WOMENS SPORTS
Brands should be investing in women’s sports, whether that’s through media buys during those events or looking to create authentic brand partnerships – and that includes pharma and health companies. Diabetes glucose monitoring brand Dexcom has seen success with its name, image and likeness or NIL deal with more than 20 college athletes who are living with type 1 diabetes while playing Division 1 sports.
As Ohanian said, women’s sports are only going to get bigger and now is the smart time for real investment and involvement.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
It wouldn’t be a proper 2024 showcase industry get-together without the mention of artificial intelligence. And there were many many mentions. The conversation did shift from last year when everyone was simply asking “What is AI?” to this year’s more introspective “How will AI change marketing?”
The general agreement is AI adds efficiency, speed, ideation and yes, creative work, but the human touch will remain essential. Unilever chief growth officer Esi Eggleston Bracey told creatives: “The real magic behind our brands is you. You stand at the intersection of insights and impact and artificial and human intelligence and creativity and commerce. It’s you who fall in love with people and solve problems.”
Google executives showing off its Gemini AI platform agreed that no matter how much AI advances, it still can’t replace the intuition, style and ingenuity of people. Even Elon Musk talking to our own WPP CEO Mark Read noted that “AI will amplify creativity.”
PHARMA ON STAGE
And while there aren’t a lot of pharma companies on the stages here, Novo Nordisk was here on Tuesday with their spokesperson rapper and actor Queen Latifah. The focus was on conversations around weight – and the stigma, myths and silence around the disease of obesity. The “Bigger Than Me” campaign running now for almost three years includes educational efforts to change perceptions, including doctors. Novo’s head of commercial strategy and marketing talked about how they even created an “inclusive obesity care” for healthcare professionals to use online and in their practices to let patients know they will be welcomed and accepted.
AND OF COURSE, THOUGHTS ON CREATIVITY
On Tuesday we got some “everyday” words of wisdom for P&G chief branding officer – and marketing legend – Marc Pritchard. He drolly noted that while P&G diaper, toothpaste and toilet brands are not the first thing that comes to mind when talking about creativity but cautioned us not to overlook those “everyday moments” that are actually rich with potential. I mean, it is the company that brought us “The best a man can get” for Gillette shavers.