Friday 29 September 2017

Facebook Engagement plummets in 2017

Chart of the Day: Image and Link post contribute to a 20% decrease in engagement

Analysis of 880 million Facebook posts by brands in the last 12 months conducted by Buzzsumo has revealed that the average engagement was relatively steady in 2016. Come January, engagement started falling and didn't stop until June where we see a small increase. The post types that have seen the biggest decline are image and links post, whereas video has been able to remain consistent.

There could be many reasons why this decline has been so substantial:

  1. The organic reach on Facebook has been falling for years with Facebook pushing brands down the route of paid promotions. The issue with this strategy is that you get lower engagement due to people seeing them as ads rather than interesting content for their favourite pages.
  2. So much content. With an average of over 1,000 stories fighting to appear in any one person's news feed, it isn't surprising that some brands are going to lose out and not be seen - competition is increasing and not everything can be shown.

 



source http://www.smartinsights.com/social-media-marketing/facebook-marketing/facebook-engagement-plummets-in-2017/

4 steps to creating an effective product tour

Create a successful funnel to encourage your aduience to buy

Product tours aren’t for everyone. No, you see, they’re for your ideal buyer — the customer you’ve identified through your marketing data is most likely to convert and make a purchase. A great product tour will keep your sales team in productive conversations with quality prospects that are more likely to convert, shorten the sales cycle by providing relevant information upfront, and increase conversions through a main call to action.

Focus your energy on building a compelling product tour rather than wasting resources funneling the wrong folks through the marketing and sales pipeline. It begins with a relevant and engaging demonstration of how your product benefits users.

Funneling to Success

Consumers move fast on the internet, scouring pages of content and looking for even quicker solutions to their problems. With 96 percent of your website visitors seeking valuable content to lead them through the buyer’s journey, it’s critical for your product tour to avoid the self-promotional material.

Relying heavily on features can discredit your product and push you into the mix of competitors. Let your product show how it will make the lives of your customers easier. Help Scout helpdesk software, for example, emphasizes benefits like singular location for management, automated grunt work, and personalization in every customer interaction.

Providing relevant content that’s helpful and positions your product's benefits can boost conversions. But don’t overdo it — look at the price of your product and length of the sales cycle. An effective product tour for a $2.99 mobile app would direct visitors to purchase the app. A low price point and short buying cycle means buyers need to get the app quickly without tons of product information upfront.

Simplicity in structure has benefits beyond the sales and marketing process — it also directly impacts visitors on a product tour who are further along in the sales process. In our product tour, we avoid the pop-ups and scrollboxes that are so effective at connecting with leads in other places on our website. Instead, we put a button at the bottom of the page with a clear CTA — “get your live demo” — to steer their full attention to converting.

Overwhelming buyers with details on the main product tour page can diminish credibility. Optimizing the user experience is more of a priority. Consider subpages and sub-navigations to assist SEO bots, lead your buyers further into your site content, and ideally, convert them.

Designing a successful product tour may sound complicated, but it boils down to four clear steps:

1. Know your ideal buyer.

More than one-third of marketers aren’t confident that the content in their product tour meets customers’ direct needs.

Dig into your audience to identify your ideal buyer — the sweet spot in your customer base that loves your product, has a high customer lifetime value, and helps grow your business through referrals, reviews, and other forms of brand awareness. Then address that customer's greatest pain points and challenges.

2. Be concise.

You could talk people to death about each feature of your product. With average attention spans at 8.25 seconds, save the in-depth feature explanations for the sales process and consumer onboarding.

Be strict with your word count on your pitch and add elements like videos, downloads, and statistics to build a more intriguing case for your product.

3. Demonstrate a clear value proposition.

Clearly convey what differentiates your product from others on the market by focusing specifically on the areas where it excels and solves your ideal buyer’s specific paint points.

4. End with an immediate call to action.

Because a product tour can seem to drag on if it's too lengthy, a motivating call to action is a good way to wrap it up. Reiterating your value proposition in a brief and engaging fashion will compel users to dive into your product more quickly and more enthusiastically.

It’s not what you say, but how you say it. Position your product tour as a problem-solving solution for your ideal consumer, and you’ll be surprised how many follow it into the sales and marketing funnel.



source http://www.smartinsights.com/traffic-building-strategy/sales-promotions/4-steps-creating-effective-product-tour/

Different types of ads and their usefulness

A quick guide to the best ads for different purposes

In a Digital Marketing: Integrating strategy and tactics with values, published 2014, Ira Kaufman and Chris Horton wrote that we’re well beyond the stage in which digital media is a fad. In fact, it is quickly becoming the means by which consumers communicate with their friends and families especially when making purchase decisions.

This is the main reason why marketers embrace the Internet and digital marketing. Consumers these days give more preference to online ads than any other medium. In a survey by Brightroll, it was revealed that as much as 72 percent of consumers believe online video ads are the same or even better than TV ads. But there are more than a dozen types of advertisements online.

Which ones are effective? Which among them actually help businesses reach their bottom line and business goals?

We listed some of them to help you figure it out which works best for your targeted audience.

If you are a marketer and still in doubt which one is best, take a look at these types and see which ones you can use to reach your customers.

1. Static displayed ads

It is an ad on a web page that does not change. A static banner ad is generally a still single frame with a catchphrase. John O'Toole, a senior performance marketing consultant, analyzed the data of four advertisers to identify which one is better between static and animated ads. After reviewing the advertisers’ data for 12 months, he learned that static ads prevailed over animated ads in almost every single campaign.

He theorized that static ads were more effective since previous visitors would recognize the brand logo instantly, whereas the animated ads have a series of images that do not contain the brand logo at all. However, static is not limited to banner ads. They can be in other forms like one-way webinars, website pages, eBooks, emails, and landing pages.

static ads example

2. Interactive ads

Marketing expert John McTigue explained the advantages of interactive content. Besides the fact that they’re cheap to set up, an interactive ad increases brand loyalty and reputation. It can be in the form of customer reviews, mobile apps, social media

It can be in the form of customer reviews, mobile apps, social media updates and shares, as well as blog comments. However, it comes with a few drawbacks, too. It’s easy to setup but it’s not cheap since you have to monitor the channels at all times. You have to provide fresh and relevant content to keep your customers engaged. Indeed, it requires manpower, training, and talent to do well.

Another example is the Interactive advisor banners, which are minified versions of SMARTASSISTANT advisors, in which only the first question is displayed and then upon interaction, it leads users to a campaign-specific landing page where they are able to answer additional questions and get immediate suggestions on suitable products. Interactive advisor banners are an engaging approach to help create an emotional experience for consumers, build powerful brand awareness, and increases click-through rates through relevant content. Studies have

Interactive advisor banners are an engaging approach to help create an emotional experience for consumers, build powerful brand awareness, and increases click-through rates through relevant content. Studies have shown that consumers are 2.5 times more likely to interact with these type of ads than with regular ad options.

interactive ads example

Source: helpscout.net

3. Animated ads

Animated GIF or flash ads take more time to create than a text or standard image but they are worth the investment. Animated ads give your customers up to 30 seconds to get your message across. Graphic designer and entrepreneur John Harbison said it can give you more freedom than the limited space of a static ad.

animated ads example

4. Banner ads

These are similar to static ads, and are displayed across a users screen - usually at the top.

Banner ads example

Ad Placement

Writer Kim Gordon said you have to put your ads where your customers are. This allows you to reach your ideal customers with the right message, in the right place at the right time. If you’re thinking about social media sites like Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube you already have an idea about the best places to put your ads. Indeed, social media is a game changer in the world of digital advertising. Let’s take a closer look on different types of ads online.

  • Search ads- you can utilize this by activating your Google Adwords account or similar advertising platforms.
  • Pay per click (PPC) ads- they provide instant gratification simply because you can expect increased traffic to your website hours after launching a campaign. Advertisers can monitor how much they spend with PPC as well as what keywords did trigger traffic to the website. Some of the biggest advantages of PPC Ads are lower advertising expenses, greater control over your ad campaigns and more accurate customer targeting.
  • Bing- Just recently, Bing Ads announced the launch of remarketing for search and shopping campaigns. Advertisers can now serve ads on Yahoo or Bing search results to users who have visited their site.
  • Facebook- through Facebook, you’ll have the opportunity to approach exactly your target group. Before starting your Facebook marketing strategy, make sure you’re clear about the ad design and content, segmentation, ad formats, and your budget.
  • Twitter- the site offers three types of ad options—promoted tweets, promoted accounts, and promoted trends. According to Penna Powers, promoted trends will cost you around $200,000 per day.
  • Google Display- Google said the Display Network (GDN) reaches over 90 percent of global internet users expanding across two million sites. Display ads are those banners or small boxes you see when you skim your favorite sites or blogs.
  • Retargeting Ads- AdRoll said retargeting works by keeping track of people who visit your site and displaying your retargeting ads to them as they visit other sites online. Generally, they help convert window-shoppers into buyers.
  • Mobile Ads- it’s growing faster than all other digital advertising formats. A recent data from Business Insider Intelligence found that US mobile ad spend will top nearly $42 billion in 2018.

Designing Ads

After you’ve decided which types of ads to use and where to place them, it’s also important to consider their designs. If you’re planning to have a clickable banner ad, the first thing to consider is the size. Use a standard size as much as possible. By that, Google AdSense noted that the most successful sizes are the following:

  • Large 336x280
  • Medium 300x250
  • Leaderboard 728x90
  • Wide Skyscraper 160x600

You have to maintain hierarchy if you want a clickable banner ad. With these in mind, you should always have the three basic components in your ad to ensure that they would be accepted by the ad platforms and help your ad convert better – the company logo, a value proposition, and a call to action.



source http://www.smartinsights.com/internet-advertising/internet-advertising-creative/different-types-ads-usefulness/

A Marketer’s guide to referrals and why they’re important

What is referral marketing?

Essentially, referral marketing is about enabling and incentivizing your existing customer base to encourage their friends and family to try your product for the first time.

It represents a significant opportunity for most online businesses to boost their customer acquisition.

There are some well-documented examples of businesses that have acquired a huge percentage of their customers via referral. It is reported that for Dropbox it represents 35% of new customers and daily bookings tripled for Airbnb when they introduced a referral programme.

Whilst these figures might seem unattainable for established online businesses, our experience suggests that targeting 10-25% of new customer growth from referrals is realistic. Figures not to be sniffed at.

After all, there aren’t many other marketing channels that you could switch on and deliver that kind of an increase in acquisition.

The hidden benefits of referral

Whilst the main benefit of referral is the number of new customers that it can deliver to your business, there is a secondary benefit you might not have considered. The quality of customers that are delivered.

Some channels tend to attract discount hunters who are not in your target demographic and likely to only buy once. In contrast, referred customers are the friends of your existing customers, so they are a great match for your target market and tend to become great, longstanding customers.

They’re also predisposed to liking you as a brand before they’ve even bought anything because their friends have been enthusing about you to them.

As a result, from the data we have seen:

  • They spend more on their first order - typically 15-25% more
  • They have a higher lifetime value, up to 200% that of customers who come in from other channels
  • They are three times more likely to become a referrer themselves

Is referral right for your brand?

Whilst there are no hard and fast rules as to what type of businesses can benefit from referral, there are some key factors to consider:

Underlying customer satisfaction

The happier your customers are with your product the more likely they are to tell their friends. A high Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a great indication that referral has the potential to work well.

Demographic

Referral can work for any demographic but some tend to be more active. Women tend to share more than men and under 30s share more than over 30s. That’s only part of the story. Whilst the older demographic tends to share less, the shares they make tend to convert better.

Talkability of the category

Some categories lend themselves to discussion. Fashion and holiday plans are often discussed with friends, hobbies are shared with other enthusiasts. Unique or new products often spark a conversation. If this dynamic is present it increases the share rate.

Impulse or considered purchase

If your product requires consideration it will take longer to get a referral programme off the ground as friends who receive a recommendation may not yet be ready to buy. But the seed of consideration will have been sown.

Discounting environment

Does your brand discount heavily? This might make it difficult for the referral offer to stand out. If it is less generous than other offers in the marketplace then referrers are unlikely to share it with their friends.

Economics

You need sufficient gross margin for the referrer and the referee incentives to fit within your Cost Per Acquisition. If you can’t offer a compelling incentive out of the margin you have available then incentivized referral won’t work.

Knowing that your brand has the right attributes for happy customers to share with their friends is a great first step; However, the right combination of offers, messaging and psychological triggers takes referral to a whole new level.

Here we consider the elements to consider to ensure that your programme is a success.

Social interaction is at the core of referral

When people initially think about referral marketing they tend to focus on the incentives and ease of use as the key drivers of success.

Although these are important, it is the psychology of referral and a customer’s relationship with their friends that have the biggest impact on whether a brand is shared.

If the referral makes someone look good because they’re introducing a brand or offer that their friends will love, then their friendship will benefit from the referral and their social capital increases.

Conversely, if the referral risks making them look like they’re acting in their own self-interest then most customers won’t risk a friendship by sharing an offer with their friends. There is too much social risk.

The key determinant of how people think about the social capital and the social risk components comes down to how the referral offer is positioned and how they view the brand.

The psychology of referral is a huge topic and one we cover in a previous post.

Encourage referral at the point of customer delight

When promoting referral there should be three ambitions:

  • To get as close to the point of delight as possible
  • To keep the programme top of mind
  • To enable customers to easily find it if they look for it

Make it easy for your customers to tell their friends

The basic rule here is that you should enable your customers to share however they want to. The sharing options we find most successful are:

Face-to-face

This is where most conversations about a brand happen. Capturing these face-to-face referrals can be difficult where a referral scheme requires a link. Something we’ve developed which is extremely successful is the ability for customers to share using their name. This means a referred friend can visit the site and just enter the referrer’s name in order to receive their introductory offer.

Unique sharing URL

Each customer gets their own unique sharing URL that they can post wherever they like: in an email, on social media on a blog.

Email

Allowing people both to send an email from the share page with the option to look up their friend’s email addresses and giving them an email they can forward on to their friends later on.

Social

Establish which social channels your target demographic uses. Typical sharing channels include Facebook (directly or on their timeline), Twitter, WhatsApp or Weibo (for the Chinese market).

Test to find the right referral incentives

Testing improves results. Sounds obvious, right? With referral, it is more complicated than it first sounds.

AB testing by cohort

If you show an offer to a cohort of customers for a month and then want to test a different offer, it would be a very poor user experience to just switch out the offer that referred friends of the first cohort are expecting.

To avoid this, you need to be able to conduct AB testing by cohort so that you can offer consistency of experience to each cohort. This is particularly important when the point of purchase may be some time after the initial referral.

AB testing by cohort

Value of referral offer

Your underlying economics will determine how much you can afford to give away. The referral incentive should always be better than offers that the referrer or their friend could get through other channels. Otherwise the customer feels like they’re doing their friend, or indeed themselves, a disservice in sharing it.

Businesses that get referral to work often find that they can offer deeper incentives than for other channels; Since referred customers tend to spend 15- 25% more on their first order and have double the lifetime value, they can afford a higher cost per acquisition for referred customers.

How to split the incentives

A balanced offer between the referrer and their friend is best. If you are generous to the referrer but not to the friend then the referrer risks feeling like they’re taking advantage of their friendship and may not share. If you’re generous to the friend but not the referrer, it makes the referrer question why their friend can get a better deal on your site even though they themselves are already a loyal customer.

Test the order of incentives

Test how self-interested your customers are by framing the offer differently. Are they more likely to refer when they feel they are being generous of when they can see how they will benefit?

Option 1: Self-interested – “Get 15% off for each friend you introduce”

Referral offer one

Option 2: Altruistic – “Get your friend £10 off their first shop”

referral offer two

This test often throws up interesting results.

The most effective incentives

Money off your own product or service tends to work best; customers understand it, they like your product or service enough to recommend it and so will probably want more of it. It also is likely to be more cost-effective for you as a business.

Where it isn’t appropriate because of your business model or other constraints then 3rd. party vouchers can work. Generally, the more liquid the voucher the better. In other words, Amazon works very well because it can be used universally online towards a wide range of products. The supermarkets and national brands are next most effective because people can envisage using the vouchers soon.

Interestingly, offering cash, the most liquid of rewards, tends to convert less well because it results in confusion. Customers don’t understand why you are offering them cash rather than credit towards your store, nor do they understand how you’d give it to them.

Launch it, prove it, promote it

It is worth recognizing that done correctly, referral can become a marketing channel that boosts acquisition by 10-25%. This warrants spending time and effort on it to enable it to reach its full potential. The launch is only the start. The real value comes from the marketing team working to optimise the channel over time.



source http://www.smartinsights.com/online-pr/reputation-management-online-pr/97061/

Thursday 28 September 2017

Investment in business growth strategy options

Chart of the Day: CMO survey of investment in alternative strategies for growth

A key part of marketing strategy development is to review the strategic options for growing a business. Here we're sharing a breakdown of actual investment by companies using this classic marketing model that has stood the test of time since it originally dates from the 1960s...

You may recognize Ansoff’s growth model, which is a matrix that can be used to identify alternative growth strategies by looking at present and potential products in current and future markets. The four growth strategies are market penetration, market development, product development, and diversification.

It's no surprise that investment in existing markets is the main focus,  followed by new product development. But it's surprising to me that market development and diversification are as high as they are. This breakdown showing the balance between investments is a useful prompt for those involved in shaping business and marketing strategy to explore the options outside of market penetration.

I feature the Ansoff framework in my Digital Marketing Strategy and Implementation book where I use this visual to show how digital channels can be used to support it.

Ansoff matrix model applied to digital marketing



source http://www.smartinsights.com/marketing-planning/marketing-strategy/investment-in-business-growth-strategy-options/

Pinterest shortcuts, Instagram live face filters and hashtags birthday

Social Media Essentials: 6 platform updates from this week

Find out what happened in social media this week with these six platform updates to help inform your social media strategy.

Spotlight story: Snapchat adds 14 ‘Creative Partners’

Last week Snap Announced that they have taken on 14 new ad Creative Partners. They have introduced these partners to help build more engaging Ads that will deliver a strong ROI for their customers. They said the following:

These new partners represent the best in video, cinemagraph, and gif creation; game and playable ad development; lead generation and data capture; interactive and 360 video players; mobile couponing and more

Snapchat believes these new Creative Partners will help enhance the post-swipe-up experience on ads. As well as encouraging users to click through instead of quickly swiping, allowing users to interact more with the landing page.Find out more about the update.

Instagram adds face filters to live video

Instagram has made face filters available for live video streaming through the app. You can now use face filters on photos, video and live video. All the existing face filters are available for live video, but there’s also a new one that’s exclusively limited to use with live streaming. The rollout began last week but it could take several weeks for it to make its way to all users globally, Instagram says.

Facebook let you launch Instagram from in its app

Facebook has made it easier for users to access Instagram directly from within the Facebook app. Facebook will be rolling out a new addition its main navigation menu on mobile linking to your Instagram account. Although a minor change, I think this is a good way to link the two apps without having to leave the app and lose users to other platforms.

New Pinterest shortcuts

Pinterest has introduced a few new shortcuts to make it easier to save and share Pins from your iPad or iPhone. Now you can save Pins to Pinterest just by dragging and dropping. When you find an image you want to save, simply drag and drop it to your board to save it automatically. They also announced 'soon you’ll be able to drag Pins and boards out of Pinterest and into other apps—like iMessage—so you can easily send ideas to your friends'. Find all the new shortcuts here. 

Twitters celebrates the hashtags 10th birthday

Last week Twitter celebrated the hashtags 10th birthday and looked back at how it became one of the most recognized symbols of our generation. It all started in 2007 with this tweet:

After one mans suggestion to use hashtags to create groups linked to tweets, it eventually caught on. The hashtag has dramatically evolved since then and is now used to group Tweets, discuss global issues and voice opinions. Twitter said:

Using hashtags on Twitter, people worldwide have made this platform their microphone, shaped culture, and changed the world.Combined with the power and influence of Twitter, the hashtag empowers everyone to see what’s happening in the world and what people are talking about. It allows people from all over the planet to share their voice and join global conversations. When something happens in the world, it happens on Twitter.

We all love a hashtag but are you using them right? In this post, I look at how many hashtags you should be using and which ones are best to help you expand your reach beyond your followers.

YouTube introduces fan sponsorships to gaming

YouTube has rolled out a new sponsorship program that allows gamers to earn money and connect with fans through their YouTube Gaming channel. Fans can now purchase digital goods directly from a channel or send recurring monthly payments of $4.99 (US). YouTube announced in return these sponsors will get 'cool insider perks, such as a custom badge for live chat that will help them stand out from the crowd and custom emoji. These badges and emoji are designed by you for your fans. As you gain more sponsors, you will unlock more emoji to be used on your channel'. The new YouTube Gaming sponsorships are now available to all eligible creators on the YouTube Gaming app.

Don't forget to connect with us on TwitterFacebookInstagram or LinkedIn and join us next week for another weekly roundup.



source http://www.smartinsights.com/social-media-marketing/pinterest-shortcuts-hashtags-birthday/

Trends in managing social media marketing

We talked to Scott Jaworski, Director of Global Social Media at Intel to find out how Intel manages social media on a global basis

In a recent survey Smart Insights, and Clutch, found that social media usage and effectiveness differs between B2B and B2C companies:he value of social media for B2B and B2C

Facebook was found to be the most valuable platform for B2C companies (96%), whilst LinkedIn is the most valuable for B2B companies.

scott

To find out more about trends in managing social media in large global brands, we interviewed Scott Jaworski, Director of Global Social Media at Intel, one of many senior keynote speakers at the Marketing Leadership Forum on October 5-6. We were interested to learn his thoughts on social media trends and innovations, brand identity on social, and mass-communications.

Trends and Innovations

Q1. Which social media trends and new innovations are you tracking which you think will be important for Intel's audiences in 2018?

The most recent ideation session I hadwas focused on camera effects. A unique opportunity for brands, especially through social is directly inside the mobile camera (Facebook's camera effects platform). Combined with augmented reality, it could be a winning recipe where brands help users create new and personalized ways to tell their story.

Q2. To what degree can social media activities be centralized in a global business like yours?

Anything’s possible and I know it sounds dreamy, but we took a pause and asked ourselves these questions first - is it the right thing to do? Are we better served focusing efforts on appointing the right people in the role?

Knowing the end-state goal of your centralized vision can take you down different, potentially easier paths netting the same end result. Example: we firmed up our social handle strategy and did a deep analysis of our footprint.  The results that came in showed fragmentation and ways in which we were able to reduce (with limited impact on reach) which indirectly aided in our centralization efforts.

Voice and Brand Identity

Q3. How do look to control tone of voice and brand identity on a global basis?

First and foremost, we needed to know who, the role, level of expertise and where the audience is that creates and publishes our content. This knowledge was integral to the creation, distribution and governance of our brand strategy and guardrails.  Knowing the aforementioned, we…

Created strategic documentation

  • We developed several versions written for different audiences at varying altitudes – handle owners, agencies, etc.

Distributed

  • Created a single destination for hosting. Users have learned where to find the latest and greatest and we can better manage version control and tracking – are people downloading it and who?

Empowered

  • Developed a support structure who has skin in the game and ability to apply a layer of localized oversight.

Use Tools

  • Leverage editorial planning software. This increased visibility and provided tracking, which organically impacts accountability

Governed

  • Implemented a governance team and framework to monitor handles. This was partially automated via the use of tools

To level set, the reality is that this is a continuous challenge that requires regular attention.

Integrating marketing communications

Q4. What is your view on the value of having a content marketing or audience engagement strategy and plan for each business area/market? Should this be defined as a separate document to achieve focus, or integrated into other communications plans?

Social without the “social” is advertising. If we’re looking to strike a rapport, develop relationships (a key differentiator social has over all other forms of marketing) and build an active audience, we need to have an engagement strategy.  My POV is that this is the cost of doing business in the social world.

I’d align your engagement strategies with audiences vs. businesses – which lends itself to being internally focused. More challenging than not is having visibility and the opportunity to engage digitally; above and beyond social.  Depending on the size and organizational structure of your business, this will likely require cross-BU collaboration, extension into geos (cultural relevance), etc.  To the extent of which you can achieve a holistic view, the better.

Social media command center

Q5. A few years back using a 'Social media command center' was seen as a way of showcasing social media and responding to customer issues. What is your view on SMCs?

SMCs of today are more than just customer support centers. They are vital to real-time insights and the development of actionable brand executions; whether it’s helping a customer or joining a relevant conversation.  That said, they’re transient by nature; you can quickly ramp and build in support of an event, activation or initiative.

The current generation of SMCs are full on Digital Analytics Hubs. These hubs go above and beyond supporting customer issues and real-time insights.  The hubs capabilities include, but are not limited to: executive and brand monitoring, social selling, trend spotting, influencer tracking and more.

Marketing technology apps

Q6. Which marketing technology and apps do you use within to manage communications in-team and with prospects and customers?

Due to contractual sensitivities, I’d prefer not to answer this question citing vendor names.

Generally speaking, my team uses editorial planning, publishing, listening, analytics and collaboration tools.

It’s important to note, there isn’t one tool to do it all. Furthermore, pairing of certain tools can pose other challenges – information sharing/inconsistencies, data integrity, version control, and more – all of which can lead to discrepancies and inefficiencies.  Tip: test and iterate often.

Learn more

If you want to know more about social media strategy from Scott, he is one of many senior keynote speakers at the Marketing Leadership Forum on October 5-6.

Registration has just opened for the events, the highest level marketing event taking place this year at the Four Seasons Westlake Village, Malibu, CA on October 5-6.

Features a remarkable line-up of 45+ Marketing Gurus and Experts including:

• David Jaye, Chief Marketing Officer/Chief Digital Officer, IBM
• Christine Nashick, Chief Marketing Officer, DHL Express
• Shonodeep Modak, Chief Marketing Officer, GE Industrial Solutions
• Mark Zarthar, Global Head of Sports Marketing, Anheuser-Busch InBev 
• Ted Hutcheson, Vice President, Global Creative and Content, Ashley Furniture Industries
• Rick Wion, Senior Director, Consumer Engagement, Kellogg Company
• Josslyn Mikow, Senior Content Strategist, eBay, Inc
• Ryan Lauder, Director, Customer Engagement, Taylor-Made Adidas Golf

To better understand the event, please click here: http://events.marcusevans-events.com/marketing-leadership-forumna17/

Connect with 80+ CMOs, Heads of Digital, Customer Engagement and Content Strategy Specialists and tailor your personal agenda based on the 4 streamed program.

To apply for a place contact leyanad@marcusevanscy.com

Contact us at leyanad@marcusevanscy.com by September 25 to find out how you can receive a $500 discount off the standard price



source http://www.smartinsights.com/social-media-marketing/social-media-strategy/managing-social-media/

Technology for Marketing 2017 Recap

A round-up of our time at TFM2017

This week the Smart Insights team were in London for Technology for Marketing. A two-day conference dedicated to martech.  If you didn’t make it to TFM here is a recap of Dave's talk and panel discussion, as well answers to the most common questions we were asked at our stand.

How to measure and improve your return on MarTech, Dave Chaffey

Dave spoke about how to build an effective martech stack that meets your ocompany's needs. Scott Brinker's martech landscape now covers over 5000 martech options. Therefore, it can be hard to find the appropriate one that will provide you with the right return. Dave started by discussing the customer lifecycle and how you can use martech to meet the customer at each stage of the cycle.

By using martech to fuel your entire customer lifecycle, you need a single data management platform for each stage of the lifecycle. For many businesses, because they haven’t done the analysis they don’t understand how to meet the needs of the audience.

He also covered many missed opportunities in martech. The key opportunities he finds companies miss are AB testing across different devices, detailed search data analysis, and welcome sequences. Dave discussed Smart Insights' infographic on digital marketing tools, this infographic provides structure to help you decide which tools are best for your business. The infographic divides 150 tools into 30 key categories, so you can see what tools to use to achieve a given objective.

When used correctly, martech tools can save time, boost productivity and lead to better marketing outcomes. Dave finished by pointing out that the biggest opportunity is in AI. There are already a lot of businesses using AI, we are at the stage where enough businesses are using it to find out how effective it is. He does not think AI will take over our jobs but help us.

The beginning of the age of AI marketing: Where do we stand now and what's next?, IBM Watson, Salesforce, AISB, Phrasee, SAP Hybris and Smart Insights

As Artificial Intelligence develops, businesses are questioning how profound AI will change the dynamics in marketing. This panel moderated by Dave Chaffey discussed how we can prepare ourselves for the foreseeable impact. The panel included:

  • Nicholas Kontopoulos -Global VP of Fast Growth Markets Marketing, SAP Hybris
  • Parry Malm - CEO, Phrasee
  • Dr Bertie Müller - Chair, AISB
  • Tom Smith - Senior Manager, Product Marketing EMEA, Salesforce
  • Jeremy Waite - Evangelist, Watson Marketing EMEA, IBM Watson

AI is still so new, while many businesses know about it many are unsure about the best place to start. The panel firstly discussed what is AI and where do we start?

Bertie: There are so many areas of AI, but also ones that will take a little longer to make their way into marketing. The key to AI is finding out how the human brain works and the essence of AI. The more human-like AI is the more we can relate to it.

Jeremy: Everyone is pretending they know what it is, but they don't. Don’t worry about AI, its something that will make our jobs easier and faster. It will help, but not replace us.

Parry: The term AI is crap. It’s a meaningless buzzword that makes you more money.

Dave also asked the panel what wins they have already seen. They discussed examples and case studies of AI in practice and what that would look like for our businesses.

Nicholas: It will replace some jobs, and will help us make better decisions. We will be able to handle bigger chunks of data and form better views of customers once AI if fully implemented.

Tom: We are currently using and partnering around AI. I believe that AI will help you increase conversions. Machines will be making decisions for you and help you make better conversion decisions.

Parry: AI scanning people for scanning, email subject lines are written by machines now, the probability is it was written by a machine.

Where should businesses start with AI?

Nicolas: Focus on people, and the problems you are wanting to solve. Don't over complicate it.

Parry: Not about AI, it's about working out your challenges and focusing on how you engage people better. If you don’t have a problem, don’t bother. The only time you should use it is if it will save you a bunch of money or make you a load of money.

'Everyone is pretending they know what AI is, but they don't. No one knows yet!' @jeremywaite #TFM17 pic.twitter.com/oJk1u8V6Ce

— Smart Insights (@SmartInsights) September 27, 2017

 

#TFM17 Dr Dave Chaffey as insightful as always @SmartInsights pic.twitter.com/HoKyTtUiTm

— Karen Bowen (@v28kab) September 27, 2017

 

Use AI in marketing to solve a problem, not just because AI is a current buzz word #TFM17 pic.twitter.com/sXbzCBobsv

— Victoria Peppiatt (@VicPeppiatt) September 27, 2017

Over at our stand, we had some great conversations and had the opportunity to meet a few of our members. Thank you to everyone who came by to say hi, it was great to meet you all. One very popular giveaway was our essential tools poster mentioned in Daves talk, if you didn't get your hands on one you can also find it here.

One of the most common questions asked was how can you integrate our resources into your marketing team. All our content can be adapted to your business needs and requirements. We have recently updated our capability grader and launched a brand new personalized learning tool, which helps you assess the areas of marketing you need further help with, giving tailored recommended resources to get you started. All our 181 resources, and counting, (guides, templates, quick-wins e-learning modules) are written by experts to give actionable advice that can be adapted to any size or industry of business. If you are interested in signing up, why not start with our basic membership and test out our content. You can become a basic member here.

Thanks yet again for a great conference TFM!

 



source http://www.smartinsights.com/marketing-planning/marketing-strategy/technology-marketing-2017-recap/

5 Methods to Get More from your Display Retargeting Activity

Attribution, publisher transparency, behaviour, and segmentation are all key features.

Retargeting is often seen as a quick win when it comes to digital marketing; simply re-engage with people who didn’t convert and optimise accordingly. With the 5 tips below, you’ll be able to drive more efficiency and growth from your retargeting activity.

1. Use Attribution to measure the ROI of your campaigns

To gain a true view of the performance of your retargeting activity, you must measure it within an analytics or attribution tool. This will allow you to see the role the channel plays within the full customer journey. If you only measure the revenue driven by retargeting within the retargeting tool itself, it’s highly likely that you will be double counting sales through other digital marketing channels and tools. This not only means the data is inaccurate but it could also mean that you over invest in that channel and activity.

For example, you may have the following tags live for your various digital marketing activity

  • Facebook
  • AdWords
  • Criteo
  • Affiliate Window

If one of your customers is exposed to all four of these channels, it could be that all four of the tags are dropped onto their browser. If a sale is made for £40, all of the channels could claim that sale.

By using attribution, you gain a clear view of how the various channels interact with one another. The £40 value of the sale will also be shared across all channels involved in the journey.

It’s also important to consider the various attribution models when determining the success of your campaign. Due to the nature of display retargeting, it will typically sit towards the end of the customer journey therefore, a last click model will over value display retargeting.

2. Publisher Transparency

It’s recommended that you use a retargeting tool that gives you full visibility into the sites your ads appear on.

The first benefit of this transparency is for brand protection. Many tools will give you the opportunity to not appear against sites or content that contain adult content or have inappropriate or offensive content. It is, however, important to ensure that sites can be excluded that are not relevant to your product offering or your brand guidelines.

I currently work for Gymshark who sell performance fitness clothing. It would not be relevant or be appropriate for the brand if our retargeting ads were to appear against an article about junk food or an article that expresses a negative view on the health and fitness industry.

Another factor for seeing where your ads appear is to help understand where your customers browse online. Insights into the websites your ads are placed on, helps you paint a picture of their online behaviour. In my previous job, I worked for VictoriaPlum.com and we gained the following insights around the customer’s browsing behaviour

  • House moving websites such as Right Move and Zoopla
  • Interior design sites such as House & Garden
  • Health and Beauty – Women’s Health
  • Food and recipes sites such as Jamie Oliver.com
  • Auction sites like eBay

This is great inspiration for display prospecting as well as other upper funnel activity.

3. Not All Customers Are The Same

Certain tools may not allow you to target users based on their specific on-site behaviour or audience signals such as their interests and other products they may be in market for. The old marketing saying around “right message at the right time” should always be considered. Relevancy is key; It’s not good enough to simply spam everyone who has been to your site in the past.

On site behaviour

  • Visited home page
  • Left the website within 5 seconds
  • Read three pages of the blog
  • Visited product details page
  • Spent more than five minutes on the website
  • Added to basket
  • Abandoned checkout

Audience Interests

  • Celebrity news
  • Quick and easy recipes
  • Health and fitness
  • Hair and beauty
  • Body building
  • Financial planning
  • Looking to buy a house

remarking guide

Image taken from Google Support

All of these factors will impact how much you’re willing to bid plus the creative and landing page you’ll use. Certain behaviours may also be used as a negative audience. For example, you may not want to retarget at all to someone who visited your site and bounced.

4. Don’t Bombard People

Potential customers do not want to feel as though they’re being followed around online with the same product they viewed. The customer may love the product, and there could be other reasons why they didn’t complete the transaction. Many advertisers will only use product feed ad formats for retargeting. There is a huge opportunity to use other creatives and messaging to help drive the conversion. For example, a voucher code may help convert the sale or a free delivery offer.

It’s also important to consider the frequency your ads are shown. Certain tools and partners may not limit the number of times your ad appears to a user. They may often tell you that the algorithm is calculating the optimum rate of impressions. Always push back on this. High volumes of impressions can be off putting to customers and potentially cause them to block your ads completely.

5. Segment Your Product Feed

You may not want to have all of your products available within your product feed to then be pulled into an ad. Examples include:

  • Low value or low margin products
  • Products that may not be visually inspiring to a customer when appearing within your ads
  • Products with low stock or no stock at all

remarketing topshopremarketing topshop tshirt

In this Topshop example, I was retargeted with a selection of products on Instagram a day after visiting their site and making a purchase of 2 pairs of jeans. I was targeted with a lot of t-shirts which I see as a positive as they could have all complimented the jeans I bought the previous day. They were relevant in this sense.

On clicking through to the website I can see the t-shirt is just £5 and there is only a size 6 and 8 in stock. I am a size 10 which they could have seen from my purchase. The low value of the t-shirt could have also meant that Topshop will make a low return for the Instagram activity.

Retargeting can be a great method for driving customers back to your site as long as the message is relevant and the activity is being measured accurately. A one size fits all approach can drive sales through remarketing, however incremental growth and efficiency can be achieved when the targeting and message is appropriate and engaging to the end customer.



source http://www.smartinsights.com/digital-marketing-strategy/digital-strategy-development/5-methods-get-display-retargeting-activity/

Wednesday 27 September 2017

How long do you wait till you trigger a re-engagement campaign?

Chart of the Day: Inactivity Managment

What is inactivity in email data management?

Your email marketing platform tracks all activity relating to your email marketing, including opens and clicks. It also tracks clients who have not interacted with your emails. Different platforms also rate inactivity differently, for instance, some may class opens still as non-activity because recipients haven't clicked on any links. So, before planning your campaigns it's best to check first.

Win-back campaigns

Win-back campaigns are aimed to re-engage your subscribers. They usually focus on an offer or Unique Selling Point (USP) depending on what you think will entice your subscriber. Your win-back campaigns can be either automated or manual, however, automation does take the hassle from creating one-off manual emails. While planning your campaign, you need to decide on three things:

  • What does inactive mean for you?
  • What are you going to do to entice your clients back?
  • What are you going to do with those who don't engage?

What do you class as inactive?

How long do you want to leave a subscriber on your system if they aren't engaging with you? Let's look at the chart below and see how many months inactives are being left on platforms.

Nine months is the average, at 59%. But what draws your eyes, my little Email Geeks? Could it be the 28+ months? 3.6% leave inactives on their system for well over 2 years? 2 years is a long time to keep redundant data on your platform - you could even get to Mars and back in less time.

Inactive email

What to do with the inactives?

You have sent your win-back, waited a week or so, and you still have an amount that hasn't re-engaged. What do you do with those? Again you have three options:

  • Mark all those as unsubscribed, so you don't contact them again
  • Delete them from your platform
  • Ignore the results and continue to email them.

If you have gone on this process, what is the point of keeping those inactives on your platform, unless you are going to do something with them again? I suppose you could have a series of campaigns, but remember there could be legal implications in keeping data over a certain time, with no activity. And to be honest, why would you go through all of this to ignore the results - just don't waste your time.

Final reflection

Having inactive clients is a natural part of the email marketing lifecycle and sometimes you just have to let go.

Trigger for Re-engagement Campaigns



source http://www.smartinsights.com/email-marketing/email-list-management-ecrm/how-long-do-you-wait-till-you-trigger-a-re-engagement-campaign/

The cost of Google Advertising in the UK

How much your cost per click should be for a #1 advert position, according to your industry

A question that is becoming increasingly common for business owners.“How much does it cost to advertise on Google?” A perfectly simple question with a not so simple answer.

As you’re probably aware, the keywords you use in your campaign have various costs associated with each click. So when estimating a sensible Adwords budget for your new campaign, without using Google’s Keyword Planner as a rough guide, (emphasis on rough), you may not know where to begin.

In this post we’re going to focus on the Google Search Network as this is often the starting point for businesses when they begin digital advertising. We’re going to look at Google’s estimates for what the average cost per click is for the top 10 online industries in the UK and how you can reduce these costs significantly.

What does the Keyword Planner say?

Google’s Keyword Planner provides historical estimates of keyword costings in order to estimate cost per click data. As a starting point, this is great for getting an idea of what the costs are likely to be for your campaign.

We looked at the top 10 most popular UK industries online. Using the Keyword Planner we produced the average cost per click data for an advert to appear in position 1 on the Google Search Results Page, for each industry.

How-Much-Does-it-Cost-To-Advertise-On-Google

The results were really interesting. If you’re in the Insurance industry, be prepared to be spending an average of around £11 on a click! The highest average cost per click across all the industries we analyzed.

Even more interestingly, As part of our research, we analyzed the difference between what Google’s Keyword Planner estimated and the actual live cost would be if your advert was positioned on page 1.

We discovered that Google’s Keyword Planner CPC estimates are a shocking 200% lower on average than the cost you would be paying if your advert was live. Which suggests that you should probably take the Keyword Planner’s estimates with a pinch of salt!

The Telecommunications industry sees the largest change between the two sets of data, with the Keyword Planner estimating costs 826% lower than the live costs.

This means that if you were to follow the Keyword Planner’s estimates when deciding your budget, you may end up paying on average 200% more once your campaign goes live! A surprise that no one wants to have.

Why do the costs vary so much per industry?

The average cost per click can vary for different keywords due to a number of factors.

  • The amount of competitors bidding for your keywords
  •  The popularity and seasonal trends of your chosen keywords;
  • The relevancy of your advert and landing page in relation to the keywords. This can not only affect the cost per click, but it will also have an impact on how often your adverts will show and what position they will be shown in.
  • The locations you are targeting

How can you reduce these costs?

No matter how large or limited your budget is, no one wants to be overpaying for clicks.

Your keywords need to be both relevant and popular. If the keywords you use are too generic, you will most likely end up paying for clicks from users that are unlikely to convert. If you go too niche and you will receive a low amount of clicks. Great for the budget but not so much for your sales goals.

To reduce the cost per click you can:

  • Make your landing pages and advert text as relevant as possible to the keywords in your ad group. Even if this means you have to have a lot of ad groups that are all very similar.
  • Keep testing! Always test different advert variations and landing pages to get the best results from your ads. Never settle
  • Reduce your cost per click bids. Sometimes you can be overpaying for clicks. Try reducing your bids slightly, but make sure you are monitoring positions and quality scores to see if they change.
  • Keep reviewing your search terms for phrases that people have searched and clicked on your ad from. If any are irrelevant, add them as a negative keyword. The more you do this, the less you’ll be paying for clicks you don’t want!

Clicks don’t necessarily mean conversions

Obviously, clicks are great. If you can pay as little as possible for clicks, even better. However, the end result goal for most businesses is conversions. Once a potential customer clicks on your ad and lands on your page, there is still a number of factors that can stop them from converting. Here are some examples

  • A slow website page speed load can make potential customers leave your page before even viewing your content.
  • Complicated check out processes often lead to users giving up on the conversion
  • Difficult navigation and irrelevant landing pages put users off if they can’t find what they are looking for with ease

We hope this post helped you to understand more about how Adwords works and how much it really costs to advertize on Google. Adwords is a great tool for businesses of all sizes. Knowing this information will help you get a more accurate estimate when defining your Adwords budget. Make sure that you take the Keyword Planner’s historical estimates as a rough guide and make sure you always check the live costs in a test account before adding them to your campaigns.

If you are unsure how to set a budget for your business or manage your campaigns, It may be worth getting a Google certified partner involved to help you further.



source http://www.smartinsights.com/paid-search-marketing-ppc/paid-search-strategy/cost-google-advertising-uk/

How SaaS companies can succeed at international SEO strategy

Don't limit your SaaS brand - the do's and don'ts of international SEO

We live in a world of nearly 200 countries and thousands of different languages, so why should your SaaS company limit itself just to English speakers or a North American audience? Asking this question, many SaaS companies will embark on a journey to expand their international visibility, only to realize that international SEO can be a strange beast. “If you build it, they will come,” does not apply if no one can find what you have built. 

Brands can find greater success within international markets if they understand how search engines, like Google index, retrieve websites for international audiences. With this understanding, your SaaS company can build a strategic approach to capturing international traffic by following international SEO best practices.

So, start studying abroad — no passport needed! — with this list of do’s and don’ts for international SEO.

Don't spread yourself too thin; do approach each localization carefully

Every single language and/or country you decide to create a localized company website for deserves individualized time and attention. You may want to start small by targeting a single country or language to expand to, focus on those efforts, and then take the lessons learned as you expand your reach further.

The last thing you want to do is try to publish 30 different sites at once without regard for best practices. This approach will result in a poor experience for users and likely a complete lack of visibility to search engines.

So, start small, focus on the details and then scale your approach as you learn more about what works and what doesn’t. Remember that it is often easier to target a language like Spanish, which is spoken in dozens of countries throughout the world, rather than targeting an individual country.

Developing a language-specific approach may, therefore, offer more efficient returns than a country-specific approach unless you are trying to directly target a single country’s market.

Don’t Rely on Auto Translators

Another critical mistake companies make - deciding to simply dump 100% of their existing copy into a translator tool and then paste this into a “localized” website. For one, translator tools will always be imperfect compared to a human translator. These programs commonly fail to recognize nuance, context or idioms present in the language.

google translate

Second, not everything translates directly from one language to the other. Otherwise, we would not have co-opted words in English like “reconnaissance,” which would translate directly from French to something like “the regaining of understanding.”

For this reason, a keyword like “best SaaS payroll tool” may have a completely different alternative in your target country, so study their search habits.

Ensure that both On-page and Off-page elements contain targeted keywords in the chosen language, including:

  • H1s and other headers
  • Title tags
  • Meta descriptions
  • Alt text
  • Body content

Other things that may not translate directly are your business hours, currency and other regional-specific factors. Research schema markup tags that you can use for language/country specific pages so that search users there do not see something that confuses them, like business hours that correspond to the middle of the night.

Do Work With Someone Who Speaks the Language and Understands Regional Expectations

Poorly translated sites usually do not rank well on SERPs. So, your first step towards writing in a new language is to hire someone who speaks the language fluently. You can outsource this job to a freelancer, but you will need to check the quality of their work with someone else who is bilingual.

You are better off hiring a dedicated bilingual project manager/creative director if you are serious about creating an experience that translates well into your new target market. They should have an enough grasp on local culture and expectations of businesses to be certain that your design and language approach produces the desired effect.

For example, a website design that is successful in America may not find success in Japan. Look at Moz’s example under Myth #12 of their related article showing how the beauty company Lush has a completely different site design approach for Japanese audiences. The Japanese site trades out minimalism for dense, colorful imagery while making the chat widget more prominent. 

Similarly, businesses launching services in Germany must be no-nonsense with their branding, and they must project a stellar, professional first impression if they are to be regarded on the marketplace at all. Germany also requires a fairly specific boilerplate site imprint for all business websites, else the host could face up to a €50,000 ($58,652 USD) fine. Knowing requirements like these are key to a successful international brand launch.

Don’t Take Your Domain Structure for Granted

While you are working on design and copy for your new website, you can already begin to form an international SEO strategy.

Your first order of business is to decide on a domain structure. You have several main options:

  • ccTLD (Country Code Top Level Domain) — “examplesaascompany.fr
    • Provides the strongest ranking signal to country-specific search engines
    • Requires you to completely rebuild your domain ranking authority almost from scratch
    • Best for an all-in approach from companies seeking to run dedicated international offices
    • Expensive to maintain
  • Subdomain — “france.examplesaascompany.com"
    • Provides a fairly strong ranking signal to foreign search engines
    • Can often help share your domain authority, giving momentum to international SEO
    • Less-expensive to maintain
    • Used by a surprising amount of multinationals, including Apple and IBM
  • Subdirectory — “examplesaascompany.com/france”
    • Sends weakest ranking signal to foreign search engines
    • Cheapest option with the least amount of needed hosting resources
    • Often easier to structure/strategize since it can be incorporated within normal site map
    • Best for small operations or businesses just starting to branch out internationally

Note that your company can also use hreflang tags to help search engines understand that a site page can also be accessed in a different language. Adding these tags to the page code can allow search engines to index the translated page based on the search user’s current country and browser settings.

An example tag for a French homepage would look like the following:

<link rel="alternate" href="http://examplesaascompany.com/fr" hreflang="fr-fr"/>

This page also needs an hreflang tag for the French page back to the English page for the search engine to be able to index properly, so always reciprocate.

Do Be Prepared to Optimize Your Approach Through Feedback

As you begin to create new pages tailored for the language/country of your choosing, you can use analytics data to determine areas of needed improvement or extra effort. Google’s Analytics tools, for example, can reveal data on search volume and trends from certain countries or languages. It can also reveal the pages that are most popular by language/region.

You should also continually verify your organic search visibility using available tools, like Google Search Console and SEMRush.

International SEO google analytics

Don’t be frustrated if you fail to appear organically at first! You can verify you did everything right by checking Moz’s checklist for international SEO. Even if you do accomplish all of the recommendations, organic rankings can take weeks to improve depending on the market and the keyword competitiveness.

A Successful International SEO Strategy Looks at the Long Term

As your company grows and your international audience grows alongside it, you will need to regularly revisit your SEO strategy. Try accomplishing things like the following tasks monthly or quarterly:

  • Flesh out your international language pages to have more depth and cultural context.
  • Review your technical SEO aspects to ensure you have the proper meta-tags that serve as signals for search engines.
  • Take note of analytics data revealing popular pages, keyword use and inbound traffic sources.
  • Differentiate your global SEO strategy from your operations on home soil by making your international pages more unique and contextualized.
  • Review word choice and phrasing with a native speaker.

 

Just like running a SaaS platform, finding SEO success on the international circuit is an ongoing process. Treat it like a full-time project, return to it continues to make improvements, and above all else make it your goal to truly, meaningfully connect with customers abroad.

Only when you commit to making their experience great can you be seen as a true international partner — someone who is trusted just as much abroad as they are back home.



source http://www.smartinsights.com/search-engine-optimisation-seo/multilingual-seo/saas-companies-can-succeed-international-seo-strategy/