Recovery, reset, or economic “flip up”?
A gloomy outlook as we head off for the long weekend. Today’s monthly jobs report was worse than May’s, worse than expected, and worse than we’ve seen in 26 years. The U.S. unemployment rate rose to 9.5%…and is bound to go past 10%.
So when will the pain ease? Microsoft (MSFT) CEO Steve Ballmer told me last week: “I don’t think we’re in a recession. I think we’ve reset. It’s very different. A recession sort of implies a recovery…I don’t assume there is a recovery.” Here’s the video of Ballmer and me on stage at the Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival, where he was named Media Man of the Year.
While in France, I caught up with another CEO, WPP Group’s (WPPGY) Martin Sorrell, who’s long been one of the more wise and worldly forecasters. (His company owns ad and marketing agencies that serve global giants like IBM (IBM), American Express (AXP), Ford (F), and Nestle (NSRG.Y), as well as Microsoft.) I asked Sir Martin is he buys Ballmer’s belief that media spending might decline as a percentage of GDP in the next 10 years. “I think advertising and marketing services as a proportion of GDP will be flat or rise,” he replied. “Any flatness or decline in the developed markets will be outpaced by growth in the BRICs and next 11.” Next 11? He means the major developing countries beyond Brazil, Russia, India, and China.
As for that broader question of how we’ll “reset” or otherwise emerge from this global economic downturn, Sorrell has an artful way of envisioning it: “It will be like an italic, lower-case letter “L” with a little bit of a flip up,” he says. “The recovery will not be a ‘V.’ And it will not be a ‘W.’ The little flip up will come in the first half of next year.”
Noodle that, and leave your worries behind this weekend!
P.S. In case you missed them, here are two more video clips from my conversation with Steve Ballmer in Cannes: Ballmer on Bing and Yahoo and Ballmer on Windows 7 and lessons from Vista.
Steve is right about how much advertising is moving away from traditional media towards online. Online ads give you the accountability you just can’t get from traditional media. Cost Per Action, Cost Per Lead, Cost Per Engagement, etc…Provide total ROI for your dollars spent. Its a wise spend for marketers. The other methods just can’t provide that.
Co-founder and creative director of Tory Burch LLC
- Power Point: Oprah says, “Own yourself”
- Behind Oprah’s next big move
- NBCU’s “Trash TV”: the full view
- Power Point: How to pick a magazine cover
- NBCU gives new meaning to “Trash TV”
- Power Point: To friend or unfriend?
- Geek Squad rivals: Bring ‘em on!
- Power Point: Go for lead dog
- Men and women at work: Can we talk?
- Power Point: It’s all about the hair
- I would like to add some facts to the... More
- i have to say this, after listening t... More
- Management in Vistakon Limerick are a... More
- There's a dirty little secret no one ... More
- I have to agree with what eddie and j... More
- This is Eddie here again and I am jus... More
- hard to fathom how nbc is in the bott... More
- I don't know who John and Jane from L... More
- I dont know i also see American techs... More
- Ah, but there are national service pr... More






Pattie,
Great interview with Steve Ballmer. In the past four weeks, I’ve heard six CEO’s (not my clients) say that they are running out of “rainy day” funds. If they survive, they are facing a new “normal.”
The question for readers is “What does it mean for your company (organizational structure, products/services, etc.) if the economy has been “reset” and today’s conditions are the new “normal?”
Jim Connolly | http://www.orgresults.net