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Category: MarketingNews

The original MarketingNewz website and email newsletter first launched in 2007.

  • TV Ad Industry Takes On The Internet With Addressable Advertising

    TV Ad Industry Takes On The Internet With Addressable Advertising

    The traditional television industry is finally feeling the pressure of the data rich micro-tuned digital advertising world of the internet and is hitting back with addressable advertising. For years advertisers have become accustomed to extreme targeting with website advertising and particularly with search advertising. Over the last few years micro targeted video ads have become the norm as video is quickly becoming mainstream on social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter. This is causing a shift in ad spending from television to the internet that the TV industry is working to stop, or at least join in on.

    The TV industry’s first step was to make viewing options available on all devices, often referred to as over-the-top (OTT) content viewing. This has been sped along by users, especially millennials and even younger teens watching more and more traditional television content on small internet connected devices. Additionally, smart TV’s are connected to the internet and more importantly are also being connected to smart cable boxes capable of serving the same kind of targeted ads that are served on the internet. This targeted advertising is called addressable advertising and it is the television industry’s competitive answer to the internet.

    From MediaPost’s Editor in ChiefJoe Mandese:

    “One of the things we’re thinking about is whether TV channels go away and become apps,” Brian Hughes, senior vice president-audience analysis and practice lead at Magna, told MediaDailyNews during a preview of the report.

    Hughes added that while the way consumers and industry practitioners think about television may be changing, its vitality as a medium remains as important as ever. It’s just becoming more complicated to track, understand and manage.

    “The message you keep hearing from the industry is that TV is dead, but I think we’re finding that it’s a lot more complex than that. It’s the fact that OTT usage has exploded. TV is not, in fact, dead. It’s just changing. But it remains a central experience for most consumers and a vital medium for most advertisers,” he explained.

    Asked what it’s changing into, Hughes said it’s part of the same meta theme that has been transforming much of the traditional media marketplace: a shift to an “on-demand world, where content is at your fingertips and you can get it where you are on the devices you are on.”

    With addressable advertising advertisers will be able to target diapers in a video commercial to a stay-at-home-dad watching ESPN on either his mobile device or even on his home TV, while others watching the same live or recorded show will see different commercials based on their own demographic, sociographic and behavioral data. No longer will all men be shown shaving and truck commercials.

    Big data is being collected and utilized by companies such as Google’s DoubleClick to make addressable advertising possible enabling the merging of traditional television viewing with the viewing of that same content on small devices to serve targeted adverting.

    “Advertisers and programmers who embrace the fundamental shift from a “big game” mentality to one of reaching viewers across many screens and devices will be rewarded with up-to-the-minute flexibility, deeper audience insights and much more dependable ROI data,” according to a recent report by the DoubleClick the Marketing Team and posted by Anish Kattukaran. “With much more granular attribution and measurement, advertisers can now understand the true performance of their ad–including engagement, brand lift, and conversions. Addressable advertising creates value for everyone in the advertising chain. This lets marketers reach and attribute highly specific targets, and helps broadcasters and distributors better value their content and monetize multiple audiences at the same time. It also give the viewers themselves a better experience, with ads that are more interesting and relevant to them.”

    Advertisers can still advertise to the masses, such as in the Super Bowl, but will also have the option of using granular data attribution to reach subsegments of the audience that are more likely to be interested in their offer. This is both a benefit and a challenge to the television industry because targeted advertising will bring higher CPM’s but with this new data advertisers will also be able to track conversions (sales) and know whether their ads are working or not. This is something traditional TV has not had to deal with and has been a huge frustration to the internet advertising industry because they have had to work with advertisers on this extreme tracking for years, while watch ad dollars go to TV which didn’t have to prove out their value. Addressable advertising is leveling the playing field.

    True conversion reporting for television and television content across all devices is the holy grail for advertisers because it lets them target ad dollars much more effectively.

    “Advertisers and programmers who embrace the fundamental shift from a “big game” mentality to one of reaching viewers across many screens and devices will be rewarded with up-to-the-minute flexibility, deeper audience insights and much more dependable ROI data,” says Kattukaran. “With much more granular attribution and measurement, advertisers can now understand the true performance of their ad–including engagement, brand lift, and conversions.”

  • Email Marketing is Alive and Well for Brands

    Email Marketing is Alive and Well for Brands

    Email marketing is alive and well for brands. Over 60% of marketers are planning to use email marketing as their primary method of gaining new business, according to a new survey by Campaigner.

    The power of first impressions should not be something that online retail marketers should overlook. This new survey illustrates the importance of a marketers first email message, right after someone provides their email to a brand.

    The survey revealed that 39% of marketers send a thank-you-for-subscribing message and 50% of those companies say that 21% of their new subscribers engage with their welcome emails. That’s quite the engagement rate and is reflective of the fact that marketers typically offer enticement deals in these emails such as free shipping, free items with purchase, extra percents off for new customers, etc. These offers almost always are only available for a limited amount of time and are offered on first purchase only. Frequent online shoppers know that providing their email will result in these deals so they are accustomed to subscribing before purchase.

    “It takes just seconds within meeting someone to form a lasting impression,” said EJ McGowan, general manager, Campaigner. “Unsurprisingly, first impressions for brands are just as critical and time-sensitive. Marketers who quickly deliver engaging welcome emails to new subscribers will see greater success in conversions, while also building brand reputation.”

    Of brands surveyed, 55% offered news and content and their main incentive to entice subscriptions while 49% offered promotions.

    It’s also important for brands to send a timely welcome message after a new subscription with 62% reporting they send their welcome emails within 24 hours. In my experience most major brands send their welcome emails immediately while the potential shopper is actively engaged with the brand. It is absolutely a horrible idea to wait as long as 24 hours, so I suspect the survey didn’t offer shorter response times as options. As I indicated above, it is an extremely effective sales strategy to send a welcome email with true and exclusive deals just for the new shopper, but it is also very important to send those while your customer is thinking about you and likely still on your website, in order to maximize their likelihood of becoming a customer.

    In general, the survey found that it’s best for retail marketers to send their emails before 2 p.m. and 35% say that between 8 a.m. and 11 a.m. is ideal in order to generated the best response. Only 25% said that between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. is best. Again, the welcome email should be sent immediately following the subscription, even if it is 3 a.m., or you risk losing a hot prospective customer to your 24 hours a day online retail business.

    Interestingly, 60% of marketers reported that they aren’t doing everything they can do to make their welcome emails most effective. The survey asked questions as to what marketers are doing to improve results in their emails:

    • Eighty-seven percent of marketers are including images in their welcome emails, while 26 percent are including videos.
    • Nearly a third (31 percent) of marketers report that geo-targeting is important for initial emails to contacts.
    • Additionally, more than half of the marketers ranked personalization and segmentation as the most successful tactics in driving conversions.

    The survey shows that (unfortunately) even though email marketing is still a very powerful platform to gain new customers, it faces the challenge of the spam and clutter folders. Marketers reported that 47% of their emails to their own opt-in customers did not hit the inbox! Wake up Google and Outlook and other email platforms, when people subscribe to something they are expressly saying they WANT TO GET EMAIL, even if, and maybe especially if, they are sent offers and promotions.

    Give us your feedback on using email for marketing on the WebProNews Facebook page.

    Here’s the Infographic on this survey provided by Campaigner:

    beat-the-heat-v1

    Give us your feedback on using email for marketing on the WebProNews Facebook page.

  • LinkedIn Enables Programmatic Ad Buying

    LinkedIn Enables Programmatic Ad Buying

    LinkedIn announced today the availability of programmatic buying for its display ads, giving data-driven marketers advanced opportunities to target more precisely and with more efficiency.

    “This means you can now work with your preferred buying platform to buy highly visible ads that help you reach and engage the right buyers and build your brand in the premium context of LinkedIn,” commented the Head of Products for LinkedIn Marketing Solutions, Russell Glass. “Our goal with programmatic buying is to give our customers more flexibility in how they work with us, and expand the ways we can partner to meet their marketing goals.”

    LinkedIn says that you can purchase programmatically through either an Open Auction or via LinkedIn Private Auctions. They also note that “If you’re already buying programmatically, Open Auction is the fastest way to buy LinkedIn Display Ads programmatically.” The Private Auction provides marketers more targeting options.

    Screen Shot 2016-06-28 at 10.02.02 AM

    When using your own first or third party data like website visitors and CRM contacts, our Private Auction offers the ability to explicitly target LinkedIn.com as a placement. As another option, the Private Auction can leverage our proprietary member persona targeting features (e.g., target “IT decision makers”) if you don’t want to use your own first or third party data.

    We support majority of the demand-side platforms (DSP’s) and agency trading desks (ATD’s). We currently have more than 4,000 premium brands enabled to run across our site to ensure customers can buy through the one that is best suited for their business.

    “Accessing LinkedIn programmatically has given Essence access to quality inventory, at scale, while allowing us to monitor performance in-house, in real time. Not only can we efficiently reach our desired target audiences–such as SMBs; we’re able to leverage our own tools, leading to high viewability and performance across LinkedIn,” stated Agatha Isabel, Programmatic Media Planner, Essence.

    LinkedIn has two targeting options for programmatic buyers:

    Screen Shot 2016-06-28 at 10.00.05 AM

    Learn more about LinkedIn programmatic ads here.

  • Google Ad Partner Specializations Launched So Agencies Can Stand Out

    Google Ad Partner Specializations Launched So Agencies Can Stand Out

    Partner Specializations are now being awarded to Google Partner’s that can demonstrate expertise in particular areas in order for these firms to better market themselves to businesses that advertise on Google. The Google Partner program was launched 3 years ago as a way for small businesses to work with ad agencies, marketers, online professionals and specialists that are knowledgable about Adwords and work with the Google ad team on a regular basis. All Partner’s are trained and certified by Google.

    The program helps small businesses place ads with more sophistication and compete for keywords with their bigger rivals.

    Google Partners can earn specializations in 5 areas of expertise:

    • Search
    • Mobile
    • Video
    • Display
    • Shopping

    “The changes to the Google Partner program are exciting for potential advertisers and our company,” says Neal Gann, CEO of Showroom Logic. “These new specializations show Google’s commitment to better serve their Partners and help us highlight what makes our technology and team so unique. It should also help prospective clients make a clear choice because it’s now easier for them to find top Partners that are aligned with their immediate goals.”

    Screen Shot 2016-06-28 at 8.51.06 AM

    Google says that to gain a Specialization designation the Partner must have at “least one certified individual and a history of consistent product performance.”

    How companies can earn specializations

    Specializations are given based on the following criteria:

    • Your company has at least one certified affiliated user in an AdWords product area
    • Your company is demonstrating product expertise in the specialization area
    • Your company has at least US$10,000 (or local currency equivalent) 90-day AdWords spend in that area

    We look at a number of things to determine your company’s level of product expertise, including how you’re implementing the AdWords product for your clients, if you’re growing your usage in the product area, if you’re retaining your clients in that product area, and other related factors.

    Premier Google Partner badge

    Google also announced the Premier Google Partner badge “designed to recognize Partner’s who manage a substantial portfolio of Google advertising campaigns and deliver great results for their customers.”

    “Google identifying and recognizing highly experienced agencies is a great step and a distinctive honor. We are thrilled to be a part of the new designation and look forward to displaying this badge,” stated Joe Chura, CEO of Launch Digital Marketing.

    Screen Shot 2016-06-28 at 8.51.53 AM

    Premier Partners must maintain a higher level of certification requirements but will receive significantly more support from the Google advertising team, according to Allan Thygesen, VP Global Sales & Operations at Google.

  • Immediacy Advertsing: Twitter Now Lets Advertisers Target By Emoji

    Immediacy Advertsing: Twitter Now Lets Advertisers Target By Emoji

    Twitter has become the first social media platform that lets advertisers target by what emoji a user has tweeted. The idea is that emoji’s are indicators of emotion, or even more specifically wanted actions, which can be used by businesses to target their product marketing. For instance, a hot coffee emoji could spark a Twitter ad from Starbucks or a beer emoji might indicate that the tweeter wants to get a beer and a Twitter geo ad could then target the person from a craft brewery nearby.

    It actually is a form of immediacy advertising (coined here), where a user is immediately targeted within seconds or minutes after expressing an interest in something while in casual conversation. Imagine if instead of Twitter this was an actual private conversation and you said, “Let’s grab a beer.” At that moment what if an advertisement appeared in an holographic image right in from of you and your friend? That’s what Twitter is doing on their platform, especially as it relates to emoji targeting.

    Twitter noted that one month from today on July 17 is World Emoji Day which is happening because, hey–we use emojis every day, so why not celebrate them? Join the emoji celebration on Twitter at #WorldEmojiDay!

    Twitter certainly sees the value of emoji marketing since over 110 billion emojis have been Tweeted since 2014.

    Now, advertisers can target people who have recently Tweeted or engaged with Tweets featuring emojis with the help of select Twitter Official Partners: AdParlor, Amobee, HYFN, Perion, SocialCode, and 4C. This new feature uses emoji activity as a signal of a person’s mood or mindset — unlocking unique opportunities for marketers. Now, brands can:

    • Connect with people based on their expressed sentiment
    • Target people who Tweet food emojis
    • Reach people based on their passions

    To get your emoji-targeting campaigns started, reach out to one of Twitter’s Official Partners.

  • New YouTube Tools Makes Video Ad Making Easy

    New YouTube Tools Makes Video Ad Making Easy

    YouTube today introduced a suite of tools for business of all sizes to make video ads. At launch, YouTube Director includes three main tools that let’s businesses, especially small businesses, make video ads with a professional look and feel.

    The first tool allows you to create a YouTube video ad right from your phone. To try it out simply download the free YouTube Director for Business app which is available on the iPhone in the U.S. and Canada with an Android version coming soon. The app is designed for the non-techie… so go for it! Another perk for small businesses is that they can use the app to create a video without any obligation to run paid ads on YouTube. Just make the video, upload it and promote it on your small business website, on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter.

    To prove that anyone can make a professional looking video ad YouTube provided the example of Woody Lovell Jr., owner of The Barbershop Club in Los Angeles. Woody created his own video ad in less than 20 minutes and ran a campaign on YouTube promoting his business. Woody said that the campaign is already seeing positive results.

    Youtube invited The Barbershop Club and four other businesses to take part in the YouTube Director Video Challenge. They asked each owner to make a video about their business, film it, edit it and put it on YouTube in 20 minutes or less!

    First, they were asked to create a video ad without this new tool. They did it but it wasn’t easy. Using YouTube Director Video they were all able to create great videos in under 20 minutes using YouTube Director and couldn’t praise it enough.

    “It’s perfect, a lot easier and so easy,” commented the business owners. “It’s like a big budget. It’s so much better and it walked you through it giving you tips. One, two, three, four… it was as easy as ABC! It was designed well. An instant commercial. The app worked as the director. It cost nothing and it’s so easy and you can just publish it.

    Here’s the video made by the Pink Family of the world famous Pink’s Hot Dogs in Hollywood, California. I’ve been to this place and it’s great and you can get a vegan dog too. Keep your eyes open because this is a popular celebrity hangout!

    Woody did a great job making The Barbershop Club video. It really has a professional feel. The Barbershop Club is based in Los Angeles at the Original Farmers Market at 3rd and Fairfax, which opened in July 1934. As Woody says about his shop, “It is where young men come learn the ways of manhood, men come to talk with ease and both are made to look like true gentleman when they leave.” Couldn’t have said it better!

    Chef Roberto Martin of eLOVate Kitchen produced the video below. eLOVate is a vegan restaurant in Santa Monica, California, one of my favorite cities, and as a vegan I’ll be trying this place out! I guarantee you, non-vegans will like it too.

    Here’s the video ad made by Sarah Wolfgang of The Dog Cafe. Sarah started an interesting new concept of dog adoption making The Dog Cafe a gathering spot for dog lovers to meet and mingle with each other over a latte and with rescue dogs looking for loving homes. Way to go Sarah!

    Nadia Geller of Nadia Geller Market created a nice video ad in just 20 minutes! Nadia Geller Market is located in the Arts District in Downtown Los Angeles that carries home products with a tongue in cheek vibe. It’s part of a larger business Nadia owns called Nadia Geller Designs which is an upscale interior design firm. Nadia is somewhat more sophisticated in marketing than the other businesses YouTube chose to highlight in this product launch.

    YouTube’s promo video on YouTube Director:

    YouTube also announced a service called YouTube Director Onsite, where YouTube actually will send a professional videographer to shoot and edit a video ad for any business that spends a minimum of $150 advertising. That is an incredible deal and a great way for small businesses to get started with video advertising. YouTube Director Onsite is launching in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Washington D.C.—and coming to more cities soon.

    For businesses that are integrated in mobile apps, YouTube also announced YouTube Director Automated Video where YouTube will create a video ad from existing creative found in your business app such as logos and app screenshots already uploaded to the app store. This is available worldwide. YouTube is asking that you call one of their experts (1-855-500-2756) to try out this service.

  • New Facebook Features: Increase In-Store Business & Measure Results

    New Facebook Features: Increase In-Store Business & Measure Results

    Facebook has announced new features that will help drive more business to brick & mortar store locations while accurately measuring a businesses Facebook mobile ad campaigns contribution in doing this. New Local Awareness Ads are designed for the small business with a single store all the way to enterprise corporations with thousands of locations.

    This is the holy grail for convincing brick and mortar advertisers that Facebook is an effective platform to drive in-store business, assuming the data shows their advertising working. It could also be Facebook’s achilles hill if advertisers discover that their ads aren’t driving business.

    The new features announced by Facebook today turn the giant social media site into a direct lead to conversion platform with the metrics informing businesses if they can capitalize on where 90% of retails purchases still happen… in physical stores.

    Facebook is launching a native store locator that helps users find and get directions to the nearest store right within a Facebook ad. The ads will offer call-to-action such as “Get Directions” designed to help drive new business. Facebook notes that last year they launched a tool that now integrates with this new feature enabling businesses with many locations to create ads dynamically within one ad campaign.

    From Facebook:

    Store locators on a business’s website can be frustrating for people on mobile, requiring several taps or typing a postal code into a small form. The new store locator removes that friction to help people on mobile find business locations quickly and easily.

    The store locator shows a map of all the locations a business has nearby. People can click on the map in the ad to see information about nearby locations. Without leaving the ad or app, they can view the address, hours, phone number, website and estimated travel time for each store.

    The store locator can be added to any local awareness ad and is available now to all advertisers.

    Facebook Launches “Store Visits” Ad Reporting Metric

    Along with the Local Awareness Ads Facebook is adding a new tracking metric called Store Visits to give businesses data on whether their ads designed to bring people into physical stores are working.

    Advertisers can use store visits reporting to:

    • See how many people come to your store after seeing a Facebook campaign
    • Optimize ad creative, delivery and targeting based on store visits
    • Analyze results across stores and regions to plan and optimize future campaigns

     According to Facebook, store visits is an estimated metric based on information from people with location services enabled on their phone. The metric will be rolling out to advertisers globally over the coming months.

    Offline Conversions API

    Advertisers can connect their in-store and over the phone transactions to their Local Awareness Ads as well as other ad types via Facebook’s new Offline Conversions API. The API lets businesses match their transactions within their point-of-sale cash registers to their ad reports on Facebook. Currently, point-of-sale tools businesses can connect their data to include IBM, Index, Invoca, Lightspeed, LiveRamp, Marketo and Square or with Facebook directly.

    This data will allow advertisers to see the real-time effectiveness of their Facebook ads to see if they are driving business as projected, what the demographics of in-store purchasers are that come to their stores via a Facebook ad are and enable them to adjust and test their ads to make them more effective.

  • How Gannett Increased Their Programmatic Ad eCPMs By 15%

    How Gannett Increased Their Programmatic Ad eCPMs By 15%

    Tim Wolfe, VP of Revenue Operations for Gannett recently talked about Gannett’s success in using Google’s DoubleClick for Publishers First Look product which was announced last year but only made available to all DoubleClick for Publishers clients in April.

    “Gannett has historically and traditionally been a newspaper business. We like to think of ourselves as a full-fledged media company at this point,” stated Wolfe. “What’s unique about Gannett is that we have a national to local reach. We’ve got over 90 local markets across the country as well as our flagship brand USA Today.”

    Wolfe added, “Some of the challenges we face selling our audiences programmatically is that we have had a lot of demand for a very specific subset of our audience. Gannett leverages DoubleClick for Publishers First Look across the network to increase yield by allowing some of our preferred advertisers and preferred relationships to engage with the top 1% of our audiences.”

    Screen Shot 2016-06-13 at 9.37.08 AM

    “Once we started to understand the impact across that 1% we’ve really started to evaluate what our pricing strategy was and needed to be,” said Wolfe. “We at Gannett are pulling in all of the data from all of our different sources into a centralized data depository. From there we’re making the decisions around what pricing we want to set.”

    Wolfe added details:

    As part of the transparency that the Google Ad Exchange provides us we’re able to look into the Open Exchange details as well as the Private Exchange details and better understand who’s winning with high frequency across our audiences. We want to monazite all of our inventory and all of our audiences to the greatest extent that we can. Introducing First Look as well as Enhanced Dynamic Allocation and a lot of the other products and suites that Google has offered us has been tremendously helpful.

    First Look has been a great compliment to our monetization and to our ad stat. Since implementing First Look we’ve seen a 15% lift in eCPM’s of our programmatic channel vehicle. As we look to the next 5 years we anticipate programatic to be a driver and a leader of monetization across the entire digital ecosystem including desktop, mobile and video.

  • Google Ranked As World’s Most Valuable Brand

    Google Ranked As World’s Most Valuable Brand

    Google is ranked as the Most Valuable Global Brand in Millward Brown and WPP’s annual BrandZ study for 2016. Google’s brand value is estimated at $229.2 billion having risen 32% from 2015. Apple is ranked 2nd at $228.5 billion, losing 8% of its brand value since last year.

    The Brandz study focused on a number of factors and is available in PDF format to read in full.

    Amazon was the fastest rising brand having risen in value 59% since 2015, from $62 billion to $99 billion. The report explained it this way:

    Amazon, which leads the Top 20 Risers, rose 59 percent in brand value compared with an 8 percent increase for the retail category. The brand introduced Amazon Fresh food delivery in three US cities and partnered with the grocery chain Morrisons for home delivery of food in the UK. In addition, Amazon delivered more merchandise using its own capacity rather than its logistics partners, a move that enabled it to better control the customer experience, which in some 30 cities worldwide included one-hour delivery for Amazon Prime customers.

    The brand also introduced Amazon Dash, a program in which customers signal for replenishment of certain FMCG items at the exact moment of need. It anticipates the transition to automatic replenishment of the Internet of Things. Amazon also developed its cloud storage business, Amazon Web Services, demonstrating how the border between business-to-consumer and business-to-business brands is becoming more porous.

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  • PwC: Internet Advertising To Overtake TV Advertising

    PwC: Internet Advertising To Overtake TV Advertising

    PwC released their annual Global Entertainment and Media Outlook report, predicting that internet advertising will overtake broadcast advertising by next year. PwC’s report forecasts media and entertainment industry revenue and ad spending over the next 5 years.

    By 2020 total spending on internet advertising is expected to be $93.5 billion while TV ad revenue is projected at $81.7 billion. Overall entertainment and media spending will be $603 billion in 2015 and reach $720 billion by 2020. The U.S. will continue to lead the world’s in internet advertising market. By 2020 the U.S. will receive $93.5 billion in internet ad revenue and China will be a distant second with $44.6 billion spent.

    The PwC study also looked at the changing media landscape, asking, “Can anyone be a media company?”

    According to the US entertainment and media outlook: 2016-2020, the next five years will hold major changes for how people watch TV and video.

    As consumer wants and expectations continue to change, so too does the TV and video industry. Today’s and tomorrow’s definition of what it means to be a “media company” will continue to evolve, as companies — not just entertainment and media companies — invest in content and direct customer media relationships. We will continue to see a rapid increase in new entrants and competitors in the space as subscriber-based businesses continue to consolidate. Operators are also attempting to target cord-cutters and cord-nevers by marketing their OTT streaming and download services–two areas that will represent tremendous growth potential for this industry’s foreseeable future.

    OTT (Over the top) streaming subscription video on demand revenue is expected to go from $6.4 billion in 2015 to $10.4 billion by 2020.

    Also of note is the rise of mobile which the PwC report predicting that mobile will go from 35% of total advertising revenue in 2015 to 49% by 2020:

    US internet advertising revenue will continue to surge forward, with mobile seeing the most rapid growth–all forms of mobile advertising will continue to grow in the coming years. One key driver is the shift in search from laptops to mobiles, with mobile paid search internet advertising having seen tremendous recent growth.

    The report also looked at the music industry and predicts that music will continue to see major evolution. By 2020 digital music streaming will dominate:

    While the music industry’s first stage of digital transition saw downloads overtake physical formats in terms of retail sales and revenue, the current stage has consumers moving away from ownership towards access. Subscription music services will soon be the primary form of paid content in revenue terms.

    The PwC study also looked at the movie industry and noted that for the first time electronic home video revenue eclipsed the movie box office in 2015. Home revenue was $11 billion while theater box office revenue generated $10 billion. PwC is also predicting that the US will lose its top market position to China in 2017.

    Looking at the video game market, PwC expects the video game industry to thrive over the next 5 years.

  • Nissan UK: 6% Adwords Conversion Rate Of Showroom Visits From Mobile Clicks

    Nissan UK: 6% Adwords Conversion Rate Of Showroom Visits From Mobile Clicks

    Marc Palmer, Marketing Communications Manager of Nissan UK, recently spoke in an Adwords promotional video for Google on the effectiveness of using Google Adwords for Nissan. “When you get your first car, suddenly, there’s that little bubble that you live in, where you can do whatever you like,” Palmer said. “I got this little old car: the top half was brown and the bottom half was gold! But what it meant was you could then start to just do things on your own. So there’s a sense of freedom.”

    “Buying a new car is one of the more important decisions,” Palmer stated. “There’s this whole piece of discovery. At the start of their car-buying journey, they go to search. People turn up to the dealership pretty much in mind the car they want to buy.”

    Puneet Vaghela, Search Account Director of Manning Gottlieb OMD, commented, “What AdWords is enabling us to do is fight the fight in the right place. We’re able to map buyer journeys.” “And that’s when the dealer has the ability to really make it brilliant,” said Palmer. “Now we’re able to find out that somebody searched for us and then they went and bought a car. That’s kind of getting close to the Holy Grail.”

    “We know that people have a lot more confidence now in online research, but the main reason they still are going to dealers is for that personal aspect,” commented Vaghela. “It’s all about finding people and reaching them in their moments of intent.”

    Vaghela added, “On mobile, we’ve seen 6.04% conversion rate store visits from search clicks and an estimated ROI of 25 pounds. When we actually go into AdWords, we can go all the way down to keyword level, which kind of keywords are actually driving people into dealerships from our search activity.”

    “Customers do so much before they come to the dealership,” according to Rachael Gregory, Retail Marketing Manager of Nissan UK. “It’s really important that once they get here, we give them exactly what they need.”

    “For the first time, really, this has given us a tangible connection between online and offline,” stated Vaghela.

    Check out the Nissan UK video promo they did for Google Adwords below: