What Cannes Lions Taught Us About Marketing To Millennials

This Cannes Lions article was written by Murray Newlands

A panel of experts was assembled last week at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, who gave us their take on marketing to Millennials in 2014.

Entitled “Brand Purpose, Millennials and the Epic Creative that Engages Them,” the panel included Quinn Kilbury, brand director for Newcastle Brown Ale at Heineken; Christina Smedley, VP of global brand and communications at PayPal; Bonin Bough, VP of global media and consumer engagement at Mondelez; and Scott Beaudoin, global practice director of corporate and brand citizenship for MSLGroup.

John Mescall, executive creative director of McCann Australia, was the standout expert from the panel. Mescall is best known as the man who came up with “Dumb Ways to Die” for Metro Trains in Melbourne, Australia. His campaign holds the achievement of most-awarded campaign in the history of Cannes, winning multiple Lions in 2013.

Takeaways From The Panel

The panel, of course, agreed that brands must resonate with their target audience and have a realistic understanding of societal needs in order to have the kinds of conversations deemed to be relevant by millennial consumers.

In order to engage with Millennials, it was noted that brands must be willing to loosen up and give up control, which is a scary idea for most brands.

“We have so many marketing constructs that come from the old adage of control. But you’ve got more power than you’ve ever had in the history of marketing, thanks to social platforms, but to exercise that power, you must relinquish control,” said Mescall.

The Millennial market values peer-to-peer conversations, so allowing Millennials to control the conversation can help boost engagement. Being newsworthy and creative are also important when engaging with Millennials.

The panel argued that people talking about your brand absolutely equates to sales, pointing to this year’s PR Grand Prix winner, “The Scarecrow” from Chipotle as an example of how earned media can generate conversations and sales.

You don’t necessarily have to be young to understand Millennials, you just have to be willing to understand and be a part of youth culture. Standing for something is important to Millennials, but the panel believed not every brand has to stand for something, they just have to be honest, according to Kilbury.

Added Kilbury, “You have to be newsworthy, too. People have to choose between cute kittens, Justin Beiber and your brand. It’s got to be a super creative idea.”

We ran into Giant Media Founder and VP David Segura who, commenting on the panel, said, “Staying ‘loose’ and fun is probably the best way to encourage sharing of your marketing message. If the audience sees an authentically funny video, they’ll help boost your ROI with every ‘share’ and ‘like’ on social media.”

In conclusion, the panel left the audience with a challenge to have ambitious goals and go after. Use technology as your friend, and try to “matter to the world.”

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Psychology says people who forgave someone who never apologized display these 7 increasingly rare traits

Psychology says people who forgave someone who never apologized display these 7 increasingly rare traits

Global English Editing

Psychology says the loneliest women aren’t the ones with empty lives — they’re the ones who became so skilled at anticipating and meeting everyone else’s needs that their own stopped being visible, even to themselves

Psychology says the loneliest women aren’t the ones with empty lives — they’re the ones who became so skilled at anticipating and meeting everyone else’s needs that their own stopped being visible, even to themselves

Global English Editing

I’m 66 and I’ve never had what you’d call a best friend — not because I’m cold or unlikeable, but because somewhere along the way I learned that being self-sufficient was safer than letting anyone close enough to disappoint me

I’m 66 and I’ve never had what you’d call a best friend — not because I’m cold or unlikeable, but because somewhere along the way I learned that being self-sufficient was safer than letting anyone close enough to disappoint me

Global English Editing

Psychology says men who have stopped loving their partners don’t typically announce it — they become neutral, and neutrality is harder to name, harder to prove, and harder to recover from than cruelty ever is

Psychology says men who have stopped loving their partners don’t typically announce it — they become neutral, and neutrality is harder to name, harder to prove, and harder to recover from than cruelty ever is

Global English Editing

Psychology says the apology you owe someone but have never given is taking up more psychological space than you realize — and these 7 behaviors are how your brain compensates for the debt

Psychology says the apology you owe someone but have never given is taking up more psychological space than you realize — and these 7 behaviors are how your brain compensates for the debt

Global English Editing

Children who were taught that crying meant weakness and that asking for help was a burden often exhibit these 9 traits as adults — and psychology says this is why so many boomers would rather sit in silence than admit they’re struggling

Children who were taught that crying meant weakness and that asking for help was a burden often exhibit these 9 traits as adults — and psychology says this is why so many boomers would rather sit in silence than admit they’re struggling

Global English Editing