
collect as much data as possible just to be
safe: Collect first, analyse later. In Germa-
ny, more than anywhere, consumers are
highly sensitive to data collection and the
implications for their privacy. As such, we
will see consumers reward those compa-
nies who find the best balance between
marketing that offers added value based on
data analytics on the one side and respect
for privacy on the other. Don’t be a creep,
and consumers might allow you into their
lives. If they do, both sides will benefit.
peter bihr
Peter Bihr is the founder of The Waving
Cat, where he explores the impact of
emerging technologies and helps apply
the insights of innovators through
­consulting and conferences like Things-
Con and NEXT Berlin.
20
#connectionbeacons
“Software Is Eating The World” explained
the entrepreneur, investor and developer
Marc Andreessen in a famous essay of 2011.
“How come?” one may ask: Sure, doesn’t
the physical world still consist mainly of at-
oms, even if bits are taking over in the dig-
ital sphere?
Part of the answer lies in beacons (or
iBeacons, as Apple calls them), which
­connect the physical and digital worlds. Bea-
cons are nothing more than small transmit­
ters with low energy consumption and lim-
ited local reach. Mobile phones, for example,
can receive and react to their signals.
It is thanks to beacons that an app
knows the location of its user and can of-
fer him or her a relevant user experience
in that context. Among the earliest adop-
ters are retailers – no surprise that Apple
quickly equipped its own stores and
­upgraded the Apple Store app accordingly.
But the possibilities go well beyond the
retail space. Interactive museum guides con-
verse with visitors via beacons, explaining all
about the latest exhibitions. In the US, fans
inside baseball stadiums receive back-
ground information on the game that is tak-
ing place. The ticket inspector on the train
makes his presence known to the railway
app via a beacon, as a result of which the app
on the passenger’s smartphone automatic­
ally displays his or her digital ­ticket.
All kinds of new interfaces can be cre-
ated. In place of cumbersome ATMs, as we
know them, bank customers can avail
themselves of an elegant app which, thanks
to beacons, knows which customer is at the
ATM. After a minimum of interaction the
machine dispenses the desired amount.
The scope for innovative services is
practically limitless. But here, too, success
will depend on how well the user’s require-
ments are considered and how the content
and user experience is suited to the loca-
tion and context. For marketers, beacons
become valuable, when indiviual interac-
tions with the brand or its products are
beautifully designed to create real benefits
for the consumers. The most important
thing is to stay relevant: If it isn’t relevant,
the user will ignore it. Creativity, too, is
called for. After all, to just send out pushy
messages flagging the latest special offers
is to ignore the opportunities which bea-
cons provide.
The invisible keys to new services
Dr. Axel Averdung
is Head of Strategy at SinnerSchrader
und developes innovative solutions for
digital products and services.
S
BEACONS
21
#connectionmobileconnections
Mobile
cONNECTIONS
Dawn of a magical times
The watch on your wrist has long stopped
ticking. Instead, you can talk to it, read the
news on it, or pay for a coffee with it. It’s
likely, in the coming year, that every early
adopter will wear one, and so get to expe-
rience all the wonder of mobile connectiv-
ity: new technologies, new applications and
new customers. With the smartwatch and
other innovations, the Age of Connected
Devices is dawning. So what will the world
be like, when everything is connected with
everything else? And what consequences
will that bring for the mobile sector?
T
22
#connectionmobileconnections
A torrent sweeping through the sector
Experts are predicting that the number of
connected devices will increase one hun-
dred fold within the next five years. The
mobile sector will become the mobile con-
nectivity sector. Everyone will be affected
– developers, start-ups, agencies, provid-
ers of mobile products, marketers and big
brands. A look at Berlin, where the mobile
sector in Germany is particularly well­
represented, reveals the magnitude of the
upheaval that is currently taking place.
The technological revolution
Behind this trend are three technological
drivers: the devices, the connectivity and
the cloud. Every few months the device
manufacturers introduce new features
such as mobile payment or smart objects
– more memory, more performance, more
screen. The connectivity options are also
becoming greater: mobile communica-
tions, Wi-Fi, NFC, Bluetooth Low Energy
and proprietary in-car connectivity such as
CarPlay or Android Auto. Behind them lie
the cloud services, which gather and ana-
lyse all the data. Working wonders with
everyday stuff! Coffee lovers, for example,
can connect via an app with the Espresso
machine in the coffee shop, which then
brews the desired coffee. Payment for the
cappuccino then takes place automatically
with the smartphone. This is already a
­reality at TopBrewer in Copenhagen. It’s
child’s play for the customer and extreme-
ly time-saving for the coffee shop.
Powering the market
Consumers are ready. And so are electrical
retailers: MediaMarkt recently created a
large department for digital wristbands
and smartwatches and wants to expand it
further. Remember the headphone market?
Small and unexciting only three years ago,
it now features lots of interesting products
and retailers offer a large range of them. It
will be the same with Connected Devices.
From mobile marketing
to connectivity strategy in 6 steps
	today:
1.	Dedicate far greater resources
to managing mobile assets (app
and web).
2.	Raise activity levels to achieve
greater frequency and higher
numbers of app downloads.
3.	Improve those neglected mobile
web portals.
	tomorrow:
4.	Create a user case related to a
device (e.g. smartwatch).
5.	Connect web applications with
the physical world (e.g. in stores).
6.	Develop your own proprietary
­connected device.
23
#connectionmobileconnections
Personalised stimuli
Opportunities to reach customers and
­prospective customers at just the right
­moment have increased enormously. Per-
sonalised stimuli allow for a completely
new form of Customer Relationship Man-
agement, which in retail can make all the
difference. A new shopping centre in Mar-
seilles, fitted out with 240 beacons, illus-
trates just how it works: if the customer
has the relevant app, he or she receives
location-based promotions from the stores,
and the shopping centre can analyse in de-
tail the resulting customer traffic.
The end of isolation
An app here, an app there, maybe a mobile
website, a customer app, then a banner and
a mobile landing page ... the mobile sector
has long offered only additions to isolated
applications. Now stand-alone solutions
are being connected with the physical
world: with a smartwatch, with a beacon in
a shop, stadium or museum, with a check-
out, a door, a piece of packaging or a car –
and all of it based on technologies and code
languages from the mobile sector.
Pressing ahead with no standards
The biggest mistake here is to do nothing.
Despite the absence of technical stand-
ards, all the big players are already active
in the game. Google is positioning itself
with Nest in the area of home automation
for house and office. Behind the iBeacon
lies an Apple protocol. And all players are
developing in-car platforms.  
Laurent Burdin
is Managing Director of SinnerSchrader Mobile
in Berlin, right in the heart of Germany’s mobile
ecosystem.
“The biggest mistake
is to do nothing.”
“The area of mobile connectivity holds huge
­opportunities, but considerable risks at the same
time. The biggest risk is to do nothing. We can
see that currently in the retail industry, where
we are talking about the likes of Amazon and
other giants such as Alibaba, with a market
capitalisation of over $200 billion. Many of those
involved are banking seriously on innovative
mobile solutions: Tesco, for example, with co-
nnected price signage, the rolling out of a beacon
network and push notifications in store. Or
Amazon with its own ‘Dash’ device, a barcode
reader with a microphone, which helps to
draw up household shopping lists and connects
automatically with the app, thus enabling One-
Click-Shopping. Imagine if every brand were
to bring its own device onto the market to connect
with its customers in its own charming way.
That would be the stuff of dreams in my book.”
04 25–27
28–29
Best Practice
Entertainment
#co
nt
ent
by Nils Jacobsen
by Adam Tinworth
25
#contentBestPractice
Best practice
curved.de – The ‘Michelin Guide’
for the mobile generation
“An iPod. A phone. An internet mobile
communicator.”
Eight years ago Apple’s founder pre-
sented his invention to the world. The
gadget would influence the culture of the
21st century like no other, and pave the way
for the triumph of the smartphone.
Within the past few years our usage
habits have changed fundamentally – away
from the desk, and over to the smartphone
or tablet. “Mobile first” is being increasingly
replaced by “Mobile only”, especially among
the young generation. Mobile has won out.
But what does this younger revolution
mean for telecommunications and mobile
phone providers, who connect millions of
customers around the world with their net-
works? Above all, it means a complete re-
think. The telephony and SMS business
model is the stuff of yesterday. In the near
future it is data volume which will make up
the lion’s share of revenue. But how and
where can (potential) customers be rea-
ched most efficiently?
This is something which E-Plus, for ex-
ample (now number one in the German
mobile phone market following its merger
with O2) has to address. In this broadly sat-
urated market, the key is to develop points
of differentiation. Traditional TV and print
advertising have long been able to reach
the target market only marginally and for
a short time-span. The internet would ap-
pear to be the natural way to go. With ban-
A
26
#contentBestPractice
ner advertising and initiatives to acquire
new customers through online and social
media seemingly exhausted, CURVED cre-
ates a new route.
Content for ‘Generation Touch’
On behalf of the E-Plus Group, Sinner-
Schrader launched the CURVED platform
at the beginning of 2014 – providing the
Generation Touch with a tech portal for the
mobile era, something which had been pre-
viously lacking. CURVED reports on the hu-
man side of the mobile revolution, telling
us what the gadgets are doing for our lives,
how they are making our everyday easier
and driving social progress.
The concept draws on a successful
100-year-old recipe: content marketing.
John Deere, the American agricultural
­machinery manufacturer, has been talking
to its customers in ‘The Furrow’ magazine
since 1895. Another fine example of ­suc-
cessful content marketing comes from
1900: the Michelin Guide. The brainchild of
tyre manufacturer Michelin, the restau-
rant guide has long given motorists good
­reasons to go that extra mile – and to use
more tyres, thus contributing to increased
sales in the process. Since the very begin-
ning, the success of this model is based on
two pillars: the quality of the content itself
and the integrity achieved by separating
the brand from that content.
Reach rules 
More than a century later, CURVED is
adapting this principle for the digital age.
The editorial team, made up of experienced
tech journalists, offers smartphone users
round-the-clock support and help, orienta-
tion, analysis, background pieces and ad-
vice. Over 25 new articles appear each
day on the site, which reaches 1.3 million
unique users per month. Independent
­editorial content – which, from a quality
perspective, is journalistically the match of
any traditional media title – is the founda-
tion of this sustained growth.
The rapid rise in reach has been possible
due to a steep learning curve and constant
monitoring of the traffic generated per ar-
ticle. SEO experts help to priorise subjects
and keywords and ensure the website is
optimised technically for Google. Visibility
on Google is a critical determinant of suc-
cess, as being on the Google News Index
leads to an explosion in traffic: Presence on
organic search delivers sustained traffic
for CURVED, even for older articles.
So what direct benefits does E-Plus
draw from CURVED? “Leads generated by
content enjoy better conversion in our
Shops than do leads from advertising”,
according to Jürgen Rösger, who, as Chief
Digital Officer (CDO) at E-Plus, supervised
the introduction of CURVED. In other words,
the more often a page is read, the higher
the conversion rate. The articles concerned
are linked to appropriate products in the
Shop, with additional banners – and adver-
torials including offers – developed specif-
ically for readers of CURVED.
CURVED’s success formula can serve
as a blueprint for other sectors: why let
‘manager magazin’ or ‘Rolling Stone’ do
what a bank or music portal with suitable
product links can do just as well?
Nils Jacobsen
Nils Jacobsen is a financial and tech
journalist with 15 years of experience.
Apart from being the editor-in-chief
for CURVED, he writes among others for
the media portal MEEDIA and Yahoo.
27
#contentBestPractce
How are things at CURVED one year on?
Nils Jacobsen: Very positive. SinnerSchrader has
managed to create a tech portal that works, in just
100 days. With over 1.3 million users visiting
CURVED each month, we already have twice as
many as the online offerings of ‘Neon’, ‘Computer-
woche’ or ‘Horizont’. Editorial independence is
clearly the basis for sustained growth.
What are your key success factors?
Felix Disselhoff: The technical foundation, which
SinnerSchrader brings to the table as one of
Europe’s leading digital agencies, is extremely
­important. The interface between editorial and
programming allows problems to be solved very
­rapidly and in an integrated way. Above all,
though, contemporay content is the key in the
­mobile tech space.
What can marketers in other sectors learn
from CURVED ?
Nils Jacobsen: These days innovative projects are
taking place almost exclusively online. The learn-
ing effects occur practically on a daily basis – even
in the interaction with our readers in the form of
comments or social media. CURVED’s success as
a content provider can certainly be transferred to
other sector portals in the music, lifestyle, food or
finance space, but not without adapting it. The tech
space has its own particular target group.
In your opinion, what are the prerequisites
for a successful content portal?
Felix Disselhoff: An absolute commitment to editori-
al independence and lots of patience.We were not ex-
pecting CURVED to be the rapid success it has been,
but in the fast-moving tech scene no two months
are the same. Every day is a new challenge.
Interview with CURVED editors-in-chief
Nils Jacobsen and Felix Disselhoff
“Leads generated
by content enjoy
better conver-
sion in our Shops
than do leads
from advertising.”
Jürgen Rösger
CO-FOUNDER OF CURVED
28
#contententertainment
TV used to be such a simple medium. You
checked the schedule, you switched it on
and watched it. Or you missed it. All very
simple.
Those days are very long gone. Televi-
sion has been going through the same dig-
ital disruption as other forms of content –
but in slow motion. A decade ago people
were talking actively about the end of line-
ar TV – and yet, it endures. There hasn’t
been a single device-based disruption to
change things, or a single service that
­upended the business. Instead, disruption
is coming from all angles, in a multitude of
forms.
On one extreme you have the rise of
paid streaming services. The last couple of
years has seen a proliferation of streaming
boxes to attach to your TV. Apple’s “hobby”,
the Apple TV, has long been a front-end
for iTunes content, but now serves as a
streamer for Netflix and an ever increasing
number of other services. Google has two
offerings in the fray: the Chromecast stick
– a tiny budget device, which allows video
to be ‘cast’ from other devices, and the new
Android TV-based Nexus Player. Amazon
released its Fire TV earlier in the year,
­primarily as a front-end for its Prime
Streaming service.
What started as peripheral services
have now become proto-TV studios in their
The Superseding of the Goggle-Box
YOUTUBE-STAR PEWDIEPIE
Earning millions with funny gamer videos
T
entertainment
29
#contententertainment
own right. Netflix has been creating original
series for a while – and extending the life of
cancelled series like ‘Arrested Develop-
ment’. However, it’s now going even bigger
by expanding the vastly successful Marvel
Comics movie franchise. Five interlinked
series are being shot now, introducing a
group of street-level superheroes, who will
eventually come together as a team.
Amazon has also dipped its toes into
the original content production world, with
three rounds of pilot productions, many of
which have gone to series – including the
well-reviewed ‘Transparent’. And, unlike
­traditional broadcasting, these series are
usually released simultaneously, rather
than serialised across weeks or months.
This is no longer appointment TV, but sto-
rytelling for the post DVD boxset age.
This changes the relationship with
marketers and advertisers. For one, this
new breed of television series does not
carry advertising. In effect, the series is,
­itself, advertising for the streaming sub-
scription. For those looking to ride on the
back of their success, the only opportuni-
ties seem to lie in product placement.
Perhaps the most interesting develop-
ment, though, has been the rise of the You-
Tube celebrity to the point where they have
become viable media brands in their own
right. YouTube has been heavily promoting
its biggest celebrities – because of the ad-
vertising revenue they can draw. PewDie-
Pie – real name Felix Arvid Ulf Kjellberg –
is the biggest celebrity they have right now.
He produces videos for gaming fans which
rapidly cruise past the 2m to 3m views
mark, from 30 million followers. According
to The Atlantic, ads on those videos net him
between $140,000 and $1.4m – a month.
His current contract with Maker Studios
ends now. It’ll be interesting to see what he
does next.
Michelle Phan, Bethany Mota and Ro-
sanna Pansino, the stars featured in You-
Tube’s advertising campaigns, cover fash-
ion, beauty and cooking. They’re one per-
son lifestyle brands, talking direct to huge
audiences in a way that traditional TV
would have rejected as unprofessional. A
new medium is emerging, one with very
different content rules from the old one.
There’s a new vocabulary of video con-
tent that makes sense in a digital world.
BuzzFeed, that content powerhouse, has
invested a significant amount of money in
both hiring top-flight talent – renowned
­online video pioneer Ze Frank – and build-
ing a studio to produce its video work. The
studio has a large number of standing sets
of classic locations – homes, offices, cafés,
and the like – which allow them to quickly
go from drawing up an idea to shooting the
video on the set. BuzzFeed’s funding is
­expected to grow so that they can offer
everything from animated GIFs to motion
picture-length productions.
This is the new dynamic of online video
content – fast, personal, with smart use of
technology and standing sets to bring ide-
as to life fast. And they’re consumed, on
demand, on any one of a huge range of
­devices – a range that continues to grow
year on year.
This quiet, slow revolution is still roll-
ing on, but it’s far too advanced to ignore
now. If you’re looking to take advantage of
it, the traditional media buying route is
looking ever less relevant. Will you support
emerging media, shown mainly online? Or
will you enter the cheap, smart and person-
al content production game yourself?
Adam Tinworth
Adam Tinworth is a business journalist,
publishing strategist and lecturer
in digital journalism. For over a decade
he’s been studying media, tech an
business topics and writes about them
on the NEXT blog.
30
05 31–33
33
Private Programmatic
Culture of Testing
#ca
mp
aig
n Interview with Matthias Schrader
TIPPS by AMELIA SHOWALTER
31
#campaignPRIVATEPROGRAMMATIC
Maintaining sovereignty over customer data
Online advertising is being automated at a rapid
rate and has been able to target, based on user pro-
files, for some time. Key to this is the data which
firms now possess, but which they often don’t use
effectively. NEXT AUDIENCE delivers improved re-
sults with its Private Programmatic offering,
linking­ advertisers’ own exclusive data with indi-
vidually tailored algorithms. Matthias Schrader ex-
plains how it all works.
How do companies manage to get data that can
help them in their campaigns?
Matthias Schrader: Amazingly, most already have
access to it. Advertisers’ own exclusive data,
­so-called First-Party data, is extremely valuable. Ex-
amples would be data illuminating how customers
use their website, as well as CRM data. Their value
lies in the fact that these days a significant portion
of display advertising in programmatic buying is
based on user profiling. In reality this takes place in
milliseconds, in high speed. And as with every auc-
tion, he who possesses the best information makes
the best deal, in this case reaching the relevant us-
ers on the most favourable commercial terms.
o
private programmatic
32
#campaignPRIVATEPROGRAMMATIC
Matthias Schrader
CEO SINNERSCHRADER
“SCRATCH BENEATH
THE SURFACE AND
YOU’LL FIND AN
EPOCHAL WAR IS
GOING ON AT THE
MOMENT AROUND
ADVERTISER DATA.”
That sounds a bit like the age-old retargeting.
Matthias Schrader: Retargeting is in actual fact a
special case in the process, which we at NEXT
­AUDIENCE call Private Programmatic. It differs
from conventional retargeting in three main ways.
Firstly, we don’t just look at the buying funnel, such
as cancellations at the shopping cart stage, for ex-
ample. We analyse a user’s Customer Journey, de-
livering relevant messages in every phase of the
­customer cycle. That’s the only way to scale display
­advertising for advertisers in the entire process.
Secondly, we don’t depend on cookies, we save the
profiles on our own server, enabling us to enrich
them at any time with other information, such as
CRM data, or using statistical methods to divide the
market into segments, which can be addressed
­individually. Thirdly, with our solutions, advertisers
can define with great precision the quantity and
quality of contact for each user. This is something
which will become ever more important for the
short-term success of campaigns and the long-
term acceptance of online advertising.
So what is Private Programmatic exactly?
Matthias Schrader: Scratch beneath the surface and
you’ll find an epochal war is going on at the moment
around advertiser data. On the field of battle there
are three parties, whose future business model lies
in monetising this data. In one corner you have the
large platforms such as Google and Facebook, in
­another the ad networks (retargeting providers of a
sort) and then again you have the international
­media agency networks. The latter two are losing
their purchasing advantage through auction models
with Real Time Bidding– under the hammer, more of
the same becomes dearer, not cheaper. And so they
are trying to maintain their very comfortable mar-
gins using their own technology. Here’s the hitch: in
this game advertisers can’t really exploit the poten-
tial that Programmatic Buying offers them. Very few
advertisers will want to share their CRM data with
Google and Facebook, for example. Media agencies
are awkward bedfellows for them too, because a
33
#campaignPRIVATEPROGRAMMATIC
As Director of Digital Analytics Amelia
Showalter participated in President Obama’s
successful re-election campaign.
Her new mission is to bring the Obama
campaign’s culture of rigorous testing and
analysis to progressive organisations,
campaigns, and companies. Here are some
of her tips about testing:
#	Rely on data, rather than gut instinct.
If you’ve got ideas about which marketing
messages will work on your audience,
you should test them out and let the data
prove you right or wrong.
#	Start small! If you have an email news-
letter, you can divide your audience
randomly in half and test out some new
messages and formats. Or you can
run a test on your website, and try out
new ways of getting people to make
purchases or sign up for your email list.
To build up the culture of testing, you
just have to start somewhere and keep
testing out new ways to improve.
Culture
of
Testing
It’s important to test out lots of mes-
sages and images, and to use every
opportunity to learn more about your
audience’s preferences.
#	Implementing this culture of testing
means that people will need to do a little
more work, to come up with different
versions of each email, banner or web-
page. It is important to plan ahead.
And, of course, the leaders of a company
will need to approve the process. It’s
very hard to have a culture of testing
if the people at the top aren’t on board.
#	To amend campaigns, it is important
to have the right data at hand. The most
useful information about people is
the information they voluntarily give you.
AMELIA showalter
CONSULTANT AND DIGITAL STRATEGIST
near-lock-in occurs through their own proprietary
technology. User profiles can’t be transferred to a
new agency partner, and so advertisers have great
difficulty in switching agency partners without
­suffering massive losses in performance.
At NEXT AUDIENCE we work exclusively for the
fourth party at the table: the advertisers who, as
hosts, pay for the entire show at the end of the day.
We operate an exclusive Data Management Plat-
form (DMP) for them on their own hardware. This
guarantees complete control over their data and
­allows them to enrich user profiles without having
to ­release information, such as CRM data, for exam-
ple, to third parties. As the only costs involved are
technical, the entire efficiency gains in program-
matic media buying go to the advertiser, who
doesn’t have to share them with third parties. We
call this principle Private Programmatic.
06 35–38
#o
uTR
O
by MArtin reckeWHAT’S NEXT
35
#outroWhat’snext
The digital transformation reaches top management
The impact of most inventions is overesti-
mated in the short-term, but dramatically
underestimated in the long run. Truism
though that may be, it happens over and
over again. With such predictability, in fact,
that Gartner’s IT consultants have man-
aged to plot it in some detail in their ‘hype
cycle’ for each new technology.
Hype surrounding the digital transfor-
mation probably reached the peak of ex-
aggerated expectation in 2014. Just like
the New Economy fifteen years earlier, it
­arrived at the floor of top management,
who quickly delegated it to interns back in
2001, prior to its gradual reemergence in
the middle of the last decade.
With the NEXT conference alongside
other events, SinnerSchrader has been
overseeing the digital revolution since 2006
– from its beginning and initial successes
through to the transition to its next phase,
the digital transformation. This revolution
has shifted the balance of power to the
benefit of the consumer and the detriment
of the corporation. Today, digital consum-
ers expect the same standards in their
­analogue world as they have come to know
from the network or their smartphones.
In the first instance this has conse-
quences for interfaces, communication and
interaction with customers. And subse-
quently for products and services them-
selves, as well as for the entire production
process including the supply chain, as
­described by terms such as ‘Industry 4.0’
and ‘Industrial Internet’.
In this way the digital transforma-
tion transcends traditional departmental
boundaries. Where the matter becomes the
remit of the Chief Marketing Officer, the ex-
perience of recent years has shown that
few CMOs on their own can put companies
NEXT BERLIN
Since 2006 SinnerSchrader has been introducing
digital business trends at its annual conference
NEXT Berlin.
What’s NEXT?
T
37
#outroWhat’snext
with an analogue mindset onto a digital
footing. It needs a clear commitment on the
part of the CEO.
Many firms, especially in the US, react
to this realisation by appointing a Chief
­Digital Officer (CDO). Atif Rafiq, for example
– formerly of Amazon – has been advanc-
ing digital at McDonalds for the past year,
seeking to extend the fast food chain into
an e-commerce enterprise. Around a quar-
ter of US firms will have a CDO by 2015,
­according to Gartner. In the first instance
this is a clear signal – both internally and
externally – that the subject has made it to
the top management rung, and now has a
voice on the board of management.
That CDOs are sometimes also posi-
tioned in the second tier of management is
only a limitation of sorts, as other CXOs are
in the same boat.
Another approach is to include the subject
area within the remit of the COO, who, well
used to tasks which transcend depart-
ments, tends to view the digital transfor-
mation more from a procedural and pro-
cess perspective as a result. Deutsche
Bank opted for this approach in autumn
2014 when its COO, Henry Ritchotte, took
over responsibility for digital.
Other potential candidates for the role
of the digital transformation in manage-
ment are the CIO and CTO, of late the latter
tends to be sometimes written out as ‘Chief
Transformation Officer’. They are already
responsible for the digital platforms and
processes within the organisation, which
gives them a gatekeeper role.
At the end of the day it is not what the
management position is called, or whether
it is newly created or not, that determines
success. What is critical is
• the support of the CEO, in order to over-
come resistance within the firm
• that the digital transformation, being a
topic of much strategic import, resides
with top management,
• a clear focus on the consumer and his or
her needs, as consumers are further ad-
vanced in the digital space than most
companies.
From the very start the NEXT set itself the
task of providing a level of orientation in
what is a confusing environment, and to
put relevant trends and subjects onto the
decision maker’s agenda. Alongside the
yearly conference, a rich video archive and
a constantly updated blog also serve this
end. With the ‘NEXT Generation’ study,
Peter Hinssen
Author and speaker at NEXT14
“It is the best of times
and it is the worst
of times. Technology
has never been
more amazing, but at
the same time, we
feel the challenges
for our organisations.”
38
#outro
­carried out for the first time this year by
SinnerSchrader and the rheingold institute,
we are taking a qualitative glance at the
behaviour of the young user segments.
In addition, we have started to devel-
op the NEXT Executive Circle, as a forum
for decision makers who wish to face the
challenge of the digital revolution. Hav-
ing kicked off in Berlin, further meetings
took place in Hamburg and Paris. Up-
coming meetings are planned for March
2015 in Barcelona and May 2015, again in
Berlin. Participation in these regular
events is by invitation only. If you are in-
terested in ­taking part, please contact
matthias.schrader@nextberlin.eu.
NEXT EXECUTIVE CIRCLE
Marketing decision makers gathering: CMOs and
CDOs discuss topics of the digital transformation.
Tony Douglas
Innovations Manager BMW
and speaker at NEXT14
“Anyone who calls
­himself an expert
in this space, is an
expert for 15 seconds.”
Martin Recke
Martin Recke is the Head of Conference
Management for SinnerSchrader
and organises the NEXT conferences
and other events since 2006. He blogs
at nextberlin.eu, among other sites.
Imprint
Publisher SinnerSchrader Group, Völckersstraße 38, 22765 Hamburg, Deutschland  Contributors Axel Averdung, Peter Bihr, Anni Brück,
Laurent Burdin, Nils Jacobsen, Olaf Kolbrück, Martin Recke, Matthias Schrader, Meike Schreiber, Amelia Showalter, Adam Tinworth and Nils Wollny
Editorial Team Ina Feistritzer, Benjamin Nickel, Martin Recke, Niko Timm (CD), Nils Wollny  Translation and Proofreading Tim Gill,
Conor Horgan, David Thompson  Illustration Christian Schupp   Picture Credits Thomas Fedra, Nils Hasenau, Katrin Saalfrank,
Dan Taylor  Design ringzwei, Hamburg  separation Johannes Bauer in der Printarena, Hamburg   print Eurodruck in der Printarena,
Hamburg   Copyright 2014 SinnerSchrader Group Despite careful scrutiny of the publication by the editorial board the publisher accepts no liability
for its accuracy. Prior permission must be obtained in writing from the publishers for any use that is not explicitly permissible under copyright law.
www.sinnerschrader.com
NEXT Year (english)

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NEXT Year (english)

  • 1. 2015 RETHINK DIGITAL STRATEGY. HOW THE LATEST INNOVATIONS WILL SHAPE MARKETING IN 2015. #NE XT YEAR !
  • 2.
  • 3. Four paths to the NEXT Experience. How winning brands will be managed in 2015. Page 4 The perfect path to new customers. Brands are carrying content for themselves. Page 24 Challenge and opportunity meet head-on. Amazon and Apple are turning retailing on its head. Page 8 The key to campaign success is data. But only if you can unlock their value. Page 30 What’s NEXT? Digitalisation is triggering leadership ­transformation. Page 34 #iNTRO #COmmerce Everything is connected and things are starting to speak. Brands are creating new uses through the Internet of Things. Page 16 #CONNECTION #COnTENT#CAMPAIGN #OUTRO #iN DE X
  • 4. 01 05–07 NEXT Experience #In TR O By NILS WOLLNY
  • 5. 5 #intronextExperience NEXT EXPERIENCE No more marketing routine. Brands need digital user experiences with vision
  • 6. 6 #intronextExperience “Services such as UBER or Netflix are showing how it is done. They combine commerce with connection, content and campaign to create an out­ standing offering.” NILS WOLLNY MANAGING DIRECTOR STRATEGY SINNERSCHRADER Digitalisation marches on, changing every- thing in its path. It impacts on every single individual as well as on society as a whole, on business models and on entire indus- tries. This change sets new challenges for companies as well as opening up new op- portunities at the same time ... with one prerequisite: an unconditional focus on the user and his or her needs. NEXT GENERATION: I want it all, now Together with the rheingold institute, Sinner- Schrader carried out a qualitative study of young people between the ages of 6 and 29, asking about their digital life. The main finding: no one in this age group can imag- ine life without the smartphone or the ser- vices that come with it. Intensive and mas- terly interaction with digital technologies is the norm. They distinguish less between ‘online’ and ‘offline’, and more between ‘onscreen’ and ‘offscreen’ – although this boundary, too, is becoming increasingly blurred. Young people confront the daily torrent of offers and information with an out-and- out digital mind-set: quick decisions based on a like or dislike logic, declining anything that does not promise immediate utility. The expectations of the digital experi- ence that a brand can offer are based on its user value and on the criterion of maxi- mum simplicity. Established players like Apple, Google or Facebook set the stand- ards in terms of functionality, look and feel, and design. Everything in the digital space is compared with them. To continue to be perceived as a brand in this context re- quires focusing on the design of digital ex- periences. NEXT EXPERIENCE: the four elements of a digital brand More than ever, meeting the new demands of the user necessitates a clear and decis- ive rejection of well-established marketing routines. This in turn requires a company culture that is oriented towards the needs and interests of the user in every way – with leadership that is actively shaping the digi- tal change. A major task here is to concei- ve for the future, constantly developing and refining digital user experiences. It is about creating the blueprint for an entire NEXT EXPERIENCE, consisting of four elements: D
  • 7. 7 #intronextExperience Nils Wollny is Managing Director Strategy at Sinner- Schrader. Working and thinking user- centrically, he helps companies in diverse sectors to accelerate innovation and digitalisation. Commerce – Transactions of goods and services. Companies like Amazon have al- tered the buying behaviour of people enor- mously in the last two decades. The next wave of innovations, which will again rev- olutionise user behaviour, is imminent: mo- bile payment, intelligent logistics and bea- con technology. Connection – connecting the physical and virtual worlds. Products such as the Apple Watch or Google Glass are raising the op- portunities for wearables to a new level. At the same time, technologies like beacons and NFC are bringing about new types of services. In addition, private 3D printers are creating entirely new product categories. Content – material which is of great inter- est to the user. Traditional advertising cam- paigns leave the NEXT GENERATION baf- fled. At the same time the auction models of the network giants are reducing the ef- fectiveness of marketing spend. And ag- gregators are becoming the gatekeepers for digital offerings. For brands, therefore, developing a content strategy that offers genuine added value to the user is essen- tial for survival. Campaign – communication between a brand and its public. Campaigns are cur- rently undergoing a twofold evolution: a change that is both systemic and content- based. Thanks to new technologies, the distribution side of campaigns and content has become more effective, with message and content becoming both ‘personalisa- ble’ and adaptable in real time. A well-conceived and integrated NEXT EXPERIENCE can combine these four ele- ments into a novel and convincing offering. Services like UBER and Netflix are al- ready transforming the transportation and entertainment industries respectively, us- ing: connection (vehicle tracking via smart- phone or device-agnostic distribution), con- tent (liberalisation of the travel business or Netflix’ own programs) and campaigns (af- filiate marketing or social media) to create outstanding commercial propositions. NEXT AGENCY: The agency for a new age Developing such outstanding offerings and overseeing their realisation is only possible with a new type of agency: one that assists companies to keep pace with the speed of technologies and users – be- cause this is what they do themselves. One that analyses people’s behaviour, gets to the bottom of it, and is in a position to alter it with its ideas. One that thinks in terms of holistically conceived, living sys- tems, which are designed to grow and constantly change. SinnerSchrader interfaces with tech- nology, people and brands, developing and implementing products and services that add value, and always with the user at heart. As the initiator of the international conference NEXT, we have been influenc- ing digital trends for years. We fuse crea- tive ideas and technology to develop solu- tions that make our clients successful. That is our claim. That’s what makes us the NEXT AGENCY.
  • 8. 02 09–12 13–15 Mobile Payment #co mm erce by Olaf KolbrückTHE Amazon challenge by Meike Schreiber
  • 9. 9 #commerceAMAZONChallenge What Amazon’s dominant position means for costumers and marketers the Amazon CHALLENGE When Amazon chief Jeff Bezos stopped off with friends at Mount Rushmore in 2001, he was himself something of a tourist attrac- tion – not as the CEO of a company that was powerful even back then – but as the guy from the Taco bell TV ads, at the time for cheese tortillas. Perhaps Bezos has harboured an ambivalent relationship with advertising since then. For years Amazon ran a mile from TV spots. Before the digital giant did eventually book TV time for the W
  • 10. 10 0 500 1,500 1,000 2,000 E-COMMERCE GLOBALLY TURNOVER IN BILLION US-DOLLARS* PROGNOSIS 2012 to 2017 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 1,058 1,248 1,500* 1,763* 2,043* 2,345* 3.0 20.6 BILLION US-DOLLARS 1ST QUARTER 2007 BILLION US-DOLLARS 3RD QUARTER 2014 PARCEL VOLUME IN GERMANY FROM 2000 TO 2013 AMAZON.COM TURNOVER FROM 2007 TO 2014 2.66 BILLION IN 2013 1.69 BILLION IN 2000 DOES SHOPPING EXHAUST YOU? ONLINEIN SHOPS YES NO 57% 43% 23% 77% People using mobile devices to shop online MOBILE COMMERCE 2011/2014 NO USAGE USAGE 81% sources:eMarketer(2),bevh,boniversum,BIEK,KEConsult,Amazon,DHL-StudieEinkaufen4.0 38%
  • 11. 11 #commerceAMAZONChallenge Kindle reader, Bezos viewed classical ad- vertising as a sign of weakness: “Advertis- ing is the price you pay for having an unre- markable product or service.” In future he would make the advertis- ing industry pay. In all probability the ad men didn’t even notice what was facing them. One person who did grasp its signif- icance is Google CEO Eric Schmidt: “Our biggest search competitor is Amazon.” After all, one in every three product search- es is already carried out in Amazon and not in Google. That means fewer clicks and fewer AdWords dollars for Google. But it’s not all about search. With the exception of Eric Schmidt, the rest of the world still sees Amazon above all as an online sales platform, as a quasi- monopolist even, which looks to gain ever more market share with little thought for profit. With good reason: almost every sec- ond e-book in Germany is bought following recommendations from Amazon. Amazon has more than 40 percent share of the en- tire book market (this, too, is only like read- ing tea leaves). In 2013 its turnover in books, music, electronics and clothing in Germany totalled €7.7 billion. One in four euros spent in Germany on e-commerce is pocketed by Amazon. And Bazos is doing his utmost to en- sure customers stay with him. He is build- ing a digital conglomerate that includes: clearly subsidised Kindles, its own publish- ing programme for authors, a digital library with an ‘all you can read’ flat rate, content suppliers with their own TV productions for its ‘Instant Video’ play station and the ‘Fire TV’ in-house TV set-top box. The purchase of the Washington Post fits into the overall picture too, strengthening the content of- fering for the Kindle. The purchase of ‘Twitch’, a YouTube for gamers, ensures yet more content and new sales leverage. And then there’s the ‘Fire Phone’ To date it hasn’t been a big sales hit. Nor does it have to be. Bezos takes a long term view of the smartphone. It not only triggers the sale of more digital content, above all it hoovers up data: with a single touch of a button the user activates the purchase-fea- ture and can buy products, music and vid- eos taken by its camera and/or micro- phone. In this way the mobile phone turns the world into a showroom, and Amazon is not only positioned right at the start of the sales process, but makes even Google search in part superfluous. Why bother typ- ing into a search engine when a simple photo will do? There’s more: Amazon saves photos taken with the ‘Firefly’ feature to improve the functioning of its system. Through additional GPS data, local information and other metadata the com- pany learns more about the user: where they shop, what they do in their free time, what interests them apart from shopping and maybe what they have kept hidden from Amazon up to now. For example, say you take a picture of your child with the recognition tool. Amazon can use this for precise product recommendations and more impactful advertising. So while Google can only tell advertis- ers what users are searching for and click- ing on, Amazon can tell them what they are actually buying, where and how often they are buying it, and increasingly and more “Our biggest search competitor IS Amazon.” Eric Schmidt Executive Chairman Google
  • 12. 12 #commerceAMAZONChallenge precisely – with an ever closer eye on the Customer Journey – why they are buying it. Amazon has only really been a com- petitor for Schmidt since the company has been accused of going after more advertis- ing spend and utilising its data goldmine to this end. Amazon already wants to start its own display advertising network in 2015 and to place advertising space similar to AdWords. Firstly the advertising will appear on its own website, and then later also on other publishers’ sites. In doing so Amazon is entering into direct competition with Google. And not just Google. The targeting gold- mine impacts equally on marketers, tech- nology providers and agencies. If Amazon starts to peddle its own personalisation algorithm and its data power, it will make these service providers superfluous to some extent. It is not just a case of Amazon being able to achieve outstanding conver- sion rates due to its data and its reach. With each single click Amazon enhances its know-how to improve its own products, its own content and its own services. There is a lesson in how this online giant deals with its partners: if the data shows that a new product is selling particularly well in a seller’s marketplace, that is often a cue for Amazon to sell it directly – under- cutting all other prices in the process. If a consumer goods manufacturer comes to enjoy double-digit market share on Ama- zon, Amazon puts on a real squeeze for re- bates and new terms, as book publishers in particular have found out, with corre- sponding impact on sales too. For Amazon is interested above all in low prices – and cross-subsidisation of the manufacturer’s and trader’s advertising monies suits that goal perfectly. Charges (effectively ‘tolls’) could work one day to the detriment of these brands, if Amazon were to support predatory pricing with marketing monies, to force through its own brands against the competition, for exam- ple. Or to undercut in the trader’s market- place. Ultimately, Amazon can always be cheaper, because it alone can avoid the Amazon charge. Olaf Kolbrück is founder and director of specialist ­e-commerce portal etailment.de and author of the book ‘Erfolgsfaktor Online-Marketing’. From 2000 to 2013 he was a reporter with HORIZONT ­magazine, with responsibility for internet and ­e-business. How to deal with amazon # Exploit presentation options such as product descriptions, product images, videos. # Utilise Amazon advertising packages such as the Brand Store to expand your own channels. # Offer only certain product lines on Amazon. # Strengthen and/or diversify through other sales channels. # Sell private labels and new products initially through your own channels only.
  • 13. 13 #commercemobilepayment When your smartphone becomes your wallet Mobile Payment When Apple chief Tim Cook revealed the iPhone 6 in autumn 2014, one new feature in particular caused lively debate especial- ly among the brand’s aficionados: the ‘Apple Pay’ mobile payment function. Cook announced presumptuously: “Apple Pay will forever change the way we buy.” Time will tell. Owners of the new iPhone have only been able to pay with it since ­October 2014 – and so far only at 220,000 contact points in the US. At its heart is Near Field Communications (NFC) technol- ogy, which transmits data by a radio signal from mobile phone to a station. For secu- rity, users must identify themselves by fin- gerprint. In Europe, where NFC technology is actually more widespread than in the United States, the service is expected to be available to iPhone users from 2015, by which time wearers of the Apple Watch in the US will also be able to use it. One thing is clear: paying is getting easier. A new technical revolution is around the corner. With the introduction of iTunes, Apple has already proven that people’s pur- chasing behaviour can be radically altered. For each Apple-Pay transaction of 100 dollars, the Americans pocket a 15 cent charge from participating banks and card providers – which Apple claims makes it cheaper than other payment methods. W
  • 14. 14 11 12 13 14 2015 +60 % 81 % #commercemobilepayment “Up to now no technology has been able to establish itself on the mass market. The latest push from Apple with various credit card providers could change this in the me- dium term, however,” wrote Deutsche Bank in a study of the FinTech sector. The trend is clear: in 2013 the volume of cashless payments globally rose by 9.4% to 366 billion transactions, compared to 2012. According to the latest Payment Re- port by consultancy firm Capgemini, this was “due to the strong growth in emerging markets as well as increased use of cred- it and debit cards, especially in electronic and mobile payments.” With more and more people using tab- lets and smartphones, the lines between online and mobile payments are becoming increasingly blurred, according to Cap­ gemini. The consultancy anticipates an in- crease in mobile payments worldwide of around 60% per year from 2011 to 2015. For online payments, on the other hand, Cap- gemini has forecast a yearly rise of “only” 16% over the same period. Even in Germany, long a mecca for notes and coins, many more people are likely to pay without cash in the near future. The auditing and consulting firm PwC esti- mates that the 176,000 end users in Germa- ny who currently pay by mobile will rise to 11 million by 2020. And Apple isn’t necessarily the trail- blazer. Many start-ups, banks and mobile phone operators already offer mobile pay- ment options. And even the Ebay subsidi- ary PayPal is currently testing an app for mobile payments in Germany. However, thus far, no system has established itself. At present only 40,000 of the more than 740,000 payment terminals in Germany can communicate with mobile devices or special cards. That may change: MasterCard recent- ly compelled all its German retail partners to convert their terminals to NFC technol- ogy by 2018 at the latest. A survey by the EHI Retail Institute of 55 retailers with a total of 58,300 outlets found that 81 per cent want to upgrade their cashier systems. But what about the banks, whose core business is, after all, payments? For the time being they are relieved that Apple continues to cooperate with them. The German Sparkassen (savings banks), for example, have already announced that they Annual growth of mobile payments from 2011 to 2015 Shops planning to adjust to mobile payment by 2018 source:EHIRETAILINSTITUTE
  • 15. 15 #commercemobilepayment wish to work together with Apple. As a pay- ment is only completed when the custom- er’s account has been debited. “The cake has not yet been divided up,” contends Deutsche Bank in its latest FinTech study. Banks will not give up the commissions that go along with payments without a fight. Nor should they: experts at Deutsche Bank believe that, in the current test phase, the traditional finance providers have the opportunity to play a part in formulating digital payment solutions. In marketing departments, too, espe- cially those of manufacturers of consumer goods, experts are musing over how Apple Pay will influence purchase decisions. The widely held view is that opportunities lie in particular with Apple’s Passbook app for loyalty programmes, which in all probabil- ity will be linked to its payment system. Marketing decision-makers need to ensure that users can easily deposit their loyalty programmes or coupons with the app. The app can then advise the customer how many points their current purchase is worth or automatically pay for a product with the appropriate coupon. Anneke Neuhaus, marketing expert at the Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, says: “Marketing decision-makers need to ask what benefits the customer can draw from it. Further information on the prod- uct can be provided via smartphone, for example. In the case of higher value prod- ucts, why not offer an explanatory video or an alternative model in a different price category? The customer can acquaint himself or herself with the product or take advantage of a discount scheme or bonus points by using the payment function.” Moreover, manufacturers will understand their customers better and utilise this insight for product development or for im- proving communications. “The opportuni- ty to interact with the customer this way can lead to some displacement in the market, but equally to a genuine win-win,” says Neuhaus. The delicate issue surrounding data protection raised by the NSA affair re- mains. At Apple they are at least attuned to the sensitivities of Europeans in particular. “Apple doesn’t know what you have bought, where you bought it, or how much you have paid for it, ” swore the management at the reveal of Apple Pay. Meike schreiber Meike Schreiber is a Frankfurt-based journalist who has been reporting for many years on the banking sector. She founded the journalist agency SchreiberDohms along with Heinz-Roger Dohms. Both write for ‘Capital’, ‘manager magazin online’ and ‘DIE ZEIT’, among other titles. “Most of our spending right now happens offline, and that’s starting to shift. All of our payments are moving online.” John Collison CEO OF THE PAYMENT START-UP STRIPE
  • 16. 03 20 17–19 21–23 Beacons Internet of things Mobile connections #co nn ect ion by Laurent Burdin by Axel Averdung by Peter Bihr
  • 18. 18 #connectioninternetofthings If everyday objects could talk, what would they say? That is the question we should ask ourselves when thinking about the ­opportunities offered by the Internet of Things, or IoT for short. The IoT is what you get by connecting physical objects – TVs, cargo containers, bracelets, coffee makers, cars or thermostats – to the internet: A connected world, studded with sensors, permanently exchanging data with both machines and humans. And it is one of the most influential trends in technology we have seen since the advent of the consum- er internet itself. How can IoT be beneficial in the context of marketing? Data and deep engagement Over the last few years, we have witnessed a wide range of experiments around the IoT. Many of the more widely known ones were driven by advertising. To name one well-re- spected example, Budweiser built a big red light that connected to the web and checked a feed for ice hockey results. Whenever the user’s favorite team scored a goal, the light would flash, and a loud horn would sound. It was a cute, well-executed and playful way to engage with fans around a topic they were passionate about. Hundreds of these lamps were sold as these fans paid money for an advertisement in their living rooms. As advertising ideas go, this one was very smart. And it just scratched the surface of what is possible. The IoT allows for a much deeper engage- ment and has the advantage of allowing us to collect and analyse data to build servic- es that are valuable to both the audience as well as marketers. Two areas offer partic- ularly huge opportunities for fast movers who overcome the (sometimes thorny) challenge of balancing value-add versus ‘data collection creepiness’: Wearable tech- nology and connected driving. Wonderful Wearables What happens if you strap a smart watch to your wrist or place a fitness tracker in your pocket? By putting on wearable tech- nology (Wearables for short) you allow a computer complete with sensors and inter- net connectivity into your life. Most of us don’t think much about it, after all we car- ry a connected computer almost constant- ly anyway: Our smartphone. As sensors and chips get both smaller and cheaper, Wearables evolve. Rather than bulky smart watches, we see styl- ish accessories: Jewellery and fashion are increasingly connected, too. A ring that subtly notifies you of a text message from your spouse? New York startup Ring- ly has created one. Clothing that tracks your vital signs? Look no further than the sports bras and running shirts that San Francisco-based Sensilk is currently devel- oping. What today may sound like gadgets for early adopters will be a normal part of life within just a few years. If we build services today that are so good, valuable or inter- esting that users let them into their every- day lives, it allows for huge engagement opportunities. I
  • 19. 19 #connectioninternetofthings Crowdshaping With new technologies at hand, data cap- tured from people in the physical world can be used to reshape experiences. Wearable bracelets like the Lightwave, an invention by Silicon Valley technologist Rana June, can measure physical engage- ment and energy levels of the people wearing them – like in this case allowing the DJ to play with the information and to show the most active dancers on a leader board. This kind of innovation cannot only be applied to performances, it can also ­reshape the way we shop. Just imagine, for example, advertisements that adjust in real-time to the emotions of a TV-audience or in-store offers reshaped by the energy level of the shopping crowd. Connected driving Along with data, cars move into the cloud – or rather, the cloud moves into the car. Automobiles become another media sur- face, another interface. As cars – owned or shared – get connected to the internet, the car stops being a mere means of transportation. By combining navigational data (where you are now and where you want to go), ­intentional information (your calendar knows where you want to go, why and with whom) and external data sources (weath- er, traffic, event information) we have a treasure trove of data points to work with. We can build true context-aware services. This could range from subtle reminders to more complex offerings. Two examples: •  Shopping reminders: “Your fridge says that you need milk. We are passing by a supermarket with milk on offer in two minutes. Do you want me to recalculate your route?” •  Media recommendations: “Based on current traffic information, your drive is estimated to last about 28 minutes. Should I read you a few chapters of your audio book?” The key: respecting privacy The key to success is, as always, to be sen- sible. With the tools provided by the Inter- net of Things, companies are tempted to collect as much data as possible just to be safe: Collect first, analyse later. In Germa- ny, more than anywhere, consumers are highly sensitive to data collection and the implications for their privacy. As such, we will see consumers reward those compa- nies who find the best balance between marketing that offers added value based on data analytics on the one side and respect for privacy on the other. Don’t be a creep, and consumers might allow you into their lives. If they do, both sides will benefit. peter bihr Peter Bihr is the founder of The Waving Cat, where he explores the impact of emerging technologies and helps apply the insights of innovators through ­consulting and conferences like Things- Con and NEXT Berlin.
  • 20. 20 #connectionbeacons “Software Is Eating The World” explained the entrepreneur, investor and developer Marc Andreessen in a famous essay of 2011. “How come?” one may ask: Sure, doesn’t the physical world still consist mainly of at- oms, even if bits are taking over in the dig- ital sphere? Part of the answer lies in beacons (or iBeacons, as Apple calls them), which ­connect the physical and digital worlds. Bea- cons are nothing more than small transmit­ ters with low energy consumption and lim- ited local reach. Mobile phones, for example, can receive and react to their signals. It is thanks to beacons that an app knows the location of its user and can of- fer him or her a relevant user experience in that context. Among the earliest adop- ters are retailers – no surprise that Apple quickly equipped its own stores and ­upgraded the Apple Store app accordingly. But the possibilities go well beyond the retail space. Interactive museum guides con- verse with visitors via beacons, explaining all about the latest exhibitions. In the US, fans inside baseball stadiums receive back- ground information on the game that is tak- ing place. The ticket inspector on the train makes his presence known to the railway app via a beacon, as a result of which the app on the passenger’s smartphone automatic­ ally displays his or her digital ­ticket. All kinds of new interfaces can be cre- ated. In place of cumbersome ATMs, as we know them, bank customers can avail themselves of an elegant app which, thanks to beacons, knows which customer is at the ATM. After a minimum of interaction the machine dispenses the desired amount. The scope for innovative services is practically limitless. But here, too, success will depend on how well the user’s require- ments are considered and how the content and user experience is suited to the loca- tion and context. For marketers, beacons become valuable, when indiviual interac- tions with the brand or its products are beautifully designed to create real benefits for the consumers. The most important thing is to stay relevant: If it isn’t relevant, the user will ignore it. Creativity, too, is called for. After all, to just send out pushy messages flagging the latest special offers is to ignore the opportunities which bea- cons provide. The invisible keys to new services Dr. Axel Averdung is Head of Strategy at SinnerSchrader und developes innovative solutions for digital products and services. S BEACONS
  • 21. 21 #connectionmobileconnections Mobile cONNECTIONS Dawn of a magical times The watch on your wrist has long stopped ticking. Instead, you can talk to it, read the news on it, or pay for a coffee with it. It’s likely, in the coming year, that every early adopter will wear one, and so get to expe- rience all the wonder of mobile connectiv- ity: new technologies, new applications and new customers. With the smartwatch and other innovations, the Age of Connected Devices is dawning. So what will the world be like, when everything is connected with everything else? And what consequences will that bring for the mobile sector? T
  • 22. 22 #connectionmobileconnections A torrent sweeping through the sector Experts are predicting that the number of connected devices will increase one hun- dred fold within the next five years. The mobile sector will become the mobile con- nectivity sector. Everyone will be affected – developers, start-ups, agencies, provid- ers of mobile products, marketers and big brands. A look at Berlin, where the mobile sector in Germany is particularly well­ represented, reveals the magnitude of the upheaval that is currently taking place. The technological revolution Behind this trend are three technological drivers: the devices, the connectivity and the cloud. Every few months the device manufacturers introduce new features such as mobile payment or smart objects – more memory, more performance, more screen. The connectivity options are also becoming greater: mobile communica- tions, Wi-Fi, NFC, Bluetooth Low Energy and proprietary in-car connectivity such as CarPlay or Android Auto. Behind them lie the cloud services, which gather and ana- lyse all the data. Working wonders with everyday stuff! Coffee lovers, for example, can connect via an app with the Espresso machine in the coffee shop, which then brews the desired coffee. Payment for the cappuccino then takes place automatically with the smartphone. This is already a ­reality at TopBrewer in Copenhagen. It’s child’s play for the customer and extreme- ly time-saving for the coffee shop. Powering the market Consumers are ready. And so are electrical retailers: MediaMarkt recently created a large department for digital wristbands and smartwatches and wants to expand it further. Remember the headphone market? Small and unexciting only three years ago, it now features lots of interesting products and retailers offer a large range of them. It will be the same with Connected Devices. From mobile marketing to connectivity strategy in 6 steps today: 1. Dedicate far greater resources to managing mobile assets (app and web). 2. Raise activity levels to achieve greater frequency and higher numbers of app downloads. 3. Improve those neglected mobile web portals. tomorrow: 4. Create a user case related to a device (e.g. smartwatch). 5. Connect web applications with the physical world (e.g. in stores). 6. Develop your own proprietary ­connected device.
  • 23. 23 #connectionmobileconnections Personalised stimuli Opportunities to reach customers and ­prospective customers at just the right ­moment have increased enormously. Per- sonalised stimuli allow for a completely new form of Customer Relationship Man- agement, which in retail can make all the difference. A new shopping centre in Mar- seilles, fitted out with 240 beacons, illus- trates just how it works: if the customer has the relevant app, he or she receives location-based promotions from the stores, and the shopping centre can analyse in de- tail the resulting customer traffic. The end of isolation An app here, an app there, maybe a mobile website, a customer app, then a banner and a mobile landing page ... the mobile sector has long offered only additions to isolated applications. Now stand-alone solutions are being connected with the physical world: with a smartwatch, with a beacon in a shop, stadium or museum, with a check- out, a door, a piece of packaging or a car – and all of it based on technologies and code languages from the mobile sector. Pressing ahead with no standards The biggest mistake here is to do nothing. Despite the absence of technical stand- ards, all the big players are already active in the game. Google is positioning itself with Nest in the area of home automation for house and office. Behind the iBeacon lies an Apple protocol. And all players are developing in-car platforms.   Laurent Burdin is Managing Director of SinnerSchrader Mobile in Berlin, right in the heart of Germany’s mobile ecosystem. “The biggest mistake is to do nothing.” “The area of mobile connectivity holds huge ­opportunities, but considerable risks at the same time. The biggest risk is to do nothing. We can see that currently in the retail industry, where we are talking about the likes of Amazon and other giants such as Alibaba, with a market capitalisation of over $200 billion. Many of those involved are banking seriously on innovative mobile solutions: Tesco, for example, with co- nnected price signage, the rolling out of a beacon network and push notifications in store. Or Amazon with its own ‘Dash’ device, a barcode reader with a microphone, which helps to draw up household shopping lists and connects automatically with the app, thus enabling One- Click-Shopping. Imagine if every brand were to bring its own device onto the market to connect with its customers in its own charming way. That would be the stuff of dreams in my book.”
  • 25. 25 #contentBestPractice Best practice curved.de – The ‘Michelin Guide’ for the mobile generation “An iPod. A phone. An internet mobile communicator.” Eight years ago Apple’s founder pre- sented his invention to the world. The gadget would influence the culture of the 21st century like no other, and pave the way for the triumph of the smartphone. Within the past few years our usage habits have changed fundamentally – away from the desk, and over to the smartphone or tablet. “Mobile first” is being increasingly replaced by “Mobile only”, especially among the young generation. Mobile has won out. But what does this younger revolution mean for telecommunications and mobile phone providers, who connect millions of customers around the world with their net- works? Above all, it means a complete re- think. The telephony and SMS business model is the stuff of yesterday. In the near future it is data volume which will make up the lion’s share of revenue. But how and where can (potential) customers be rea- ched most efficiently? This is something which E-Plus, for ex- ample (now number one in the German mobile phone market following its merger with O2) has to address. In this broadly sat- urated market, the key is to develop points of differentiation. Traditional TV and print advertising have long been able to reach the target market only marginally and for a short time-span. The internet would ap- pear to be the natural way to go. With ban- A
  • 26. 26 #contentBestPractice ner advertising and initiatives to acquire new customers through online and social media seemingly exhausted, CURVED cre- ates a new route. Content for ‘Generation Touch’ On behalf of the E-Plus Group, Sinner- Schrader launched the CURVED platform at the beginning of 2014 – providing the Generation Touch with a tech portal for the mobile era, something which had been pre- viously lacking. CURVED reports on the hu- man side of the mobile revolution, telling us what the gadgets are doing for our lives, how they are making our everyday easier and driving social progress. The concept draws on a successful 100-year-old recipe: content marketing. John Deere, the American agricultural ­machinery manufacturer, has been talking to its customers in ‘The Furrow’ magazine since 1895. Another fine example of ­suc- cessful content marketing comes from 1900: the Michelin Guide. The brainchild of tyre manufacturer Michelin, the restau- rant guide has long given motorists good ­reasons to go that extra mile – and to use more tyres, thus contributing to increased sales in the process. Since the very begin- ning, the success of this model is based on two pillars: the quality of the content itself and the integrity achieved by separating the brand from that content. Reach rules  More than a century later, CURVED is adapting this principle for the digital age. The editorial team, made up of experienced tech journalists, offers smartphone users round-the-clock support and help, orienta- tion, analysis, background pieces and ad- vice. Over 25 new articles appear each day on the site, which reaches 1.3 million unique users per month. Independent ­editorial content – which, from a quality perspective, is journalistically the match of any traditional media title – is the founda- tion of this sustained growth. The rapid rise in reach has been possible due to a steep learning curve and constant monitoring of the traffic generated per ar- ticle. SEO experts help to priorise subjects and keywords and ensure the website is optimised technically for Google. Visibility on Google is a critical determinant of suc- cess, as being on the Google News Index leads to an explosion in traffic: Presence on organic search delivers sustained traffic for CURVED, even for older articles. So what direct benefits does E-Plus draw from CURVED? “Leads generated by content enjoy better conversion in our Shops than do leads from advertising”, according to Jürgen Rösger, who, as Chief Digital Officer (CDO) at E-Plus, supervised the introduction of CURVED. In other words, the more often a page is read, the higher the conversion rate. The articles concerned are linked to appropriate products in the Shop, with additional banners – and adver- torials including offers – developed specif- ically for readers of CURVED. CURVED’s success formula can serve as a blueprint for other sectors: why let ‘manager magazin’ or ‘Rolling Stone’ do what a bank or music portal with suitable product links can do just as well? Nils Jacobsen Nils Jacobsen is a financial and tech journalist with 15 years of experience. Apart from being the editor-in-chief for CURVED, he writes among others for the media portal MEEDIA and Yahoo.
  • 27. 27 #contentBestPractce How are things at CURVED one year on? Nils Jacobsen: Very positive. SinnerSchrader has managed to create a tech portal that works, in just 100 days. With over 1.3 million users visiting CURVED each month, we already have twice as many as the online offerings of ‘Neon’, ‘Computer- woche’ or ‘Horizont’. Editorial independence is clearly the basis for sustained growth. What are your key success factors? Felix Disselhoff: The technical foundation, which SinnerSchrader brings to the table as one of Europe’s leading digital agencies, is extremely ­important. The interface between editorial and programming allows problems to be solved very ­rapidly and in an integrated way. Above all, though, contemporay content is the key in the ­mobile tech space. What can marketers in other sectors learn from CURVED ? Nils Jacobsen: These days innovative projects are taking place almost exclusively online. The learn- ing effects occur practically on a daily basis – even in the interaction with our readers in the form of comments or social media. CURVED’s success as a content provider can certainly be transferred to other sector portals in the music, lifestyle, food or finance space, but not without adapting it. The tech space has its own particular target group. In your opinion, what are the prerequisites for a successful content portal? Felix Disselhoff: An absolute commitment to editori- al independence and lots of patience.We were not ex- pecting CURVED to be the rapid success it has been, but in the fast-moving tech scene no two months are the same. Every day is a new challenge. Interview with CURVED editors-in-chief Nils Jacobsen and Felix Disselhoff “Leads generated by content enjoy better conver- sion in our Shops than do leads from advertising.” Jürgen Rösger CO-FOUNDER OF CURVED
  • 28. 28 #contententertainment TV used to be such a simple medium. You checked the schedule, you switched it on and watched it. Or you missed it. All very simple. Those days are very long gone. Televi- sion has been going through the same dig- ital disruption as other forms of content – but in slow motion. A decade ago people were talking actively about the end of line- ar TV – and yet, it endures. There hasn’t been a single device-based disruption to change things, or a single service that ­upended the business. Instead, disruption is coming from all angles, in a multitude of forms. On one extreme you have the rise of paid streaming services. The last couple of years has seen a proliferation of streaming boxes to attach to your TV. Apple’s “hobby”, the Apple TV, has long been a front-end for iTunes content, but now serves as a streamer for Netflix and an ever increasing number of other services. Google has two offerings in the fray: the Chromecast stick – a tiny budget device, which allows video to be ‘cast’ from other devices, and the new Android TV-based Nexus Player. Amazon released its Fire TV earlier in the year, ­primarily as a front-end for its Prime Streaming service. What started as peripheral services have now become proto-TV studios in their The Superseding of the Goggle-Box YOUTUBE-STAR PEWDIEPIE Earning millions with funny gamer videos T entertainment
  • 29. 29 #contententertainment own right. Netflix has been creating original series for a while – and extending the life of cancelled series like ‘Arrested Develop- ment’. However, it’s now going even bigger by expanding the vastly successful Marvel Comics movie franchise. Five interlinked series are being shot now, introducing a group of street-level superheroes, who will eventually come together as a team. Amazon has also dipped its toes into the original content production world, with three rounds of pilot productions, many of which have gone to series – including the well-reviewed ‘Transparent’. And, unlike ­traditional broadcasting, these series are usually released simultaneously, rather than serialised across weeks or months. This is no longer appointment TV, but sto- rytelling for the post DVD boxset age. This changes the relationship with marketers and advertisers. For one, this new breed of television series does not carry advertising. In effect, the series is, ­itself, advertising for the streaming sub- scription. For those looking to ride on the back of their success, the only opportuni- ties seem to lie in product placement. Perhaps the most interesting develop- ment, though, has been the rise of the You- Tube celebrity to the point where they have become viable media brands in their own right. YouTube has been heavily promoting its biggest celebrities – because of the ad- vertising revenue they can draw. PewDie- Pie – real name Felix Arvid Ulf Kjellberg – is the biggest celebrity they have right now. He produces videos for gaming fans which rapidly cruise past the 2m to 3m views mark, from 30 million followers. According to The Atlantic, ads on those videos net him between $140,000 and $1.4m – a month. His current contract with Maker Studios ends now. It’ll be interesting to see what he does next. Michelle Phan, Bethany Mota and Ro- sanna Pansino, the stars featured in You- Tube’s advertising campaigns, cover fash- ion, beauty and cooking. They’re one per- son lifestyle brands, talking direct to huge audiences in a way that traditional TV would have rejected as unprofessional. A new medium is emerging, one with very different content rules from the old one. There’s a new vocabulary of video con- tent that makes sense in a digital world. BuzzFeed, that content powerhouse, has invested a significant amount of money in both hiring top-flight talent – renowned ­online video pioneer Ze Frank – and build- ing a studio to produce its video work. The studio has a large number of standing sets of classic locations – homes, offices, cafés, and the like – which allow them to quickly go from drawing up an idea to shooting the video on the set. BuzzFeed’s funding is ­expected to grow so that they can offer everything from animated GIFs to motion picture-length productions. This is the new dynamic of online video content – fast, personal, with smart use of technology and standing sets to bring ide- as to life fast. And they’re consumed, on demand, on any one of a huge range of ­devices – a range that continues to grow year on year. This quiet, slow revolution is still roll- ing on, but it’s far too advanced to ignore now. If you’re looking to take advantage of it, the traditional media buying route is looking ever less relevant. Will you support emerging media, shown mainly online? Or will you enter the cheap, smart and person- al content production game yourself? Adam Tinworth Adam Tinworth is a business journalist, publishing strategist and lecturer in digital journalism. For over a decade he’s been studying media, tech an business topics and writes about them on the NEXT blog.
  • 30. 30 05 31–33 33 Private Programmatic Culture of Testing #ca mp aig n Interview with Matthias Schrader TIPPS by AMELIA SHOWALTER
  • 31. 31 #campaignPRIVATEPROGRAMMATIC Maintaining sovereignty over customer data Online advertising is being automated at a rapid rate and has been able to target, based on user pro- files, for some time. Key to this is the data which firms now possess, but which they often don’t use effectively. NEXT AUDIENCE delivers improved re- sults with its Private Programmatic offering, linking­ advertisers’ own exclusive data with indi- vidually tailored algorithms. Matthias Schrader ex- plains how it all works. How do companies manage to get data that can help them in their campaigns? Matthias Schrader: Amazingly, most already have access to it. Advertisers’ own exclusive data, ­so-called First-Party data, is extremely valuable. Ex- amples would be data illuminating how customers use their website, as well as CRM data. Their value lies in the fact that these days a significant portion of display advertising in programmatic buying is based on user profiling. In reality this takes place in milliseconds, in high speed. And as with every auc- tion, he who possesses the best information makes the best deal, in this case reaching the relevant us- ers on the most favourable commercial terms. o private programmatic
  • 32. 32 #campaignPRIVATEPROGRAMMATIC Matthias Schrader CEO SINNERSCHRADER “SCRATCH BENEATH THE SURFACE AND YOU’LL FIND AN EPOCHAL WAR IS GOING ON AT THE MOMENT AROUND ADVERTISER DATA.” That sounds a bit like the age-old retargeting. Matthias Schrader: Retargeting is in actual fact a special case in the process, which we at NEXT ­AUDIENCE call Private Programmatic. It differs from conventional retargeting in three main ways. Firstly, we don’t just look at the buying funnel, such as cancellations at the shopping cart stage, for ex- ample. We analyse a user’s Customer Journey, de- livering relevant messages in every phase of the ­customer cycle. That’s the only way to scale display ­advertising for advertisers in the entire process. Secondly, we don’t depend on cookies, we save the profiles on our own server, enabling us to enrich them at any time with other information, such as CRM data, or using statistical methods to divide the market into segments, which can be addressed ­individually. Thirdly, with our solutions, advertisers can define with great precision the quantity and quality of contact for each user. This is something which will become ever more important for the short-term success of campaigns and the long- term acceptance of online advertising. So what is Private Programmatic exactly? Matthias Schrader: Scratch beneath the surface and you’ll find an epochal war is going on at the moment around advertiser data. On the field of battle there are three parties, whose future business model lies in monetising this data. In one corner you have the large platforms such as Google and Facebook, in ­another the ad networks (retargeting providers of a sort) and then again you have the international ­media agency networks. The latter two are losing their purchasing advantage through auction models with Real Time Bidding– under the hammer, more of the same becomes dearer, not cheaper. And so they are trying to maintain their very comfortable mar- gins using their own technology. Here’s the hitch: in this game advertisers can’t really exploit the poten- tial that Programmatic Buying offers them. Very few advertisers will want to share their CRM data with Google and Facebook, for example. Media agencies are awkward bedfellows for them too, because a
  • 33. 33 #campaignPRIVATEPROGRAMMATIC As Director of Digital Analytics Amelia Showalter participated in President Obama’s successful re-election campaign. Her new mission is to bring the Obama campaign’s culture of rigorous testing and analysis to progressive organisations, campaigns, and companies. Here are some of her tips about testing: # Rely on data, rather than gut instinct. If you’ve got ideas about which marketing messages will work on your audience, you should test them out and let the data prove you right or wrong. # Start small! If you have an email news- letter, you can divide your audience randomly in half and test out some new messages and formats. Or you can run a test on your website, and try out new ways of getting people to make purchases or sign up for your email list. To build up the culture of testing, you just have to start somewhere and keep testing out new ways to improve. Culture of Testing It’s important to test out lots of mes- sages and images, and to use every opportunity to learn more about your audience’s preferences. # Implementing this culture of testing means that people will need to do a little more work, to come up with different versions of each email, banner or web- page. It is important to plan ahead. And, of course, the leaders of a company will need to approve the process. It’s very hard to have a culture of testing if the people at the top aren’t on board. # To amend campaigns, it is important to have the right data at hand. The most useful information about people is the information they voluntarily give you. AMELIA showalter CONSULTANT AND DIGITAL STRATEGIST near-lock-in occurs through their own proprietary technology. User profiles can’t be transferred to a new agency partner, and so advertisers have great difficulty in switching agency partners without ­suffering massive losses in performance. At NEXT AUDIENCE we work exclusively for the fourth party at the table: the advertisers who, as hosts, pay for the entire show at the end of the day. We operate an exclusive Data Management Plat- form (DMP) for them on their own hardware. This guarantees complete control over their data and ­allows them to enrich user profiles without having to ­release information, such as CRM data, for exam- ple, to third parties. As the only costs involved are technical, the entire efficiency gains in program- matic media buying go to the advertiser, who doesn’t have to share them with third parties. We call this principle Private Programmatic.
  • 34. 06 35–38 #o uTR O by MArtin reckeWHAT’S NEXT
  • 35. 35 #outroWhat’snext The digital transformation reaches top management The impact of most inventions is overesti- mated in the short-term, but dramatically underestimated in the long run. Truism though that may be, it happens over and over again. With such predictability, in fact, that Gartner’s IT consultants have man- aged to plot it in some detail in their ‘hype cycle’ for each new technology. Hype surrounding the digital transfor- mation probably reached the peak of ex- aggerated expectation in 2014. Just like the New Economy fifteen years earlier, it ­arrived at the floor of top management, who quickly delegated it to interns back in 2001, prior to its gradual reemergence in the middle of the last decade. With the NEXT conference alongside other events, SinnerSchrader has been overseeing the digital revolution since 2006 – from its beginning and initial successes through to the transition to its next phase, the digital transformation. This revolution has shifted the balance of power to the benefit of the consumer and the detriment of the corporation. Today, digital consum- ers expect the same standards in their ­analogue world as they have come to know from the network or their smartphones. In the first instance this has conse- quences for interfaces, communication and interaction with customers. And subse- quently for products and services them- selves, as well as for the entire production process including the supply chain, as ­described by terms such as ‘Industry 4.0’ and ‘Industrial Internet’. In this way the digital transforma- tion transcends traditional departmental boundaries. Where the matter becomes the remit of the Chief Marketing Officer, the ex- perience of recent years has shown that few CMOs on their own can put companies NEXT BERLIN Since 2006 SinnerSchrader has been introducing digital business trends at its annual conference NEXT Berlin. What’s NEXT? T
  • 36.
  • 37. 37 #outroWhat’snext with an analogue mindset onto a digital footing. It needs a clear commitment on the part of the CEO. Many firms, especially in the US, react to this realisation by appointing a Chief ­Digital Officer (CDO). Atif Rafiq, for example – formerly of Amazon – has been advanc- ing digital at McDonalds for the past year, seeking to extend the fast food chain into an e-commerce enterprise. Around a quar- ter of US firms will have a CDO by 2015, ­according to Gartner. In the first instance this is a clear signal – both internally and externally – that the subject has made it to the top management rung, and now has a voice on the board of management. That CDOs are sometimes also posi- tioned in the second tier of management is only a limitation of sorts, as other CXOs are in the same boat. Another approach is to include the subject area within the remit of the COO, who, well used to tasks which transcend depart- ments, tends to view the digital transfor- mation more from a procedural and pro- cess perspective as a result. Deutsche Bank opted for this approach in autumn 2014 when its COO, Henry Ritchotte, took over responsibility for digital. Other potential candidates for the role of the digital transformation in manage- ment are the CIO and CTO, of late the latter tends to be sometimes written out as ‘Chief Transformation Officer’. They are already responsible for the digital platforms and processes within the organisation, which gives them a gatekeeper role. At the end of the day it is not what the management position is called, or whether it is newly created or not, that determines success. What is critical is • the support of the CEO, in order to over- come resistance within the firm • that the digital transformation, being a topic of much strategic import, resides with top management, • a clear focus on the consumer and his or her needs, as consumers are further ad- vanced in the digital space than most companies. From the very start the NEXT set itself the task of providing a level of orientation in what is a confusing environment, and to put relevant trends and subjects onto the decision maker’s agenda. Alongside the yearly conference, a rich video archive and a constantly updated blog also serve this end. With the ‘NEXT Generation’ study, Peter Hinssen Author and speaker at NEXT14 “It is the best of times and it is the worst of times. Technology has never been more amazing, but at the same time, we feel the challenges for our organisations.”
  • 38. 38 #outro ­carried out for the first time this year by SinnerSchrader and the rheingold institute, we are taking a qualitative glance at the behaviour of the young user segments. In addition, we have started to devel- op the NEXT Executive Circle, as a forum for decision makers who wish to face the challenge of the digital revolution. Hav- ing kicked off in Berlin, further meetings took place in Hamburg and Paris. Up- coming meetings are planned for March 2015 in Barcelona and May 2015, again in Berlin. Participation in these regular events is by invitation only. If you are in- terested in ­taking part, please contact matthias.schrader@nextberlin.eu. NEXT EXECUTIVE CIRCLE Marketing decision makers gathering: CMOs and CDOs discuss topics of the digital transformation. Tony Douglas Innovations Manager BMW and speaker at NEXT14 “Anyone who calls ­himself an expert in this space, is an expert for 15 seconds.” Martin Recke Martin Recke is the Head of Conference Management for SinnerSchrader and organises the NEXT conferences and other events since 2006. He blogs at nextberlin.eu, among other sites.
  • 39. Imprint Publisher SinnerSchrader Group, Völckersstraße 38, 22765 Hamburg, Deutschland  Contributors Axel Averdung, Peter Bihr, Anni Brück, Laurent Burdin, Nils Jacobsen, Olaf Kolbrück, Martin Recke, Matthias Schrader, Meike Schreiber, Amelia Showalter, Adam Tinworth and Nils Wollny Editorial Team Ina Feistritzer, Benjamin Nickel, Martin Recke, Niko Timm (CD), Nils Wollny  Translation and Proofreading Tim Gill, Conor Horgan, David Thompson  Illustration Christian Schupp   Picture Credits Thomas Fedra, Nils Hasenau, Katrin Saalfrank, Dan Taylor  Design ringzwei, Hamburg  separation Johannes Bauer in der Printarena, Hamburg   print Eurodruck in der Printarena, Hamburg   Copyright 2014 SinnerSchrader Group Despite careful scrutiny of the publication by the editorial board the publisher accepts no liability for its accuracy. Prior permission must be obtained in writing from the publishers for any use that is not explicitly permissible under copyright law. www.sinnerschrader.com