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Tag: brands

  • How the Metaverse Will Affect Brand Loyalty

    How the Metaverse Will Affect Brand Loyalty

    It’s hard to predict the future. When science-fiction writers have tried to imagine what life will be like 50 or 100 years from now, they’ve come up with some shocking possibilities: hoverboards, a moon colony, robots that fold our laundry for us, etc. Some predictions have come true (minus the laundry-folding robot), and others linger in the realm of possibility. But one thing is certain: the metaverse will be a force.

    What’s the metaverse? It’s a term coined by Neal Stephenson in his 1992 sci-fi book “Snow Crash” to describe an interconnected virtual universe where humans can socialize, shop, and do all sorts of other things at any time of day or night with anyone else in any location across the globe.

    The metaverse is the concept of a shared, persistent, and connected virtual world. It’s a world in which users interact with the environment through their avatars, or digital representations of themselves. Think about how that would change your experience if you were playing a game or participating in an event with other people around the world simultaneously — you’d be able to talk via voice chat or text chat regardless of what platform they’re using.

    The metaverse won’t just change how you interact with people; it will change how brands interact with customers. How will all these advances affect brand loyalty?

    Consumers Expect Brands to Enter the Metaverse

    In the metaverse, you can expect to see brand experiences in new ways. Brands won’t just sell products; they will also create a sense of community and connection with other people. In fact, it’s likely consumers will expect brands to enter the metaverse and expect their experience to be interactive and engaging.

    Brands Are Already in the Metaverse

    You may wonder how the metaverse is already affecting brand loyalty.  Some brands have a presence in the metaverse and are already interacting with users in it. They’re doing so by creating virtual stores, distributing branded products, and even designing experiences that combine real-life social interaction with VR technology. As such, brands have started using this new medium to interact with customers, and they will continue to do so as more people get into virtual reality.

    How Brand Loyalty Will Change With Virtual Reality

    In the past, brand loyalty was limited to physical products or services that could be offered in exchange for money. With the rise of digital marketing and social media, businesses have created new ways to interact with their customers — and thus offer new incentives for brand loyalty. The metaverse offers an entirely new way for businesses to interact with their customers — through a simulated environment where they can meet up and discuss anything.

    The Metaverse Will Change How Users Interact with Brands

    The metaverse is the ultimate brand experience, and it will change how people interact with their favorite brands. Instead of being bombarded by traditional advertisements or promotions from big companies, users will only see what they want to see when they want to see it. In this way, brands will be forced to adopt strategies and design experiences that resonate with their audiences, a challenge many have struggled with for years.

    While things will evolve over time, it’s important for brands to interact with customers in a way that doesn’t disrupt the consumer’s experience. That would be obtrusive in the same way a telemarketing call is when you’re trying to relax. It should also involve consumer interaction. By creating immersive and interactive experiences, you can build brand awareness and customer loyalty.

    The metaverse can also mirror and reinforce the marketing you do in real life. In the metaverse, you can sell virtual goods to digital avatars and create your own virtual stores and venues that are similar to your physical ones to further reinforce your brand’s message.

    The other major shift will be how brands advertise in this new environment. Instead of passively pushing out marketing messages through traditional channels like TV commercials and billboards, metaverse companies will create experiences based on what fans actually like and encourage them to engage with that experience.

    Conclusion

    As discussed, the metaverse has great potential to transform how users interact with brands. Consumers are already entering and engaging in VR worlds and expect brands to follow them. Many brands are responding by creating unique experiences that build loyalty through fun and interactivity, instead of traditional advertising techniques such as ads, discounts, and free trials.

    It’s clear consumers want more from their favorite companies than just a transaction. They want an experience that helps them feel connected, whether it’s to a product or another user who loves it, too (or both!). The metaverse will help make this possible in unprecedented ways, and your brand can start taking advantage now!

  • Levi’s Is a Brand That Can Drive Traffic, Says CEO

    Levi’s Is a Brand That Can Drive Traffic, Says CEO

    “I think this world is coming down to winners and losers,” says Levi’s CEO Charles Bergh. “The Levi’s brand is incredibly strong and so we’re in a position with all of our customers to be asking for more, to be asking for more floor space and more open-to-buy budget. They need us. They need strong brands today and Levi’s is a brand that can drive traffic for them. We’ve got some really strong collaborations happening and that brings a lot of heat to the business.”

    Chip Bergh, CEO of Levi’s, discusses the strength of the Levi’s brand and how they are appealing to millennials through innovation, personalization, and collaborations with Netflix, in an interview with Jim Cramer on CNBC:

    Charles Bergh, President and CEO, Levi Strauss & Co

    Levi’s Is a Brand That Can Drive Traffic

    I am a big believer in winners and losers. I think this world is coming down to winners and losers. The Levi’s brand is incredibly strong and so we’re in a position with all of our customers to be asking for more, to be asking for more floor space and more open-to-buy budget. They need us. They need strong brands today and Levi’s is a brand that can drive traffic for them. Our fall-winter season just took the stores, literally this week. We’ve got some really strong collaborations happening and that brings a lot of heat to the business. 

    We’ve got a collaboration with Hello Kitty. We’ve got a very successful collaboration right now with Stranger Things, the hit Netflix show. All that’s on floor now. We’ve also introduced this laser technology where consumers can customize their own jeans online. A consumer can go online and literally design their own jeans finished by a laser. We can finish a pair of jeans for the consumer and ship it to them in less than a week. 

    Customization and personalization are a huge part of what we’re doing. In fact, in all of our mainline doors around the world, we’ve got tailor shops. We are really catering to the consumer. We’re letting consumers personalize and customize their own t-shirts. Our t-shirt business is on fire. I’m very optimistic about the future here in the US and also globally. 

    Levi’s laser-powered personalization technology lets you customize denim with rips, fades, patterns to patches.

    Sustainability Is Really Important To Us

    Sustainability is really important. We’re a company that really is all about our values. We talk about value and values. One of the things when we did the IPO I said we’re not going to change how we run the company. We’re going to continue to stand for things that are important. This company has a track record of not being afraid to take a stand on important issues of the day. Sustainability is really important to us. We use it as a constraint and innovation. In fact, this laser technology is just one example. 

    We developed this technology primarily to eliminate a lot of the chemicals that are in the supply chain. Finishing a pair of jeans requires dozens and dozens of chemicals and we’ve eliminated over a thousand chemicals by being able to finish our jeans with a laser. This shirt that I’m wearing is a combination of cotton and hemp. Now hemp historically has been like burlap. It’s a very tough fiber. We’ve worked with a supplier that creates cottonized hemp. This product feels as if it’s cotton but it’s also woven with hemp. Hemp is a lot more sustainable. It takes less water to grow than cotton and you can grow a lot more per acre of land. It’s a lot more sustainable as a fiber and it’s cheaper as a fiber too.

    Levi’s Is a Brand That Can Drive Traffic, Says Levi’s CEO Charles Bergh
  • Microsoft Introduces Bing Pages To Help Individuals & Companies Manage Their Brands

    Microsoft Introduces Bing Pages To Help Individuals & Companies Manage Their Brands

    First reported by MSPoweruser, Microsoft has unveiled Bing Pages, a new way “for brands to manage their public personas on Microsoft products like Bing and Outlook.”

    When searching for a well-known or popular person, company or brand, Bing will often display enhanced search results that provide far more—and usually more visually appealing—information than a standard search. With Bing Pages, Microsoft aims to bring those results to everyone. The program is currently in beta.

    According to the official site, “Bing Pages is a beta program that lets users manage their presence on Microsoft products such as Bing and Outlook.com….Participants who sign up for this program get their own page on Bing to highlight their contact information and social media channels. They can also promote social media posts in relevant search results–at no cost.Businesses can use Bing Pages to customize their Outlook profile with updated contact info, images, and content. These changes also appear in Bing search results.”

    The signup page is available to everyone and only requires an email address and Twitter account to get started.

  • Brands That Adjust to the New Economy Are Going to be More Successful

    Brands That Adjust to the New Economy Are Going to be More Successful

    Former CKE Restaurants CEO Andy Puzder says that brands that adjust to the new economy are going to be more successful. He says that Walmart and Target adjusted to the new economy and that’s why they are doing great. Similarly, the fast food chains that don’t adjust will not do as well as those that have like Chick-fil-A, In-N-Out Burger, and Shake Shack.

    Andy Puzder, Former CKE Restaurants CEO, discussed the how brands need to adjust to the new economy on Fox Business:

    Fast Food Industry Needs to Adjust to the New Economy

    I think there is a lot of competition now from grocery stores. Grocery store sales are up and people are eating at home. So that’s something that people that are running restaurants need to keep in mind. Secondly, people need to adjust to the new economy. It’s much like in retail. Sears is failing but Walmart is doing great. Kmart’s failing but Target’s doing great. That’s because Walmart and Target adjusted to the new economy.

    It used to be if you ran a fast food restaurant you had an advantage with the drive-thru because a soccer mom coming home from a soccer game could pick up some food and drive home and it was very convenient. Now, maybe it’s not as convenient. You could call Uber Eats and you can choose from 40 different restaurants and it’s delivered to your door. You don’t even have to sign for it. Uber uses your credit card just like when you go with an Uber driver.

    Brands That Adjust Are Going to be More Successful

    The convenience element is changing. Brands that pick up on that are going to be more successful than brands that don’t. You see brands like Chick-fil-A doing very well, In-N-Out Burger, Shake Shack, these kinds of niche brands that aren’t these larger brands that have been associated with the traditional service. Millennials react differently to that. The world is changing and restaurants need to react just like other industries.

    Markets Are Overreacting – Economy is Booming

    Transportation and construction are particularly relevant because if the economy is growing that’s where you are going to see the jobs. You will see it in people building and you will see it in people delivering goods. We are seeing continued economic growth. I would also point out that consumer spending was the best since 2006 this last holiday season and consumer spending drives two-thirds of our GDP growth. The economy is doing very very well.

    I don’t know why the markets are so overreacting to the negative news that comes out. The economy is booming, people are doing very well. Wages are up, more people are working, we have 7 million job openings, and people are taking home more of what they earn because of the tax cuts. There is really nothing on the horizon that would indicate that we are heading into a recession or even much of a slowdown.

    A Good Economy is Not Good News to Certain Party

    I think we are going to see continued accelerated growth this year despite what you are hearing in the news media. A lot of it is political. A lot of it is because there’s a Party out there for whom a good economy is not good news. That Party happens to control a lot of the news media so they’re having an impact. I think we are really having a dynamic economy and it can and will continue. The American people should be patient.


  • Facebook Expands Canvas Marketing Opportunities

    Facebook Expands Canvas Marketing Opportunities

    Canvas is Facebook’s mobile marketing platform for companies wanting to present a more immersive experience to potential customers. It’s a full-screen mobile ad that Facebook touts as loading nearly instantly and is designed specifically for Android and iOS devices. Using the same technology for loading photos and video quickly in the Facebook mobile app, Canvas can load up to 10 time faster than the mobile web.

    When Canvas launched back in February, advertisers had to have either a web click or website conversion objective. Making Canvas even more versatile for advertisers, especially for marketers looking to seriously gain brand engagement, marketers can now choose brand awareness or video view objectives. “This means brand marketers can use Canvas across their range of goals for their campaigns,” noted a Facebook post.

    The future of Canvas

    Facebook is seeking to make Canvas an extremely robust marketing tool, especially for companies looking for new branding and customer relationship opportunities. “The future of Canvas will include many more features designed to make this immersive, attention-grabbing format accessible to any business, regardless of size or creative resources,” said Facebook. “Recently, we introduced new metrics for Canvas to help marketers understand the performance of each component—videos, photos and buttons—within their Canvas. Marketers can now learn from each Canvas they run, determining which designs work best to achieve their campaign goals.”

    They plan to make Canvas simple for any brand to implement by providing advertisers with templates that immolate how other advertisers have used the new platform. Facebook says that the templates will be available over the next few months, but they provided one as an example:

    screen-shot-2016-09-27-at-6-31-59-pm

    360 Videos Coming to Canvas

    Facebook wants to make Canvas its most immersive ad format in order to attract the Madison Avenue brands. Soon they will be offering 360 videos that provide advertisers a unique way to engage people on mobile and interact with a brands advertisement. According to Facebook, ITAU, a Brazilian bank, used Canvas with 360 video in it to tell an immersive story for children, in order to let people know about the banks outreach and charity in the area of education.

    They are also offering the ability to link Canvas ads to one another via linked buttons and images, instead of just linking to a website. The allows advertisers to create a multi-Canvas experience. “By linking Canvases, Beats by Dre could invite people to explore differently colored versions of its iconic headphones, designed after different countries’ flags,” noted Facebook. “When people tapped on their different Beats options, instead of being driven to a slow-loading website, they got another Canvas, loaded quickly, that they could explore. Beats saw an average of 39 seconds spent in the Canvas, and 73% of the Canvas was viewed on average.”

    Brand Success on Canvas

    Facebook released some statistics from a couple of brands that have recently tried the Canvas marketing platform. Royal Caribbean used Canvas to promote a contest to win a free cruise where the last Canvas screen provided an access code and a link to enter the sweepstakes. Their cost per action was $0.17 and the average time potential customers spent on their Canvas as 72 seconds.

    They say that Canvas works for smaller localized brick and mortar businesses too. A company (Edifica) built a new condo complex (also called Canvas) in Peru and was looking to find buyers using Canvas. According to Facebook, they saw a 50% lower cost-per-click, a 15% lower cost-per-thousand impression, and a 2.3X click-through-rate versus their other link ads, and got a 46-second average time spent in their Canvas. It’s unknown how many of these clickers turned into condo sales.

  • 87 Million Millennials on LinkedIn Seeking to Change the World

    87 Million Millennials on LinkedIn Seeking to Change the World

    A LinkedIn study recently took a look a Millennials in an attempt to erase the stereotype that they are lazy, entitled and unemployed. “Given the massive amounts of news coverage (44,000 articles and counting), it seems like everyone is desperate to understand my generation,” said Alexandra Rynne who contributed to LinkedIn’s Millennial Playbook (PDF). “Thankfully, we don’t have to rely on stereotypes or sensationalism to find out.”

    >>> Comment on the article here...

    LinkedIn Marketing Solutions looked at the data of the 87 million millennials found on LinkedIn to gain some very interesting insights on who Millennials really are and whether they are still living in their parents basement or not. 🙂 There are over 2 billion Millennials on Earth, 85 million of those in the U.S., and worldwide have $1 trillion in purchasing power according a LinkedIn post. The Millennial Generation is roughly defined as people reaching young adulthood around the year 2000.

    Screen Shot 2016-07-18 at 10.38.12 AMMichelle Lynn, EVP, Managing Director, Carat Consumer Insights, and Doug Ray, Carat’s US CEO & Global President offered new research illustrating that Millennials are not a homogenous group. Marketers should not be targeting Millennials as a whole, since they’re only reaching 42% of their total.

    Research by Carat Consumer Insights broke millennials into these 4 broad types of people:

    • TrendNetters have a median age of 27 and make up 42% of all Millennials and align most closely to the general stereotype of Millenials: Digital extroverts who are easy to find and market to because they live their lives online
    • AlterNatives have a median age of 24 and make up 23% of all Millennials (consisting mostly of males), are introverts and extremely elusive
    • LYFPreneurs have a median age of 28 and make up 19% of all Millennials, consisting mostly of females who are extremely ambitious.
    • BetaBlazers have a median age of 25 and make up 16% of Millennials and are an extremely forward-thinking group.

    “I was pleasantly surprised to see how many of my generation are investing time on LinkedIn,” said Rynne. “There are 87 million millennials on LinkedIn worldwide, and 11 million are classified as “decision makers.” Not only that, millennials represent 30% of long-form publishers on LinkedIn, even though we’re less than 25% of total members.” In other words, millennials are already making an impact on society.

    “There’s no denying millennials are chasing great,” Rynne added while coining a new term. “Some of us want the thrill of recognition. Some just want to make the world a better place. Some just can’t resist pushing the boundaries of what’s possible.”

    Marketers are confused on how to “advertise” to Millennials because the generation is not like their parents. They grew up with the internet, free content, social media, ad blockers and fast forwarding through commercials. “How do we help a struggling brand that was born before the internet existed, adapt to this new economy?”, asked Sanjay Nazerali in a blog post. Nazerali is the London based Global Chief Strategy Officer of the Dentsu Aegis Network. “One answer is to make marketing useful. Endless studies of so-called Millennials show that consumers expect brands to make a contribution to their lives. In this context, a brand could try to create a useful service, rather than an ad, to drive its marketing. In doing so, trust becomes less elusive: we’re not asking consumers to have faith in us, we’re asking them simply to experience our utility.”

    Millennials see themselves as very different from previous generations, with many thinking they can change the world, and marketers should pay attention to this perception. “We are not a generation of suits and ties, but rather creators and entrepreneurs,” said Page Williams, who is a Senior Manager of Member Marketing & Communications, Social Media at LinkedIn. When asked which brand is killing it with Millennials she noted that Nike is “coming out strong with their women’s apparel line and global strategy and with the launch of their first YouTube series, they are reimagining how to reach this audience in a way that aligns with the audience’s lifestyle.”

    According to the Millennial Playbook study, by 2020, Millennials (18-34) will make up 50% of the workforce… and they are working now too. Over 2.7 million are working in sales, 2 million are software developers, and over 800,000 are entrepreneurs owning their own businesses.

    Screen Shot 2016-07-18 at 10.57.01 AM

    Millennials switch jobs more than any previous generation. LinkedIn surveyed 5,000+ Millennials across the world to find out how and why Millennials switch jobs and the number one reason Millennials change jobs “is to advance their careers (67%), followed by compensation (60%) and the desire for more challenging work and roles that are a better fit for their skills and interests (51%).”

    “Pick a fast-growing market that you’re excited about and go work for the smartest people that you can find in that market,” said Jon Lombardo, Agency Team, Creative and Brand Strategy Lead at LinkedIn. “You will benefit by learning from leading thinkers, you will build a valuable long-term network, and you will be positioned for a career of growth in a strong market.”

    The study concludes that the top-performing Millennials are Social Millennials. “Your personal brand is your responsibility,” noted Mel Carson, CEO & Principal Strategy Consultant at Delightful Communications, who was interviewed for the study. “Never before has there been more of an opportunity to use technology, social media, and common sense to tell your professional story, stand up, and stand out in an increasingly crowded digital space.”

    Alex Mann, Digital Strategist at Tweak, advises Millennials to be authentic, helpful and relevant when posting on social media as a personal growth and career advancement strategy. “That can be said for a soda as much as it can be for a human being,” he says.

  • How To Build Your YouTube Audience, From A Gamers Perspective

    How To Build Your YouTube Audience, From A Gamers Perspective

    YouTube is arguably the most disruptive marketing platform of this decade. Yes, it’s been around since 2005, but only in the last few years is it starting to impact Madison Avenue marketing campaigns. Companies are using YouTube to put their brands in front of hard-to-reach niche viewers and are also finding ways to creatively make their own videos to spread their marketing message and enhance their image.

    If you are the marketing director of a Fortune 2000 company or are an entrepreneur starting a small business you should dive into YouTube and video in general and learn how it can be an effective marketing tool for you or your brand.

    Recently, some video gamers on the YouTube platform and part of the Youtube Creator Academy made a short video offering some advice on how to build a unique audience. This is from gamers perspective, but I think you will find the tips useful no matter what industry you are in.

    “I built a community by being a really family friendly channel,” said Zach Letter of Aviator Gaming. “I do mostly story based content in Minecraft. I like to consider my channel the soap opera of the Minecraft world so that kids come to watch an in-depth story that has some drama, has some romance and has that tension they deal with everyday at school or in their real life. I think that is how I built such a tight
    -nit community that loves my scripting, loves my role play but also loves me.”

    Letter commented, “When I try to engage my audience I use a lot of the YouTube tools but I also use parts of my voice. I will try to engage them for likes and comments, just to see where they’re at in a certain series.” For instance Letter might ask, “What do you thinks going to happen next in the plot?” “That actually inspires me to write certain things in the script. If a lot of people want this certain thing to happen I might go back in and change the script and change up the episode. I think it’s alway smart to engage comments especially when it’s related to your content because it allows you to tailor content that your viewers actually want to see.”

    “Whether it’s submissions on social media or in the comments sections they let me know that, hey, we really want to play this game, or hey, try out this game that’s coming out,” commented Garrett Sutton of JoblessGarrett. “Staying up on the trends and hype trains in regards to new releases of games really helps a child’s world as well.”

    “For us it’s hard, because our main body of the episodes are very heavily scripted, but we use the intro paragraphs, we use the end cards as ways to actually communicate with the fans.” Matthew Patrick of The Game Theorists said. “People have been asking for us to cover films, TV and anime for a really long time, so Film Theory, the Channel, made a lot of sense. Hey, it would be really cool to see you play games and see what you do in real life, so the live stream happened.”

    Patrick added, “First off the way they behave on camera will really dictate the way their fans behave. If you are responding to haters all the time those are going to tend to filter up in the comments, whereas if you are responding to that thoughtful comment, it shows that you as a creator is active in that community and is someone who is listening and is excited to engage.”

    Check out the full video below:

  • Twitter: New Timeline Should Benefit Businesses

    Twitter: New Timeline Should Benefit Businesses

    On Wednesday, Twitter confirmed reports of a new algorithmic timeline, but stressed that to enable it, users have to do so themselves in settings. In other words, the sky hasn’t fallen as many Twitter users would have had us all believe over the weekend.

    If a user does enable the functionality, the tweets Twitter thinks they will care about most will appear at the top of the timeline (still recent and in reverse chronological order). The rest of the tweets will appear underneath like usual. Users can also pull-to-refresh at any time to see new tweets at the top like normal.

    According to the company, people who had early access to this version of Twitter have tended to retweet and tweet more.

    Twitter says the new timeline is an improvement for consumers as well as for businesses and brands. In a separate announcement, the company talked up the brand implications. In that, product marketing manager Eric Farkas writes:

    Brands that create quality content have always performed well on Twitter. With this update, whether it comes from an SMB, large brand, consumer, or athlete you follow, the best content shines through. We’ve noticed in our early experiments that people who have this experience turned on Tweet and Retweet more on Twitter — and we believe this means that brands can reach a more engaged potential audience. Throughout our tests, we also saw an increase in engagement for brands’ organic Tweets and an increase in engagement for Tweets about live events.

    Promoted Tweets and Promoted Accounts will work the same way as always, and are not affected by this change. Brands will still have access to the same suite of creative, measurement, and targeting tools to make sure theirs ads display to the right people, at just the right moment.

    Farakas shares comments from several business executives who have found the new approach helpful. He also points to a set of best practices for Twitter content strategy and a help center article about the new Timeline experience.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Facebook Just Gave Pages a Path to Better Visibility

    For all intents and purposes, Facebook just gave users more control over what they see in the news feed than ever before. And with it, a pathway (albeit a tough one) for pages to reclaim some post visibility.

    For weeks now, Facebook’s been testing a feature that lets users pick and choose which friends and pages they most definitely want to see when they open up the news feed. Today, Facebook formally announced these updated controls, allowing users to prioritize who they see first at the top of their news feeds.

    “News Feed is a personalized stream of stories that you build from the people and Pages you’ve connected to on Facebook. The goal of News Feed is to show you the stories that matter most to you. To do this, we use ranking to order stories based on how interesting we believe they are to you: specifically, whom you tend to interact with, and what kinds of content you tend to like and comment on,” says Product Manager Jacob Frantz.

    “We’re always working to improve and personalize your News Feed experience. We know that ultimately you’re the only one who truly knows what is most meaningful to you and that is why we want to give you more ways to control what you see. Last year we announced some new ways to control what you see in News Feed. Today we are announcing even better tools for you to actively shape and improve the experience. We’ve redesigned and expanded Facebook’s News Feed Preferences to give you more control.”

    Have you been able to regain some reach as of late? Do you think pages can convince users to put them in their “see first” list? Let us know in the comments.

    That control comes in the form selecting which friends and pages you want to see before all others at the top of your news feed. If you go to your news feed preferences inside settings, you’ll see the option to “prioritize who to see first.” There, you can star both people and pages. From then on, you’ll see their new posts at the very top of your news feed when you open up Facebook. They’ll have a star next to them.

    Screen Shot 2015-07-09 at 9.08.50 AM

    The regular, algorithmically-driven news feed will pick back up once all the starred posts are exhausted.

    Facebook, always protective of its algorithm that takes into account likes, comments, and other interactions to show you what it thinks you want to see, is basically letting you bypass it.

    This is good news for users, and even better news for brands.

    – – – – – – – – – – –

    Facebook can’t show you everything from every friend and page you follow. Anyone with a page knows that despite recent reports of a turnaround, overall Facebook’s organic reach has plummeted over the past year or so. For brands, competition for room in the crowded news feed is at an all-time high. Pages are lucky if they’re seeing post visibility in the teen%.

    Facebook does not filter posts from friends, however, and all you have to do to see every single thing every single friend posts is to scroll down far enough. Of course, that’s not really feasible, but at least the posts are there, on the news feed, if you really wanted to scroll forever.

    For pages, this isn’t the case. And we all know that as a page, posting can often feel like blowing smoke at a campfire.

    But this new feature lets you tell Facebook that you never, under any circumstances, want to miss a post by a specific person or page.

    This could be excellent news for pages, which continue to suffer with visibility. Recently, Facebook announced a tweak to News Feed that would show users more content from friends, and even less from pages. It’s hard out there for a page. If pages can convince users to put them in their “see first” lists, then they’ve found the Facebook holy grail – 100% visibility in someone’s news feed.

    Expect the please add us to your see first lists so you never miss a post pleas to start pouring out from pages. Users are limited to 30 friends or pages in their “see first” section, so it’s hyper-competitive. But if pages have the love of their Facebook fans and churn out content they actually can’t stand to miss, then it’s possible for pages to ensure their posts are at least seen.

    – – – – – – – – – – –

    So, why is Facebook doing this?

    When you think about it, Facebook is giving users a way to avoid all the stuff they don’t really want to see – and of course that includes ads. Let’s say a Facebook user only really cared about a handful of people and pages – everything else is just noise to them. This new feature lets them sign on, check out the only stuff they really want to see, and sign off.

    “It sounds counterintuitive, but the worse we do on rankings, the more we make people try and scroll through, the more likely they are to just go away,” a Facebook spokesperson told Re/code. “If we show you the stuff you really really want first, you’ll come back more often.”

    So, Facebook’s theory is that if you get to see what you want in news feed, you’l like Facebook more. And if you like Facebook more, you’ll get on Facebook more.

    And if you’re thinking that Facebook is going to use this against users, and target ads based on who they prioritize – Facebook says that’s not the case.

    – – – – – – – – – – –

    Motivations aside, this is all pretty good news for users and pages. The new set of news feed preferences also includes a “discover new pages” tool.

    “Helping you find new Pages to follow can help you connect with publishers, artists and businesses you might be interested in. Based on the types of Pages you’ve liked in the past, you can discover new Pages in order to get more of the stories you care about,” says Facebook.

    Screen Shot 2015-07-09 at 10.33.17 AM

    And there’s also a tool for “reconnecting” with friends and pages users unfollowed.

    Screen Shot 2015-07-09 at 10.32.26 AM

    Users should see all of these new options on iOS, and Facebook says it’s coming to desktop and Android soon. For pages, this is a tough way to try to regain reach, as it involves users actively deciding they want to put you in their favorites. But it’s something. And if you’re truly awesome, then why wouldn’t someone want to put you on their “see first” list?

    Do you think this new feature benefits pages? How do you plan to utilize it? Let us know in the comments.

  • Spotify Lets Brands Tailor Ads Based on Your Mood with New Playlist Targeting

    Spotify Lets Brands Tailor Ads Based on Your Mood with New Playlist Targeting

    Spotify’s ad offerings for brands have included audience targeting for some time – based on age, gender, location, platform, and genre preferences. Now, Spotify’s turning to playlists to unlock users’ current moods, so advertisers can know if users are in chill mode or turn-up mode.

    The company has just announced playlist targeting for brands, set to kick off May 1.

    “Music is an integral part of life, day in and day out,” said Jeff Levick, Chief Revenue Officer, Spotify. “Our new targeting solutions based on rich behavioral insights combined with our global footprint in 58 markets give brands unprecedented ways to reach streaming consumers.”

    Spotify is leveraging all of its playlist data – based on more than 1.5 billion playlists – to provide advertisers with a glimpse into a user’s mood.

    “We leverage first-party data to identify user-generated and Spotify-curated playlists aligned with popular activities and moods. We create audience segments by identifying users that listen frequently to playlists in each category. We refresh segments daily based on new playlists, new users, and overall streaming activity,” says Spotify.

    Out of the gate, brands will be able to reach users based on a handful of activities and moods, signaled by playlists. These include workout, party, focus, commute, relax, travel, dining, and romance.

    So, a coffee brand could play an ad to a user on his/her way to work, or a cruise line could play an ad for someone in the “travel” mood.

    According to Ad Age, Spotify has been testing playlist targeting for a few months with eight brand partners.

    “This is not something that’s just randomly thrown out there. It’s a strategic evolution of the Spotify ads business going back a year and a half ago with the mobile licenses,” said Spotify’s VP-North America advertising and partnerships Brian Benedik.

    Playlist targeting will be available for brands at the start of next month, targeted to Spotify’s free-tier users. Earlier this week, Spotify began running a “tweet the beat” promotion, which basically amounts to an ad for all users – even those paying for premium.

    Image via Spotify

  • Facebook’s Organic Reach Murder Is Sending Brands to Instagram in Droves – But Are They Following a Sirens’ Song?

    At this point, brands probably feel like it would be more effective to don dinosaur costumes and shout on the street corner than to post stuff to Facebook. Brands’ organic reach has been murdered by the social network – a devastating blow almost two years ago and small cuts ever since. For those who refuse to pay-to-play, Facebook certainly feels like an echo chamber.

    Most of the time you’re lucky if ten – maybe 15 – percent of your Facebook followers see your posts. Unless you pay to promote them of course, but even then results can vary.

    Instagram, at least for the time being, offers brands a respite from this. If you’re a brand and you post a photo to Instagram, there’s a 100% chance that it’ll at least appear in your followers’ feeds. Whether or not they’ll engage is another story and completely up to how effective you can be – but at least your post has a fighting chance.

    One hundred precent organic reach is a beautiful thing – but in the end it could turn out to be a sirens’ song.

    Research firm L2 has a new report out about Instagram’s fast-paced growth among brands.

    “Facebook’s News Feed algorithm restricts the organic reach of content on the platform, and is particularly punishing for brands with large followings (500k+),” says L2 in its Instagram Intelligence Report. In contrast, Instagram communities defy gravity, with no negative correlation between a brand’s follower count and engagement rate.”

    L2 looked at the top 250 brands and found post frequency on Instagram is up 23 percent since the beginning of 2014.

    On average, brands post 9.3 times per week on Instagram, up from 7.5 times a week a year ago. On the other hand, brands are posting to Facebook less and less. Over the same period, average posts a week feel from 11.1 to 8.8.

    Plus, Instagram is growing rapidly. Brands’ follower counts grew 26 percent overall last year.

    A growing user base plus unlimited reach is enough to make any marketer swoon.

    Of course, there could be a storm on the horizon.

    “Enamored by 100 percent organic reach, brands have dialed up efforts on Instagram – post frequency has grown 23 percent over the last five quarters. Unlike the pay-to-play ethos of Facebook, pure sweat (namely, content testing and optimization) still drives meaningful results on Instagram. For brands, these are the salad days – motivated to both preserve user experience and create scarcity value, Instagram has kept advertising on the platform to a minimum,” says L2.

    And that’s true. Instagram has been purposefully cautious about crowding everyone’s feeds with sponsored posts. This gives brands’ regular, non-promoted content more visibility. When Instagram ramps up the paid ads efforts, and it’s inevitable, brands will be competing for eyes more than they’re used to doing.

    And then there’s the other issue – the one that could really hurt brands’ reach on Instagram. Algorithmic interference.

    Facebook owns Instagram, and you have to imagine that it’s at least a possibility that the company will adopt a similar feed strategy with Instagram as it’s done with Facebook – limit organic reach to force brands to buy ads.

    L2 agrees, and warns of this very thing:

    “Brands should expect that organic reach will be supplanted by pay-to-play (see: Facebook) on Instagram, and ensure the assets and skills being erected will stand when muscle (money) replaces sweat.”

    Ultimately, Instagram’s 100 percent organic reach and booming user growth could be a sirens’ song for brands. A long time ago, brand pages got used to relying on Facebook traffic and engagement – as it was free and easy. Then, Facebook pulled the rug out. Now that brands are heading to Instagram and beginning to rely on the visibility and high engagement rates is provides, could the same thing happen?

  • Cinemagraphs Could Be the Next Big Thing in Facebook Advertising

    Facebook, a company that makes its money selling ad space, has the same problem that everyone who deals in advertising has. How do I capture the consumer’s attention? Or, more aptly put, how do I make people stop and give a damn – if just briefly?

    Advertising on Facebook has evolved over the years to include the rather in-your-face tactic that’s currently being employed – autoplay, in-feed videos. First, there were sponsored photo posts – which were static. Then, there were videos – which move about at an often startling pace.

    It’s the kind of jarring assault that makes the average user want to scroll, and scroll away as fast as they can.

    But could there be another type of in-feed ad, one that moves enough to capture the eye but is subtle and – dare I say – pleasing? Apparently, Facebook is putting its weight behind the cinemagraph.

    You’ve likely seen cinemagraphs floating around the internet for years now. Basically, cinemagraphs are still photographs that feature a very small, controlled element of movement from one aspect of the frame. Like this:

    The technique of creating cinemagraphs has been around for some time, but the term was coined (and trademarked) by photographers Jamie Beck and Kevin Burg in 2011.

    And apparently, that’s who many high-profile companies are tapping to create their cinemagraphs. Adweek reports that Burg and Beck have been in talks with Facebook about cinemagraphs, and that Burg and Beck have “had all kinds of new inquiries [from brands].”

    Here’s what a cinemagraph ad could look like on Facebook. This is a cinemagraph that Burg and Beck’s Ann Street Studio created for Ecco Domani wine:

    Much more aesthetically pleasing than an autoplay ad, you have to admit.

    “You’re going to start seeing a ton of these on Facebook,” an advertising executive told Adweek. They say they know this because they’ve seen “a guide produced by Facebook for marketers called ‘Hacking Facebook Autoplay.’”

    Facebook’s autoplay feature in the News Feed is a powerful one for marketers – but right now it’s only being used bluntly. Something like a cinemagraph could make use of the autoplay feature and still keep users from scrolling by in abject horror.

    Images via Johan Blomstrom, Wikimedia Commons, Ann Street Studio

  • Facebook: Video Is Taking Over, Up 75% in the Last Year

    Facebook says the video party is in full swing and content creators (users, but more importantly – brands) should come join said party. Or if they’re already at the party, they should learn how to party harder.

    We already know that Facebook serves, on average, over a billion video views per day – almost one per user. Here are some more impressive stats about the growth of video on Facebook that the company has just dropped:

    We’re increasingly seeing a shift towards visual content on Facebook, especially with video. In just one year, the number of video posts per person has increased 75% globally and 94% in the US. And with people creating, posting and interacting with more videos on Facebook, the composition of News Feed is changing. Globally, the amount of video from people and brands in News Feed has increased 3.6x year-over-year.

    Since June 2014, Facebook has averaged more than 1 billion video views every day. On average, more than 50% of people who come back to Facebook every day in the US watch at least one video daily and 76% of people in the US who use Facebook say they tend to discover the videos they watch on Facebook.

    Translation: video is the future of Facebook engagement, and you need to get on it.

    Facebook is currently looking to rival video services like YouTube, and it knows it has the user base to do so. Facebook wants you to post your original videos on its site, and it wants brands to do the same.

    Facebook also knows that much of its big opportunity in the advertising arena comes from in-feed videos ads. That’s why the company introduced autoplay videos in the news feed back in 2013.

    But autoplay can only do half the work for users and brands looking to grab people’s attention.

    “Shorter, timely video content tends to do well in News Feed. 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,” says Facebook. “Whether you’re a journalist in the field or a public figure sharing a part of your life, post raw videos that are compelling, shareable, clips that no one else will have.”

    Facebook would like you to know that its video sector is doing great, and that it’s worth your time to create videos specifically for your Facebook audience. You biting?

    Image via Facebook

  • Instagram Destroys Twitter in Brand Engagement, Says Report

    Brands looking to cultivate a robust social media following should be putting a lot of their time into Instagram, according to recent data.

    Socialbakers says that brand engagement on Instagram is blowing Twitter out of the water. In fact, the average engagement per post for the top 25 most-engaged brands in 50 times greater on Instagram than it is on Twitter.

    “Instagram gives brands an outlet for creative storytelling and engagement with tight communities of people who share a passion for the the brands’ values,” says Socialbakers.

    In other words, if you’re likely to follow a company on Instagram, it’s more likely that you “share its values” and will therefore be more apt to participate with the company.

    This isn’t the first time that we’ve seen data to prove that engagement on Instagram soars above the rest. Earlier this year, a Forrester study showed that brands saw 58 times more engagement on Instagram than they did on Facebook and a whopping 120 times more than on Twitter.

    Instagram recently topped 300 million monthly active users, which puts it barely ahead of Twitter. Though some might not really care about this metric, it’s a pretty big deal to advertisers. More eyes plus more engagement per eye? That’s a big check mark in the Instagram column.

  • CNN Talking Heads Use Product-Placed Surface Tablets As iPad Stands

    Once again, Microsoft is having a hard time controlling the variables of its product placement.

    You may have been watching CNN’s election coverage last night. If so, you may have seen a bunch of shiny, new Microsoft Surface Pro 3 tablets resting upright in front of the various commentators.

    What you may not have seen were the iPads, which the talking heads ‘hid’ behind the Surface tablets.

    Sneaking around your personal iPad by using the product-placed tablet as a shield is one thing. But using it as a stand? That’s some cold-ass shit right there.

    This sort of thing is becoming a trend. As they do with CNN, Microsoft also has a deal in place with the NFL to exclusively use the new Surface tablets on the sidelines during games and on the commentators’ table during, well, commentating. Unfortunately, things haven’t gone 100 percent according to plan, as Microsoft has had a hard time getting announcers to stop calling them iPads.

    Image via @adamUCF, Twitter

  • Colin Kaepernick Fined for Wearing Beats Headphones

    It looks like we have our first victim of the NFL’s Beats by Dre headphones ban.

    The NFL has fined San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick $10,000 for donning a pair of pink Beats headphones at his post-game press conference on Sunday.

    Why the fine? Well, the NFL recently partnered up with Bose for a sponsorship deal. On the heels os that, the league banned players from wearing Beats by Dre (and other branded) headphones on the field before the opening kickoff through the end of the game. Players are also banned from sporting Beats during TV interviews, press conferences, and locker room interviews conducted within a 90-minute window following the conclusion of the game.

    In a statement, the NFL made a point to discuss broad league policies against “branded exposure”, instead of focusing on the Beats sponsorship deal.

    “The NFL has longstanding policies that prohibit branded exposure on-field or during interviews unless authorized by the league. These policies date back to the early 1990s and continue today. They are the NFL’s policies – not one of the league’s sponsors, Bose in this case. Bose is not involved in the enforcement of our policies.”

    Kaepernick has had a deal with Beats for some time now. You may remember that commercial that played every single second of every single day. Also, Beats and Kaepernick have a healthy social media partnership.

    A $10,000 fine is unlikely to discourage Kaepernick, or anyone else for the matter, from wearing brands that are paying them big bucks to do so. It’s not like Kaepernick is going to have to pay the fine himself or anything.

    Image via Paul Gutierrez, Twitter

  • NFL Announcers Keep Calling Microsoft’s Product-Placed Surface Tablets ‘iPads’

    NFL Announcers Keep Calling Microsoft’s Product-Placed Surface Tablets ‘iPads’

    Oftentimes, a brand can become so ubiquitous that people stop thinking of it as a brand of a specific product, and instead begin to associate the brand as inherent to said specific product. You probably do it all the time – sometimes without noticing.

    For instance, in the south, it’s common to call any soft drink a “Coke”. Not just Coca-Cola, but anything from a Diet Pepsi to a Dr. Pepper – hey can you grab me a coke?

    How about Kleenex? I’m sure most people simply refer to all tissues as “Kleenex”. The brand has become synonymous with those soft tissues you use to blow your nose. The list of these brand takeovers goes on and on. Hey, can you Xerox this for me? Turn off that damn Nintendo!

    Another brand that’s reached this status? The iPad. To many people, all tablets are iPads, and this is becoming painfully (and hilariously) obvious in the context of the NFL.

    Last May, Microsoft signed a $400 million deal with the National Football League, and part of that deal included making the Microsoft Surface tablet (Microsoft’s iPad) the official tablet of the most popular sport in America. You’ve probably seen the results of this deal – coaches and players looking at tablets on the sidelines instead of old-fashioned playbooks. As part of the deal, NFL teams are now utilizing Microsoft’s Surface in reviewing on-field actions and formulating strategy.

    Good product placement, right?

    Well, in theory.

    That’s an NFL announcer twice referring the the Surface tablet as an “iPad.” Whoops.

    Business Insider reports that this is not a singular screwup – but an alarming trend (if you’re Microsoft).

    From BI:

    In a separate incident, Drew Brees of the New Orleans Saints was spotted by Fox commentator John Lynch using a Surface on the sideline. Lynch remarked that Brees was “not watching movies on his iPad.”

    Lynch did seem to realize his mistake when he later noted that players now have “iPad-like tools” at their disposal. However, at no time during the discussion was Microsoft or the Surface mentioned by name.

    It appears that Microsoft needs to have a talk with the NFL and the NFL needs to, in turn, have a talk with its broadcast partners and their announcers. Otherwise, Microsoft spent a pretty penny to give Apple a wonderful product placement deal.

    Image via Vine, screenshot

  • Hyperlapse Marketing Is Obviously Already Happening

    Whenever a new social media experience catches the media’s attention, marketers are usually among the first to take note and utilize it.

    On Tuesday, Facebook’s Instagram announced the launch of Hyperlapse, a new iOS app designed to let users create high-quality time lapse videos even while in motion.

    Introducing Hyperlapse from Instagram from Instagram on Vimeo.

    On Wednesday, Re/code is pointing us to a bunch of examples of brands that have already taken advantage. Below, find videos from Mountain Dew, Milkbone, Bud Light, Sonic, and Arizona Tea.

    The Tonight Show has also gotten in on the fun.

    Instagram did not say when an Android version might be available. You can learn more about how to use the iOS app here.

    As far as Instagram marketing goes, the company debuted a new ad analytics suite for brands last week.

    Image via Instagram

  • Instagram Debuts Ad Analytics Suite for Brands

    Instagram Debuts Ad Analytics Suite for Brands

    By some accounts, brands are seeing more engagement from their instagram ads than they are from other social networks like Twitter and Facebook. Instagram, which only began allowing ads less than a year ago, is taking things slow. Your Instagram feed hasn’t been inundated with ads yet because there simply aren’t that many ad partners yet. It appears as if Instagram really wants to avoid a backlash.

    But there are some ads on Instagram, and brands need to know how they’re performing. With that in mind, instagram has just announced a new suit of tools for brands to track advertising performance across the network.

    It’s a three-pronged approach to ad analytics. Instagram highlights Account Insights, which will “allow businesses to see how they’re increasing brand awareness on Instagram through impressions, reach, and engagement”; Ad insights, which will “show the performance of paid campaigns with brand analytics (impressions, reach, and frequency) for each individual ad delivered to the target audience”; and Ad Staging, which “allows advertisers and their creative teams to preview, save, and collaborate on ad creative for upcoming campaigns.”

    All current Instagram advertisers now have access to these tools, and Instagram says their feedback will help fine-tine the product before it goes wide to more brands “later this year.”

    According to Instagram, this was an oft-demanded feature.

    Instagram is getting more and more serious about ads, even though they’re taking it quite slowly. We’re still waiting for the global launch of the ad product, but Instagram recently made a big personnel move by appointing Facebook Regional Director James Quarles to the newly-created position of Global Head of Business and Brand Development at Instagram.

    Image via Instagram

  • Brands Get Way To See When They Appear On Tumblr

    Ditto Labs announced on Tuesday that it has formed a firehose partnership with Tumblr, which will enable brands to find their logos and products within images shared on Tumblr. Considering that there are over 120 million posts to Tumblr on a daily basis, this could provide a good opportunity for companies to get a better feel for what their Tumblr presence is truly like.

    Tumblr is enabling its partners to utilize the capability.

    Tumblr Head of Business Development T.R. Newcomb says, “Tumblr is a highly visual platform that encourages graphical storytelling. Adding the unique layer of visual analytics from Ditto Labs allows our brand partners to discover much deeper insights and competitive intelligence into the narratives that play out around their brands each day on Tumblr.”

    Ditto Labs CEO David Rose said, “Photo-listening provides incredible insight into how people make brands a part of their everyday lives,. No other technology can read brand information inside of pictures at social-scale. It’s a must-have for companies looking to understand how to engage with fans and consumers in a photo-centric world.”

    According to Mashable, Newcomb says Tumblr isn’t planning to do anything ad-related with this yet, but brands might be able to gain some insights from about their brands and apply them to organic strategies.

    Read our interview with Curalate’s CEO for more on how brands can get better at visual social media like the kind of thing you’re likely to find on Tumblr.

    Ditto Labs is offering its customers photo analytics for Tumblr effective immediately. It also provides an API for social media “listening” platforms.

    According to data from comScore, Tumblr users spend an average of 16 minutes per session on the service.

    Image via Tumblr

  • 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.