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  • Google Analytics Remarketing Lists Extended To Search Ads

    Google Analytics Remarketing Lists Extended To Search Ads

    Google said on Thursday that it will now let advertisers use audiences (formerly known as remarketing lists) created in Google Analytics to reach people on Google Search without any changes to tagging.

    Google’s Remarketing Lists for Search Ads (RLSA) lets an advertiser tailor search ads to users based on their past activity on the advertiser’s website. This can now be utilized in conjunction with over 200 Google Analytics dimensions and metrics, and audiences can be used to re-engage customers across Google Search and the Display network with a consistent message.

    Google has a case study looking at how financial services provider TransUnion used Google Analytics audiences to “spend more efficiently” on Google Search and get “impressive conversion rates and cost efficiencies”. You can take a look at that here. The company reportedly

    increased its conversion rate by 65% and average transaction value by 58% while lowering both CPCs for existing customers and cost per transaction by 50% each.

    There’s an Instant Activation feature, so you can start using RLSA by going to Property > Tracking Info >Data Collection from the Admin tab, and making sure Remarketing is set to “ON”. Then, all eligible audiences will start to populate for RLSA.

    remarketing-on

    Google says there are three ways to create new audiences. You can use the Audience builder in the remarketing section of the Admin tab and select the relevant Adwords accounts, or if you have an existing segment you want to turn into an audience, you can click on the segment options and hit “Build Audience”. It will then take you to the audience builder. The other option is to import audiences from the Google Analytics Solutions Gallery.

    “Once you have shared an audience with AdWords, it will appear instantly in your AdWords Shared Library and will show eligible users in the column List size (Google search),” says Google in a blog post. “Keep in mind that an audience must accumulate a minimum of 1,000 users before you can use it for remarketing on Google Search.”

    This help center article on AdWords remarketing lists for search ads should tell you just about everything you need to know.

  • Here’s Why It’s Getting Harder To Ignore Instagram For Marketing

    Here’s Why It’s Getting Harder To Ignore Instagram For Marketing

    Instagram unveiled some improvements to its mobile apps this week, which could help marketers increase their visibility on the popular social network, which is increasingly becoming the “go-to social network” for a younger generation. New trending content and search features could help businesses attract more eyeballs.

    Do you think Instagram’s new features can help you improve your marketing strategy? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    New Marketing Opportunities

    Despite its popularity, Instagram has never been great from a content discovery perspective, but that’s changing with these new features. As content becomes easier to discover, marketers have some new opportunities on their hands with a network that has already shown to be great for user engagement with brands.

    There’s a new Explore page with trending tags and places and a more powerful search experience making it easier for users to find people, places, and tags. The new Explore experience includes trending tags and places as they emerge in real time.

    “Through trending Tags and trending Places, you can experience moments like #bonnaroo or #fathersday from every perspective,” Instagram says in a blog post. “Rich visual content captures everyone’s unique take — not just what the community is talking about, but also what they’re doing and seeing.”

    The trends are frequently refreshed based on what’s popular at the moment. If you’ve enabled location services on your phone, it may show you places nearby.

    There are collections at the top of the Explore page, which feature interesting accounts and places in various categories. The content in the collections is editorially chosen by Instagram. They choose new topics to feature twice a week that it thinks the larger Instagram community will like.

    The company says it’s always working to update the types of photos and videos it shows in Search & Explore to better tailor it for users, and may show photos liked by people whose posts the user has liked or posts that are liked by a large number of people. Note that just because you see a post in Search & Explore doesn’t mean everyone else is seeing it.

    The new search experience is where the real potential is though.

    “For everyone on Instagram, we’ve dramatically improved the ability to find what you’re looking for,” the company says. “With the new Places Search, you can now peer in at just about any location on earth, allowing you to scout out your next vacation spot in the South Pacific, get a look inside that hot new restaurant or experience your favorite music festival — even if you couldn’t make it this year. The new Top Search also lets you search across people, places and tags all at once.”

    If your’e a brick and mortar business, the place search feature can surface your business and photos from users showing it off. You might encourage customers to share pics from your establishment.

    pizza instagram

    The tag search feature can surface popular tags based on keywords, even displaying just how popular they are. Hashtags are already a major part of Instagram marketing, so there’s obvious potential here.

    tagsearch

    tagsearch2

    The new features are available in updates to the iOS and Android apps. It’s unclear if and when they’ll come to the web experience, which recently got its own revamp. The new Explore will only be available in the U.S. for now, but will launch in more countries eventually.

    Big Engagement, Slow Adoption

    A few months ago, we looked at a study from Yesmail, which found that while brands on Instagram experienced a 278% growth in followers in 2014, the number of brands adopting the platform was still quite low. The firm analyzed over 2,000 brands on social platforms and found that only 23% were on Instagram.

    “Restaurants lead the Instagram-adoption rate, beating CPG, retail and hotel brands. However, only 31 percent of restaurants are on Instagram, compared to a whopping 86 percent of restaurants using Facebook and Twitter,” a spokesperson for Yesmail told WebProNews. “With 300 million users and 70 million photos and videos shared daily, Instagram’s high level of consumer engagement should motivate brands to adopt the platform.”

    It found that hotel adoption of Instagram is about 30.8%, while retailer adoption and CPG adoption are at 23% and 16% respectively. Retailers included in the research saw an 8% increase in followers per month, on average. That’s double the rate of other social platforms, according to Yesmail. 80% of brands from the research have Facebook pages, while 82% are active on Twitter, 60% engage on YouTube, and over a third have a Google+ profile.

    A newer study (from last week) from Yesmail found Instagram to be significantly better than Facebook for retailers when it comes o increasing follower counts.

    “The report indicates that although Facebook is the status-quo, it is not the most effective social media platform,” a spokesperson for the firm tells WebProNews. “Retailers hoping to amplify their social media presence should explore new channels and invest in campaign metric tools.”

    The study looked at the beauty, apparel, big box, electronics, and home goods categories across Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, and Google+. Out of those analyzed, 91% have a presence on two or more social channels.

    Apparel retailers in particular saw an average follower growth of 417% on Instagram last year. Apparel brands were also the most socially connected with 86% on four or more social channels and 60% present on all five channels tracked.

    91% of brands were on Twitter, while 79% used YouTube, and just 43% were using Instagram despite its potential for follower growth.

    According to the new study, the average follower growth rate for brands on Instagram is 237%.

    “The focus on Facebook made sense years ago, but Yesmail Market Intelligence illustrated how follower growth for that channel has plateaued for most retail categories,” said Michael Fisher, president of Yes Lifecycle Marketing. “The answer isn’t necessarily to shift resources, but rather turn a serious eye to audience preferences and return on social investment. Social media has moved past the experimental phase, and retailers must know their audience and know the ROI of their efforts.”

    It’s not just Facebook that has seen follower growth stall. It’s a similar story on Twitter. In terms of follower counts, Faceobook still had the highest by far with an average of 2.8 million fans per page. Instagram came in second with 300,000.

    “Instagrammers are passionate about the platform and their love for amazing imagery. You’ll reach people who are open to new perspectives,” Instagram says on its business site. “Instagram’s simple design allows captivating visuals to take center stage. Each image or video fills the screen with nothing to clutter the experience. On Instagram your brand’s story will be surrounded by other beautiful content in a creative and inspiring environment.”

    They have over 300 million monthly active users and see 2.5 billion likes and 70 million photos every day. According to a new report from BI Intelligence (citing data from Piper Jaffray), U.S. teens consider Instagram to be the most important social network – more than Twitter, Facecbook, Snapchat, Tumblr, Google+, Pinterest, etc.

    Screen shot 2015-06-25 at 10.25.04 AM

    What does Instagram itself say about how businesses should be using it?

    It just so happens that Instagram has its own content strategy tips and other tips for getting started. These are right from the corporate site:

    Instagram business tips

    Instagram business tips

    This video from the company is a year old, but it gives marketers an idea about how to show off their brands on Instagram and engage with the community:

    Instagram for Business from Instagram on Vimeo.

    Instagram has a page for marketers to “find inspiration” here. It shows off the company’s “favorite examples” of brands using Instagram to “reflect their unique identifies”. it should at least give you a good idea about the type of stuff that works well. You can also check out case studies from brands like McDonald’s, Maybelline, Qantas, Chobani, Ben & Jerry’s, Mercedes-Benz, etc. here.

    Is There a Science to Instagram Marketing?

    Marketing on Instagram may not be a science, but this recent infographic from KISSmetrics treats it as such, and may give you a hand with your efforts:

    ++ Click Image to Enlarge ++

    Source: The Science of Brands on Instagram (Infographic)

    Advertising

    While we’ve mostly been talking about unpaid marketing efforts here, Instagram is really just getting started with its paid options, and you’ll want to keep an eye out for more and more improvements and features in that area.

    Earlier this month, the company announced it would start letting businesses of all sizes buy ads. Instagram first launched ads a year and a half ago on a limited basis, and has since expanded formats most recently to include carousel ads.

    A New Way for Brands to Tell Stories on Instagram from Instagram on Vimeo.

    Here’s a look at how early-adopting brands have used those.

    The company says that across over 475 campaigns measured globally, ad recall from sponsored posts was 2.9x higher than Nielsen norms for online advertising.

    Instagram will begin testing direct response ads in the coming months. These will enable users to buy products or download apps from the ads.

    “People come to Instagram to follow their passions, from travel and fashion to cars and entertainment,” the company said in a blog post. “They want to see ads that reflect the things they care about. Advertisers also want to target their messages in more effective ways and reach people not just because of their age, location and gender, but because of the people, places and things they love.”

    “Later this year, we will continue to connect businesses to the right people through expanded targeting options,” it added. “Working with Facebook, we will enable advertisers to reach people on Instagram based on demographics and interests, as well as information businesses have about their own customers. We will also improve the feedback mechanisms within Instagram to give people greater control and improve the relevance of the ads they see.”

    The company is working to make advertising available through an Ads API and Facebook ad buying interfaces over the coming months in an effort to open op ads to businesses of all sizes. It says it will leverage the best of Facebook’s infrastructure for buying, managing, and measuring ads.

    They’ll be opening the API to a select group of Facebook Marketing Partners and agencies at first, and will expand globally throughout the year.

    A lot of the news in the social media advertising industry of late has been related to ecommerce, buy buttons and the like. Instagram is reportedly working on some features that could make the service a better marketing platform for ecommerce businesses hoping to attract buyers.

    In which Instagram features do you see the greatest potential for marketing? Discuss.

    Images via Instagram, KISSmetrics

  • Instagram Just Made Some Big Content Discovery Improvements

    Instagram Just Made Some Big Content Discovery Improvements

    Instagram just announced two major improvements in an area where it’s been severely lacking for its entire existence – discovery. There’s a new Explore page with trending tags and places and a more powerful search experience making it easier for users to find people, places, and tags.

    Instagram says it sees over 70 million photos and videos posted every day. As this rapid content sharing continues, discoverability will only be increasingly important. It should also help businesses with their Instagram marketing strategies.

    The new Explore experience (pictured above) includes trending tags and places as they emerge in real time.

    “Through trending Tags and trending Places, you can experience moments like #bonnaroo or #fathersday from every perspective,” Instagram says in a blog post. “Rich visual content captures everyone’s unique take — not just what the community is talking about, but also what they’re doing and seeing.”

    The trends are frequently refreshed based on what’s popular at the moment. If you’ve enabled location services on your phone, it may show you places nearby.

    There are collections at the top of the Explore page, which feature interesting accounts and places in various categories:

    Screen shot 2015-06-23 at 1.39.20 PM

    The content in the collections is editorially chosen by Instagram. They choose new topics to feature twice a week that it thinks the larger Instagram community will like.

    The company says it’s always working to update the types of photos and videos it shows in Search & Explore to better tailor it for users, and may show photos liked by people whose posts the user has liked or posts that are liked by a large number of people. Note that just because you see a post in Search & Explore doesn’t mean everyone else is seeing it.

    Here’s a look at the new search experience:

    instagram-search

    “For everyone on Instagram, we’ve dramatically improved the ability to find what you’re looking for,” the company says. “With the new Places Search, you can now peer in at just about any location on earth, allowing you to scout out your next vacation spot in the South Pacific, get a look inside that hot new restaurant or experience your favorite music festival — even if you couldn’t make it this year. The new Top Search also lets you search across people, places and tags all at once.”

    The new features are available in updates to the iOS and Android apps. It’s unclear if and when they’ll come to the web experience. The new Explore will only be available in the U.S. for now, but will launch in more countries eventually.

    Various studies have shown that businesses are somewhat slow to adopt Instagram, but those who do are more likely to see better engagement (compared to Facebook) and/or a faster increase in followers.

    Images via Instagram

  • These Marketing Tools Are Tapping Into The New Pinterest Ads API

    These Marketing Tools Are Tapping Into The New Pinterest Ads API

    In April, Pinterest announced its Marketing Developer Partners (MDP) program with the goal of helping businesses get more value of their Pinterest efforts.

    “The program helps businesses optimize and scale their Pinterest marketing and improve Pinterest for Pinners,” a spokesperson for Pinterest told us. “The initial MPD program is made up of a limited, carefully selected group of developer partners who meet the needs of existing businesses on Pinterest and align with Pinterest’s core value of putting Pinners first.”

    These partners include: Ahalogy, Buffer, Curalate, Expion, Newscred, Percolate, Shoutlet, Spredfast, Sprinklr and Tailwind.

    At the time, Pinterest also said it was in the early days of testing its Ads API in the U.S. in an effort to help advertisers optimize their campaigns and find “sustained success” on Pinterest. The company is now talking more about this, and has revealed the first MDPs using the API. These include: 4C, Adaptly, Ampush, Brand Networks, HYFN, Kinetic Social, SocialCode and SocialFlow.

    “We selected these partners because they’re building tools that address the immediate needs of Pinterest marketers and share in our vision of creating a better discovery experience for Pinners,” says Pinterest’s Jyri Kidwell. “We’re already hearing lots of positive things from businesses working with our MDPs.”

    Jody Ford, VP of global growth at eBay, for example, said, “We want to make eBay relevant to consumers at the moment they’re inspired to shop, and Pinterest enables us to put the right content in front of the right people. By working with one of Pinterest’s Marketing Developer Partners, eBay can buy Promoted Pins to promote interesting trends and topics with Pinterest users, making them instantly shoppable. And we’re encouraged by early results, which have shown a significant increase in traffic from Pinterest to eBay.”

    According to Pinterest, Adore Me, a lingerie brand, saw a whopping 4000% increase in Pinterest-referred revenue after working with 4C, using the Ads API. They have a case study on the brand available here.

    Image via Pinterest

  • Include These Types Of Content In Your Business App To Get More Sales

    Include These Types Of Content In Your Business App To Get More Sales

    People are spending more and more time with mobile apps, and that includes those that let them buy things. The problem for businesses hoping to break into that increasing app usage is that the number of apps people are using isn’t really growing along with the time they’re spending using apps.

    New changes Google has been making could (and should) mean increased discovery for new and existing apps, and could just lead to that number of apps metric increasing as time goes on. It’s going to be challenging to make your business’ app stand out in the crowd, so you should know what kind of app content users are gravitating towards. We’ll look at that in this article.

    Are you getting a significant amount of business through mobile apps so far? If not, what do you think needs to change to make it happen? If so, what are the main ways people are discovering your app and/or the content within? Discuss in the comments.

    Nielsen released some research showing significant growth trajectory for the time consumers are spending using apps.

    Time spent on apps via Nielsen

    “Over the span of just a few years, the concept of app usage has transformed from a novelty to an essential part of the mobile user experience,” the firm says. “With millions of apps now available and more being rolled out every day, there is an app for everyone, regardless of age, race or interest.”

    “But while marketers and app developers continue to add functionality and robustness to apps, they also must effectively position them to stand out in an increasingly competitive marketplace,” it adds. “Despite the increase in choices, the number of apps used is staying the same.”

    As you may know, Google is now indexing app content in search results. Businesses who follow Google’s protocol for app indexing even get the benefit of a ranking signal. It’s in your best interest to have an app and to have it indexed. At first, Google was only offering this on Android, but has recently started to index content on iOS, though it’s still early days on that. Currently, on Android, anyone can take advantage of app indexing. On iOS, Google is only working with a handful of partners so far, but that will likely open up to everyone else eventually. Luckily, Android has a much bigger piece of the mobile operating system market share since it’s on so many different devices from various manufacturers.

    Google App Indexing in action

    With Google’s changes, users can also discover your app even if they haven’t installed it yet, which is key. They (and others) of course offer app install ads to help you convince more people to get your app on their phone to begin with.

    RELATED READING: HOW TO SET UP APP INDEXING FOR RANKING IN GOOGLE

    You might want to give this presentation from Google I/O a watch. It’s a session called “Smarter user acquisition with App Indexing, AdWords and Google Analytics”.

    Here’s how Google describes it: “Content discovery on mobile isn’t easy. Luckily, this is a familiar problem to Google. With App Indexing on both iOS and Android, you can engage users organically by surfacing app content in the search results page. And on Android specifically, you can even drive app installs for users who don’t have your app. Google’s smart mobile ads platform gives you access to AdWords, the world’s largest network, to find the right users who will install and engage with your app, plus you can gain insights through Google Analytics install attribution to know where your users came from. Discover Google’s variety of approaches to driving app discovery, growth and engagement in this session.”

    Even if you can get people to install your app, you face the challenge of getting them to open it and interact with it regularly. Google has been working on some things that can help with that as well.

    For one, it now offers app deep linking with Goo.gl. This was announced less than a month ago.

    “Once you’ve taken the necessary steps to set up App Indexing for Android and iOS, goo.gl URLs will send users straight to the right page in your app if they have it installed, and everyone else to your website. This will provide additional opportunities for your app users to re-engage with your app,” explained Google software engineer Fabian Schlup. “This feature works for both new short URLs and retroactively, so any existing goo.gl short links to your content will now also direct users to your app.”

    You can drive traffic to in-app content through your marketing efforts using such links.

    Potentially even more helpful for driving re-engagement from users who have installed your app, is Google Now on Tap. Google announced this at Google I/O. With this feature, users can get to useful content from other apps regardless of what app they’re currently using. It’s driven by context.

    An example of how it works would be pulling a movie review from IMDb if the user is looking at movie content from another app or reservations on OpenTable if they’re viewing a restaurant in a different app.

    Google says Now on Tap another way to get apps in front of users at the right moment. If you have an app with content that people need to see, well, that applies to you. Luckily, beyond app indexing, there’s nothing else you really have to do to be integrated with Now on Tap. Just have your app indexed by Google.

    These are really just potential bonuses of app indexing, but the question remains: what do you need to offer in your app to actually get people to use it and buy from you?

    comScore and UPS recently conducted a study looking at what kind of content shoppers find important. The content types are product reviews, Q&A, product and brand videos, and photos submitted of consumers using products. These are good places to start.

    Other types of app content shoppers find useful include communities and forums, “trending now” products, the seller’s blog content, and podcasts. You might want to think about using some or all of these things in your app. Luckily, most of this stuff is excellent for appearing in search results.

    MarketingCharts put together this graph based on the findings.

    app content shoppers want

    That study also concluded that 55% of shoppers value consumer and peer reviews when they’re searching and selecting products to buy. Detailed product information is the most important fact in the search and selection process it found. Other important components cited include the seller’s reputation, return policy, and the use of multiple images or the ability to zoom in on products.

    While the above lists what content people value from websites, MarketingCharts notes, “Similar factors are important when shopping via mobile applications. Indeed, product images (54%) and product reviews (53%) are considered the most important retail app features among users, with these followed by relevant search results (50%) and mobile coupons (50%). While the study cautions that ‘apps… aren’t a must for every retailer,’ 4 in 5 mobile shoppers surveyed reported having used a retailer’s app rather than a browser to access a retailer at some point.”

    This is all very helpful to know, and can help you make your app more useful to consumers.

    Do you expect maintaining a mobile app to have a significant impact on your business? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Images via Nielsen, MarketingCharts

  • New Google Feature Means Businesses Need Apps For Search Marketing

    New Google Feature Means Businesses Need Apps For Search Marketing

    The world of search engine marketing is ever-changing, and it’s no secret that mobile continues to take over the desktop. Google has a new feature, even beyond a related ranking signal for organic search on mobile devices, that gives businesses more incentive to have mobile apps for search marketing purposes. It essentially expands as search marketing-related benefit device-wide, as opposed to limiting it to the actual search results page.

    At Google I/O, Google announced the launch of something called Google Now On Tap. It’s a new feature in the latest version of Android, which the company unveiled in developer preview. You’d be forgiven if you missed that particular announcement as the company made many of them.

    Google Now on Tap is essentially a way for you to utilize Google Now on your own terms rather than in the confines of Google itself. While Google Now already served as a virtual assistant, this makes it even more so.

    Do you see Google Now on Tap as a new opportunity to increase visibility of your content? Share your thoughts about it in the comments.

    “Since we launched Google Now, we’ve been expanding the ways it can help and do more of the work for you,” says director of product management Aparna Chennapragada. “You can get notifications like where you parked your car, news stories based on your interests, or help with travel like your upcoming reservations. We’ve also gotten better at giving smarter answers to some of your questions (‘Is my flight on time?’) and at helping you get things done across your apps (‘Ok Google, play Sugar on Spotify’).”`

    “We’re working to make Google Now a little smarter in the upcoming Android M release, so you can ask it to assist you with whatever you’re doing—right in the moment, anywhere on your phone,” Chennapragada explains. “With ‘Now on tap,’ you can simply tap and hold the home button for assistance without having to leave what you’re doing—whether you’re in an app or on a website. For example, if a friend emails you about seeing the new movie Tomorrowland, you can invoke Google Now without leaving your app, to quickly see the ratings, watch a trailer, or even buy tickets—then get right back to what you were doing.”

    “If you’re chatting with a friend about where to get dinner, Google can bring you quick info about the place your friend recommends,” Chennapragada adds. “You’ll also see other apps on your phone, like OpenTable or Yelp, so you can easily make a reservation, read reviews or check out the menu.”

    When the user taps and holds the home button, Google presents options for its best guess of what might be helpful in the moment. If it doesn’t provide the right thing(s), the user can say, “Ok Google” from any screen or app. If it works as advertised it’s pretty smart. If you’re listening to a band on Spotify, Google says you can simply ask “who’s the lead singer?” and it will get you the answer.

    As Google notes, it shows apps from your phone that may help with what you’re doing based on context. It might tap IMDb for movie review, OpenTable for reservations, etc.

    There’s an SEO element to all of this. App indexing. Google recently made App Indexing a ranking signal for mobile search results on Android devices, and announced that it’s starting to index iOS apps as well. Google Now on Tap is another reason to utilize app indexing.

    Clickz says Google Now on Tap “makes app search optimization more critical than ever.” Emily Alford reports:

    While the announcement comes as a boon to app developers, it also means that it’s now more important than ever for brands to think about App Search Optimization> (ASO) along with SEO, since Google is taking both into consideration for Now on Tap, according to Danielle Levitas, senior vice president of research and analysis for App Annie, which provides app ranking data and mobile analytics for businesses.

    “Part of the reason Google is providing deep linking is to give developers another way to be discovered outside of the app store,” says Levitas. “SEO is still critical, but you’ve also got to think about ASO, which has to do with keywords for discoverability, how an app is described, and even its reviews. But Now on Tap actually makes mobile and the app experiences easier for brands to execute because they can think about discoverability as a continuum as opposed to these two very disparate platforms.”

    Google says Now on Tap another way to get apps in front of users at the right moment. If you have an app with content that people need to see, well, that applies to you. Luckily, beyond app indexing, there’s nothing else you really have to do to be integrated with Now on Tap. Just have your app indexed by Google.

    While optimizing for Google via app indexing is one thing, businesses will also need to market their actual apps in other ways to drive app installs. The more people who have your app installed, the more chances they’ll have to actually see the content within via Now on Tap. As the Clickz article points out, a lot of downloaded apps are rarely opened, and Now on Tap could be just what those apps need to get more engagement from the users who downloaded them in the first place.

    In other words, if you’ve found app creation to be a waste of time in the past because you didn’t think people would really use your app, this means that people may actually use it more, provided that you can convince them of its usefulness enough in the first place to get then to download it.

    Google does say it will have more details about everything once the release of Android M gets closer. In the meantime, I really can’t urge you enough to get your mobile apps indexed, and if you don’t have a mobile app, now is a better time than ever before to build one or have one built. It’s becoming a matter of visibility in Google, and that’s not even taking the Google Play Store into account, which is now doing paid search results like Google Search.

    It’s actually possible that your business may be able to take advantage of Now on Tap in the future without having an app, as the company is reportedly considering including website content in the feature at some point, but that hasn’t been announced.

    Does your business have a mobile app? Do you expect Google Now on Tap to make a significant difference? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Images via Google

  • Infographic Takes A Crack At The ‘Science’ Of Instagram Marketing

    Infographic Takes A Crack At The ‘Science’ Of Instagram Marketing

    While the brands that are using Instagram as part of their marketing strategies are seeing a great deal of benefit from doing so, a shockingly low number of brands are actually making use of it. Based on various studies, however, that will change as more wise up to what Facebook’s visual social network has to offer.

    Why aren’t more brands taking advantage of Instagram?

    “Instagram is still a fairly new platform, and is late in the advertising game – the platform introduced sponsored posts just two years ago. It’s possible that before 2013, marketers didn’t view Instagram as a must-have, but rather as a nice to have. As engagement and users increase, I have no doubt that we’ll see more brands adopt the platform,” Bob Sybydlo, Director, Market Intelligence and Deliverability Yesmail recently told WebProNews after releasing a study on the subject.

    Kissmetrics has a new infographic out looking at the “science of brands” on the platform, finding that experimenting pays off.

    “Content testing and optimization still rule the Instagram game,” it says.

    ++ Click Image to Enlarge ++

    Source: The Science of Brands on Instagram (Infographic)

    These are consumer brands though. Is there any value to the platform for B2B businesses?

    Last week, we looked at some findings from Social Media Examiner, which showed that B2B marketers have placed pretty much zero significance on Instagram. That does appear to be changing as well, however. The report also found that 40% of B2B marketers intend to increase their Instagram activity. That number is likely to continue to grow as well.

    Via B2Bnn.com

  • Here’s What The Netflix Original Content Schedule Looks Like Right Now

    Here’s What The Netflix Original Content Schedule Looks Like Right Now

    Netflix just released its Q1 earnings, and announced that it has achieved some new milestones. For one, it surpassed 40 million members in the U.S., as well as 20 million internationally, and 60 million total. Member engagement is at an all-time high, the company said, with members streaming 10 billion hours in Q1.

    Here’s a look at the financials:

    In Q1 alone, Netflix added 4.9 million members globally, which is significantly higher than the 4.1 million it projected. The company says retention also continued to improve. That’s no surprise, considering that Netflix has been rated the highest for the online video streaming category in terms of brand loyalty.

    Netflix will be focusing more of its marketing budget on international growth in Q2, so expect international numbers to look even more impressive on the next report. Of course international expansion continues as well. The service just launched in Australia and New Zealand less than a month ago, and Netflix expects to have its worldwide roll-out complete by 2017.

    A Japan launch is slated for later this year in addition to other markets.The company expects net adds to increase by 70% in Q2 compared to last year.

    Here’s what CEO Reed Hastings and CFO David Wells told shareholders about its content in a letter:

    Our original content strategy is playing out as we hoped, driving lots of viewing in an economic way for Netflix while bolstering the positive perception of our brand and service around the world.

    House of Cards, in its third season, had its biggest launch yet in terms of viewers. Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Tina Fey’s return to television, has been a hit, winning Rotten Tomatoes scores of 90%+ from both critics and viewers and our drama thriller, Bloodline starring Kyle Chandler, Ben Mendelsohn and Sissy Spacek, is performing on par with the first seasons of our other big drama shows. During the quarter, we announced new seasons for all three shows, as well as three new Netflix original films, PeeWee’s Big Holiday from Judd Apatow and Paul Reubens, Jadotville, from Irish director Richie Smyth and starring Jamie Dornan, and Beasts of No Nation from director Cary Fukunaga and starring Idris Elba. Beasts will premiere on Netflix later this year.

    We are delighted by the fan excitement and critical response around last Friday’s launch of Marvel’s Daredevil, the first of four series and a mini-series from our deal with Marvel Entertainment. The current quarter will also see the debut of Grace and Frankie starring legendary comedians Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin, Sense8, an unbelievably cinematic and entertaining global dramatic thriller from the Wachowski siblings, and the third season of our groundbreaking Orange is The New Black.

    Netflix also shared an updated look at its slate of original content for the foreseeable future. Here’s what that looks like:

    April 17 Chris D’Elia: Incorrigible Stand-Up Comedy Special Global Original
    April 26 Chef’s Table Docu-Series Global Original
    May 8 Grace and Frankie Series Global Original
    May 21 Between (All territories except Canada) Series Global Original
    May 22 Jen Kirkman: I’m Gonna Die Alone (And I Feel Fine) Stand-Up Comedy Special Global Original
    May 22 The Other One: The Long, Strange Trip of Bob Weir Documentary Global Original
    June 5 Sense8 — Available in Ultra HD 4K Series Global Original
    June 12 Orange is the New Black – Season 3 Series Global Original
    June 26 What Happened, Miss Simone? Documentary Global Original
    Q3 2015
    July 10 Chris Tucker Live Stand-Up Comedy Series Global Original
    July 17 Wet Hot American Summer Series Global Original
    August 28 Crouching Tiger: The Green Destiny — Available in Ultra HD 4K Film Global Original
    Coming Up in 2015 & 2016
    Beasts of No Nation Film Global Original
    2015 BoJack Horseman – Season 2 Series Global Original
    2016 Bottersnikes & Grumbles (All territories except UK and Australia) Kids Global Original
    2016 Care Bears and Cousins (All territories except France and Germany) Kids Global Original
    2015 Chelsea Handler Docu-Comedy Specials Comedy Doc Special Global Original
    2016 Chelsea Handler Talk Show Global Original
    2015 Club de Cuervos Series Global Original
    2016 The Crown Series Global Original
    2016 Danger Mouse (All territories except Germany, France, UK and Ireland) Kids Global Original
    2015 Dinotrux Kids Global Original
    2015 Dragons Kids Global Original
    2015 Ever After High Kids Global Original
    2015 F is for Family Series Global Original
    2015 Fargo – Season 2 (France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland & Benelux only) Series First Run Non-US
    2016 Flaked Series Global Original
    2015 From Dusk Till Dawn – Season 2 (All non-US territories) Series First Run Non-US
    2015 Hemlock Grove – Season 3 Series Global Original
    2016 Jadotville Film Global Original
    2016 Justin Time: The New Adventures Kids Global Original
    2015 Knights of Sidonia – Season 2 Anime Series Global Original
    2016 KONG – KING OF THE APES Kids Global Original
    Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events Series Global Original
    2015 Longmire – Season 4 (US & Canada only) Series Global Original
    2016 Love Series Global Original
    2016 The Magic School Bus Kids Global Original
    Marco Polo – Season 2 — Available in Ultra HD 4K Series Global Original
    2015 Marseille Series Global Original
    2015/2016 Marvel’s A.K.A. Jessica Jones — Available in Ultra HD 4K Series Global Original
    2016 Montauk Kids Global Original
    2015 Narcos — Available in Ultra HD 4K Series Global Original
    2016 The OA Series Global Original
    Peaky Blinders – Season 3 (US only) Series Global Original
    2015 Penny Dreadful – Season 2 (France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland & Benelux only) Series First Run Non-US
    2015 Pompidou Series Global Original
    2015 Popples (All territories except France) Kids Global Original
    2015 Some Assembly Required (All territories except Canada) Kids Global Original
    2016 Special Correspondents Series Global Original
    2015 Super 4 Kids Global Original
    2015 Trailer Park Boys – Season 9 Series Global Original
    2015 What Happened, Miss Simone? Documentary Global Original
    2015 With Bob and David Series Global Original
    2016 Winx Club WOW: World of Winx Kids Global Original

    Hastings and Wells also noted that they plan to roll out a new TV user interface in the second half of this year, which will see video playback “forward into the browse experience.”

    They’re also working on ways to better promote Netflix originals to subscribers using data to identify those that would most likely be interested in specific titles.

    Netflix is also working on adding more subtitles and UI languages for content.

    The letter to shareholders mentioned HBO’s new HBO Now service, saying they think both services will continue to be successful, and that they’re not substitutes for one another. On another competitive note, the company says it views Internet MVPD offerings like the rumored Apple offering, Sony’s Playstation Vue and Dish’s Sling TV as more competitive to the current pay TV bundle than to Netflix. It adds that piracy remains a “considerable long-term threat, mostly outside the U.S.”

    In case you’re wondering about the DVD service, it still has over 5.5 million members, which the company considers a “core user base” that continues to rely on it for new release movies and TV shows, as well as its broad selection of titles. On the last earnings report, it had 5.8 million DVD subscribers.

    Image via Twitter

  • Significant Marketing Efforts Still Needed For gTLDs

    Significant Marketing Efforts Still Needed For gTLDs

    It appears that the both the domain name industry and businesses opting to use new generic top-level domains (gTLDs) may have a great deal of marketing to do to spread awareness about gTLDs. Most consumers are not familiar with the initiative to get sites using over 1,300 new domain options, and at the same time, they don’t like going to domains they don’t recognize.

    According to the Domain Name Association (DNA), just a quarter of internet users worldwide are aware of efforts to expand the number of domain names. 55% are completely unaware, and 20% are unsure. eMarketer illustrates the data:

    eMarketer, which created the above graph based on the DNA’s findings, says, “The initiative isn’t without controversy. What some view as a ‘blank canvas for innovation’ to spur more creativity, diversity and trust on the internet, others see as costly, exploitative and bound to cause consumer confusion. Nonetheless, it continues to move forward, requiring all internet users to adapt.”

    The lack of awareness may not be as big a problem as the lack of trust about unfamiliar domains, considering that search is the way most people are getting to content.

    The DNA said, “Consumers trust domain names as THE most trustworthy way to navigate the Internet. The majority of consumers say they are most confident in the security of links they have bookmarked or have typed directly into the web browser. Ranked next, consumers most trust search results WHEN THEY RECOGNIZE THE DOMAIN NAME or url. Then further down the list are search results delivering an unknown web address. So people use search slightly more often but click on search results with recognized addresses and trust known or typed-in domain names.”

    It also says that new domain extensions that identify brands or security attributes are likely to increase user trust.

    Discussing a recent survey from NCC Group Trust, the DNA says, “60% of respondents stated that the ‘Websites associated with a known brand or company’ provide an increased sense of security. To me, this says that loans.chase will be seen as clearly more secure than chaseonlineloans.com where Chase can build brand awareness (and where long domain names with brand names embedded are often a source of Phishing attack). Similarly and in a short period of time, onlinepayment.bank and onlinepayment.secure will be able to build awareness as secure places.”

    Again, this just shows how important the marketing of these gTLDs is going to be to businesses who are using them. But even businesses themselves need to be marketed to as well.

    DomainMart CEO Alex Tajirian says, “Success requires cooperation among registries and resellers when it comes to sales and marketing. Impulse buying aside, a product’s sales are driven by the product’s utility, which is why some professionals believe that the main objective of marketing is to create awareness of a product’s utility. If people find the product useful, they will pay the right price. Hence, when businesses don’t register new gTLDs, it can mean one of three things: the businesses aren’t aware of the gTLDs’ existence, they don’t understand the things’ utility/benefits, or the price is too high to be cost-effective.”

    “Instead of targeting every unaware business and trying to change the minds of others regarding the new gTLDs’ utility, I propose a targeted and focused marketing audience,” he writes. “Start by focusing on undecided managers and those who are not aware of the new domains; then expand to a broader audience. One such audience is start-ups. They can be reached with booths at tech conferences, ads on online tech sites, and use of traditional marketing venues in high-tech hubs such as Silicon Valley.”

    Aditya Chauhan, a Business Development Strategist at LogicBoxes, writes at DomainNameWire that increasing awareness is one of the three biggest challenges facing new gTLDs, calling this a “nightmare for registries”.

    “Not only do they have to bear the burden of marketing their product, but also the need to educate customers about nTLDs [new TLDs] as a whole,” she says. “This is something that .CLUB seems to have handled remarkably well on a global scale. By using well known faces to endorse and use their product, .CLUB has spread both awareness and acceptance amongst their target audience. However, there’s still a long way to go to make nTLDs more mainstream.”

    Donuts, which is the largest registry for new gTLDs, recently unveiled what’s being called a “marketing offensive” aimed at “spreading the new gTLD gospel to small businesses in the US,” as Trevor Little at World Trademark Review puts it.

    The good news is that according to Donuts, several studies by search experts have found that the first generation of new gTLD addresses are matching or outperforming legacy gTLDs and ccTLDs in search performance.

    Images via ThinkStock, eMarketer, .CLUB

  • Adobe Aims To Improve ‘Internet of Things’ Marketing

    Adobe Aims To Improve ‘Internet of Things’ Marketing

    Adobe held its digital marketing conference Adobe Summit, and made a slew of marketing-related announcements

    “The product and partner announcements cover where marketing is going next: bringing digital experiences to the physical world, IoT and wearable devices, mobile marketing innovations for the entire app lifecycle, and the convergence of marketing and ad technologies,” a spokesperson for Adobe tells WebProNews.

    Connecting Businesses and Consumers via the Internet of Things

    First off, Adobe Marketing Cloud is getting an upgrade related to the Internet of things (IoT). The company says it’s enabling brands to bring “highly personalized experiences” to physical spaces like retail stores, hotel rooms, vending machines and other IoT devices. It’s doing so by offering a new IoT SDK to let brands measure and analyze consumer engagement across any of these devices.

    “What’s driving this is the digital transformation of the enterprise, catalyzed by the marketing department. Previously siloed, marketing data is now being used in concert with data collected by other departments like sales and customer service, creating a richer view of the customer,” Adobe says.

    “Marketing is moving beyond existing digital channels to include new physical experiences in the real world,” said Adobe SVP of DIgital Marketing Brad Rencher. “Adobe Marketing Cloud helps brands use their online marketing data to create unparalleled personalization in retail, entertainment, and travel and leisure experiences.”

    In addition to the SDK, Adobe has new “Experience Manager Screens,” which it says enable marketers to extend interactive content to these physical spaces with one author user experience to ensure consistency across devices. It supports multi-touch so content can easily move among screen sizes. It’s all tied into Creative Cloud.

    “Adobe Experience Manager Screens allows us to redefine the way clothing lines are designed and displayed,” comments Jody Giles, SVP of Product Integration at Under Armour. “Instead of physical samples, we are able to create rich digital designs and experiences in record time and extend them to our Catalog app. We can also see customers using the technology in our stores and engaging with our brand on life-size touch screens.”

    Marketing Cloud also has new “intelligent location” capabilities, which let businesses tap into GPS and iBeacon data to optimize their physical brand presences.

    “With the visualization of iBeacon data, brands are able to view traffic patterns and customer engagements within retail stores, sports stadiums, airports, hotels, museums and other points of interests,” the company explains. “Marketers can view and measure dwell times throughout the day, consumer interactions with push notifications and in-app messages triggered by iBeacons and more. The visualization of data enables them to reconfigure store layouts and optimize the display of merchandise to fully maximize ROI.”

    As Marketing Cloud users can now reach IoT devices, Adobe Target now supports digital content testing, optimization, and personalization across them. Content can be served on ATMs, gas pumps, game consoles, car dashboards, appliances, etc. based on users’ personal interests. Adobe says it uses “predictive, yet anonymous” data including CRM and third-party sources to personalize content in real time. Businesses will be able to analyze engagement using Mobile Core Services and Adobe Analytics.

    According to a consumer survey, the top IoT devices consumers want to interact with digitally are home electronics (61%), home appliances like thermostats, fridges, or ovens (54%), and cars (51%). 27% of those who don’t currently own a smartwatch say they are very likely to buy one in next 6 months, while 67% of those said they were very likely to buy Apple Watch (I wonder what percentage plan on buying a $17,000 model).

    77% said it would be useful to receive promotions while inside a store (j84% for 18-34 year-olds), and 74% of marketers see great potential in impact of IoT and wearables.

    Mobile Marketing and App Development

    Also at the summit, Adobe introduced some new stuff for Adobe Mobile Services, including a new mobile app framework that brings together Adobe Experience Manager Apps, Adobe PhoneGap Enterprise, Adobe Analytics – Mobile Apps, and Adobe Target.

    “Adobe Digital Index data shows a new record in the use of mobile devices and yet, building a successful mobile app experience today remains a mystery for many marketers,” said Matt Asay, vice president, Mobile Strategy at Adobe. “They struggle to synthesize a myriad of different mobile tools that address very specific needs. With Adobe Mobile Services, we will dramatically simplify this process, making it easy for marketers to build and optimize their apps.”

    The framework includes tools to aid in development, user acquisition, app analytics, and user engagement. The spokesperson says it “delivers the complete, integrated solution in the industry for developing and managing apps, and is the first to eliminate marketers’ dependence on an array of disjointed point solutions.”

    Adobe has added six new app tech providers to its partner ecosystem, including: Fiksu, Vibes, Kochava, Ionic, Crittercism, and appFigures. Each is integrating its tools into the framework.

    “Adobe Analytics clients will be provided with mobile app store data including: app downloads, app and in-app revenue, returns, ranks and ratings,” a spokesperson for appFigures tells WebProNews. “Data provided by appFigures will be updated in near real-time. With app store data directly available in their dashboards, marketers and developers will have more insightful data to base their mobile decisions on.”

    That particular integration is expected to be available in Q2.

    Data-Driven Marketing and Ad Tech

    Adobe also introduced a new algorithmic engine and updates to its Marketing Cloud Audience Core Services to “bring together the worlds of data-driven marketing and ad tech.”

    This involves integrating programmatic buying natively to put the marketplace right in front of the marketer as they put it.

    “New Audience Core Services enable brands to connect massive audience and behavioral data from a broad range of sources, including CRM systems, websites and apps while a new set of algorithms lets them reach those audiences with paid media through Adobe Media Optimizer,” the company says.

    “We believe programmatic efforts to date are broken and focus simply on display ad bidding,” adds John Mellor, VP of Digital Marketing at Adobe. “Having a one-stop shop for all your targeting and data as well as transparency into technology pricing and media costs is a big step towards true programmatic. The ability to share audience segments across other Adobe Marketing Cloud Solutions brings that data to life across channels and ensures that audiences are seeing the same message no matter where marketers connect with them.”

    Partnership with IBM

    Adobe has also partnered with IBM Interactive Experience, which is building specialized enterprise consulting capabilities for Marketing Cloud.

    “A recent IBM Institute for Business Value study indicates that there is a disconnect between what consumers say they want from digital experiences and how they actually behave,” said Paul Papas, Global Leader, IBM Interactive Experience. “Today’s announcement will help marketers close the gap between expectations and experience using a combinations of Adobe Marketing Cloud and the services of IBM Interactive Experience, a unique digital agency that brings together experience design, systems integration and strategy consulting.”

    Adobe is also expanding its alliance with Accenture with a new cloud-based managed service based on Marketing Cloud. More on that here.

    According to Adobe, 76% of the Fortune 50 utilize Marketing Cloud, as do 9 of the top 10 internet retailers and all of the top 5 media companies and top 10 software companies.

  • Ad Viewability Contention Rages On

    Ad Viewability Contention Rages On

    If there’s one hot topic in online advertising in 2015, it’s viewability. It’s causing a lot of disagreements between advertisers and publishers, and it’s the subject of a great deal of confusion and chaos throughout the industry.

    What are your thoughts on the subject? What needs to be done? How do publishers need to adapt? Should advertisers be more patient? Discuss in the comments.

    Google and Facebook have both been talking about viewability efforts of late. Google recently rolled out viewability reporting across its ad platforms. Facebook talked last week about what viewed impressions mean for its own advertisers.

    The company says it measures ad impressions the moment the ad enters the screen, and if it doesn’t enter the screen, it doesn’t count it as an impression. Soon it will apply this to organic content from businesses as well. It also says it’s working with the Media Rating Council (MRC) and a consortium of advertisers and agencies to develop “more robust standards” for viewable impressions.

    “Our goal is to work with the MRC, our partners, and industry leaders around the world to help apply further standards for feed-based websites like Facebook, mobile media and new ad formats,” the Facebook for Business team said.

    “We’re working closely with Facebook and they’re doing compelling research around the viewable status and value of advertising of all types of impressions on their media, including those that quickly come in and out of view on a person’s screen. We will continue to collaborate and ensure that we consider the learning relevant to feed-based, mobile focused publishers in our viewable impression standard going forward,” said MRC CEO George Ivie.

    According to ClickZ, the MRC considers viewability to be specifically “50 percent of pixels of an ad unit remains viewable for a minimum of one second for display and 50 percent of pixels in view for a minimum of two seconds for video,” which many find much too low.

    Back in December, the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) released its “State of Viewability Transaction 2015″ report aimed at offering guidance on how to manage the “shift of digital media’s ‘audience currency’ to 100 percent viewability.”

    It said 100% viewability measurement simply isn’t possible. Instead, it recommends 70% as the best threshold for buyers and sellers. 2015, it says, will be a “year of transition.”

    Since the IAB’s report, viewability has only become a more hotly debated topic. Advertisers are demanding more viewability while publishers struggle to deliver and maintain that advertisers are sometimes not seeing the big picture about the difficulty of meeting such demand, or in some cases even the validity of the data they’re seeing.

    Ad Age recently shared some demands by advertisers it had obtained from various publishers. Some demand 100% viewability. Others are more reasonable, but are still very firm in seeking “make-goods” for out of view impressions. Suffice it to say, this is being much more carefully looked at by all parties these days.

    Last month, Mike Shields at The Wall Street Journal wrote that “the push for web ad viewability [is] proving to be a nightmare for publishers early on.”

    “In the near term, the issue has caused contentious negotiations and rocked how many big publishers manage and forecast inventory for 2015, which in turn effects how they project revenue for the year, top online ad executives say,” he wrote. “Publishers say that while they have been out in front of the viewability issue, they are getting hit with reports from agencies and third parties claiming that significant chunks of their ad inventory are not viewable. That’s requiring these websites to deliver advertisers significant make-goods, or additional advertising to make up for deficiencies. Furthermore, properties ranging from AOL to Forbes are redesigning portions of their websites on the fly as a result,. In private conversations, many online publishers are bitter, and use harsh language to describe the current state of affairs.”

    In that article, he also notes that mobile and the wide variety of screen sizes can be a major issue when it comes to viewability. I couldn’t help but notice a comment on the article from The Mobile Majority CEO Rob Emrich, who we just interviewed about Twitter’s syndicated ads. Here’s an excerpt from his WSJ comment:

    There isn’t a simple solution for this problem, due to the complex and circuitous path by which mobile ads are built and trafficked. What’s more, the journey from creation to an actual viewed ad is perplexed by a number of moving parts managed and maintained by far too many vendors and commensurate associated fees. This drives up complexity and cost on top of media which hurts both publishers and buyers. For instance, to run any single large scale mobile campaign, a buyer would need somewhere between 4 and 10 vendors. At the very least, they would need vendors to manage strategy, creative technology, ad serving, bidding, targeting, data activation, measurement, reporting / BI and fraud detection. Every time there is a handoff, whether by computer or more often (still) by humans, of an ad from one vendor to another, there is a loss of data or at least some sort of compromise in quality. Sorting out accountability for final results becomes impossible because no one vendor can be blamed or held accountable. This leads to an opaque and broken marketplace that no one individual participant can fix.

    Not only has this created an inefficient system, a distrust in the technology itself has emerged. This is because viewability reporting is just as chaotically layered as the building of an ad. 3rd party viewability vendors often produce inconsistent viewability reports originating from different sets of available data from different layers of the full ad technology stack. This in turn confuses buyers even more and creates a compounding loss of confidence.

    Eric Wheeler, the CEO of 33Across and former Executive Director of Ogilvy Interactive North America, advises advertisers to work with viewability vendors to create verification tests and run A/B tests with ad units vs. standard IAB.

    The IAB maintains that there are major issues with vendor reporting, however. At its annual leadership meeting earlier this month, new chairman David Morris reportedly “singled out” vendor reporting as a “key problem holding the industry back on viewable impressions.” Ad Age reported:

    Mr. Morris said that publishers often find substantial differences between vendors on the same line items. “Publishers need to demand that verification companies do a better job of delivering consistent and accurate data,” he said. “To our agency partners, I say reducing the number of vendors you use will help us scale these solutions more quickly.”

    According to that same report, Morris “took pains to draw a line between” viewability and fraud. We recently looked at a report from Integral Ad Science, which explored ad viewability trends. It found that the viewability rate for publisher sourced ad inventory remained relatively unchanged at 52% during the fourth quarter, and that the level of ad fraud increased over the previous quarter, but still remained better than that of networks and exchanges.

    Viewability for display impressions sourced from networks and exchanges, it found, increased from 36.7% in Q3 to 42.6% in Q4. It attributed this to more user attention and/or increased adoption of viewability optimization technology.

    Video ads saw increased viewability, jumping nine percentage points to 39%.

    “According to Integral’s Year End Survey results published last month, 57 percent of the industry transacted based on viewability in 2014, and even more so — 73 percent — plan to do so this year,” the firm said. “Additionally, 85 percent engaged in programmatic buying, which includes real-time bidding. These activities may have led to an increase in the adoption of viewability measurement technologies by networks and exchanges, as well as optimization of media toward viewability. Perhaps as a result, viewability for display inventory was 42.6 percent in Q4, up from 36.7 percent in Q3. Ad fraud experienced a small uptick from 13.7 percent in Q3 to 14.5 percent in Q4.”

    “The fourth quarter also saw video ad viewability increase from 30 percent in Q3 to 39 percent in Q4,” it added. “Not surprisingly, completion rates while in view also rose from 20 percent to 26 percent. Brand risk for video saw a slight increase from 18.7 percent in Q3 to 20.7 percent in Q4, contributing to a noticeable decline in TRAQ, Integral’s overall media quality assessment score. This decline was also likely due to the increased supply of lower quality inventory made available to take advantage of a time when user attention and advertising demand were up.”

    Some think native ads are the way to fight low viewability. Adam Rock from Tan Media, a content marketing and native advertising agency, writes, “For advertisers running campaigns across multiple sites and publishers, it is an acknowledged struggle to compare like with like, let alone determine what percentage of ads have been viewed by the target audience. But the issues surrounding low viewability can be solved by utilising the form of true native which, unlike traditional display, can be sold on a guaranteed viewable CPM (vCPM) rate.”

    “By working with a network of publishers, and an advanced native ad platform, clients can be assured they will only be charged on a vCPM basis; when the native ad unit or article preview is in-view of the user’s browser,” he says. “And because the content is ad-served rather than manually placed through various publishers’ content management systems (CMS), scale, advanced campaign controls, and performance optimisation can be provided, while capturing ground-breaking consumer attention analytics not previously available to content marketers.”

    Demand-side platform Adform released technology this week, guaranteeing viewability for programmatic buyers, but the platform is not accredited by the MRC for its viewability measurements. DigiDay ran a sponsored article on it.

    Viewability is now digital media’s top concern, according to a different (non-sponsored) DigiDay article, which also highlights just how complicated the whole thing is, noting that some can’t even agree on what the actual disagreement is about. As one ad tech company exec said, it’s really about the value of viewability rather than viewability vs. non-viewability. How much is it worth, and will advertisers pay more or demand better for the same prices? Clearly they’re demanding, but the negotiations are going to differ vastly from publisher to publisher based on the capabilities of each.

    Either way, this issue isn’t going to go away anytime soon, and publishers should be doing what they can to increase viewability on their end. In some cases this may mean site redesigns. AdExchanger points to some sites, including The New York Times, Time.com, and National Journal, which have implemented redesigns with viewability in mind. Sometimes, it’s as simple as moving banners higher on the page.

    Katrin Ribant at Adotas has an interesting article out this week about viewability as currency, which looks at joining data sets, calculating viewability rates, and optimizing toward key performance indicators on viewable media.

    Thoughts on improving the situation? Share in the comments.

    Image via IAB (YouTube)

  • Facebook Marketing Partners Program Takes Effect

    Facebook Marketing Partners Program Takes Effect

    Back in October, Facebook announced its Preferred Marketing Developer (PMD) program would become a new program called Facebook Marketing Partners, and that it would be restructuring things to make it easier to find partners based on specific needs. That all goes into effect today.

    The new structure enables businesses to find partners in specific countries and industries. There’s also a revamped matching tool that lets you search by specialty, country, and industry, and then directly contact the partner.

    The program features hundreds of partners (new and existing), and they’re categorized based on the areas of expertise: Ad Technology, Media Buying, Facebook Exchange (FBX), Community Management, Content Marketing, Small Business Solutions, Audience Onboarding, Audience Data Providers, and Measurement.

    Adobe, which is a partner, sent us some comments on the change from senior product marketing manager for Social Advertising Solutions, Monica Lay:

    “The four-badge PMD program provided opaque direction for marketers looking for a technology partner based on their needs. As the digital media landscape became even more fragmented and marketer’s needs became more specific, you can see why Facebook did a complete overhaul. The new structure basically moves away from an API centric approach to marketing-driven descriptors.”

    “What’s interesting is the introduction of new players, the most noticeable one being advertising agencies under the Media Buying category. This is an important move for our industry, as agencies will have to undergo certification with Facebook. There is a significant need to enhance expertise in paid social, especially when this environment is so agile.”

    “The nine Facebook Marketing Partner specialties create a more cohesive environment for everyone involved in this complex ecosystem, leading to more clarity, more choices and more impact. It’s a positive outcome that is a win-win for all those involved.”

    Salesforce also announced that it has joined the program, and is telling its partners and customers that nothing has changed.

    You can find the new Facebook Marketing Partners website here.

    Image via Facebook

  • Facebook Marketing Expert Mari Smith On Utilizing The Social Network’s New Features

    Facebook Marketing Expert Mari Smith On Utilizing The Social Network’s New Features

    Over the past year, Facebook has crushed the organic reach of the posts published by many Pages. It’s harder than ever to get exposure in the News Feed without paying for it. Still, Facebook has launched new features, including tools specifically for Pages, which do create some potential for new opportunities.

    Which of Facebook’s recently added features do you find most helpful? Let us know in the comments.

    We wanted to get some thoughts on some of these from a true Facebook marketing expert, so we reached out to Mari Smith, author of of The New Relationship Marketing and coauthor of Facebook Marketing: An Hour A Day.

    Search

    Facebook has made some big improvements to its search experience, adding keyword-based search to bring up post results, among other things. You can now find who has said what about any given topic. Are there opportunities for businesses here?

    “The ability to search for posts seems to be rather buggy and needs much improvement,” Smith tells WebProNews. “So far, despite a myriad of search tests myself, I’m not finding it terribly useful. Over time, however, as refinements are made, businesses will be able to surface any post created by users on their personal profile, shared with public. Ideally, we’ll also be able to surface posts made by Pages, too.”

    Asked if she sees Facebook’s search feature becoming more of a go-to destination for users in light of its improvements, Smith says, “Not yet. Facebook’s search has a long way to go. It will be interesting to see just how widely users have taken to the new tabbed design of the search results page. It’s not that obvious, at first. And, it’s not even that obvious how to search and surface items such as friends’ photos, places, events, etc. My guess is most users simply use the search bar for looking up other users’ profiles. Facebook would do well to provide further education/tutorials on how to optimize search.”

    We also spoke with Moz co-founder Rand Fishkin about Facebook search recently. He doesn’t see Facebook search becoming very significant anytime soon either in terms of being a place where users regularly go to look for information.

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg talked a bit about search during the company’s earnings call last week.

    “So, our view on this is that there is a lot of unique content that people have shared in Facebook, a lot of personal content, recommendations from friends that you can get that you just wouldn’t be able to get through a traditional web search service or other app,” he said. “And we’re on this multiyear voyage to basically index all the content and make it available to people and rank it well. We started off by launching graph search which I think included more than a trillion different connections in the first system.”

    “And the second round of the search progress that we just started rolling out at the end of last year was post search, which now has indexed more than I think a trillion posts, which I mean the sizes of these corpuses are bigger than anything in a traditional web search corpus that you would find,” he added. “So it’s an interesting and fun challenge to make this work. We’re seeing that people immediately understand how they can use this and find content that they’ve seen in News Feed before or that they’ve posted with just a few keywords.”

    In terms of what types of content might work best for Pages when it comes to visibility in Facebook search, Smith tells us, “Visual wins the game for organic, paid and search results – whether images or video. Our brains process images, especially containing real people, much faster than words. Plus, our attention spans have reduced, so the quicker businesses can communicate their message in a visual manner, the better. Videos under 60 seconds are ideal, with a blend of informative and entertaining, if possible. Notice when we do a search on Google, the row of YouTube video thumbnails always stands out!”

    As you’ve no doubt heard, Facebook video is booming. Facebook has been promoting that fact throughout the new year (it was another big theme of the earnings call).

    “Shorter, timely video content tends to do well in News Feed,” Facebook says. “Keep in mind that auto-play videos play silently in News Feed until someone taps to hear sound, so videos that catch people’s attention even without sound often find success.”

    Trending

    In December, Facebook made some big improvements to its Trending feature. For one, it became available on mobile. Secondly, it added new sections for different types of content. Whereas before, it was basically a jumble of news stories with varying degrees of personal relevance, the experience is now split up into: Articles, In the Story, Friends and Groups, Near the Scene, and Live Feed.

    The Articles section shows coverage of the topic from various news organizations. The In the Story section shows posts from people who are actually part of the story. Friends and Groups shows what people in your network are saying about the topic, and the Near the Scene section shows you posts from people near where the story is unfolding.

    “Regarding the ‘Trending’ feature at the top right of our desktop News Feed, similarly to Twitter’s trending topics, it does seem to have reasonable usefulness in terms of seeing what the majority of users are discussing,” says Smith. “Personally, I’d also like to see Trending broken down into locations and possibly friends vs. public.”

    “Also, in yet another News Feed ranking algorithm change, Facebook introduced a feature that gives more priority to posts that receive comments, likes and shares promptly after the post was published,” she adds. “The speed at which users respond is a signal that it could be a hot, trending topic. Pages would do well to pay attention to the response time of their posts, tracking the types of posts and subjects that generate the fastest response.”

    Small Business Marketing

    Due to the aforementioned decline in organic Page post reach, many businesses have grown frustrated with Facebook marketing.

    Asked if she still sees Facebook as a viable platform for marketing a small business (especially one with a low marketing budget), Smith tells us, “Yes – I would recommend that low budget be allocated to what are called ‘dark posts.’ That is, ads in the News Feed that look like a Page wall post, but don’t actually appear on the Page. With very granular targeting to reach the exact target market, small businesses can do exceptionally well using Facebook. In addition, making use of custom audiences is a must. This is where a business can upload its own email database, or segments thereof, and place ads in the News Feed to that target group. Plus, using website custom audiences helps a business to retarget its website visitors with Facebook ads.”

    “Facebook recently introduced a new ad feature called ‘Conversion Lift Measurement’ to help advertisers track better ROI, especially offline sales,” she adds. “Although the new metric is only available to select large advertisers, this is great news for small businesses when the feature eventually becomes available.”

    More on Conversion Lift Management here.

    “In addition, we’ll soon see the rollout of Facebook’s ‘Atlas’ advertising product that allows retargeting and tracking via mobile devices,” she adds. “Retargeting typically works via cookies; however, cookies don’t work on mobile. The way Atlas works, is advertisers can then place ads to remarket to visitors whether they view on desktop, mobile or tablet. In other words, reaching the exact audience no matter what device they’re on.”

    “Page owners may wish to try out the new organic Interest Targeting feature to see if that helps create a greater reach,” she says. “Prior to publishing a piece of content, admins can pre-select subsets of their fanbase. Another recent change is the ability to create a Post End Date – this stops a post from showing in News Feed at the specific time/date that you wish. Handy for, as Facebook states, ‘a publisher can use this to remove yesterday’s weather report from News Feed.’”

    We talked more about these features in an article here.

    Do you agree with Mari’s analysis? Do you have anything to add? Share in the comments.

    Image via Mari Smith, Facebook

  • Pinterest Marketing Tips From A Guy That’s Been Doing It For 5 Years

    Pinterest Marketing Tips From A Guy That’s Been Doing It For 5 Years

    Pinterest may have plateaued as a driver of traffic to websites, at least for the time being, but it’s still number two in that department behind Facebook, according to data from Shareaholic. The firm released a report this week finding that Twitter, StumbleUpon, reddit, Google+, LinkedIn, and YouTube combined represent roughly a third of the traffic Pinterest sent to publishers in December.

    pinterst referrals

    If you want to get web traffic from Pinterest, you’re going to want to optimize for the Pinterest search experience.

    Is Pinterest search optimization part of your online marketing strategy? Do you intend to focus more on it going forward? Let us know in the comments.

    We recently looked at some ways you can do that. In that article, we referenced an eBook on the subject written by Vincent Ng, a marketer who has been engaging in Pinterest marketing since 2010, and runs a Pinterest marketing agency.

    Ng, who goes specifically by “Pinterest marketer” as opposed to online marketing consultant or something like that, has now shared some additional insights into Pinterest search and marketing with WebProNews.

    How has Guided Search changed Pinterest marketing?

    Last year, Pinterest launched Guided Search, an enhanced version of its search feature enabling users to find things they didn’t necessarily know they were looking for. You can start with a relatively vague keyword, and get additional options to add to help “guide” you in different directions.

    pinterest marketer Vincent Ng“Guided Search allows for businesses and marketers to see what other topics or products people may be interested in,” Ng tells us. “For example, you may be in the business of selling wedding dresses, but you’re not too sure what dresses are popular. When you use Guided Search, it tells us that people are looking for princess wedding dresses, vintage wedding dresses, and lace wedding dresses and so much more. Now you can create boards and pins around those specific topics and keywords.”

    “You don’t have to guess what people want,” he adds. “Guided Search will tell you what people want.”

    Pinterest Analytics

    Last summer, Pinterest made its “new and improved” analytics offering generally available. The company described it as a “smarter tool to help businesses worldwide continue to improve how they work, with meaningful insights about what their customers are interested in.”

    The company recently made a new video primer available:

    “There’s a lot going on with Pinterest analytics,” Ng says. “The first thing is to ensure you have verified your Pinterest account with your associated website. You will know it’s verified once there’s a red check mark next to your website. A verified Pinterest account gets you analytics of pins that are coming directly from your site as well as pins that direct back to your site.”

    “The area known as, Activity on (your website), will give you data on which pins are getting the most repins, the most clicks and the most impressions. And this is a great starting point to know how what pins are most engaging,” he adds. “And what’s great about that data, is that it shows you pins from other people as well. The best performing pins are not always going to be the one that you originally pinned. It could be from one that’s been reshared onto an influencer’s account. And if it is, you may want to contact that person and send them a thank you note or special offer if she happens to have pinned one of your products.”

    How Can Using Rich Pins Help Bloggers Drive Traffic?

    Pinterest, as you may or may not know, offers something called Rich Pins. There are several types: Product, Recipe, Article, Movie, and Place. These allow you to make pins more useful, and add relevant information. For example, article pins include a headline, the author, and a story description.

    “Rich pins for a blogger is a must, because rich pins are a factor in search rankings for Pinterest. Pinterest prefers to show blog posts or pins that are rich pins,” says Ng. “On top of that, rich pins also have more credibility and authority because rich pins for articles show off, in bold text, the title of the blog post article and the meta description when clicked through.”

    “I worked with a hairstyle blog on improving their traffic, and we were stuck at getting 30 referral visits a day from Pinterest,” he adds. “The moment they were approved for rich pins, the traffic spiked up within two days to 70 referral visits from Pinterest.”

    Making Your Site More Pinterest-Friendly

    There are things you can do besides using the Pin It button and rich pins to make your site more Pinterest-friendly.

    “One of the ways is to ensure that you have a vertical image that people can pin,” says Ng. “This is because vertical images stand out more on Pinterest’s feed. A person who does a really good job of creating blog images is Donna Mortize from Socially Sorted.”

    “The other way to make content Pinterest friendly is to use more than one pinnable image,” he adds. “Just like the idea of a click to tweet, when you create snackable content that’s pin friendly and you have two or three of those spread out in a blog post, then readers can choose the one that resonates with them the best that they want to pin.”

    The Messaging Feature

    Last year, Pinterest launched a new messaging feature allowing users to reply to people when they shoot them a pin. You can reply back with text or with another pin. You can even send pins and messages to multiple people at once.

    “For marketers, it’s a great way to contact some of your most influential followers and engagers and begin a relationship,” says Ng. “As long as a person follows you, you can contact him.”

    “If you happen to sell a product then send your fans a link for a discount,” he says. “As a blogger myself, I’ve sent messages thanking people for being gracious in pinning my content. But I also ask for their e-mail in Pinterest messages. After that I will then send them a free copy of my e-book that would cost close to $25, free of charge, because they were such great fans.”

    Interest Following

    Pinterest also launched interest following last year. Marketers may find some opportunities here as well.

    “There are some steps you can take to increase your chances of your pins showing up within interests on Pinterest,” says Ng. “First, try to ensure that your boards are in the correct category of the interest. For example, if you happen to sell comic books, then your best category would be geek. Second, in the pin descriptions, use the search terms that are the exact match of the interest, and/or ensure you use words associated with that interest. If the interest is Marvel Comics, then use words like Spiderman and Mary Jane, as long as it’s relevant.”

    “Another aspect that will help is to look at the images that are being used in interests, and see if there is a pattern,” he adds. “Pinterest’s visual recognition isn’t perfect, but it is getting better at putting the right pins in the right interests based on the image itself.”

    Does Time of Day/Week Matter?

    Asked if he believes if there are times of the day and/or week that are better for pinning content than others, Ng says, “I do and I don’t. And that’s because every business is going to be different and every customer is going to use it at different times. For example, you may want to post in the evening and weekend if you’re selling women’s fashion. However if you’re a blogger that’s focused on stay at home business moms, then you may want to pin early in the morning when mothers are getting up.”

    “The challenge is that not all pins show up at the moment you pin,” he says. “It could be hours, or even days before someone is exposed to it due to the new Pinterest smart feed changes.”

    What Does Pinterest need?

    Asked if there’s one feature that he’d like to see Pinterest add that it doesn’t already have, Ng says, “I think it would be great if Pinterest added a sticky pin feature. If Pinterest allowed you to keep one pin at the first position when a board is clicked on, that would be amazing.”

    More Men Are Coming Around To Pinterest

    Pinterest’s latest search-related announcement was the addition of gender-based filtering, enabling men to have a better search experience on the service, which has a reputation for being much more woman-oriented.

    “I think the new search feature that customizes results based on whether you’re a woman or a man will be good in terms of driving more men to use the site,” Ng says. “Before, when men searched for pins on Pinterest they were getting a lot of irrelevant pins.”

    “For example if you typed in watches, if you were a man, you would get a lot of watches that were for women,” he adds. “But now as a man, when you type in watches in the search box on Pinterest you get watches that are designed for men. And that’s a great way to encourage more men to use it, and to help male/female products be exposed more to the right audience.”

    A Pinterest spokesperson tells us, “We’ve already seen these improvements result in a double digit lift in engagement, similar to recent updates to the new user experience which show trending interests for each gender to choose from as they get started.”

    They also shared some new growth stats with us. For one, Pinterest’s male user base in the U.S. grew 73% year-over-year.

    Suffice it to say, the second leading driver of social media referral traffic is growing its audience and improving its search functionality. This is good for websites.

    Do you get significant traffic from Pinterest? Is this an area where you plan to put more of your focus? Discuss.

    Images: Shareaholic: MGNG Marketing, Pinterest

  • Email Marketing Considerations For Google Inbox

    Email Marketing Considerations For Google Inbox

    Last fall, Google launched Inbox by Google, a new email app, which it hopes will one day replace Gmail as the email experience people like to use. Right now, it’s still only available by invitation, but eventually it’s going to be available to all. It remains to be seen whether or not one day it’s forced on Gmail users.

    It’s hard to say how well Inbox will be received by the masses. I tried it fairly early on, and wasn’t particularly comfortable with it. Others feel the same way, but some do find it to be an improved experience. It all comes down to preferences.

    The last time Google made a big change to its email offering (the big Gmail redesign with the tabs), it had made some changes that had a direct effect on marketers. Reactions were mixed. Email marketers will, of course, have to pay attention to what Google does with Inbox as well.

    Inbox Explained

    First, let’s recap what Inbox does exactly.

    “Inbox expands upon the categories we introduced in Gmail last year, making it easy to deal with similar types of mail all at once,” explained Google’s Sundar Pichai when announcing the product in the fall. “For example, all your purchase receipts or bank statements are neatly grouped together so that you can quickly review and then swipe them out of the way. You can even teach Inbox to adapt to the way you work by choosing which emails you’d like to see grouped together.”

    “Inbox highlights the key information from important messages, such as flight itineraries, event information, and photos and documents emailed to you by friends and family,” he added. “Inbox will even display useful information from the web that wasn’t in the original email, such as the real-time status of your flights and package deliveries. Highlights and Bundles work together to give you just the information you need at a glance.”

    inbox by google

    Bundles group together things like promotions, purchases, or trip information, so related messages are kept together in one place. Users can tell the app which messages they’d like to see grouped together and when they appear in the inbox (as they arrive, once a day, once a week,etc.).

    Google tells users to try setting promos and social bundles to once a day so they can “focus on other messages first.”

    inbox by google

    Inbox also lets you add reminders. Google describes it as “a centralized place to keep track of the things you need to get back to.” It also provides “Assists,” which are described as “handy pieces of information you may need to get the job done.”

    inbox by google

    “For example, if you write a Reminder to call the hardware store, Inbox will supply the store’s phone number and tell you if it’s open,” explained Pichai. “Assists work for your email, too. If you make a restaurant reservation online, Inbox adds a map to your confirmation email. Book a flight online, and Inbox gives a link to check-in.”

    There’s also a snooze option for emails and reminders. You can temporarily dismiss them, but have them come back later.

    inbox by google

    Users can use Google Now or the new Google Calendar app to set reminders, which will then later appear in Inbox. Any reminder snoozed to a specific day will also appear on your calendar.

    You can actually snooze emails to places rather than times.

    “For example, you might want to snooze your ticket to the game, a reminder to buy milk to the grocery store, or even the article Mom sent you to when you get home,” says Inbox interaction designer Xander Pollock.

    What Does Inbox Mean for Marketers?

    Many in the email marketing industry have already offered some thoughts about how marketers can prepare for Inbox adoption.

    Tom Sather, senior research director of email research at Return Path, suggests starting by displaying your logo as the From: Address. He notes that the visual style of Inbox displays senders by icons rather than plain text, similar to Gmail’s Grid View. To take advantage, you need a verified Google+ business account, authenticate with SPF and DKIM, and register with Google.

    Sather also suggests optimizing for snooze and monitoring Inbox placement and categorization. On Snooze optimization he suggests providing Gmail users with instructions on how to snooze a message based on geolocation, if you have a brick and mortar location, and also proving your nearest location.

    He also points out that the spam folder is harder to find than in Gmail, and users will likely miss more emails that are delivered there. This means potentially lower open rates and a greater need to increase Gmail deliverability.

    Back to the visual style of Inbox for a moment. Aaron Beashel at CampaignMonitor suggests utilizing markup to add images and other things.

    “Today, the inbox is very text-focused and only shows plain-text fields like the from name and subject line. Even the preheader is just plain text,” Beashel says. “With Highlights however, email marketers can use the Schema.org markup to add images, offers, actions and more to emails and they are displayed in the inbox itself.”

    “These extra visuals in the inbox draw the reader’s eye to your email and can help it get noticed and opened,” he adds. “A similar thing happened when Twitter started showing images in the Twitter feed – tweets with images saw 18% more click-throughs than those without images as they stood out above the other content being presented to the user.”

    “Just like with Tabs, Bundles will likely further polarize a subscriber’s engagement,” said Saleforce Marketing Cloud’s Chad White in a ClickZ article. “So if they were marginally engaged before, Bundles will make them less so. But if they were engaged before, Bundles will make them more so. On net, this should benefit most marketers, just like Tabs benefited most marketers, especially those with highly engaged subscribers.”

    “That’s because Bundles, just like Tabs, makes it easier for email users to ignore emails that are unimportant to them and to pay more attention to the emails that are important to them,” he added. “Also, when similar emails are grouped together, it’s more efficient for users and better for marketers. I compared Gmail’s Promotions Tab to a shopping mall, saying that you’d rather have your store in the mall where people go to shop than in the Primary Tab where you’re like a traveling salesman who interrupts conversions with your subscribers’ friends and family members. Bundles are similar, except this mall floats freely in your inbox feed rather than being tethered to a tab.”

    White also discussed Inbox in an Exact Target blog post, noting that the impact of Inbox on marketers will be gradual due to the invite-only launch and the fact that users will still have to download it even when it becomes generally available. It’s not like the tabbed interface in Gmail, which was just thrust upon users.

    Kevin Gates at OptinMonster is recommending a five-step approach to optimizing for Inbox consisting of split tests, personalization, testing link counts, asking users to switch you to their lists, and segmentation. He gives an example of a message that marketers might consider using:

    “Thank you for signing up! You will receive a confirmation email from us shortly. Please check your email (and possibly your SPAM folder) in the next few minutes so you can start receiving great tips straight to your inbox today!

    Are you a Inbox by Google user? Click Here for further instructions for how to optimize your viewing experience with Google’s new app.”

    We saw a lot of this type of thing when Gmail got the tabbed interface, so we’ll probably see it a lot too as Inbox gains more users.

    So What Do People Think Of Inbox?

    JR Raphael at ComputerWorld used Inbox for six weeks, and decided to go back to Gmail. He lists a whole bunch of Gmail features that just aren’t present in Inbox and calls it “pretty-looking but less practical and efficient” for his needs.

    UserTesting recently conducted a study looking at how users interact with Inbox the first time they use it on a smartphone, and then on a desktop computer. It observed four different people. Hannah Alvarez highlighted five main takeaways about how they felt about the product: Users really appreciated the consistent experience between mobile and desktop; Some interactions were different on mobile, and that’s a good thing (mostly); The users had mixed feelings about the app doing a lot of work for you; Inbox makes some bold—and risky—assumptions about the icons it uses; Some people just don’t like change.

    “Of the four participants, one user said she might use Inbox sometimes, and one said yes (When we followed up two weeks after the test, both told us that they were still using it),” says Alvarez. “The other two participants said they wouldn’t continue using Inbox. They both pointed out that the regular Gmail app already does a pretty great job of doing everything they need it to do. They can use the Social and Promotions tabs to reduce clutter, and they can install Boomerang if they want to return an email to their inbox at a later time. To them, the new interface in Inbox was just too much of a change. As one said, ‘If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.’”

    But Google will probably continue trying to fix it, and one day, users may not even have the option of using the old Gmail any longer. Who knows?

    Google sent out a new round of Inbox invites last week.

  • How Social Media Makes Email Marketing More Effective

    How Social Media Makes Email Marketing More Effective

    A study from Nielsen once found that 92% of people trust word-of-mouth marketing. Most of the time this comes from social media, and marketers should consider harnessing that with their email campaigns to reach a broader audience.

    Do you incorporate social media into your email marketing campaigns? What tactics to do you use specifically?

    Are you combining your social media and email marketing efforts to find and take advantage of your best brand advocates – the people that are spreading positive word-of-mouth about your business?

    Benefits of Incorporating Social Media Into Email Campaigns

    We had a conversation about this with Jason Warnock, VP, Intelligence Products at email marketing software firm Yesmail. He believes there are three main benefits to incorporating social media into email campaigns, which all stem from being able to track social shares from them.

    “First, acquiring new subscribers is simple with an integrated email and social strategy. By tracking who is engaging with promotions shared on social and collecting their information, email marketers can acquire already engaged subscribers, increasing reach and revenue,” Warnock tells WebProNews. “By tracking opens, shares, revenue and database growth for each email campaign, marketers can also measure the ROI from a specific email campaign.”

    “Finally, marketers can identify who is sharing their content, tracking the engagement and revenue each share generates,” he adds. “After defining their best brand advocates, marketers can create incentivized campaigns targeted at their most valuable subscribers. This will increase the campaigns’ reach and generate subscriber growth.”

    Best Practices for Integrating Social Media Into Email Campaigns

    When it comes to best practices for incorporating social media into email campaigns, Warnock highlights four main concepts: tapping into attribution expertise, using the right channels, choosing the right product, and identifying the right technology.

    “When integrating social and email campaigns, attribution allows you to track and measure the value of your most loyal fans. When implementing social into an email marketing campaign, rely on experts to provide recommendations for best practices,” he says. “Do your research before you integrate social and email to see where your consumers are talking. The most common social network for social sharing is Facebook, followed by Twitter and then Pinterest.”

    “If you’re a company with multiple service offerings, some products are more likely to be shared. Restaurants, entertainment and electronics generally perform the best,” Warnock adds. “Automated tools can simplify attribution processes, especially when it comes to data processing.”

    What Content Works Best For Social Integrations?

    Some types of email content are going to work better than others for inspiring recipients to share it via social media channels. According to Warnock, incentives are the best way to encourage engagement with an email campaign. Yesmail completed a survey finding that 28% of consumers who have never shared a promotion on social media are more likely to share if they’re incentivized.

    Relevant deals like percent off, money off and buy-one-get-one-free also inspire social sharing, he says.

    Live Social Feeds

    In the email marketing industry, there’s been a lot of talk lately about integrating live social media feeds into email campaigns. For example, we recently looked at a study from The Relevancy Group highlighting what consumers don’t like about mobile email. To counter some of these complaints, it recommended using a live social feed in addition to context personalization, real-time A/B testing, embedded video, live web content, personalized deadlines, and real-time personalization by way of disparate data sources.

    “I think that as we see best practices of social media and email marketing come together, tactics like embedding live social feeds into an email marketing campaign will become more common,” Warnock says. “Email marketers are already experimenting with hashtags in email subject lines as direct calls to action, and an embedded social feed can be the cherry on top of an integrated strategy.”

    “If the commentary on the live social feeds is relevant, it can be effective,” he adds. “This could also be another opportunity to incentivize users. If subscribers see that other people are sharing the promotion, they may be more inclined to do so as well.”

    Wrapping Up

    Warnock believes combining social and email enables marketers to promote their products in a way that’s less intrusive than other ways like banner ads and sponsored posts.

    He adds, “It benefits the consumers as well, who are given an opportunity to receive special offers that are relevant to their interests.”

    If recipients realize benefits to themselves and to their friends, surely you’ve got a successful campaign on your hands.

    As an email subscriber, do you ever engage with social media through email messages? What makes you want to share information from an email with a friend? Let us know in the comments.

    Image Jason Warnock (LInkedIn)

  • What Not To Do In Mobile Email Marketing

    What Not To Do In Mobile Email Marketing

    For better or worse, mobile is increasingly the way people are accessing their inboxes and receiving (or deleting) emails. This presents both opportunities and challenges for marketers.

    We recently explored some things to consider to improve your open rates in this climate, but have you ever considered what email users actually say they don’t like about mobile email? Doing so may help you reassess your own strategy.

    Mobile Means More Opens

    According to research from The Relevancy Group, 73% of consumers utilize their mobile phone to access one or more email accounts. As time has gone on, it’s only gotten easier to add additional accounts. Google, for example, recently added support for third-party accounts to Gmail, enabling Gmail users to use the app to also check their Yahoo Mail and Microsoft Outlook accounts.

    It’s no surprise that the rise of smartphone usage has led to increased email open rates. According to Epsilon, North America saw open rates increase by 6.5% year-over-year in Q3, thanks mainly to mobile device usage. Return Path data from December found that 62% of emails in the UK were opened on mobile devices compared to 21% on desktop. In the U.S. it was 48% from mobile and 25% from desktop. A similar story is told in other countries around the globe:

    So people are opening email from their mobile devices. That’s great news for email marketers. Unfortunately, the mobile experience often leaves a great deal to be desired by the people opening it. This was addressed in a report from The Relevancy Group (via MarketingProfs).

    What Not To Do

    The survey asked participants what they specifically don’t like about getting email messages on their mobile phones. 44% of them said they get too many messages. 37% said the marketing messages aren’t relevant to them. 32% said the messages are too small to read and interact with. 26% said when they click-through, the website is illegible on their mobile device.

    “Marketers must focus on frequency, relevancy and real-time capabilities to capture consumer attention and drive engagement,” the report says.

    Frequency

    Let’s think about each of these complaints for a moment. Too many messages. This is a complaint that’s practically as old as email marketing itself, and it’s certainly not limited to mobile. The nature of mobile, however, only amplifies the potential annoyance level. Users are carrying around their devices all day. It’s always with them – possibly even beside them while they’re in bed. They likely get push notifications, and maybe even receive sounds with these notifications. It’s not hard to see why frequent emails may get annoying, particularly if they’re irrelevant.

    Frequency has always been a difficult balancing act for marketers. On the one hand, you don’t want to drive subscribers away by annoying them, but on the other hand, you need these messages to be seen, and people don’t always open the emails they receive, even if they are relevant. They may not realize a message is relevant without opening it, they may get distracted and forget to open it later, or they may simply just not have the time to concern themselves with the message upon delivery. This is why follow-up emails are sometimes the way to go.

    Neal Taparia co-CEO of Imagine Easy Solutions recently contributed an article to Forbes claiming to have increased overall reach by 54.7%. by sending follow-up emails to those who didn’t open the message the first time. The company increased potential sales by that amount while maintaining a consistent unsubscribe rate. In other words, they didn’t push it too hard. To minimize the annoyance factor, they wait a week to send the second email, and make some minor changes to it.

    Relevancy

    So what about relevancy? According to the report, marketers that leverage existing customer data and pair it with context in a real-time manner have the best shot at increasing accuracy and relevancy of an offer.

    “Often what prevents marketers from utilizing data to improve relevancy is that they don’t have access to it and/or lack the resources to coordinate programs, offers and staff across channels,” it says. “As marketers begin to think about implementing real-time email, they must seek coordination and organizational buy-in first. Real-time email doesn’t always require access to data, but to accomplish many of the most advanced real-time email tactics it will require access to data. The overall organizational shifts to cloud computing will simplify data access. Marketers must be prepared to define the value of the data and begin to map out different offers for different types of circumstances that will happen in real-time.”

    The report looks at what tactics are regularly utilized:

    According to The Relevancy Group, a countdown timer is one of the easiest and most effective ways to boost real-time email effectiveness. They provide a sense of urgency, have shown to lead to a 15% to 68% increase in click-through rates. They also take five to ten minutes to set up by adding an HTML embed code into an email template.

    They also suggest using a live social feed, context personalization, real=time A/B testing, embedded video, live web content, personalized deadlines, and real-time personalization using disparate data sources.

    One of the best things you can do to improve relevance is take advantage of location. You can have multiple sets of creative, and change content automatically based on weather or inserting local content based on subscriber location at the time of open. I’d encourage you to check out the report for additional ideas on boosting relevancy.

    Mobile Usability

    A handful of the complaints from people talking about what they don’t like about mobile email are directly related to the usability of the emails they get and/or the websites that they’re promoting. This is a clear indication that if you are using email marketing, you need to make sure your site is optimized for mobile.

    Not that it should come as s surprise, but a recent study from NetElixir found that mobile shoppers convert 160% more often on sites that are optimized for smartphones. Obviously this will apply to conversions from emails.

    There are plenty of other reasons to have a mobile-optimized site in 2015. The biggest one is that IT’S 2015!

    “Desktop websites in mobile browsers are ineffective at converting visitors into buyers,” wrote Magicdust CEO Ian Mills at The Huffington Post. “Calls to action (CTAs) are often obscured, links are difficult to click and contact pages are buried in awkward menus. Mobile shoppers have little patience for an unwieldy website and one-third of them will leave a transaction if the site isn’t optimized for mobile.”

    “To make the most of mobile, CTAs should be clear and easy to click and contact information should be one of the first things visitors see,” he added. “80 percent of shoppers admit that mobile purchases are impulse-driven and that they’re more likely to purchase from and interact with a brand that offers an engaging mobile experience.”

    Basically, if your site isn’t mobile friendly, it’s time to get with the program, and mobile conversions is only one area where you’re bound to see improvement as a result.

    Sending App Users Emails

    The other complaints from mobile email users are about getting emails when they use your app. This probably isn’t much of a concern for most businesses. For one it’s very possible that you don’t even offer a mobile app, and if you do, there’s also a good possibility that a relatively small amount of your email subscribers are using it.

    These are also the smallest points of concern in that part of the survey, so there’s just probably not a huge impact with this. That said, it can be a point of annoyance, so if you feel like this could potentially apply to you, you may want to take note, and perhaps cut down on the emails sent to app users.

    Wrapping Up

    The bottom line is that mobile is only going to continue to account for a bigger slice of the email open pie, and consumers are only going to use smartphones more to shop and transact. Paying attention to what their habits and preferences are is key, and leaving your email strategy stagnant is ill-advised.

  • Google Has A New Marketing App Called Primer

    Google Has A New Marketing App Called Primer

    Google has a new iPhone app called Primer aimed at “knocking some sense into marketing,” or in other words, getting marketers to use more Google services. As the site explains:

    Primer is a no-nonsense, jargon-free app designed specifically for busy startups. Our marketing lessons take 5 minutes or less and use real world experience.

    With case studies, insider tips and interactive quizzes, Primer teaches you how to promote your business, get more customers and avoid common mistakes.

    Lessons include search engine marketing, getting media coverage, and content marketing, but Google promises more topics to come.

    The app works offline, so you can “learn marketing on the subway, in an airplane or anywhere else you may not have a signal.”

    While it’s only available for iOS, an Android version is on the way. You can sign up to be notified when that’s live.

    Via TechCrunch

    Image via iTunes

  • New Vine Feature Presents Marketers With Good Way To Reuse Old Video Content

    New Vine Feature Presents Marketers With Good Way To Reuse Old Video Content

    The latest feature added to Twitter’s Vine service should give marketers a new opportunity to repurpose existing video content in a fresh way.

    Before, Vine just let you record videos from the app, but now it lets you import videos that you already have. Content marketers are often looking for ways to get more out old content, and this seems like a perfect way.

    The new Vine Camera from Vine on Vimeo.

    Obviously due to the nature of Vine, this will mean editing any video down to the six second limit, but depending on the video, that could be just what you need to actually get attention. Vines are good at getting views for the fact that they’re so short, so why not do some trimming and see what happens?

    If you want to see some good examples of how marketers are already utilizing Vine, this article has thirty-seven of them.

    Vine also added some new editing tools, so you’ll now even more options for creating a compelling, short-form version of a longer video.

    Image via Vine

  • Brian Carr on Bringing New Marketing Trends to Life for Brands

    Brian Carr on Bringing New Marketing Trends to Life for Brands

    Since the dawn of marketing, all businesses have been trying to do the same thing, get a potential customer’s eyes on their brand, and keep their brand in front of them. Modern marketing may have started with a booth at fairs, print ads in newspapers, and 30-second TV spots, but today’s advertising is very different. The Internet requires a vastly different approach to traditional marketing. 



    Recently we caught up with Brian Carr, who is a Business Brand and Development specialist for several industries and the sports world, on this very topic. Here is what Carr had to say: “Today, sales and marketing have integrated into business development. The relationship is the performance of creative engagement of the physical with digital experience.

    “

With the advent of the Internet came the beginning of big data, and marketers have learned to use all of that performance data to influence clients’ decisions. “Much like sports, where we keep a ‘score’, marketers now have a similar score board,” said Carr.



    So, how has the rise of big data helped marketers substantiate their marketing efforts?



    “What’s great about harnessing data is that it is a visualization for how a strategy within a format is performing and being used. For example, every major professional and collegiate organization as well as apparel manufacturer utilizes this to enhance the fan experience. Bringing that data to your client demonstrates just how effective their investment is,” says digital marketing professional Brian Carr. “Data dashboards were not available just a handful of years ago. This data approach has also made it possible for individual marketing firms to be compensated based on their performance. Much like the game of football, we always know down, distance, time, and score as well as the personnel and units performing. This opens a lot of doors; it is making it possible for a lot more opportunities.”

    

Is all of this data a good thing? Isn’t it overwhelming, or too much noise?



    “Yes, absolutely it’s a good thing- as long as you know what to do with that data and navigate it once you’ve collected it, it is absolutely a good thing. Years ago, it was less of a good thing, because marketers didn’t know what to do with it,” Carr explains. 



    How a marketing campaign is performing is the benchmark metric in today’s modern online advertising world. Performance-based marketing, or advertising in which the client pays when campaigns achieve measurable results – instead of simply buying ad space and calling it a day – has been on the rise over the last few years. This was the birth of affiliate marketing. When it’s easy to measure user actions resulting from advertisements, a performance-based structure simply makes more sense.



    Brian Carr and other industry insiders know that affiliate marketing is one of the most effective performance-based marketing styles around.

    

Affiliate marketing essentially involves websites advertising a business for a commission; the affiliates are then paid based on the performance of the marketing efforts. This usually amounts to visitors (potential customers) brought in by the affiliate. Most affiliate marketing setups involve an affiliate network that manages offers for the affiliate to choose from.



    Another type of performance-based marketing that is gaining traction is content marketing, or “a marketing technique of creating and distributing valuable, relevant and consistent content to attract and acquire a clearly defined audience, with the objective of driving profitable customer action. The key here is the execution of distribution strategy.



    With traditional, in-your-face hard sell advertising becoming less and less effective in the fast-paced and instant attention getting world of the Internet, content marketing has emerged as an innovative way for brands to reach their target audiences.

    

And it’s not just about reach, but also about influencing and gathering information on customer behavior.

    That’s where the actual content comes in. A banner ad that tells people to shop at a hardware store is obtrusive and oft-ignored. But if that same brand were to publish a piece of content in an article, white paper, infographic, or video (such as creating a tutorial on a branded YouTube Channel) that discussed summer home improvement strategies and tips, then you would have content marketing. “This is what I call relationship engagement, whereby the advertiser becomes a resource to the customer and creates a client who returns for more information/education and follows with more product and/or service purchases.”

    

The most important thing about content marketing is making sure that the content is both high quality, relevant, timely and informative. The best content marketing transcends advertising, and can simply be seen as good content. That’s the end goal.

    

In the past, one of the drawbacks of performance-based marketing was confusion between brands and publishers regarding the performance metric itself; in other words, disagreement over the analytics.

    But now that those systems have improved and marketers know what to do with all that data, experts like Brian Carr assert that performance-based marketing is fast becoming a preferred method and will accelerate in the future.

  • Newscred, Percolate, Brand.com Scheme To Alter Digital Content Creation

    Newscred, Percolate, Brand.com Scheme To Alter Digital Content Creation

    A group of companies is seeking to change the face of content creation and alter how brands are able to connect with target audiences online. They’re attempting to make an impact on the online news industry in a way that’s meaningful to businesses looking to promote their products and services, without compromising the integrity of interested publications.

    Companies like Newscred, Percolate, and Brand.com are giving content creators tools to not only create original, interesting content, but get it distributed in helpful ways.

    Investors see a lot of potential in these kinds of services. Earlier this year, Newscred raised a new $25 million round of funding (less than a year after it raised $15 million). A couple months ago it launched new partnerships with Getty Images, Visual.ly, and others. Percolate also recently raised $24 million.

    We had a conversation with Brand.com president Mike Zammuto about how his company in particular views the new landscape. He believes that these types of platform companies are changing online news media.

    Brand.com matches newsmakers (the aforementioned businesses who need to get word out) with journalists and publications looking for interesting stories. It enables news outlets to get info straight from the source while maintaining the editorial control that’s important for maintaining credibility. Brand.com’s platform enables brands to explain how they want to look online, and commission writers and reporters to tell their story as an alternative to “old-fashioned” press releases. It has distribution partnerships with media outlets like CNN, Forbes, Reuters, The Huffington Post, MSNBC, Fox News, etc.

    
To maintain credibility, they filter out self-promotional and advertorial copy, ensuring that story ideas really are newsworthy, and provide content that is actually valuable (otherwise this wouldn’t work).

    “Content creation, whether it’s marketing content or news content, should have benefited immensely from the rise of Internet tech, but it hasn’t,” Zammuto tells us. “Platform companies provide an opportunity for reporters to actually utilize the parts of the Internet that are the most beneficial for creating the news. Brand.com creates an ecosystem that connects publishers and reporters with newsmakers with a genuine story to tell – reporters don’t have to dig around for scoops anymore. They can go straight to the source, easily and efficiently.”

    “In the past, news creation relied largely on one-on-one communications,” he adds. “Platforms can improve scalability and efficiency. More broadly, news publishers have seen revenue for advertising and subscriptions fall off with no adequate replacement, and the industry is becoming desperate for a new business model that supports editorial independence and a free and open press, but also the prospering and growth of these publications so that they can continue to support their editorial goals. A platform is a scalable and flexible model. Just as social media streamlined online social interaction, our news platform streamlines the process of identifying and creating great news stories.”

    In case you haven’t heard, native advertising is trending in a big way. This may leave some businesses wondering if they should skip this type of content production, and simply go the native ad route.

    Here’s what Zammuto has to say about it: “PR and native advertising are both ineffective. Native advertising is simply a way to sneak PR into a news content platform. That strategy doesn’t benefit the editors and reporters or the readers. We want the control to ultimately remain in hands of the editors and reporters, not PR middlemen peddling promotional stories. Newsmakers have always wanted to contact reporters and vise versa, and a platform can link these bodies without relying on any intermediate point of contact that might dilute true news.”

    “Travel agencies were a pre-Internet necessity,” he continues. “Now, they just stand in the way between travelers and travel providers. Eliminating a middleman benefits every party involved, in news media and, historically, in all other industries.”

    Still, new native advertising options are launched all the time. Media companies are investing more and more in offering this to advertisers. A recent report from eMarketer found that for media publishers, native advertising represents an opportunity to “reverse the tide of flat or declining revenues”. So far, brands seem to be biting.

    As far as reporters go, it’s church and state, ads and editorial. Zammuto’s company claims to provide reporters with a way to find interesting and original content.

    “When reporters know and trust the platform as a location for exclusive scoops and sources, I’ll know that we’ve succeeded,” he tells us. “And when I see high quality but financially ill news organizations newly able to reinvest in original, high-quality news content, I’ll know that we’ve succeeded.”

    “We see signs of success every day,” he says. “It’s a success whenever a publisher tells us that we are giving their reporters access to great stories and newsworthy exclusive topics. Our platform’s analytics can currently indicate to us who is reading the content, which is a major success for any brand working with us that is used to inefficient and unpredictable PR industry outcomes. Soon the SaaS model will provide us with a holistic end-to-end view of the news, from creation to publishing to analysis of associated demographics. Here’s how a successful article looks to us: publishers are confident that great content is reaching the right audiences, audiences have access to the information they want to read, and brands are able to track who reads published content and what other content those readers might find compelling.”

    
From a brand’s perspective, an offering like this can go a long way in spreading the word for a newsworthy brand in an era where everybody has a voice (and an opinion). Brand.com, Newscred, and Percolate are attempting to offer new and more dynamic options for brands for determining how to create and circulate content online.

    Image via LinkedIn