Contagious Radar report: 70.9% believe generative AI will radically disrupt advertising and marketing over the next five years
Contagious, a creative and strategic intelligence service based in London, has today published its annual Radar Report. Surveying over 100 of the industry’s top C-suite marketers and agency executives, the research reveals the challenges and opportunities in advertising and marketing in 2024.
Survey participants included Benjamin Braun, Samsung’s Europe CMO, Tiffany Rolfe, global CCO at R/GA and Martin Weigel, CSO at Abbott Mead Vickers BBDO.
In the context of financial headwinds, the question of budget reveals a vast discrepancy between the perspective of clients and agencies. While a staggering 80.8% of respondents from agencies think agencies are underpaid, only 34.5% of clients agree. Meanwhile, less than a fifth (15.4%) of people from agencies think agencies are paid enough, against over a third (37.9%) of clients.
When it comes to the impact of advertising and creativity, over half of respondents (52.4%) don’t believe adland understands real people, however almost half (43.7%) don’t feel that advertising needs to reflect the real world. Equally, the report finds a significant shift in the industry’s output, with over three quarters (85.4%) of creative leaders considering the output of the industry to be ‘average’ – a 4.8% increase from 2023.
Says Patrick Jeffrey, managing director of Contagious: “It’s no surprise that AI dominated this year’s Radar responses, but the variation in opinions was fascinating: some leaders called it ‘the most disruptive force since the internet’ yet others are treating it as a simple productivity hack. It’ll be fascinating to see how that divergence plays out in 2024.”
Further details can be found in the report, available for download here. In addition to the survey, the Radar Report also features commentary from leaders at agencies and brands about their focus for 2024.
2 Comments
I remember when we were told that Letraset was going to radically disrupt everything and if you didn’t have it your agency was never ever going to do great creative work.
Then it was bromide machines.
Then fax machines.
Then large stock library catalogues.
Then 0800 numbers.
Then open plan offices.
Then lots of street art on walls and empowering quotes to inspire creativity.
Then Word.
Then Pagemaker, Quark, PhotoShop, Illustrator.
Then cheap scam ads.
Then mobile phones.
Then mobile phone with WAP technology.
Then an explosion of ad schools.
Then the internet.
Then viral ads.
Then online stock libraries with trendy graphics.
Then iPhone.
Then blipverts.
Then social.
Then flash mobs.
Then apps.
Then open plan but with everyone sitting together a a long white desk so everyone can ‘ideate’ together just like what Mother does.
Then understanding Millenials, because this generation was sooooooooo different from every other.
Then storytelling.
Then being really inclusive so no-one will get offended.
Then Zoom.
Then working from home.
Then NFT’s.
And now it’s Artificial Intelligence.
But you know what makes really good creative work?
Creatives talking shit together in a quiet office, being stupid, making improper jokes and figuring it out. Perhaps going to lunch too. Definitely lunch.
But never at Prego. You only go there to drink and be carried out at 7pm gloriously smashed and banned for six months. You still charge the client, ofc.
Well said Ghost of Mayoral Drive.