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Tuesday, 21 July 2015 01:23 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
By Madushka Balasuriya
What will marketing be like 10 years from now? That’s the question Mathew Neilson, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Chartered Institute of Marketing (CIM) UK - the world’s largest professional body for marketing - is currently posing to marketers from around the globe through the website marketing2025.com.
“When speaking about the future of marketing, one of the things that struck me is ‘where do you start on such a big topic?’” remarked Neilson at a CIM breakfast forum held recently in Colombo.
Neilson, who was in Sri Lanka for the Sri Lankan CIM Graduation and Membership Investiture Ceremony on 17 July, went on to show a brief video of Arthur C. Clark. In it Clarke notes that advances in science and technology will mean that a reasonable prediction of the future would in “20 or, at most, 50 years” seem “ridiculously conservative” while an accurate one “would sound so absurd that everyone would laugh.”
“The only thing we can be sure of about the future is that it will be absolutely fantastic,” concludes Clarke, a conclusion Neilson hopes can be applied to marketing through the ‘Marketing2025’ initiative.
“I’d like you to cast your mind back 10 years and see how much some things have changed. The scale and pace of this change is having a transformational effect on how we live and work. No other corner of business has felt this change more than marketing. Marketers are seeing a significant shift in power; brands and media owners are starting to see their power eroded by customers and consumers,” observed Neilsen, painting a picture of what can or cannot be expected in the future.
“At the end of 2014, CIM held a series of events called ‘Future Focus’ to explore and capture the views of our members. That has led to a major global discussion over the first part of 2015 called ‘Marketing 2025’.
“We want to define the role of marketing in 2025 and enable the marketers of the future, and in partnership with a range of expert marketers CIM is going to champion and reward the most forward-thinking marketers in the industry, who help to predict and solve the challenges of the future,” revealed Neilsen, who went on to note the six key themes under which the debate would be structured: Marketing economics, digital, brands, skills, talents and careers, social and sustainability. In a brief Q&A session following his speech, Neilson was questioned about how marketers in Sri Lanka could better prepare themselves for the ever-changing landscape of technology and social media.
“The question is ‘what’s the next big thing?’ because the likelihood is, that by the time people in Sri Lanka become connected in a way to social media, they would have moved on to the next form of social media,” noted Neilsen, citing Snapchat as an example of a “big form of social media that [he] absolutely [has] no understanding of” but which would “increasingly play an important role around millennials.”
“Those emerging trends that are based on a younger generation in western societies are likely to play a hugely important role in terms of how the young people of Sri Lanka respond to that,” added Neilsen, acknowledging that while “people are very comfortable with their traditional methods” the “skill of a marketer is actually to see how they bring all of the different channels [of marketing] together in the most effective way.”
“I don’t watch TV anymore. Instead I use Netflix and Amazon Instant. My viewing habits are completely different from what they were five years ago. So I feel that increasingly it will be the consumers that decide which channels [of marketing] they will engage us with, and which channels they want to switch us off from if they feel we’re being invasive. Therefore, researching and understanding your customer’s engagement habits is absolutely critical.”
CIM Chairman Mathew Neilson shares key insights into future of marketingThe Daily FT met up with Mathew Neilson, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of The Chartered Institute of Marketing (CIM) UK for a brief interview during his visit to Sri Lanka. Following are excerpts:
Q: Following the discussions you’ve had in Sri Lanka, what are the differences you have noticed in the problems faced by marketers here as opposed to those in the UK?
Q: Could you elaborate on what you mean by a “lack of talent”? Is it a lack of skills or qualifications?
Q: In your speech you addressed the blurring of lines when it comes to responsibilities for marketers. How does a CIM qualification address that?
Q: What advice do you have for businesses that want to spur growth in Sri Lanka around the concept of sustainability?
Q: Marketing in 2025 - what are some of the better ideas that you have seen? |