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  • Instagram To Improve Ads, Open Them Up To Businesses Of All Sizes

    Instagram To Improve Ads, Open Them Up To Businesses Of All Sizes

    Instagram made a big advertising announcement on Tuesday as it prepares to add new formats and targeting options, and perhaps most significantly start letting businesses of all sizes buy ads.

    Instagram first launched ad a year and a half ago on a limited basis, and has since expanded formats most recently to include carousel ads. The company says that across over 475 campaigns measured globally, ad recall from sponsored posts was 2.9x higher than Nielsen norms for online advertising.

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

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

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

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

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

    Image via Instagram

  • How To Use Twitter’s New Partner Marketplace To Find Help For Your Business

    How To Use Twitter’s New Partner Marketplace To Find Help For Your Business

    Twitter announced the launch of its new Official Partner Program, which it says will help businesses achieve better results “on Twitter and beyond”.

    What products do you currently use to get more out of Twitter? Let us know in the comments.

    Twitter already had its Twitter Certified Program, which it launched back in 2012. The goal of that was to make it easier for businesses to find the right tools in three categories: engagement, analytics, and data resellers. Earlier this year, the company launched the Twitter Marketing Platform Partner Program. The new Official Partner Program marries the two to present partners officially recognized by the company for their “high quality products” or “expert-level services and proven success on Twitter”.

    To go along with the program, there’s a new Twitter Partner Marketplace, where businesses can find helpful products and services based on specific goals, location, and industry.

    You can indicate that you need help in one of the following categories: Agency Services, Consulting Services, Discovering Content for News, Displaying Content Publicly, Listening to Consumer Insights, Managing Ads, Managing Customer Care, Managing Mobile Ads, Managing My Social Presence, Measuring Ads, Measuring Mobile Ads, Measuring Social Efforts, Monitoring Social Trends, Optimizing Creative Ad Performance, or Targeting Ads.

    Once you hit search, you’ll be presented with partner results that meet your criteria.

    From there, you can view a partner’s profile and/or contact them.

    Twitter’s official partners are recognized for what they do best across eight competencies, says Twitter. These include: analytics, engagement, content curation and display, consulting and agency services, ad tech, audience data provider, audience on-boarding, and ad measurement.

    Twitter says they can help marketers, advertisers, and brands increase campaign performance, gain deep insight, market more efficiently by helping them scale, manage, and measure campaign performance to achieve objectives, measure brand performance, identify marketing and consumer insights, manage their social presence, discover and display engaging content, and oversee customer care.

    Twitter also announced hat IBM is its first ever consultancy partner resulting from its previously announced enterprise data partnership.

    “This growing program, new site and new logo are just the beginning,” says Twitter’s global director of developer and platform relations Prashant Sridharan. “We’re excited to put more resources into developing Twitter’s ecosystem for years to come. Many partners have seen tremendous success and value in working with Twitter and being a partner.”

    “While only the highest-quality solutions are admitted to the program, we’re always looking for new and innovative products and services,” Sridharan adds.

    Those with products they think would be a good fit for Twitter Official Partner Program can find out if they’re eligible and applying here.

    Have you explored the new marketplace yet? Let us know what you think.

    Images via Twitter

  • DoubleClick Search Gets App Install Ads

    DoubleClick Search Gets App Install Ads

    Google announced app install ads for DoubleClick Search on Thursday – one of the many announcements from the company as it hosts its annual Google I/O developers conference.

    Starting immediately, DoubleClick Search will support AdWords app install search ads that run on Google.com and soon on the Google Play Store. Advertisers will be able to incorporate app distribution into their search marketing campaigns across Android and iOS in order to drive sales and loyalty, Google says.

    “In today’s constantly connected world, people are moving seamlessly between screens, sites and apps,” the company says. “To be effective, marketers must connect consumers with relevant content in the moments they are looking.”

    Google is launching a new campaign set-up flow for mobile app promotion. Here’s that as described by Google:

    • Campaign and ad creation
      • Create AdWords mobile app install campaigns for search ads directly in DoubleClick Search, including bulksheet support
      • Develop app install ads in DoubleClick Search using your app URL and your app icon in the Google Play and Apple App Stores
    • Targeting
      • Add keywords to target users looking for apps like yours on Google.com and Google Play1
      • Show ads on phones and tablets (you can optionally exclude tablets), only to users who do not currently have your app installed
    • Conversion tracking across mobile platforms
      • Measure success with tracking that works on both Android and iOS
      • Utilize simple, “SDK-less” conversion tracking on Android that doesn’t require modifying your app
      • Use Floodlight activities for conversion tracking on iOS (coming soon)
    • Bid optimization
      • Maximize the total number of app installs with automated bidding
      • Bid based on your unique objectives, on a CPC or CPA basis

    Google gave developers a bunch of new tools for promoting, measuring, and monetizing apps this week. Read this for some of what has become available.

    In addition to all of that, they announced a new app invite toolkit aimed at driving referrals.

  • eBay Promoted Listings: Only Pay For Clicks That Result In Sales

    eBay Promoted Listings: Only Pay For Clicks That Result In Sales

    eBay announced the launch of new Promoted Listing ads, which enable advertisers to pay only for clicks that result in an item being purchased.

    The company says you can use the ads to boost item visibility, start a campaign at any time, and pay only when your item sells. It promises quick and easy setup, advertiser control, detailed reporting, and clear billing. You can choose the listings you want to promote, set your ad rates, and launch your campaign quickly and easily. You can start, stop, or change a campaign at any time, making it ideal for seasonal items, new listings, and best sellers, as eBay notes. They provide “tons” of stats to show how campaigns are performing and for optimization purposes.

    “With promoted listings, you can increase the likelihood of a sale by putting your best merchandise in front of buyers who are actively searching and shopping,” the company says. “Your ads may appear in prominent locations on eBay based on several factors, including your chosen ad rate and how relevant the item is to a buyer’s search.”

    Fees appear on your invoice. You choose how much you’re willing to pay to promote your items (from 1% to 20% of the sale price), and you’ll only pay your chosen rate when the buyer clicks and purchases the item.

    Jordan Sweetnam writes on the eBay for Business blog:

    What’s unique about this service is, as a seller, you only pay for advertising your listings when an item is clicked and purchased. Most other advertising services will charge you for a click, whether or not a sale takes place. This is a more efficient way to advertise and one more example of our focus on seller success.

    With promoted listings, you’ll be able to put your best-selling merchandise and seasonal must-haves in front of your customers as they are actively searching for specific items. This will give you the opportunity to boost the visibility of items and may increase the likelihood of sales.

    The ads are currently only available by invitation. You can join a waiting list from Promoted Listings here. The service is only available for items bought and sold on eBay itself, and is available on the limited basis in the US, UK, Germany, and Australia. eBay plans to expand the program later this year.

    Hat tip to Ginny Marvin

    Image via eBay

  • Google Improves Ads For Nearby Businesses

    Google Improves Ads For Nearby Businesses

    Last year, Google announced an improvement to location extensions which saw businesses with multiple locations being able to display up to three on their mobile search ads. Google has now made a new improvement, saying it will show three or four different businesses for location-related searches, such as “nearby auto repair” for example.

    Each of these units will feature click-to-call and directions, and the new format organizes information so that users can compare options and take action (like call or visit).

    Businesses with location extensions enabled are eligible to show these formats.

    “With a world of information at their fingertips, consumers want what they want, right when they want it, so it’s essential that ads are fine-tuned to be relevant to people’s contexts,” Google says in a blog post. “In addition to location extensions, there are many types of extensions in AdWords that can make your ads more useful and engaging — and they deliver, on average, a 10% increase in click-through-rate.4 Showing more than one extension on an ad tends to see even higher engagement than that.”

    “Search ads can trigger up to four extensions at the same time,” it adds. “This means your ad can show when and where a product is available at a nearby store, or show an app extension for someone on her mobile device.”

    According to the company, Google search interest in “near me” has doubled since last year with 80% coming from mobile.

    Images via Google

  • Twitter Releases New Ads Globally

    Twitter Releases New Ads Globally

    Last summer, Twitter unveiled its objective-based campaigns, reports, and pricing, which it described as a new way to optimize ad campaign performance. They enable advertisers to only pay for actions that are “aligned with” their marketing objectives. Until now, these have been in beta, but the company announced on Wednesday that they’re now available globally to all advertisers.

    The workflow recommends the best ad format to use, and includes tools like an image cropper and drag-and-drop feature to make ad creation easier. You can create a website clicks or conversions campaign, and promote a tweet with a ink or a Website Card. Reports for the campaign will display metrics deemed most relevant to your campaign’s goals.

    “It’s now simpler and easier to succeed with Twitter Ads,” says senior product manager Christine Lee. “When creating a new campaign, you can select from one of six objectives — and our customized workflow will help you choose the best ad format for your goals. For example, if you want to drive traffic to your brand’s website, you can select a website clicks or conversions campaign, which is designed to drive a higher volume of relevant URL clicks. You’ll only be charged when a user clicks on a link to your website — all other engagements, like a favorite or a Retweet, are free.”

    “You’ll never pay for actions that aren’t relevant to your goal, ensuring that you’re positioned to drive the highest possible ROI in each of your campaigns,” she adds.

    When you have a campaign running, the campaign dashboard will show your results in real time with metrics like link clicks, video views, or app installs, and the cost per result.

    The company shares success stories from eBay, Gupta Media, Tableau, and Jaguar Land Rover here.

    Image via Twitter

  • PLAs Come To YouTube With TrueView For Shopping

    PLAs Come To YouTube With TrueView For Shopping

    Google announced that it is extending its product listing ads (PLAs) to YouTube with TrueView for Shopping, its new format that lets businesses run product ads with related videos.

    It’s no wonder that Google has been encouraging marketers to create more “how to” videos. These are exactly the type of videos Google created TrueView for Shopping ads for – those that show consumers how to do something that they may need a buy a specific product in order to achieve.

    Earlier this month, Google put out a report saying that how-to searches have seen 70% growth year-over-year with over a hundred million hours of such content having already been watched in North America in 2015. People are increasingly watching these videos on mobile devices with 91% of smartphone users turning to them for ideas while completing a task.

    These searches are on the rise across all age groups, but millennials are especially likely to search YouTube for how-to videos. According to Google, 67% of them agree that they can find a YouTube video on anything they want to learn.

    The new TrueView PLAs should figure nicely into all of this.

    “Whether it’s watching a product review or learning how to bake a soufflé, we look to video in countless moments throughout to the day to help us get things done,” Google says in a blog post. “We call these micro-moments – when we reflexively turn to our devices to learn more, make a decision, or purchase a product. To connect the dots between the moment a person watches a video and the moment they decide to make a purchase, today we’re introducing a new feature called TrueView for shopping that makes it easy for viewers to get more information on your products and click to buy.”

    With these ads, businesses can showcase product details and images, and users can click and purchase from a brand or retail site from within the video ad. The option is available for TrueView in-stream video ads, and works across mobile, desktop, and tablet. 50% of views on YouTube come from mobile.

    TrueView for Shopping is built on the cards platform Google announced last month, which lets you share more info about your brand, related videos, and playlists, and lets you link to your site.

    The ads are integrated with Google Merchant Center, so you can connect campaigns with a Merchant Center feed to dynamically add products and customize ads through contextual and audience signals such as geography and demographic information.

    “Brands that have participated in our early tests of TrueView for shopping have seen strong results for driving interest and sales,” Google says. “Online home goods retailer Wayfair, for instance, saw a 3X revenue increase per impression served when compared to previous campaigns. And beauty retailer Sephora took advantage of this new ad format to drive +80% lift in consideration and +54% lift in ad recall, and an average view time of nearly two minutes.”

    The new ads will come to Google’s buying front end in the coming months, but those who wish to start using them as soon as possible can get in touch with a Google account manager to learn how to proceed.

    Images via Google

  • Pinterest Gives Businesses a Way to Get in Front of More People

    Pinterest Gives Businesses a Way to Get in Front of More People

    When it comes to advertising, Pinterest says it’s about “mapping your business goals to the steps Pinners take to plan their futures.” With that in mind, Pinterest is now offering some new types of ad solutions to “give businesses a unique way to get in front of more people” on a path to purchasing. These new advertising options were rumored to be in the works a couple of months ago.

    Sure to be more eye catching, Pinterest is debuting Cinematic Pins. Calling them “thumb-stoppers”, Pinterest says these Cinematic Pins are its “most beautiful type of Promoted Pin” yet.

    Cinematic Pins, at first glance, appear to be Pinterest’s answer to video ads on sites like Facebook and Instagram – but that’s not entirely accurate. Cinematic Pins move when a user scrolls by them, which is pretty much the opposite of a Facebook video ad, for instance, which plays when you stop on it and stops playing (audibly as well) when you start scrolling. It’s clear that Pinterest’s goal here is catch eyes with that motion in the hopes it’ll make people stop and click or repin.

    Is Pinterest part of your business plan? If so, how’s it working out? If not, do you think you’ll turn some attention to Pinterest in the near future? Let us know in the comments.

    Pinterest is starting to roll out Cinematic Pins with a handful of big-name partners like Gap Inc. (Gap, Old Navy and Banana Republic), L’Oreal USA (L’Oreal Paris, Maybelline and Garnier), Nestlé, STX Entertainment’s new movie The Gift, Target, Unilever, Visa Checkout, Walgreens and Wendy’s.

    Apparently it’s worked in testing, at least according to Pinterest.

    “Users want to feel like they’re in control, and we’ve done a bunch of user testing—users are delighted by this experience,” said Tim Kendall, Pinterest’s gm of monetization, to AdWeek. “They wind up scrolling back and forth. They love controlling the motion.”

    Pinterest is also unveiling targeting options for Promoted Pins, allowing brands to target to specific subsets of users based on interests like millennials, foodies, gardeners, and travelers.

    These new ad options – Cinematic Pins and audience targeting – are what Pinterest is describing as its “Awareness” tier of a three-pronged approach to advertising.

    As you can see on level two, Pinterest is rolling out a new Cost-per-engagement model.

    To know if your audience thinks your content is save-worthy, it’s best to measure their engagement through repins, closeups and clicks. In addition to our existing premium CPM and CPC Promoted Pins, we’re now rolling out a cost-per-engagement (CPE) model that’ll help you track future intent.

    Also, if you spend enough on Promoted Pins, Pinterest will help you craft them with a new “Pin Factory”.:

    We want you to have a great start with Promoted Pins, which is why we’re offering a few new services that make it easier to create great, promotable content. The Pin Factory is our Pin creative studio for brands. For a minimum spend, we’ll create beautiful, helpful Pin images and descriptions that get you results.

    Pinterest has been taking steps as of late to look better to businesses. Last month, Pinterest announced its new Marketing Developer Partners (MDP).

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

    This program is designed to make it easier for marketers to find content to pin, and ultimately to pin said content in the best way possible.

    The company also just launched its Developers Platform, a suite of APIs for building apps and integrations that Pinterest says will “bring pins to life.”

    “The Platform will enable developers to tap into the Pinterest interest graph of more than 50 billion projects, places and products to build and grow their apps,” Pinterest spokesperson told WebProNews at the time. “With the new APIs, developers will be able to reach millions of Pinners with apps that make Pins actionable and help people take their ideas offline.

    With these new options for advertising and with Pinterest making steps to make its platform more efficient for marketers and users alike, it’s just another reason why businesses shouldn’t ignore the power of Pinterest.

    The other reason? Traffic.

    Here are some recently-shared stats from Pinterest:

    The stats:

    • 50 billion Pins collected by people onto more than 1 billion boards
    • 80% of traffic comes from mobile
    • Each year, Pinterest serves more than 1.5 trillion recommendations
    • Recipes: Over 1.7 billion recipe Pins
    • Shopping: Every day nearly 2 million people Pin product rich Pins
    • Articles: More than 14 million articles are Pinned each day
    • ⅔ of all the content people Pin is from a business’ website

    If you’re a business, the last few points here should make you take notice – two million product pins daily and the fact that two-thirds of all content is from a business website. Hard to argue with that proportion.

    Are you utilizing Pinterest to its full potential? Let us know in the comments.

    Image via Pinterest

  • Here’s What The New AdWords Editor Does

    Here’s What The New AdWords Editor Does

    Google announced the launch of an update to its latest version of AdWords Editor. Version 11.0 was released last year, and now 11.1 is available. You can upgrade here.

    The latest update includes full support for labels, upgraded URLs, call-only ads, ads in mobile apps, etc.

    With full label support, advertisers can now create, edit, or delete labels using the Labels tab under the Shared library. You can assign or remove labels to and from campaigns, ad groups, keywords, and ads in their respective data views. You’ll also be able to filter views using labels and export/import account changes related to them.

    “Earlier this year, we introduced Upgraded URLs to help you save time when managing URL tracking information, reduce how often Google crawls your website, and provide access to new ValueTrack and custom tracking parameters,” says product manager Geoff Menegay. “To help you upgrade to the new system by July 1st, we’ve added support for Upgraded URLs. You can now upgrade your destination URLs using AdWords Editor, and once you’ve upgraded, manage your final URLs and tracking templates at scale. You can learn more about how to upgrade your URLs in our Help Center article.”

    The new version of AdWords editor also lets you create and manage call-only ads, which let mobile users call businesses on the phone. Google added this ad option back in February.

    “By showing ads in mobile apps, you can reach the growing number of people using mobile devices to play games, listen to music, and stay entertained,” says Menegay. “Under ‘Keywords and targeting,’ you can now choose to show your ads for certain categories of apps, including specific apps (or placements) and mobile app categories, like Games and Shopping.”

    Another new capability in AdWords editor is parental status targeting. You can add this factor in addition to gender and age in your demographic targeting across the Google Display Network. Google has also adde support for custom affinity under Audiences.

    The update also includes improvements to the search bar, more localization support, and other user interface tweaks.

    Images via Google

  • Millennial Media Guarantees 100% Viewability For In-App Ads

    Mobile ad marketplace Millennial Media announced that it will offer its clients a guarantee of 100% viewability for in-app mobile ad campaigns. This comes as the industry is “desperately” seeking guidelines for viewability. It’s a bold move for sure.

    The Media Rating Council announced last week that it has issued interim guidance for how to proceed with measuring and transacting around mobile viewability. This applies to the “Opportunity to See” an ad in a mobile web browser or a mobile app.

    READ: Here’s How To Measure Mobile Ad Viewability

    “In order to deliver on this first of its kind initiative, the company is partnering with Integral Ad Science, the only at-scale vendor that can currently measure in-app viewability,” a spokesperson for Millennial Media tells WebProNews. “The guarantee will be fulfilled by participating Millennial Media clients only being billed once their ad is verified viewable by Integral Ad Science.”

    “This move is a significant step in Millennial Media’s ongoing commitment to make digital advertising more accountable, as well as helping the industry to spearhead well defined and commonly accepted standards around viewability (by continuing to work together with partners such as Integral Ad Science, as well as the Interactive Advertising Bureau and Media Rating Council),” the spokesperson adds.

    READ: A Clearer Look At Mobile Ad Viewability

    “The mobile ad ecosystem is desperately seeking guidelines around viewability,” said Michael Barrett, President & CEO at Millennial Media and an IAB Board Member. “Today, we are choosing the highest standard possible by offering a 100% in-app viewability guarantee. We have selected Integral Ad Science as our measurement partner because they are the only at-scale vendor that can currently measure in-app viewability. We will continue to partner closely with the MRC, IAB, and the mobile ad ecosystem to define industry-wide standards around viewability. We are committed to becoming the largest mobile marketplace that provides 100% viewable, brand safe, and fraud free impressions.”

    Integral Ad Science recently completed an audit of the Millennial network, and both companies have been working with publishers on technical changes that improve viewability. It must be going well if they’re making a 100% guarantee.

    Millennial defines viewability as 100% of the ad being in view for at least one second. The guarantee applies to in-app banner ads and interstitials Additional formats may be added later.

    At first, the guarantee will only be applied to campaigns running on inventory originating in the U.S. and U.K. but a global rollout is planned for later this year. It dos not apply to inventory purchased programmatically, but Millennial is also working with Integral Ad Science to enable it in the Millennial Media Exchange.

    You can learn more about the guarantee on this FAQ page.

    RELATED:

    Should Viewability Standard Just Be A Jumping Off Point?

    Ad Viewability Contention Rages On

    Report Looks At Ad Viewability Trends, Fraud

    Image via Millennial Media

  • Is A Spotify Video Service On The Way?

    Is A Spotify Video Service On The Way?

    A Spotify video service may soon be a reality if there’s any weight to the latest reports making the rounds.

    The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Spotify is now trying to get a video service off the ground. Mike Shields and Jens Hansegard write:

    Music streaming service Spotify is laying plans to enter the hotly competitive Web video business and has been in discussions with several digital media players about potential partnerships, according to people familiar with the matter.

    The closely-held streaming service, which has shaken up the recording industry over the past few years, has been reaching out to companies that specialize in making content for YouTube to discuss both acquiring their material and co-creating original video series, said people familiar with the matter. Spotify has also reached out to some well-known traditional media companies.

    Rumors of a Spotify video service are nothing new. There were reports at least as far back as early 2013 about such a plan. Those reports had the company taking on Netflix and HBO with high quality original content.

    There is certainly a great deal of opportunity in video advertising these days, which Spotify does already offer. It introduced video ads in September:

    “Spotify Free users can watch a brand-sponsored video spot (aka a Sponsored Session) in exchange for 30 minutes of uninterrupted music,” the company explained. “Brands can also sponsor a video ad break on desktop with a Video Takeover. Both formats are delivered in a 100% viewable environment and give our brand partners 100% share of voice.”

    “Our audience is incredibly engaged so we are delivering an advertising experience that enhances their time spent on Spotify and connects them to the music and brands they love,” added Jeff Levick, Spotify’s Chief Business Officer.

    A recent study from Advertiser Perceptions and the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) found that 68% of marketers and agency execs expect their digital video ad budgets to increase over the course of the next year.

    The study was conducted based on a survey of 305 buy-side professionals, who largely expect that greater investment in digital video will come from overall rising ad budgets this year and as funds shift away from broadcast and cable TV. 67% said they anticipate their broadcast and cable TV ad spend to stay the same or decrease in the next year.

    67% also believe that original digital video will become as important as original TV programming within the next 3 to 5 years.

    “This study demonstrates unequivocally that digital video is a fierce competitor for advertising dollars,” said Sherrill Mane, SVP, Research, Analytics, and Measurement at the IAB.

    Spotfiy, which has benefited from a great deal of Facebook exposure over the years may find to break into that same kind of visibility with a potential video product. Facebook is already advising page admins against posting videos from third-party services in favor of promoting its own native videos, which are drawing a great deal of those ad dollars.

    Last month, Spotify began letting brands tailor ads based on mood with playlist targeting.

    Image via Spotify

  • Facebook Improves Audience Network Ads

    Facebook Improves Audience Network Ads

    Facebook is sharing some numbers on the performance of Audience Network, the mobile ad network it launched last year, which lets developers show Facebook ads within their apps and advertisers reach people beyond the confines of Facebook itself.

    The company also introduced some new native ad templates for the network, as well as new native ad management tools and horizontal scroll for native ads.

    Facebook Audience Network Performance

    Facebook introduced Audience Network at f8 in April of last year, and gave it a proper launch in October.

    Facebook advertisers can choose to have their ads appear in third-party mobile apps by way of Audience Network by choosing the option under Placement in the ads creation process:

    Developers who wish to monetize their apps with these ads can apply to do so here.

    “Over the last year, tests by both Facebook and our partners have shown how Audience Network ads are working for advertisers,” Facebook says in a blog post. “We found that Audience Network ads work well in tandem with ads on Facebook by extending reach and delivering returns that are comparable to News Feed ads. Audience Network ads helped the US Navy increase its campaign reach by 33 percent. Rosetta Stone used Audience Network ads to drive installs of its mobile app, reducing cost-per impression by almost 40 percent and reaching people whose engagement and likelihood to purchase was nearly 30 percent higher compared to other ad networks.”

    Facebook mentions research by Fiksu finding that people who installed ecommerce apps from Audience Network Ads drove 20 times more revenue for the advertisers that those who downloaded the app from other display network ads. It also mentions research from Nanigans finding that cost-per-impression from Audience Network ads was comparable to News Feed ads, and even three percent lower.

    Facebook says that since October’s launch, the number of apps in the network has increased by 5X and that over half of developer revenue from the network comes from native ads, with publishers seeing 7x higher CPMs for native ads when compared to standard banners.

    “People have trained themselves not to look at the top or bottom of an app – the most common locations for standard banner formats,” says Facebook’s Jenny Abrahamson. ” An ad that is well integrated within the app design and naturally fits into the user flow has a much better opportunity of catching a user’s attention and ultimately leads to higher conversion rates. Poorly placed ads, especially those that pop up when a user first opens an app, have an adverse effect on user experience and engagement, including lower interaction rates with future ads — even when those ads are well designed.”

    New Native Ad Tools

    The new native ad templates for Audience Network ads are based on common ad format sizes and native ad best practices. Publishers can define font, ad height, background color, button border treatment, and various other properties so they fit in well with the app experience. That is after all what native ads are supposed to do.

    Facebook is giving publishers a new way to manage multiple native ad requests so they can make sure the highest performing ad is delivered at the right time to the right person. The new native ads manager will automatically optimize for highest performing ads, and publishers can pre-fetch up to 10 ads and deliver them in the best order ranked by yield.

    Documentation for implementing the native ads manager can be found here.

    Finally, Facebook is giving publishers an easy way to implement horizontal scroll for native ads with a custom native template and support within the native ads manager.

    The Audience Network should only prove more effective for both apps and advertisers as mobile usage continues to rise.

    Images via Facebook

  • Here’s How To Measure Mobile Ad Viewability

    Here’s How To Measure Mobile Ad Viewability

    The Media Rating Council (MRC) just issued its interim guidance for the digital marketing and advertising industry on how to proceed with measuring and transacting around mobile viewability. This applies to the “Opportunity to See” an ad in a mobile web browser or a mobile app.

    As you may know, the MRC works with other industry organizations (ANA, IAB and 4As) under the Making Measurement Make Sense (3MS) initiative. Its goal is to “facilitate industry discussion and conduct additional, necessary research to create permanent guidelines that account for the specific nuances of mobile web environments.”

    “In guidance issued in 2014, the MRC noted the need for further study to determine if existing Viewable Impression standards could apply to mobile,” an MRC spokesperson tells WebProNews. “Mobile presents technical complications as well as inherently different use cases because of how individuals interact with their devices.”

    READ: A Clearer Look At Mobile Ad Viewability

    For the most part, the new mobile guidance reflects the existing desktop guidance with iewable impression measurement of ads following the model: “50% of pixels in the viewable space of the browser for a minimum of one second for display and two seconds for video ads.”

    The mobile guidance also has a new metric for “Loaded Ad,” which “recognizes that measurement of both pixels in view and time in view may be particularly challenging in mobile at present.”

    “A Loaded Ad is a measure, explicitly designed as an interim metric specific for mobile in application measurement until such time that the state of that measurement fully matures, that provides users with some assurance that the ad did load on the screen, although it does not meet the requirements for qualifying as a viewable impression,” the MRC explains.

    So far, nobody has been accredited as yet by the MRC for mobile viewable impression measurement. It says the new guidance should be considered as a path for organizations that wish to become accredited to do so.

    “After the issuance of the desktop and video viewability guidelines last year, it became clear that technical characteristics of the mobile ad serving environment require the development of new or enhanced methods for determining the viewability of mobile-delivered ads,” said MRC CEO and Executive Director George Ivie. “Furthermore, the ways in which users interact with content and ads in mobile environments are inherently different from those observed in the desktop environment, possibly creating differences in where the moment of ‘opportunity-to-see’ occurs. As such, we will need to conduct extensive study, testing, and industry discussion to develop more permanent guidance. In the meantime, we have issued a set of interim approaches to mobile viewable impression measurement and reporting to allow the industry to transact in as seamless a manner as possible.”

    READ: Ad Viewability Contention Rages On

    The MRC notes that all previous guidance is superseded by the new guidance, which will remain in place until it issues a standard by the end of the year.

    Image via 3MS

  • Yelp Talks About Its Efforts In Ad Sales

    Yelp Talks About Its Efforts In Ad Sales

    Yelp released its Q1 earnings report on Wednesday, disappointing investors and sending its share price downward. The company did emphasize its rapid mobile growth. Another big focus of the company’s earnings call was on its salesforce.

    On its previous earnings call, Yelp had talked about beefing up its sales staff, saying it planned to increase sales headcount by 40% this year, with growth coming mostly in the U.S. despite its international growth efforts.

    “Many of those folks [salespeople] tend to come to us either straight out of college or within a few years thereafter, but we take all comers and there’s all different kinds of folks,” said COO and Director Geoff Donaker at the time.

    Sales headcount in the first quarter grew roughly 25% year-over-year.

    On Wednesday’s call, CFO Rob Krolik said they implemented a territory change within their sales organization at the beginning of the year in an effort to reach more local businesses, and this had had a negative impact on sales productivity. The change was reversed in March, however, and productivity has begun to recover. He also said Yelp intends to grow the sales team focused on national, mid-market, and franchise businesses.

    Donaker further explained that every year for the last five or six years Yelp has reassigned territories at the beginning of the year, but this year for the first time, hey took geography out of the equation because they wanted to make sure they got leads in to the hands of reps more quickly. They figured out, however, that geography was more important than they thought.

    They figured this out by the end of February, noting the “truisms of local sports teams, scores, and weather and when you’re talking to two different clients right after the other turned out to be pretty important.” They reassigned territories based on geography, and immediately started seeing improvement in March and into April.

    The company’s brand advertising revenue was down 11% year-over-year. It attributes this to the shift to programmatic advertising and the “industry’s desire to have advertising products that are disruptive to the consumer experience.”

    40% of Yelp’s local advertising revenues in Q1 came from CPC advertisers, which was up from 32% in Q4.

    “This rapid shift to performance-based advertising has occurred faster than expected and we’re still relatively early in the development of our CPC product,” said CEO Jeremy Stoppelman. “We’re investing additional resources to scale functionality and expect CPC to remain a promising area of growth for our local advertising business.”

    Asked about how long it would take to roll out new pricing, Donaker said it wouldn’t take long and that it’s something they can do any time. He said it’s even already happening with parts of the salesforce selling “entry level” products to local businesses, which can start with smaller prices if they choose. These can be as low as as $25 or $50 a month for certain products.

    “That’s not typical but it is a product that is available today on a self-serve basis and increasingly available in full service as well,” he said.

    “What still needs to happen from a CPC perspective…kind of auction based pricing for us is no longer new, we’ve been doing this for a couple years now,” he later said. “It’s something that obviously there is a lot of expertise out in the marketplace and now with 90,000 advertisers and even more than that in terms of locations, there’s just a lot to be done to continue to make sure we’re doing the best we can for all our advertisers from the self and full serve perspective.”

    One analyst asked Donaker why Yelp isn’t building out its self-service ad business versus adding salesforce.

    He responded, “It’s growing quite fast as our full serve channel. We feel good about our 55% revenue growth overall and I think at the end of the day while we will continue to invest in our self-serve channel, what we continue to find in the marketplace is that local business owners actually want to talk to us on the phone. They want to be handheld through that experience. Whether they ultimately choose to do some of that work on a self-provisioning basis which we think of as sort of assisted self-serve or from a pure and full self-serve which is of course where we do all the setup for them. These are in many cases not marketing experts. They’re folks out running their businesses every day and they actually want to speak to somebody on the phone who can actually walk them through it.”

    This is, of course, where so many businesses have complained about their experiences with Yelp. There’s a documentary about that in the works, which surprisingly didn’t come up in the conversation on the conference call, despite making plenty of headlines in the media last month.

    Yelp maintained that the company will continue to hire more salespeople, and while additions were lighter than expected during the first quarter, Yelp expects to maintain that 40% increase for the year.

    The company also said it’s expanding the list of partners it’s working with in the programmatic field, where it’s already seen “fairly large growth”.

    Image via Yelp

  • Is Facebook More Small Business-Friendly Than You Thought?

    Facebook is dedicating more resources to trying to stay in the good graces of small businesses, even after it has continually made changes to its News Feed algorithm over the past year and a half, which have largely been detrimental to them.

    Do you think Facebook can still be a valuable asset to small businesses despite the organic reach issue? Let us know in the comments.

    According to the company, there are 40 million small businesses using Facebook, and last year, it enabled $227 billion of economic impact and 4.5 million jobs globally.

    Its latest small business efforts involve a new series of educational events and live chat support for advertisers.

    “Boost Your Business”

    First off, Facebook announced the 2015 Boost Your Business program, which is made up of a series of half-day and 2-hour pop up events, which will educate small businesses on best practices and the “latest marketing strategies and tools”.

    The company has partnered with famed Facebook marketing consultant Mari Smith, MailChimp, Shopify, Visa, and Zenefits to help with the events. Facebook’s own director of small business Jonathan Czaja will also be in attendance.

    The half-day events feature a small business panel and Q&A session moderated by Smith, a small business networking center in which attendees can speak with panelists, a “learn-how zone” with educational videos, Facebook/partner counters where attendees can speak with industry experts, two Facebook learning tracks (one on growing online sales and one on driving in-store sales), and partner sessions which attendees can choose from hosted by MailChimp, Shopify, and Visa. These events will also feature a keynote speech from Czaja.

    The half-day events cost $25 per ticket, and include a $50 Facebook ad coupon on arrival.

    The two-hour pop-up events include a network expo with small business organizations, the chance to meet business leaders and decision makers from the community, presentations of Facebook best practices, local small business panels, and the chance to win one of three $500 ad credit giveaways.

    Facebook describes Mari Smith as “one of the worlds most influential and knowledgeable new media thought leaders and one of Facebook’s top marketing experts.”

    She recently spoke with WebProNews about how businesses can utilize some of Facebook’s newer features in what could be a semi-preview of the types of things she’ll discuss at the events.

    In light of the organic reach blow Facebook has dealt to Facebook pages, we asked Smith at the time if she still sees Facebook as a viable platform for marketing a small business (especially one with a low marketing budget).

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

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

    More on Conversion Lift Management here.

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

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

    We talked more about these features in an article here.

    Smith will only be appearing at the four half-day events in San Diego, Minneapolis, Nashville, and Boston. She had this to say on her website with regards to the event series:

    I’ve been a raving evangelist of the power of Facebook – specifically for business use – since I first joined the platform on May 4th, 2007. My 8th anniversary of being on Facebook (my ‘Faceversary’!) is coming up. This is truly the perfect timing for me to work directly with Facebook to support the deeper education of small and medium sized businesses – something I’m very passionate about, having lead numerous Facebook marketing live and virtual trainings for many years.

    As you know, there’s been innumerable changes to Facebook’s business pages, ads and News Feed algorithm over the years. What works for businesses in today’s Facebook world is very different to what worked even last year.

    I have long believed that the best antidote to lackluster results on Facebook is education. And, not just training on how to use the Facebook (ad) products; but a full-on integrated online marketing approach that includes optimized landing pages, lead generation, email marketing and customer relationship and retention strategies.

    Boost Your Business isn’t Facebook’s only new effort to educate businesses about getting more out of Facebook. About a month ago, Facebook announced BluePrint, a program that trains marketers on how to create better campaigns that “drive business results”.

    It’s kind of like a Khan Academy for Facebook marketing, and includes 40 learning paths/modules that can be accessed from desktop or mobile. They’re available to anyone with a Facebook account. Here’s a look at the different courses.

    Online Chat Support

    As mentioned earlier, Facebook is also launching online chat support for small business advertisers. They can access this by clicking “Get Help” on the Facebook for Business website. They can chat and screen share with a trained Ads Specialists and get “quick” answers to their Facebook advertising questions, according to the company.

    The feature will roll out in the US, UK, and Ireland for now, and will be made available to additional countries later in the year. Facebook says it will also test mobile chat and phone support this year.

    According to TechCrunch, Czaja says Facebook has “hundreds of reps” handling email and chat support, and that the company intends to grow that number “dramatically” in the coming years.

    Facebook Wants Businesses To Do More

    Facebook doesn’t just want to educate businesses and give them more tools. They also want businesses to “make themselves useful” as the Wall Street Journal reports. From that:

    Now, Facebook wants businesses to beef up their offerings, said vice president of small business Dan Levy. That could mean helping users book flights, get directions or schedule an appointment with a plumber. “We’re in the process of making a lot of updates to pages,” Levy said. “Increasingly the utility of pages for people and businesses is something that’s really important.”

    Some big businesses use their Facebook pages this way. Southwest Airlines LUV -3.47%, for example, has a “book now” button on its Facebook page that sends users to its website. Retailer J. Crew’s page links to its ecommerce site.

    Facebook is certainly forcing businesses and marketers to get more creative.

    “For brands who have put all their efforts into developing and growing a community on Facebook, the decline of organic reach feels like being denied access to their own fans. Brands now have to work harder to reach their target audiences, or, they simply have to cough up the money,” Moment.me CEO Dovev Goldstein recently told WebProNews. “For big brands with deep pockets, this might be less of a problem, but for small to medium businesses, this new development can seem to pose a big barrier to making social media work for them.”

    “While it might seem unfair to brands who have spent time and money growing their likes on Facebook, for social media marketers themselves, this development simply forces them to get more creative and clever in how they use the social medium as a way to promote their brand’s story,” he said. “Yes, the decline in organic reach does mean that social media marketing will have to be conducted differently, but it can also be looked at as a new opportunity to redefine how brands communicate in this space. Small businesses in particular have an opportunity to shine here. They can use their relatively small size to be hyper-targeted in their outreach, going after individual users as opposed to posting a promotional post designed to pull in more quantity over quality.”

    Is Video the Answer?

    Is video the answer to all of small businesses’ Facebook problems? Probably not, but all signs point to it being a pretty big help.

    The company has been constantly pushing video all year since its January announcement that video posts per person has increased 75% globally and 94% in the US. Numerous studies have since surfaced finding Facebook video to be a large focus of marketers and an effective tool. Video has trumped photos as the post format of choice for the best organic reach.

    “I think all marketers have the opportunity to do video, and that’s pretty exciting, including SMBs who would never be able to hire a film crew and buy a TV ad,” said Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg during the company’s earnings call last week. “We’re seeing those put videos in. Over 1 million SMBs have posted videos and done really small ad buys around them. And that’s pretty cool because I don’t think there are probably 1 million advertisers who have bought TV ads in that same period of time.”

    A study from Visible Measures found that Facebook is more effective than YouTube for driving immediate growth in video viewership, though YouTube still dominates as the video’s life goes on.

    Organic Reach Picture Worsens, But Ad Effectiveness Gets Better

    In terms of organic reach in general, Facebook is still making algorithm changes that are most likely unfavorable for Pages. As recently as last week, Facebook announced yet more changes, one of which will show some people more content from their friends and less from Pages.

    On the paid side of things, however, the effectiveness of Facebook ads appears to only be getting better. We recently looked at a report from Nanigans, which found that click-through rates increased 17% quarter-over-quarter and about 260% year-over-year as advertisers have embraced different types of ad formats like video and multi-product ads.

    We also looked at a report fro Kinetic Social finding click-through rates to be up 266% year-over-year with the average CTR across all Facebook campaigns continuing to rise. Here’s what CTR looked like by ad type, placement and vertical:

    Facebook is Giving Businesses More Tools

    You can hate on Facebook for the organic reach thing all you want, but there’s no question that the company has released a multitude of new tools that businesses can potentially take advantage of. This includes a lot of ad tools, but also other things.

    On the ad side, there’s the Ads Manager app, which helps businesses manage their ad campaigns from their mobile devices. It also launched the Audience Network, its mobile ad network, which lets mobile apps monetize through Facebook’s active advertisers. Other semi-new ad-related offerings include local awareness ads, conversion lift measurement, and of course product ads.

    A couple months ago, Facebook announced that it reached 2 million active advertisers. At the time, we ran through many of the company’s latest ad offerings including, but not limited to these things.

    In January, Facebook launched Place Tips, which appear at the top of users’ News Feeds to give them information about the places they’re at.

    At the same time, the company announced that it’s testing Bluetooth beacons with select businesses that allow them to tap into this functionality. For brick-and-mortar businesses, this is a major area to keep an eye on as time goes on.

    Facebook has made numerous moves, which point to the social network becoming a better place for businesses and individuals to sell products. In addition to the multi-product ads, Facebook acquired shopping search engine TheFind to incorporate its technology into the Facebook ad ecosystem.

    Facebook also has a Buy button, which is still only available on a limited basis, but it did give advertisers call-to-action buttons in December, which include a “shop now” option. The company has also added new buying and selling features to Groups.

    Another recently launched a tool that has the potential to benefit small businesses is a new standalone Android app called Hello, which serves as a caller ID app, but also as a provider of local business search and information.

    Opportunities with Messenger

    It also added peer-to-peer payments to Messenger, not entirely unlike Square’s Square Cash offering, which that company recently turned into a small business marketing vehicle with $Cashtags.

    And speaking of Messenger, in addition to turning the product into its own developer platform (which could provide some business opportunities itself), Facebook announced last month that it is readying some business-specific features for it. Businesses will be able to connect with customers directly through this intimate messaging platform, potentially replacing email as a communication channel for some customers.

    As a business, you can enable your customers to connect with you via Messenger. If they elect to do so, you’ll be able to send them personalized updates and talk to them in real time.

    You can use custom layouts for order confirmation, shopping updates, etc. As the company says, “This lets your customers keep all their order info in one place and reach out to you if they need to change anything.”

    Facebook is hoping businesses will use this to improve their customer support experiences, which as studies have shown, are not particularly great when it comes to social media.

    Budget and Time are Obstacles

    Besides the reduction of organic reach on Facebook, small businesses’ biggest obstacles are their budgets and their time/resources for marketing.

    A study from BrightLocal found that 34% of small businesses allocate less than 10% of their marketing budgets to online channels, while 50% allocate less than 30% and only 29% allocate over 70%.

    “I found this figure a little perplexing when you consider the other responses SMBs gave,” CEO Myles Anderson told WebProNews. “75% said online was effective at bringing in new customers & 3 of top 4 most effective marketing channels are ‘digital’. Yet SMBs allocate a disproportionately low % of their marketing budgets online. I believe the reason is a combination of a few factors.”

    “Many business owners handle it themselves so don’t assign a monetary budget to online marketing,” he said. “The survey showed that 64% of business owners handle their internet marketing themselves. Online marketing isn’t applicable or doesn’t work for some businesses so they don’t invest. Some businesses rely solely on Word of Mouth to bring in new customers so don’t invest in online. Budgets are too low to play in the online arena.”

    The study found a direct correlation between the number of employees the business has and the monthly marketing budget.

    30% of those running the business on their own said online marketing was simply ‘not effective’. When you have to do everything, it’s not hard to understand why that might be. The fewer people a business has, the harder it is to do marketing right.

    According to another report from Thrive Analytics, 77% of small and medium-sized businesses don’t think they have the time or knowledge to manage their digital media efforts effectively, while 70% wish they could take advantage of digital media to help them expand their businesses and reach.

    That study did find that just after company websites (and we’re talking a one percentage point difference here), Facebook and/or social media sites are the biggest area of focus for budget growth planned by SMBs over the next twelve months.

    However, other research finds that small businesses haven’t increased their social presences at all over the past year:

    “When you think about our marketer growth, I think we have an ability to grow both the number of advertisers who use our platform, but also the percentage of their business that we get,” said Sandberg on the earnings call. “So 30 million small business pages continuing to grow [again, now 40 million]. We have an opportunity to turn those businesses into advertisers and marketers, and that’s what we’ve done successfully and we’re going to continue to focus on that. And we do that by building very simple ad products.”

    “There are some who spend a large portion of their budget on Facebook, but that’s actually very unusual,” she told investors. “For most people, even when they start spending with us, we’re a small portion of their budget. And when you look at the consumer time we get, we are not getting the equivalent amount of time or resources from our marketers really of any size, and therein lies our opportunity to grow.”

    Yes, Facebook wants you to advertise. The free ride to the News Feed is a thing of the past, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that Facebook isn’t small business-friendly. The advertising opportunities are only improving, but even beyond that, the company is putting out a lot of interesting tools and features that businesses may be able to take advantage of.

    Either way, Facebook is clearly dedicated to trying to win over the minds of distraught small businesses. How do you think it’s doing? Discuss.

    Images via Facebook, Socialbakers, Nanigans, Kinetic Social, BrightLocal, Thrive Analytics, eMarketer

  • Digital Video Ad Budgets Increase, Facebook Best For Short-Term Reach

    Digital Video Ad Budgets Increase, Facebook Best For Short-Term Reach

    A new study from Advertiser Perceptions and the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) found that 68% of marketers and agency execs expect their digital video ad budgets to increase over the course of the next year.

    The study was conducted based on a survey of 305 buy-side professionals, who largely expect that greater investment in digital video will come from overall rising ad budgets this year and as funds shift away from broadcast and cable TV. 67% said they anticipate their broadcast and cable TV ad spend to stay the same or decrease in the next year.

    67% also believe that original digital video will become as important as original TV programming within the next 3 to 5 years.

    Across the automotive, CPG, financial services, retail, and telecommunications categories, advertisers expect to spend more on digital video. 67% expect to move a portion of spend out of TV to do so. CPG, financial services, and telecommunications marketers expect the biggest impact to be on their cable TV budgets. 63% in the automotive category expect to get the funding from expanding budgets.

    “This study demonstrates unequivocally that digital video is a fierce competitor for advertising dollars,” said Sherrill Mane, SVP, Research, Analytics, and Measurement at the IAB.

    A separate study from Visible Measures is out, which looks at video campaigns on Facebook and YouTube. It finds that “alternative video platforms” like Facebook have become more important to brands and that Facebook has not only grown “tremendously” for total viewing, but that it’s also now the most powerful tool for driving immediate growth in viewership for timely video content.

    That study found that for brands that post their campaigns on both Facebook and YouTube, Facebook dominates viewership immediately following a campaign’s release. For the campaigns it looked at in March, Facebook reached 85 percent of its viewership in the first week after launch, while YouTube only reached 63 percent of its viewership during that time. But don’t let that fool you. It also found that YouTube still dominates reach in the long run. It just takes longer.

    They credit both YouTube’s functionality and consumer behavior for making YouTube more effective in the long term. According to Visible Measures CEO Brian Shin, the decrease in Facebook’s share of viewership over the course of time highlights how differently Facebook and YouTube function for both consumers and brands.

    “If something is hot and of the moment, such as a newly released campaign, the Super Bowl, or even a cultural phenomenon like Fifty Shades of Grey, Facebook and similar social media sites are incredibly effective for driving the spread of timely content due to the trending nature of the News Feed,” he said. “But the strength of Facebook to promote trending content also highlights how powerful YouTube remains as a platform for continued viewership.”

    “Content discovery on Facebook is very much dependent on the Facebook News Feed, which is a function of what a user’s friends are sharing, as well as recommendations based on trends and a user’s interests. Because discovery is so dependent on sharing, viewership soon after content gets hot’ is strongest on Facebook,” says Visible Measures. “Conversely, YouTube acts as a depository for video and millions of users go there first, or arrive via Google search, to find video content. This user paradigm enables videos to have a much longer shelf-life on YouTube.”

    “While Facebook can be counted on for viral lift, if your video doesn’t ‘pop’ on Facebook it will vanish pretty quickly, whereas slow and steady evergreen content can pay dividends for a long time on YouTube,” marketing consultant Brian Honigman told us in January.

    According to Shin, Facebook will have to amp up its video discovery and search options if it wants to compete with YouTube for the long term.

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg spoke a little bit about Facebook’s search efforts during the company’s earnings conference call last week.

    “If you think about the overall web, there’s a lot of public content that’s out there that any web search engine can go index and provide,” he said. “But a lot of what we can get at are recommendations on products and travel and restaurants and things that your friends have shared, they haven’t shared publicly, and knowing different correlations, or interesting things about what your friends are interested in, and that’s the type of stuff, those are questions that we can answer that no one else can answer, and that’s probably going to be what we continue to focus on doing first. And I think what you’re seeing is that as we enable more use cases and as we just get a lot of the basics right around performance and bringing the mobile features into parity and beyond what we’ve been able to do on desktop, the volume is growing quickly.”

    Though he wasn’t talking specifically about video with regard to search, the huge increase in video sharing on Facebook will only add pressure on Facebook to handle video search better. Right now, Facebook’s search feature doesn’t even include a video option. That definitely needs to change, and I have no doubt that it will in time.

    Facebook has been testing some functionality, which could help in the discoverability department. It’s trying a feature that automatically plays another video once the one the user is currently watching ends. This is something YouTube started doing a while back.

    Earlier this year, Facebook announced that video on the social network had increased 75% over the past year. Socialbakers, at the time, found that for the first time, brands were sharing Facebook videos on the social network more than YouTube videos. And with good reason. Facebook is said to give more weight to native videos in News Feed ranking.

    Socialbakers also recently found that Facebook video tends to get better organic reach than regular status updates, links, or photos.

    “The real growth point today is in videos,” it said. “While they are relatively more promoted than photos – 27% of all videos are promoted, compared to 17% of photos – there are so many more photos than videos that the new format is still far more effective at reaching audiences.”

    Facebook expects video specifically to bring it more mobile ad dollars.

    “Looking ahead, we believe video will play a significant role in bringing more marketers to mobile,” said COO Sheryl Sandberg during the earnings call. “More than 75% of global video views on Facebook occur on mobile – and we believe mobile video will become more important to marketers over time.”

    Asked about video ad pricing, CFO David Wehner said, ”Video is effectively winning in the auction if it’s higher priced. So if somebody’s willing to pay more for a video, it’s going to get served before another type of format ad. But there’s not really a price differential you’re paying for a video, it’s just what are you willing to pay into the system. So there’s not differential pricing by product, it’s just what are you willing to bid for the format that you want to show to the people that you want to show it to and that’s how the system works.”

    Last week, Facebook announced the launch of Anthology, a new marketing program that gives brands access to a group of well-known video publishers to improve the quality of video ads.

    Images via Facebook, Socialbakers

  • Google’s Search Ad Revenue Growth Is Getting Uglier

    Google’s Search Ad Revenue Growth Is Getting Uglier

    It doesn’t look like things are improving for Google’s core search advertising business. There have been major concerns about it for a while now, and while Google’s latest earnings report doesn’t look too shabby on the surface, its growth rate is on a steady downward trajectory.

    BI Intelligence released this chart illustrating the decline in year-over-year growth over the course of three years.

    It doesn’t look good.

    Google did manage to post 12% year-over-year revenue growth at $17.3 billion for the quarter, while missing expectations.

    “Excluding the net impact of foreign currency headwinds, revenue grew a healthy 17% year on year,” said outgoing CFO Patrick Pichette. “We continue to see great momentum in our mobile advertising business and opportunities with brand advertisers.”

    Aggregate paid clicks were up 1% quarter-over-quarter and 13% year-over-year. Paid clicks on Google sites were up 25% year-over-year, while paid clicks on network sites were up 12%.

    Average cost-per-click increased 7% year-over-year and 5% quarter-over-quarter. On Google sites it was up 13% year-over-year and 3% quarter-over-quarter. On network sites it was up 2% year-over-year and 11% quarter-over-quarter.

    Desktop search revenues accounted for 38% of the U.S. digital ad sales in 2014, according to a recent IAB report.

    Image via Google

  • Sheryl Sandberg On What Facebook Is Doing For Small Businesses

    In recent months there have been a lot of articles written about how Facebook is hurting or “failing” small businesses.

    In November, Tech Times wrote that “Facebook is killing small business entrepreneurs”.

    Last month, Fast Company published an article called “How Facebook is Failing Local Businesses“.

    Are these stories exaggerated? It really depends on the business, but in general, probably. Either way, it seems worth taking a look at what the company said about small and medium sized businesses on its earnings call on Wednesday.

    In her prepared remarks, COO Sheryl Sandberg said, “In Q2 of last year, we shared that we reached 30 million active business Pages on Facebook. This number continues to grow as more and more small businesses are using our free Pages product – and we remain focused on converting these Page owners into advertisers. One way we’re doing this is by providing simple, easy-to-use products; over 80% of new advertisers start with entry-level tools like a promoted post or Page like. We are increasingly focused on making sure these tools work well on mobile. We’re also educating marketers on how to use Facebook more effectively. We recently launched two online training resources: Blueprint, for large clients and agencies, and ‘Learn How’ videos for small businesses. These efforts are paying off. In Q1 we announced that we now have over 2 million active advertisers.”

    She talked about SMBs more during the Q&A session at the end of the call. Here are her words on the subject (via Seeking Alpha’s transcript):

    I think all marketers have the opportunity to do video, and that’s pretty exciting, including SMBs who would never be able to hire a film crew and buy a TV ad. We’re seeing those put videos in. Over 1 million SMBs have posted videos and done really small ad buys around them. And that’s pretty cool because I don’t think there are probably 1 million advertisers who have bought TV ads in that same period of time.

    On SMBs, we have a very small test in the U.S. We started last quarter for buy-on Facebook, and that enables people to buy products from merchants with a buy button on Pages, and it is a product that is used and aimed at SMBs. We’re also very focused on helping SMBs have a presence, especially a mobile presence. 35% of SMBs in the United States, which is probably ahead of most other countries, don’t have a web presence at all, and an even smaller percentage of SMBs have a mobile web presence or any kind of mobile presence that works. And so Pages are a good and free and easy way to have a mobile presence, and that’s something we’re very focused on growing.

    When you think about our marketer growth, I think we have an ability to grow both the number of advertisers who use our platform, but also the percentage of their business that we get. So 30 million small business pages continuing to grow. We have an opportunity to turn those businesses into advertisers and marketers, and that’s what we’ve done successfully and we’re going to continue to focus on that. And we do that by building very simple ad products.

    And then when you think about the percentage of spend we have, what I said before on this call, which is we only have a small percentage of even our large customers, that’s true of our small customers, too. Now, there are some who spend a large portion of their budget on Facebook, but that’s actually very unusual. For most people, even when they start spending with us, we’re a small portion of their budget. And when you look at the consumer time we get, we are not getting the equivalent amount of time or resources from our marketers really of any size, and therein lies our opportunity to grow.

    One of the things that has been the biggest thorn in the side of small businesses (especially those with lower marketing budgets) is the fact that Facebook keeps changing its News Feed algorithm in ways that prevent Facebook Page posts from being seen by more people without having to pay for visibility.

    In fact, the company just announced more changes this week, which don’t look particularly good for these businesses. CEO Mark Zuckerberg addressed these on the earnings call as well, though his words probably aren’t of much comfort to those who have been suffering from these changes.

    Facebook did make another announcement this week, which could potentially be good for small businesses with Facebook pages. It launched a new Android app that provides users with Facebook information for caller ID as well as business search functionality. These separate Facebook apps, however, don’t always gain a ton of users, so it’s hard to say what kind of impact this one will have.

    Image via Facebook

  • 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

  • Does Your Business Have The Time To Get Online Marketing Right?

    Does Your Business Have The Time To Get Online Marketing Right?

    The fewer people a business has, the harder it is to do marketing right.

    Most small and medium-sized businesses don’t think they have the time or knowledge to manage their digital media efforts effectively, according to a new report from Thrive Analytics. 77% said as much, while 70% wish they could take advantage of digital media to help them expand their businesses and reach.

    Is a lack of time preventing you from being able to take care of the marketing strategy you’d like to employ? Let us know in the comments.

    The data comes from a survey of over 1,100 SMBs collected in January.

    “The problem is most small business owners feel current marketing providers don’t have their best interest in mind,” says Jason Peaslee of Thrive Analytics. “Owners often feel marketing providers push “flavor of the month” products on them and don’t bother to learn what they actually need. Current providers are falling short on several fronts including poor product performance (60 percent), and poor service levels (55 percent). This contributes to high digital product churn rates (+40 percent depending on the product) and low satisfaction scores given to current providers.”

    “Many smaller sized businesses have tried to go the Do-It-Yourself route leveraging their can-do spirit,” he writes. “However, they are falling short in a number of areas as well. Only, 55% have websites and those that do have websites don’t have mobile optimized ones (40% percent). Only 31% have a strategy to attract the mobile consumer and those that manage their own websites update them infrequently (58% percent every six months or more). This further illustrates the fact they need help as well.”

    The report finds that 51% of small business owners have a positive outlook on their business for the year, and 31% are willing to increase budgets and invest in digital solutions if it makes sense for their business.

    The biggest areas of anticipated growth are company websites, social media, mobile advertising, display ads, paid search, SEO, online video, and email marketing. Most of the categories with less anticipated growth are offline channels like yellow pages, radio, magazine ads, TV, newspapers, and outdoor advertising.

    You can find the report here.

    We recently looked at findings from BrightLocal, which found that smaller businesses are more afraid of increasing their online budgets compared to those with larger headcounts. Here’s a look at company size vs. planned spend on internet marketing in 2015 from that:

    “From further analysis we can see that larger organizations are more bullish about increasing their online spend, while smaller (which make up the majority of our respondents), are less assertive,” said BrightLocal’s Ross Marchant at the time. “Not only is there a higher sense of uncertainty in the group, but there are far more who confidently say they will not increase their online marketing spend.

    eMarketer is pointing to recent polling by Ebiquity for American Express OPEN, which despite Thrive’s findings that social is ranked as the second most effective marketing method, found that small businesses haven’t increased their social presences over the past year:

    Businesses not utilizing Facebook more might be missing out on some serious clicks, as research from Nanigans we looked at earlier shows CTRs have jumped 260% over the past years as businesses take more advantage of video and multi-product ads. More on all of that here.

    Is your business struggling with online marketing because of time and/or a lack of resources? Do you expect things to improve in the near future? Let us know in the comments.

    Images via Thrive Analytics, BrightLocal, eMarketer