By Mike Follett, CEO at Lumen Research
People often describe attention as the next evolutionary stage in media metrics. From the Stone Age data of impressions, to the Axial insights of viewability, and on to the modern world of measuring what matters.
But what if we took the evolutionary language seriously? Michael T. Hannan’s Population Ecology framework applies the logic of Darwin to the messy world of business.
Hannan originally applied population ecology—a concept borrowed from biology—to business situations to explain how organizations survive, thrive, or fail in complex environments. His approach focuses on how environmental conditions shape the success of organizational populations, emphasizing environmental fit, structural inertia, and legitimacy as key drivers of survival and success. By shifting focus from individual adaptation to the broader forces of selection, Hannan’s thinking helps us see why some innovations succeed while others fall by the wayside.
Using this lens, it’s clear why attention metrics have gained traction.
The future of advertising belongs to those who pay attention—literally. We’re proud to play a role in this evolution, ensuring the metrics of tomorrow are as meaningful as the messages they measure.
Sources:
Hannan & Freeman’s 1977 paper: http://www.iot.ntnu.no/innovation/norsi-pims-courses/harrison/Hannan%20&%20Freeman%20(1977).PDF