For the love of long format
Sundays at the Triple Nickel - Jess Colquhon / Stept Studios

For the love of long format

I read an interesting perspective from a strategist at Google the other day. His argument? That humans don’t naturally have short attention spans as a result of consuming digital media.?

Need proof? I'd be confident in saying we've all indulged in at least one of the following...bingeing Squid Game in a single weekend; getting lost for hours in podcasts or audiobooks; spending Saturdays glued to the sofa watching sports fixtures back-to-back; or tearing through whole books in an afternoon on our Kindles.?

So as entertainment, long-format has a place. But what about when it comes to brand work? In this space, it's understandable (perhaps) that bite-size is king. There's a lot of science to say that short video is better for immediate brand recall. It's also cheaper (in theory) and more accessible for the wave of entry brands popping up everywhere we look. The new trend for client briefs is to put a high priority on short, snappy explainers that can be sliced and diced into multiple cuts and communicate key product drivers in impossibly tight timeframes. The lesson? Efficiency is important.

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My argument, therefore, is not with the short format itself. It has and will continue to have an important place in branded media. My argument is that the true enemy is crappy content. Content that fails to captivate our attention. And my belief? That the proliferation of the short-format has made it easier than ever for brands to get duped into that world of below-par content. An overcrowded and all too frequently unoriginal place to play in.

Ultimately, branded advertising wishes to be a rich tapestry of storytelling. But by constantly deferring to the short format, brands swim with the tide. And when you do this, it's easy to get lost.

So what does this all mean? To borrow an overused piece of advertising wisdom, it's the hope that more brands look to Zag, where others Zig! It's a desire for brands to be braver with their briefs and commit to original media that stretches beyond the 6s, 15s, 30s, 60s formats.

And by the way, branded doesn’t mean just slapping a logo in the top and tail. That means getting their hands dirty. To involve themselves deeply in sourcing and crafting stories from the ground up. It means backing teams of talented creatives, writers and directors to sustain narratives that mean something. Narratives that require and deserve our attention.

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And it seems the movement has started. In places where it counts too. At Sundance Film Festival, Clio, the international advertising awards competition, partnered with Brand Storytelling, a media company exclusively built to support and inspire investment in the practice of purposeful brand-funded content.

And according to a survey conducted earlier this year by the Harris Poll for Participant Media, 36% of marketing executives surveyed projected increased spending in the development of impact entertainment. Long format, it would seem, is beginning to unlock brand purse strings.

So how about some long-format work that stands out? One of the best examples I've seen comes from a director I admire hugely, Jess Colquhon who is signed to Stept Studios in the U.S.A. Stept are renowned for creating "advertising that feels more like entertainment" and Jess' piece for Crown Royal - Sundays at the Triple Nickel - is testament to a brand, production company and director all working in sync to deliver something special.

Patagonia, of course, have been an authority in the space for years with a whole gamut of incredible documentaries relating to environmental and social causes.

Outdoors brand YETI have found a nice hybrid, favouring mid-length features that bind a product to a deeper message of community, adversity or opportunity.

I'm a realist. And I don't expect to stop receiving 30s briefs overnight. But I'm excited to see braver brands come forwards, investing in media formats that go beyond their immediate brand sphere and grab our attention with powerful storytelling not stunted soundbites.

After all, anyone can make a video. Not everyone can tell a story...

Written by Wij Travers - Head of Creative - Hot Icarus




With you on this Wij, long form all day for me. As a consumer I want to inspired with great content and stick with it, not tricked into watching. As you say just requires a higher standard of content, a better understanding of core audience, and more bold/patient budget holders - a mixture that can be pretty hard to find.

Love this Wij, got totally lost in the stories as well.

Ben Mercer

Writer, Speaker and Content Creator | Bestselling Author of Fringes, Our Race, Endgame & Superstrengths | former Pro Rugby Player | Advise People & Brands on Growth through Storytelling | I Read, Write & Share Books

3 年

long form is the way. you can create something beautiful that will delight your true fans, then chop it up and disseminate it short form in a variety of different ways for everyone else! You can even turn the production into engaging media for everyone and bring them in to your world

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