Looking Back at 2019 and the Dawn of a New Era
The decade is drawing quickly to a close, and it’s been a wild ride. From new technologies to new members of our family (we welcomed BizTech, IMA, Firewood Marketing and WhiteBalance this year), 2019 presented us with a lot of thrilling changes—and some exciting opportunities as we enter a new era. Looking back, we polled managing directors from our offices around the world for their favorite trends and technologies that have emerged in the past year—and what they’re looking forward to next.
Extended Reality Gets Real
Interest in mixed and extended reality (the combination of real and virtual objects or environments, like augmented or virtual reality, enabled by mobile or wearable devices) has been growing. At the same time, mixed reality has made strides in maturity over the past year, like Google’s efforts in making virtual objects feel truly anchored to the environment with occlusion, in which virtual objects are responsive to their surrounding environment—for example, disappearing behind real-world objects.
For Martin Verdult, Managing Director at MediaMonks London, extended reality is among the innovations he’s become most excited about going into 2020, and not just for the entertainment potential: “Virtual and augmented reality will become increasingly prevalent for training and simulation, as well as offering new ways to interact with customers.” For example, our Spacebuzz virtual reality experience gives children a unique look at the earth and environment they may typically take for granted, using the power of immersive tech to leave an indelible mark.
Value comes from connecting an IP to a brand through a deeply engaging hyper reality experience.
As the technology that powers extended reality matures, so will its potential use cases. But when a technology is still evolving significantly in short time, it can be difficult for brands to translate their ideas or goals into clear, value-added extended reality experiences. “We have introduced creative sprints for our core clients to get these ideas in a free flow,” says Verdult.
Among Verdult’s favorite examples of augmented reality projects MediaMonks has worked on this year is Unilever’s Little Brush Big Brush, which uses whimsical, virtual animal masks to teach children proper brushing habits and turn a chore into playtime. Similarly, extended reality can bring products to life in an engaging way—or if used in a customer’s research phase, it can help customers interact with a product with minimal (or no) dedicated retail shelf space.
Part of the Little Brush Big Brush’s charm is that it extends beyond simply AR, connecting to a web cartoon series and a Facebook Messenger chatbot to reward kids with stickers at key milestones. “Value comes from connecting an IP to a brand through a deeply engaging hyper reality experience,” says Olivier Koelemij, Managing Director at MediaMonks LA. “One that only a well-executed integrated production can offer, combining digital and physical in new and extraordinary ways.”
AI/Machine Learning Grows Up
One can’t reflect on past innovations and look to the future without mentioning artificial intelligence and machine learning. From programmatic delivery to enabling entirely new creative experiences—like matured extended reality powered by computer vision—to connecting cohesive experiences across the Internet of Things, artificial intelligence “will change our interaction with technology in ways we can’t imagine yet,” says Sander van der Vegte, Head of MediaMonks Labs, our research and development team that continually experiments with innovation.
The most creatively inspiring uses of AI are the ones that will help us understand the world and our fellow humans. In collaboration with Charité, for example, we programmed a 3D printer to exhibit common symptoms of Parkinson’s disease and its effect on motor skills. The result is a series of surreal art-objects that make real patients’ experiences tangible for the general population.
Social Content and Activations Build Impact
Ask Sicco Wegerif (Managing Director at MediaMonks Amsterdam) what struck him this year, and he’ll tell you it’s the elevation of social content in purchasing—for example, how Instagram made influencer posts shoppable early this year. Wegerif notes that about a quarter of consumers have made a purchase on social media, signaling new opportunities for brands to build connections with consumers.
“Looking at this from an integrated and smart production perspective, we can help brands create so many assets and storylines that tap into this trend, especially when combining this with data so we can be super personal and relevant.” When social media is prioritized early in the creative and planning process, it can enable more meaningful experiences.
For example, our “People are the Places” activation for Aeromexico used Facebook content to transform the way users discover destinations around the world. Instead of researching and booking a city, users get to learn about people around the world—then purchase a ticket to where they call home. The social content enriches the experience and builds emotion into the experience. “It’s in essence a very simple thought that can change the whole CX,” says Wegerif.
Social Activations and Digital Experiences Weave Together
Speaking of social media, it can become a powerful tool to build relevance and connection with experiential. Jason Prohaska, Managing Director at MediaMonks NY, says: “Experience and social work hand-in-hand as part of the digital plan for many brands, and are no longer below the priority line.” With live experiential—which elevates the role of the online audience to interact, take part in and build buzz around experiences—brands can achieve greater strategic impact in how they build connection with their consumers.
But doing so successfully requires a confluence of data, influencers, experiential storytelling and production. The future of this looks good to Prohaska. “We expect 2020 to deliver several use case scenarios at scale for brand identity that may set benchmarks for personalization, automation, customer journey optimization, efficacy, performance and engagement.”
Koelemij looks forward to stronger investment in digital and consumer understanding as brands begin to integrate experiences even further going into 2020. “With most good work, success and performance can now be better attributed to digital as we get more advanced in understanding what success looks like,” he says, “especially in how we can measure it across blended activations.”
And that’s exactly how we’d like to spend 2020: helping brands achieve their goals with data-backed, insights-driven creative across the customer decision journey. Through added capabilities thanks to companies like WhiteBalance, Firewood, BizTech and IMA joining the S4Capital family in 2019, we achieve this by greatly prioritizing and enhancing key elements of the marketing mix for daring brands—and as we reflect on the past year, we can’t wait to see what’s next.
Related
Thinking
-
Blog post
The New Playbook to Extend a Sports Spot into a Brand World By Tim Gunter 4 min read -
Blog post
What 2025 Revealed About AI, and What It Unlocks in 2026 By Monks 5 min read -
Blog post
Building Email Inbox Trust and Strong Sender Reputation through Disciplined Warming Strategies By Bridget Creach 8 min read
Sharpen your edge in a world that won't wait
Sign up to get email updates with actionable insights, cutting-edge research and proven strategies.
Monks needs the contact information you provide to us to contact you about our products and services. You may unsubscribe from these communications at any time. For information on how to unsubscribe, as well as our privacy practices and commitment to protecting your privacy, please review our Privacy Policy.