The Cultural Power of Cinema is the latest edition of Digital Cinema Media’s Building Box Office Brands series, created in partnership with experts, Burst Your Bubble. The study reveals cinema’s leading role in co-viewing experiences (98 percent) and how brands using the medium can in turn maximize commercial and social impact.
Against a backdrop of people spending more time alone, there being fewer tentpole water cooler moments on TV, and media investment shifting significantly towards outlets that are predominately viewed in silo, DCM and Burst Your Bubble set out to understand what’s happening in culture, what role cinema can play in bringing people together, and ultimately the impact that the shared cinema experience can deliver for brands.
As part of the research, DCM included latest point-of-sale data to showcase how 98 percent of all showings are a shared viewing experience – well out-performing co-viewing figures available on TV and YouTube.
The wider study revealed that there is a lack of togetherness in society currently, and its particularly notable among young adults that there is a feeling of isolation from others. Despite this, people are still craving moments of togetherness and cinema is one of the events (alongside the likes of gigs, live sports etc.) that can create a positive shared experience:
55 percent of adults agree ‘there is no sense of community anymore’
60 percent of 16-34s agree they ‘feel distant from other people’
7 in 10 agree that ‘events that bring people together are more important now than ever’
71 percent agree ‘being part of a big audience enhances the experience’ at the cinema
60 percent always/often experience a sense of connection to others in the cinema
Andrew Tenzer, co-founder, Burst Your Bubble said, “Cinema provides a powerful shared experience in which people feed off the energy of others, and makes us feel closer with others. This highlights the continued importance of cinemas within communities – and how they are particularly key in the context of battling social disconnection and isolation among younger adults.”
The benefit for brands of this shared experience is clear – audiences see the ‘ads and trailers’ as part of the event experience and unlike other channels that are viewed alone, cinema naturally creates an environment that can generate a moment of talkability for brands about their ads too:
62 percent of cinemagoers agree they ‘like to get there in good time to see ads and trailers’
67 percent of 16-34s agree they ‘enjoy talking about the ads with other people’ at the cinema
To demonstrate the implications of this all in practice and highlight how cinema helps brands maximize cultural power, DCM worked with Burst Your Bubble to use their Signal framework to analyze five campaigns that were running on cinema screens across May and June (categories included automotive, gaming, entertainment & leisure, retail and telecoms).
The results proved that exposure to the ads in cinema delivers significant uplifts for brands on metrics relating to social impact, brand fame and signaling:
Social Impact
+50 percent uplift in ‘community’ association (the brands are associated with bringing people together and inclusivity)
+106 percent uplift in ‘universalism’ association (the brands being associated with phrases including broad-minded and social justice)
Brand Fame
+12 percent uplift in ‘everyone knows this brand’
+26 percent uplift in ‘everyone likes this brands’
Positive Signals
+37 percent uplift in agreement that ‘If I use this brand, most people think I’ve made a good choice’
+21 percent uplift in associating the brands with ‘high quality products and services’
Karen Stacey, CEO, Digital Cinema Media said, “Co-viewing is important because people enjoy talking about what they are watching together. For cinema, the ads and trailers are seen as an integral component to the whole experience – we place your brands at the heart of human connection. This is why we believe brands should include cinema as part of their AV mix to maximize talkability around key launch moments and maximize the cultural power of their own brand.”
She concluded, “Cinema really is like no other medium because it offers a shared, collective experience – it’s a special moment for people, a place where audiences are receptive to quality content in the right context. This study proves our offering to brands is more powerful than ever, providing further compelling evidence that using cinema at the crucial moments – starting a new product, campaign or message – will deliver real value and leave a lasting impact with audiences.”