One man’s dream can be another man’s nightmare: imagine a market where every producer knows his consumers perfectly or one with 100 percent demand and zero alternative to his product, a market with no competition where products fly off the shelves effortlessly?
The president of a distressed global car manufacturing corporation might daydream of possessing this kind of total supplier’s market before facing a hostile annual shareholders’ meeting. The same dream would be the mother of all nightmares for an advertising communications executive; in a world with no choice communication has neither place nor meaning.
To the good fortune of the advertising industry markets (as the seminal ‘Cluetrain Manifesto’ made clear at the beginning of this century) are conversations, and these conversations have been diversifying and intensifying in our era of the knowledge economy.
But this new world continues to grow ever newer layers: we no longer live in the information age; we live in an age of information management, as Eli Khoury, chief executive officer of M+C Saatchi, pointed to Executive.
At issue is a global cultural problem where people think they really know what they are doing when they claim to be experts because they had success with the Internet on one, limited occasion. “The digital age allowed anybody to be his own king, which so far is proving to have lowered the standard of available talents,” Khoury said.
In this age more than ever, the distinction between marketing clutter and meaningful conversation is measurability. Advertising research, which measures the quantitative and qualitative rapport between the target audience and the originator of any commercial communication, has made strides in the Arab markets to the point that there are no underdeveloped markets anymore, said Edouard Monin, chairman and CEO of Ipsos Middle East and North Africa. [Ipsos MENA, the regional affiliate of France-based independent international research organization Ipsos, and Pan-Arab Research Company (PARC), are the two widely used providers of research in advertising and media in the region.]
The growth of research in the MENA region was boosted by the recession of 2008, said Ziad Skaff, group director of Integral Middle East and North Africa, a research company in the Omnicom Group. While other parts of the advertising business were hit, the economic downturn highlighted the importance of measurement and research to everyone’s benefit, he said, “The recession has given many companies a slap, telling them, for every penny you pay, there should be some return. If it is not a return moneywise, it should be a return in relation to Key Performance Indicators [KPI].”
According to Monin, research clients are no longer found only among multinational companies. “Local companies are also doing a lot of research. In some cases, they are even more professional than the big multinational companies,” he said, emphasizing local companies in competitive fields such as banking, finance and mobile communications.
Integral’s Skaff estimated that all global, and 70 percent of local, clients dealing with Omnicom Group agencies in the region employ some kind of measurements today.
However, as Monin remarked, the region accounts for the smallest share of financial expenditure into advertising research globally, at only about 1 percent of the world’s total. In absolute numbers, the region’s entire advertising research investments amounted to no more than an estimated $230 million in 2008.
That was up from $62 million in 2002 and $125 million in 2005, but despite annual average growth in the 20 percent range, “if you compare it with advertising expenditure or with research expenditure worldwide, $230 million is ridiculous,” said Monin.
According to Ipsos data Monin shared exclusively with Executive, Saudi Arabia is the region’s largest research market, at nearly 30 percent. The Gulf Cooperation Council, including Saudi Arabia, overall accounts for about half of regional research investment. Research expenditures in the Levant contribute no more than 10 percent to the total; Iran contributes 10 percent and Egypt and other markets in North Africa generate up to 25 percent. The rest comes mainly from Pakistan.
The execution of research is concentrated in the hands of four or five large organizations that have a combined market share of 60 to 65 percent, while another 20 to 25 small and midsized companies also provide research, Monin said.
Companies such as Integral do the bulk of their research in support of the group and its clients. “We are hopefully beneficial to our industry and mainly to our clients,” said Skaff.
Researchers’ hurdles
The effectiveness of research in the region is still facing challenges, including an expectation from clients of much lower rates here than they would have to pay elsewhere, even though overheads and expert staff costs in the MENA are on par with global levels, Monin said.
Several leaders in the advertising industry said they are banking on new tools to achieve research insights faster. “We are in the process of creating live consumer panels in key markets, where we interact with consumers on a daily or weekly basis,” said Firas el-Zein, CEO of ZenithOptimedia MENA.
Others noted that dated research methodologies create obstacles in markets such as Saudi Arabia, where cultural sensitivities have obstructed automated measurement of television consumption in homes.
But beyond the technical challenge, media owners, advertising agencies and advertising clients have not been able to find a formula for operating audience measurements, said Elie Khoury, CEO of OMD Mena (not to be confused with Eli Khoury of Saatchi). “There is a lot of mistrust in the industry. Nobody can agree on who should be leading this,” he explained, adding the problem affected only TV audience measuring.
Samir Ayoub, CEO of media services company Mindshare in MENA, told Executive that for many years one problem with research in the region has been an unwillingness to admit mistakes. “When the research is out and it is not in my favor I will object and say the research is wrong. If we don’t admit [our faults], we can never progress and improve.”
Communication within the research industry appears to be a key factor. “We must be able to sit together as research companies and create an association to develop the business in the region,” Monin said.