Adam Morgan
Apr 23, 2014

Curiosity’s cool, but don’t skip the centre

Advice for curious planners.

Adam Morgan
Adam Morgan

One of the most frequent pieces of advice one sees handed out to young communications planners is ‘be curious’. I used to say the same. But I’ve changed. What I now recommend to a young planner is not curiosity, but the right curiosity—that is, the right balance of curiosity. Because what I frequently find is too much curiosity about what’s happening on the edges, and not enough about what’s happening at the centre. 

Let me explain. We all know that curiosity about the edges is key to innovative thinking, to ideas. And it’s easy, and delicious, to graze on those edges; they offer rich pickings of novelty and conversation, and the chance to appear smart, interesting, and on-the-button to client, creative and boss. 

But the edges increasingly seems to be the only focus of curiosity. What one sees much less of is planners who are as curious about the centre: who take the time to really understand and explore the seminal, data-based research, for instance, by Byron Sharp and by Field and Binet into how marketing does and doesn’t work—the things that really keep their marketing CMO up at night. To take an even more specific example, one sees a great deal of curiosity about Big Data as The Next Big Thing (the new front edge), but not enough about what the evidence (such as Field and Binet’s learnings in The Long and The Short of It, for instance) tell us about the circumstances in which Big Data will represent either a springboard or a landmine to their client’s marketing success (the centre of the issue). 

The media imperative around innovation has made us obsessed with the new; planners are just reflections of their agencies in this regard. And any obsession creates an inherent imbalance, which is not healthy. We need to be aware of the new, but with a deep understanding of the centre. We need not only curiosity, but the right curiosity.

Adam Morgan is founding partner of eatbigfish and is on Twitter @eatbigfish.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

20 hours ago

Creative Minds: Jereek Espiritu pushes his ideas to ...

An intervention by a computer repairman drove Jereek Espiritu away from a career flying helicopters to a world of creative leaps and flights of fancy.

21 hours ago

UM launches Full Colour Media with a focus on ...

Full Colour Media is underpinned by a body of custom research conducted with more than 10,000 brands and with 5 million data points, culminating in a ‘Brand Patterns’ proprietary model designed to grow and differentiate brands.

22 hours ago

Campaign Global Agency of the Year Awards 2024: ...

With the final entry deadline for Agency of the Year Global fast approaching, we speak to judges who share their views on the biggest opportunities and challenges for 2025, and what they hope to see in winning entries.

22 hours ago

The 'laziest influencer' makes cleaning effortless—l...

S.C. Johnson's new mold-cleaning campaign features their least energetic spokesperson ever—a sloth whose main qualification is mastering the art of minimal effort.