Last week I was ‘doing digital’ business in New York. Tony Blair was in town too, advising WPP, but compared to his day rate (a reported $200k) my digital consultation comes at a bargain!
I am fascinated by digital anthropology – observing how digital infiltrates culture and society. So with every trip that I take abroad I try to come away with as many digital snapshots as I can, as these are helpful indicators of market growth and consumption trends.
Here are some of my observational snapshots from my time in the city that never sleeps last week:
- Boy, is digital TV big in the US! You only have to gaze up at the HD screens in Times Square to appreciate the enormity and the sophistication of the digital branded content on the big screen. While in town we attended the launch of ControlTV (http://controltv.com) which is another example of how brands are investing heavily in digital broadcast content – it begs the question, is this cannibalising non-digital TV budgets or will this be a new, additional line on the media plan?
- New Yorkers (and we must make the point that New York isn’t necessarily a microcosm of where the rest of the country is it with its digital adoption curve) are tablet-tastic. Whether it’s the iPad or the Kindle, you see these being consumed / read / used on the subway and in cafes much more than here in London.
- Spot the Starbucks customer without an iMac!
- As of 1st October 2010, Bing + Yahoo! = 30% of the US search market. They’re back in the game! Last week Microsoft started the migration of AdCenter campaign delivery onto Yahoo! Search results. Will Google be worried?
- Blackberry is much bigger than here in the UK. This market share is probably set to grow with the launch of the Blackberry Playbook (rival to the Apple iPad) in 2011.
- Free Wi-Fi is being curtailed. Cafes, bars and public spaces are blocking their Wi-Fi access to the general public because US digital IP legislation is much tougher than in the UK and no proprietor wants to be sued for one of their customers illegally downloading copyrighted digital content.
- (One for the journey home) – on Virgin Atlantic the in-flight entertainment channel cross-promoted Virgin Media to VA customers. It just occurred to me what a no-brainer that was, when both are on-demand digital TV channels owned by the same umbrella brand. Yet Virgin is unique in this cross-platform opportunity from digital ‘in the sky’ to digital ‘on land’.
I guess if I were to summarise these snapshots, or to try to find a common theme, it would be one of multi-screen, multi-dimensional digital opportunities for brands.
It is always interesting to get a feel for what the opportunities are for brands to target customers over the other side of the pond, and equally interesting to compare the US digital market with the markets here in Europe.
Blog post by Amanda Davie, Managing Director of Reform



