In economic crisis,
businesses change their ad strategies
Readers have got tired of ad pieces on
print papers, while TV watchers would switch to other channels when they see
ads. With 28 million users, the Internet has become a new potential ad
channel.
The participants at the workshop discussing the
tendency in the communication and advertisement industries in
Do Kim Dung, Deputy Chair of the Vietnam Advertisement
Association, said the years 2012 and 2013 witnessed the sharp downturn in the
print ads all over the world and in
In 2010,
However, Dung said that the market share held by
Internet ads remain… immeasurable, while the proportion is 19-20 percent in
the world.
“I believe that the Internet still cannot outstrip
print newspapers as an ad channel. However,
“It’s obvious that young people are the biggest
consumers, while they are the biggest Internet users,” he added.
Ad firms complained that the ad turnover decreased
dramatically in 2012, since businesses all tended to cut down the budgets for
ad campaigns.
Phan Le Khoi, Vice President of IB Group, noted that
businesses nowadays tend to think twice when budgeting ad programs. In
general, they run comprehensive marketing campaigns to promote some kinds of
products, while ads are just a part of the campaigns.
Khoi went on to say that there are many different ways
for businesses to access customers instead of spending big money on ads.
There are many instruments and channels for businesses to introduce their
products to consumers, while the costs are very “reasonable,” such as social
network websites like Facebook or Zing.
Vietnamese ad firms have also complained that they have
to compete fiercely with foreign ad firms, even though the foreign firms bear
some restrictions in doing business in
Why can foreign firms win the competition? According to
Khoi, the key lies in the way of thinking. While Vietnamese ad firms simply
carry out ad programs, foreign firms think about the strategies.
The weak point of Vietnamese ad firms is that they
don’t focus on the creativeness, while they simply fulfill the ideas and
programs ordered by clients.
Market survey firms said the global ad turnover in 2012
grew by 4.7 percent, while the figure was 1.2 percent in Asia Pacific.
Meanwhile, a report of UNDP provided for the presentation
about the ad law in January 2012 showed the market shares of the ad channels
as follows: TV 41 percent, Internet 16 percent, outdoors ads 11 percent,
journals 5 percent, newspapers 23 percent and radio 4 percent.
The figures in Vietnam were as follows: TV 78 percent,
newspapers 11 percent, journal 7 percent, outdoors 4 percent, Internet 0
percent and movie 0 percent (0 percent means inconsiderable).
Predicting about the growth rate of the ad industry,
Khoi of IB Group said the figure could be 13 percent in the world, and no
less than 6 percent in
DDDN
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Chủ Nhật, 19 tháng 5, 2013
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