The Lean Advertising Network:
Learning What You Already Know.

Here is an interesting proposition. What if you were a Chief Marketing Officer and through some quirk of magic or miracle of teleportation you found yourself sitting in the not-so-comfortable chair of a telemarketing or customer service operator in one of your offshore call centers in, say…Bangladore? What could you learn about your customers that you didn’t already know? More importantly, what could you do with that information to improve the effectiveness of your marketing communications efforts? How could you leverage the experience of those eight hours of customer selling or servicing face time to your brand’s best advantage?

O.K. Let’s step back from the Twilight Zone for a minute. In a survey released by CustomerSat in May of 2007, 71 percent of the sales and marketing executives polled admitted to having less understanding of why their customers remained loyal to their respective brands than they knew five years ago. Yet they have infinitely more customer information at their disposal. More data. Less understanding. More facts. Less insight. Without that insight they admit that all the data in their CRM systems is useless.

So, given this condition, short of unseating a call center operator, how do you reach your customers with the most effective solutions, value propositions, and brand differentiators without a clear understanding of what works and what does not work? The impact of this question and all of the other questions that may be going without answers right now, is very real. And that is the promise that we believe the advent of our Lean Advertising Theory may fulfill.
________________________________________

For your own Lean Advertising White Paper Click Here.

This is why with the help of our readers and industry thought leaders we have initiated the development of the Lean Advertising Network, a real-time technology platform that will allow companies to deploy Lean Advertising practices as a back-up to their existing marketing communications procedures. This proof-of-concept effort will provide forward thinking marketing decision makers with suite of management solutions that conform to the practice of Lean Advertising, yet have been proven in their own respective arenas. These existing solutions will be administered by a middleware application that puts the entire network on the desktop for a transparency that is non-existent in today’s Byzantine world of traditional and interactive advertising options.

What Exactly Is A Lean Advertising Network?

If you could go back in time, equipped with what you now know and advantage that knowledge and insight to create the practice we know as advertising, what would it look like, what would it work like, what would it do for you? This was the premise the development team of the Lean Advertising Network began with.

As you know if you have been following this series of articles, we started with the principals of Lean Manufacturing as our architecture. This meant that we had to create a process of advertising that would be engineered to improve upon itself over and over and over again. The development team began their process with the smallest units of measurement possible. Eight people in our office were their first audience. Not customers. Not prospects. Just the people the developers needed to influence.

Next came the product. An Apple. Then they created an ad for the apple. The next step was to develop the media that they would use to reach their audience. The developers put up a bulletin board and tacked the ad up for all to see. “For Sale. One Red Apple. $25.”

Nobody bought the apple. Now real-time analytics were put into play. The developers asked each of the eight people in their audience what it would take for them to buy the apple for $25. Nobody was interested in a $25 apple. This provided the developers with the insight they needed to improve their advertising. The developers changed the price to 25 cents.

Now they had six customers. The developers had to decide whether to buy more apples or revise their ad to turn it into an apple auction. Once again the ad was refined. The ad became interactive with eight response tabs asking who would be willing to pay more than 25 cents for the apple and who felt it was wrong to change the price at all. Five people responded. No one was willing to bid on the apple. Three people suggested the audience initial their tabs and they be put in a hat and the “winner” be drawn.

The ad was revised again to ask if the drawing should be held before or after lunch. No one responded.

The ad was revised yet again to announce that the drawing would be held in ten minutes. Four people submitted their slips for the drawing. The slip was drawn, the apple was sold. Profit and cost were calculated. A questionnaire was sent to all eight members of the audience asking how the developers could improve the process and the product.

Three people filled out the questionnaire saying bring more apples. One said give them a choice between apples and oranges. Two said leave me out of this nonsense, I have work to do.

From this humble beginning the developers created a system that tied in the product development, the supply chain, the advertising development, the media selection, the audience, the audience feedback, the cost and ROI factors, the sales process, the evaluation process, the ability to revise each element of the program based upon what was learned by monitoring those elements and finally the ability to expand the system and incorporate other networks, applications, data sources and multichannel touchpoints in the process. From a simple sign on a bulletin board the developers expanded to email, direct mail, direct response print, web-based media, and finally broadcast. And the first Lean Advertising Network was born. At least in concept. Now the fun begins. Building the proof of concept…for real.

Stay strong.



WEDNESDAY
FEBRUARY 6, 2008
ISSUE 175

ABOUT ME

ARCHIVE

CONTACT ME

AGENDA

MOST READ

MAD002
The Journey
to Great

MAD009
The Death of
Advertising

MAD023
The Boy Who
Broke My Heart

MAD025
Too Busy for
Temptation

MAD072
The Rise and
Fall of the
Creative Class

MAD006
The Battle for
Coca-Cola
Rages On

MAD059
Happy Birthday
to Me

MAD060
The City that
Spawned the
Age of
Advertising

MAD066
The True Cool

MAD095
The Creeping
Influence Of All
Things Emo.

MAD015
The Four Great
Myths of Global
Branding

MAD026
The One True
Thing

MAD030
The Lost Art of
Persuasion

MAD021
Dare To Be
Great: The Mad
Genius of The
"Matrix"

MAD071
Boomers
Downshift
To Neutral

MAD092
Advertising
Immunity. Can
It Be Cured In
Our Lifetime?

MAD100
Breathing New
Life Into
American
Business

LINKS WE LIKE

TheNextSmart.com

HarryWebber.com

IAPIA.org

PowerPitchMovies.com

GrowUpToBeRich.com

TheGaspCompany.com

BizHunter.com

BrAnswers.com

POWER BLOGS

Hollwood-Elsewhere

AdRants

Adland

Ads Of The World

Ad Goodness

Beyond Madison Av

Jaffe Juice

Make The Logo
Bigger

Random Culture

Entrepreneur Success Blog

American Copywriter

Digital Axle

Adgabber.com

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The Lost Art Of
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Reality Check

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Making Your Own
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The Future of Branding


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Me, Unmasked


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Nobody Knows
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Ma(Duh!)son
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The Ultimate
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The Next
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What Are
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Help Wanted:
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The New
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The Client's
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Ladies And
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Change Or
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Clients Kick
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Money For
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Too Cool To
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Pimp My
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Why Don't You
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What Would
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The Dance Heard
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MAD130
Why Brand
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WHO READS
MADISON AVENEW

ADVERTISING/PR AGENCIES
A.C. Nielsen Co
Anomoly
Arnold Worldwide
BBDO NY
Bravo Group
Brodeur Porter
Novelli
Brandimensions
Burston Marsteller
Campbell Ewald
Carat USA
Cimarron Group
Cramer Krasselt
Crispin Porter &
Bogusky
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ENTERTAINMENT

19 Entertainment
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Ask Jeeves, Inc.
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CAA
CBS Studio Center
CBS, Inc.
CineWorks
Clear Channel
Courtroom TV Network
DIC Entertainment
DirecTV
Disney Worldwide Services
Electric Lightwave
Emeril’s Homebase Exxon Mobile Corp.
ESPN
Fandango
Franklin Weinrib Rudell
Golf TV
GE/NBC
Harpo Productions

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TECHNOLOGY

Accelovation
AG Technologies
Allied Signal, Inc.
Altavista Company
Apple Computer
Adobe Systems
AT&T Corp.
Bell Laboratories
Boeing
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Coca-Cola
Computer
Sciences Corp.
Compass
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Computerwise,
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Cybernostic Group
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Dell Computer
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Diebold
Digitas
Energy Group
Networks
E. D. S.
Edaptivity.com
Electronic Arts
Equinix, Inc.
Evocative, Inc
GHI Technologies
GTech, Corp.
Genentech, Inc
General Electric
Plastics
GoDaddy Software
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Hollywood
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Hughes Network
IBM Corporation
Knology Holdings
Intel Corporation
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Macromedia, Inc.

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CONSUMER PRODUCTS

Abbott Laboratories
Affiliated Foods
Air Canada
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American Airlines, Inc.
Healthcare
Amazon.com
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Amaco Corporation
Anheuser Busch
Apple Computer
Berretta, USA
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Bayer Corp.
Borders, Inc.
Calvin Klein Cosmetics
Canadian Mental
Christian & Timbers
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Colgate Palmolive
Conrail
Cooper Oil Tool Div.
Corp. Edison Group
Delta Air Lines
Dr Pepper/Seven Up
Eli Lilly & Company
Estee Lauder
Ethan Allen
Federal Express Corp.
First Health Growth
Health Assn
H.J. Heinz Co.
Heinz Service Company
Hilton Hospitality
Hotjobs.com
The Home Depot
HQ Global Workplaces
Humana
Ikea NA Services
International Paper
Johanna Foods Inc.
Johns Hopkins
Johns Manville
Johnson & Johnson
Joseph E. Seagram
Kaiser Permianente
Kinkos, Inc
Masonic Homes
Mead Corp.
Merck & Co.
McDonald's
McKesson
National Gypsum
Norfolk&Southern Railway
Nike
Office Max
Oliver Peoples
Pepsi-Cola
Pfizer
Phillip Morris

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PUBLICATIONS

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Adweek
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Media
American City
Business Journal
Bloomberg Financial
Brandweek
C|Net
Chicago Tribune
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Telerate
Forbes, Inc.
Getty Images
Hachette Filipacchi
Harper Collins
Houghton Miffin Co.
Knight-Ridder

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FINANCIAL FIRMS

Assurant, Inc.
American Express
American Family
Insurance
Automatic Data
Bank Of America
Bank One
Banque Paribus
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Central Life Insurance
Charles Schwab & Co.
Citicorp Global
Information Network
Chase Manhatten
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Commonwealth
Dean Witter
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Dorland Sweeny
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Ernst & Young
Fannie Mae
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First American Title
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GOVERNMENT/
NGO

42nd Communications
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AFB
Admin Office of U.S.
Courts
Air Force Logistics
Command.
American Heart Assn.
Autism Partnership
The Art Institute
International
American Red Cross
Cal Dept. of Social
Services
Canadian Wheat Board
City Of Philadelphia
City of Los Angeles
City of New York
Commonwealth of
Kentucky
Communicom Services,
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Cherokee Indians
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John D & Cathrine T. McArthur Foundation

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In response to
Issue #174
"Relentless Creativity ."

This is getting better and better. Just when I was about to give up on anything new coming out of this business, here you come with your lean advertising to shake us all up. Keep it coming.

T VanKamp, Phoenix