Couric & Co.
June 29, 2007 10:37 AM

10 Questions: What's Cool?

(Noise Marketing)
More and more companies are grappling with the challenge of how to reach the pickiest possible demographic: young people.

One marketing agency—Noise Marketing—specializes in reaching young adults for corporations like Six Flags and JP Morgan Chase. Its CEO, Noah Kerner, who founded the agency at age 25, just co-wrote a new book on the subject, called "Chasing Cool". He is the subject of this week’s 10 Questions.

1. Noah, your agency, Noise Marketing, has become a go-to shop for brands like Sprite and Yahoo to try to reach a younger audience. What are you teaching them exactly?

Young people are driven by aspiration. They don't want to be spoken to as young people. One of the most common misperceptions is the belief that in order to reach young people, you need to pander to them.

2. You've written about starting to DJ at the age of 14--and becoming such a hit that you even appeared on the Tonight Show. Was that good training for a marketing career?

It was the best training. Like I write in the book, DJing is the ultimate focus group only you're really out there with people seeing what moves them, what bores them, and what it takes to keep them coming back for more. To be a good marketer, you need to be intimately connected to culture. Same thing applies to DJ's.

3. Your new book talks about how companies can stand out in a cluttered marketplace. What are the obstacles, in your view, to brands getting their message out to young people?

Young people are always moving, so you need to move with them. The biggest obstacle is the inability or unwillingness to continuously shake things up.

4. You've said you can't "chase cool." In effect, your brand just has to be cool. But what is cool? And who decides?

Producers decide and consumers will quickly let you know if you're wrong. Cool means vastly different things to vast groups of people so chasing someone else's definition of cool, as if there is some sort of objective definition, is a flawed strategy. Ultimately, cool is the outcome of a process, not a strategy that can be manufactured. All those people and brands - from Robert DeNiro to Grey Goose - who have been fortunate enough to achieve that perception have lead the marketplace with personal vision, not chased after it like a greyhound after a fake rabbit.

5. If you can't buy cool, if no marketing company can deliver cool--then why are you getting hired? And how do you choose which potential clients to accept?

Most of the time we are challenged to build new products or sub-brands for companies that will better appeal to young people. So while we're in the marketing business, we're also in the product development business. If we don't have a hand in the product itself, it's supremely difficult to be successful. Even if the advertising is great, you'll ultimately fail if the product doesn't deliver. As a visionary adman once told me: great advertising makes a bad product fail faster. In terms of clients, we try to work with companies who share this belief.

6. This is a generalization, of course--but what do young people want from the companies that market to them?

Products that deliver on the communication.

7. Does TV and radio advertising still matter to young audiences, or is it all about the web?

Young people still watch TV and listen to radio so its certainly relevant. But the tide is quickly shifting. What's certain is that you'll be more successful launching campaigns for young people on the web than in any other medium. And what will ultimately happen is that companies will one day build campaigns around the web as the central medium and think about TV as the alternative channel.

8. Do the companies you work for have any obligation not to market harmful or unhealthy products to their customers--who, after all, aren't yet adults?

100%. Companies have an obligation to be honest about what they are marketing. We work in the 16-30 range so our core audience isn't all that young. But we won't work with a company that doesn't take the responsibility to be forthright about its products and messages.

9. Who, or what, are the most important opinion-leaders for younger people? Celebrities? Web sites?

Friends, first and foremost. Celebrities have an impact but most celebrities have been diluted to the point where there's no trust left. If Jessica Simpson is schilling for Pizza Hut one minute and Proactive the next, where's the credibility. Doesn't pizza cause pimples?

10. Finally, a bit of a self-interested question, what do you think network newscasts should do to make themselves more relevant to young people?

Shorten the content. Understand new technology platforms and provide content intelligently across those platforms. Don't repurpose news programs for mobile phones, create new news programs for mobile phones. Stop wasting time fighting piracy and figure out how to monetize illegal channels which is something companies like Podzinger are doing.

Tags:
chasing cool ,
noah kerner
Topics:
10 Questions
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Add a Comment
by petersemkiw July 1, 2007 3:20 AM EDT
...There is definitely electricity in the air...
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by petersemkiw July 1, 2007 2:28 AM EDT
...We care about you and we like you...
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by petersemkiw July 1, 2007 2:00 AM EDT
Sun Tzu say:"You have to believe in yourself!"
(Now that was a Sun Tzu moment,brought to you courtesy of my Chinese Fortune Cookie)

And Eric, I agree with you, that if a person is experiencing a clinical depression, they should seek professional help. Help is definitely available out there, and all you have to do is call and reach out to ask for the help, but that isn't always easy to do, but I also agree, Never Give Up and Do Ask For the Help!
And I hope you're reading this, Dear Misty, as this one is for you, Peter




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by ericmichael1 June 30, 2007 11:10 PM EDT
Illness, the loss of loved ones and the crushing disappointments of life can sometimes overwhelm us. Theodore Roosevelt went through terrible depression after the death of his first wife, and likely died with it after the death of his son Quentin in the Great War.

"Black care," he wrote, "rarely sits behind a rider whose pace is fast enough."

Theodore Roosevelt was a brilliant person who led a vibrant, adventurous life. He knew how to cope with adversity: focus on accomplishing something beyond ourselves.

He is credited with preparing the U.S. to become a world power, both with his establishment of a modern navy and the completion of the American Pyramid: the Panama Canal. He fought the selfishness of big business and saved millions of acres of land as national protected areas for future generations to admire and to ponder over.

He had his weaknesses, as we all do. But he left an imprint with his life that still benefits us today.

Yet clinical depression is not something to take lightly. It truly takes a brave man---and woman---to admit that the problem exists and to seek professional help. And to never give up. Like Teddy did.

Never give up.

Eric
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by petersemkiw June 30, 2007 8:41 PM EDT
Dear Katie,
I think that Noah has a lot of important things to say about American Business and Marketing, and especially about how to market for and towards young adults. I would be very interested in reading more about his marketing ideas in his book "Chasing Cool", as it is a strategy that I have been pursuing for many years myself now, as an independent citizen.

The internet and the proliferation of the other new communication and information techonologies, like the iphone just released yesterday, offer so many more opportunities for advertising, and even news broadcasting, which never existed before, and since so many young adults are very familiar with these new gadgets already, it is good that Noah already understands how to use them effectively in his marketing strategies as well.

And it is especially good that Noah's company is actively involved in product development as well.
I agree that "great advertising will make a bad product fail faster". Being involved directly in product development will reduce the chances of a bad product from ever coming to market in the first place.

Chasing Cool is cool. And please don't cry, Misty. Chasing Cool will make you feel better,

Cool Peter





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by Swampthing18 June 30, 2007 2:01 PM EDT
Something cool, huh???? Offer mobile web navigation to the physical world around us in one click. Give the mobile web user / consumer the ability to interact with the product by clicking the barcode, logo, trademark, RFID, slogan, keyword, UPC, etc., to get price, location, information, coupons, tickets, schedules, menus, reviews, etc. The internet of things.

Let the masses just qode it.
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by oakishpines June 29, 2007 6:26 PM EDT
' ... i went to a girl's house and said let's go hunting, and she replied: instead let's garden ... i went to a soldiers house and said let's go hunting, and that girl replied: surely let's, that will be fun ... '

i wonder tho, wut forms of gardening we'll soon find irrational ... for instance: weed killet in one hand and weed super fertilizet in the other as a form of etch-a-sketch

i noticed recently reading some old anthology of poems how cruel the few about the ugly of age and the beauty of outh appeard

just think, soon even a gentle breeze across a field will appear a brutal assault on the poor tinyest creatures hidden inside

if one day soon evolution will succeed defending even the weakest, weak plants and microbes and molecules as well as creatures, and even the dust spends all day getting wishes come true by way of 'eternal storyboards' or 'pc construction wombs' or something,

then, is it more likely earth will beild eternity, or more likely eternity built earth?

i saw an old picture recently of a fallen home on the shore after a storm and in the foreground, a patch of green growth and it made me wonder if anyone builds homes not by tearing down trees to create stable structures, but by stabilizing trees to create stable structures?

where do i find a hundred billion billion new medical you are here map songs and dances and arts and crafts and skits and kits per day? i'm still searching
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by ericmichael1 June 29, 2007 4:38 PM EDT
It would be REALLY cool if we could put Airman on the next plane to Bombay.
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by airmanc5 June 29, 2007 4:01 PM EDT
Another "fluff" story by Katie Couric, with all that is going on in the news world, Katie wants to play softball. How about a story on Radical Islam Katie, and their torture methods? How about you speaking out in Support of Rusdie and his writings on the Satanic Verses, oh yeah, I forgot the Mainstream Media "CNN, CBS, ABC,NBC, NYT's are deadly afraid of doing any type of story involving that, Freedom of the Press does not apply if you are afraid right Katie? IF it is any consulation Katie NBC and Brian, "doom and gloom" williams is losing viewers faster than you acccording to the latest ratings. A movie called Islam vs the Islamist, which PBS spent $700,000 of taxpayers money to have made, then refused to show it because they were afraid of the extremeist, is being shown on, of all stations Fox newschannel this sat i believe at 3 pm. I loving watching PBS, but i find it distrubing that they are afraid to show the truth about a radical group. I think its the Rushdie syndrome again. and thats just my opinion, from my notebook today
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