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What is an insight?
A deep truth about the consumer, brand, or category that leads to stronger creative ideas.
Components of an insight
Truth (what's really happening in people's lives)
Tension (a frustration, barrier, or unmet need)
Motivation (what drives consumer behavior)
Fact vs. Observation vs. Insight
Fact = True, objective statement (e.g., "60% of students drink coffee daily").
Observation = Behavior noticed (e.g., "Students often drink coffee before morning classes").
Insight = Deeper understanding of "why" (e.g., "Students feel coffee is essential for focus and productivity, not just energy").
Where do you find insights?
Ethnography, interviews, surveys, social listening, purchase data, cultural trends, everyday behaviors.
Consumer Usage Rituals
Repeated, meaningful behaviors tied to a product (e.g., Oreo dunking, Starbucks customized orders).
Big Idea
A central creative concept that connects brand + consumer insight + strategy.
Role: Guides campaigns, ensures consistency, differentiates brand.
Persuasive Techniques:
Vivid Demonstrations
Show product working dramatically.
Persuasive Techniques: Scarcity
"Limited time only," FOMO.
Persuasive Techniques:Metaphors
Compare product to relatable idea ("Red Bull gives you wings").
Persuasive Techniques: Authority
Experts, influencers, testimonials.
Brand Frame
The context in which a brand is seen (luxury, everyday, eco-friendly, etc.).
Popular Culture
Brands gain power by showing up in memes, trends, conversations.
Brand Equity
The value a brand holds in consumers' minds (awareness, loyalty, associations).
Brand Position
How the brand is perceived relative to competitors (unique place in market).
Relation: Position drives equity; strong equity reinforces position.
Account Planning
Role vs. Function
Role = What a planner does personally (research, strategy, briefs).
Function = What planning brings to the agency overall (consumer voice, insight generation).
Tasks & Approaches
Writing creative briefs
Conducting research (qual & quant)
Building consumer personas
Monitoring trends
Testing creative
Position Titles
Account Planner, Brand Strategist, Consumer Insights Manager.
IMC (Integrated Marketing Communications)
Coordinated use of multiple communication tools to deliver a consistent message.
IMC (Integrated Marketing Communications)Role
Ensures synergy across channels.
IMC (Integrated Marketing Communications)Process
Research → Planning → Execution → Evaluation.
IMC (Integrated Marketing Communications)types of Messages:
Paid, owned, earned, shared (PESO model).
IMC (Integrated Marketing Communications)Synergy
All channels working together to amplify message.
Successful Campaign Contents:
Clear objectives, insight-driven strategy, big idea, consistent execution, measurable outcomes.
Creative Brief
Strategic document guiding creatives.
What it does: Distills consumer insight + brand strategy into actionable direction.
Types: Single-Minded Brief, Media Brief, Digital Brief, Channel-Specific Briefs.
4Cs Analysis
Consumer, Category, Company, Culture.
Organizational Storytelling
Using brand's history, purpose, and values to create meaning.
Culture
Shared values, beliefs, behaviors.
Trends
Patterns in culture that shift consumer behavior.
Relationship
Trends reflect cultural shifts; culture shapes what trends stick.
Purchase Funnel:Stages
Awareness → Interest → Consideration → Purchase → Loyalty → Advocacy.
Purchase Funnel:Importance
Maps consumer decision-making, guides media strategy.
Measurement & Segmentation
Benchmarking Aspects:
Awareness (do they know the brand?)
Attitude (how do they feel about it?)
Usage (do they buy it?).
Measurement & Segmentation,User Types:
Current, new, category, non-category, light, medium, heavy.
Segmentation:
Dividing audience into groups by:
Demographic (age, gender, income)
Psychographic (values, lifestyle)
Behavioral (purchase habits, loyalty)
Geographic (location).
Existence ≠ Association
Just because a brand exists doesn't mean people connect it with a category or need.
Attitude & Barriers
Attitudes shape purchase barriers (e.g., "too expensive," "not eco-friendly").
Personas
Research-driven fictional profiles representing target consumers.