Jenny Chan 陳詠欣
Mar 27, 2012

INTERVIEW: JCDecaux Greater China CEO urges you not to 'burn money' on TV ads

HONG KONG - JC Decaux, the outdoor advertising company controlled by the eponymous French family, feels the medium's buoyant performance in Greater China could convince advertisers to pass up other media such as TV and newspapers.

wide player in 16:9 format. Used on article page for Campaign.

The group's Greater China operation is headed by Stephen Wong (pictured) as chief executive officer, who estimates a 70 per cent market share in Hong Kong and between 15 to 18 per cent in China's outdoor advertising scene.

In Hong Kong, bus bodies and billboards account for the majority of the remaining 30 per cent. In China, the operator has a smaller slice of the pie because it does not operate bus shelters and outdoor TVs there.

Trends in outdoor advertising include more use of digital animation as well as interactive mechanisms such as quick response (QR) codes.

"Clients are still figuring out how best to use these new tools to match their marketing objectives," Wong said in a video interview with Campaign Asia-Pacific. "Imagination, and not investment, is the challenge."

The evolution of conventional static display advertisements outdoors has been spurred by the economic and social development of Greater China itself, where people are upwardly mobile and live in densely packed cities.

Wong is confident outdoor media will continue to play a major role in media plans for Chinese and Hong Kong advertisers. Apart from being traditionally the quickest way to target the masses, outdoor advertising "will outperform the overall market", he predicts.

Wong sums up why outdoor advertising will have a bright future: Consumers are spending more time away from home, technology is continuing to improve the interactivity of outdoor media, and other media (print and broadcast) are suffering from declining audiences due to media fragmentation.

"In TV ads, you burn your money rather fast, to be honest," Wong said (see the video for more detail). However, he added that TV is still useful for selling emotions, making it a comparatively better medium than outdoor.

He also touched on how Chinese cultural and social norms shape the content of outdoor advertisements. The dictation by government regulations. Rather, advertisers who partake in "deliberate creative ploys [to be provocative] have to adjust to social expectations of them", Wong said. Especially in Greater China, "social responsibilities are sometimes more important than financial results," he added.

Source:
Campaign China

Related Articles

Just Published

10 hours ago

Tata Motors win pushes Omnicom Media Group into top ...

Major APAC wins reshape global rankings as OMG rises to fifth with $78 million Tata Motors India account; Publicis Media jumps five spots to third after $209 million Kenvue win.

10 hours ago

X global agency lead leaves after 11 months

Christian Kimberley-Bowen is joining Pinterest.

11 hours ago

Initiative wins Volvo's global media account, China ...

Account was worth $448.7 million in 2023.

15 hours ago

Creative Minds: How Yuhang Lin went from dreaming ...

The Shanghai-based designer talks turning London Tube etiquette into a football game, finding inspiration in the marketing marvels of The Dark Knight, and why he wants to dine with Elon Musk.