WebProNews

Tag: retargeting

  • Twitter Launches Tailored Audiences From Mobile Apps

    Twitter Launches Tailored Audiences From Mobile Apps

    Twitter announced the launch of tailored audiences from mobile apps, enabling advertisers to create targetable audience segments based on mobile app actions (like installs, purchases, or sign-ups).

    This follows the recent news that Twitter would track which apps users have.

    “Tailored audiences from mobile apps can help you drive the highest possible ROI in your app install and app engagement campaigns,” Twitter’s Kelton Lynn tells advertisers. “You can ensure that your ads are not displayed to users who have already installed your app. And you can augment tailored audiences from mobile apps with look-alike targeting to reach high-value users most similar to those who have your app installed.”

    “In app engagement campaigns, you can use tailored audiences from mobile apps to connect with users at specific stages of your app marketing funnel,” Lynn adds. “For instance, you can target users who have installed your app but have not yet signed up or made a purchase.”

    Tailored audiences from mobile apps can be combined with others from lists, and website visitors. Segments are updated in real time.

    If you’re a user concerned about privacy, you can simply uncheck the box in your privacy settings next to “Tailor ads based on information shared by ads partners, just like always.

    Image via Twitter

  • Twitter Tailored Audiences Now Let Advertisers Use Email Addresses,Twitter IDs

    Twitter announced some new features for advertisers today, specifically in the realm of tailored audiences.

    Twitter began testing tailored audiences ad retargeting back in the summer before making it globally available last month. The option enables advertisers to reach users who have shown interest in their brands or categories while they’re not actually on Twitter.

    For example, if a hotel can advertise to a person on Twitter who has recently visited its website.

    Now, Twitter is giving advertisers the ability to create tailored audiences based on CRM audiences and Twitter IDs. You can now create one from lists of email addresses from your CRM database or CRM database records. Likewise, you can create one from a list of Twitter IDs – either usernames or user IDs.

    “Let’s say a fashion retailer wants to advertise a spring clearance sale on Twitter, and they’d prefer to show their ad to current membership cardholders,” explains Twitter product manager Kelton Lynn. “To get the special offer to cardholders who are on Twitter, the retailer may share with us unreadable scrambles (called hashes) of the email addresses of its card members. We can then match that information to Twitter accounts in order to show the matched users a Promoted Tweet with the sale information.”

    “Suppose the aforementioned retailer wants to build relationships with new prospects on Twitter who are influencers in fashion,” Lynn says. “The retailer can use public information on Twitter like a user’s bio, follower count, verified status, or past Tweets — from Twitter or by using Twitter’s API or Certified Products — to identify the specific accounts on Twitter which are the most appropriate potential customers. The retailer may then use this list of Twitter ID’s to create a tailored audience through an ads partner, show those fashion influencers a Promoted Account and engage them as followers.”

    Twitter

    In addition to letting advertisers create tailored audiences based on CRM databases or Twitter IDs, Twitter is also letting them exclude selected CRM and Twitter ID audiences.

    Images via Twitter

  • How and Why Remarketing Can Gain Back Lost Customers

    Late last year, Advertise.com and the Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization (SEMPO) shared some interesting findings from a survey on ad technology, and found that remarketing (sometimes called retargeting) was considered the most under-utilized online marketing technology by nearly half or respondents. 

    Since then, Google has launched remarketing capabilities for AdWords, and I’m guessing the technology has been taken advantage of by more advertisers since. Daniel Yomtobian, CEO of Advertise.com, which offers its own remarketing services, tells us, "As many as 96 percent of the people who visit a website leave without completing the actions marketers would like them to take, like making a purchase. Remarketing targets previous site visitors and brings them back with highly customized ads that maximize conversions and return on advertisers’ interactive spend. Remarketing has been shown to improve ad response up to 400 percent compared to traditional display marketing."

    Remarketing, simply put, targets customers who have been to the advertiser’s site before, but didn’t convert, and tries go gain their interest again, maybe with a different offer or a different spin on the ad. 

    Daniel Yomtobian"These visitors are tagged when they leave the site then later are shown ads with specific discounts and specials on items previously browsed as they surf elsewhere on the web," explains Yomtobian. 

    "First, the advertiser is given a line of code from the Remarketing network to include into their website," he continues. "Once implemented, upon visiting the site, users are tagged anonymously and later recognized by banner ads spaces on other websites within the Remarketing network. Advertisers later follow-up with these users as they surf other websites with an advertising message." 

    "It is important for both consumers and advertisers to understand that remarketing does not pull any other information from the visitor other than that he or she has viewed that particular site," he notes. "The visitor is ‘tagged’ anonymously and this allows advertisers to serve a relevant ad later in the visitor’s Internet surfing.

    Increasing Traffic and Conversions

    "Remarketing provides marketers with a vehicle to bring lost visitors back to convert, a solution that did not previously exist," says Yomtobian. "Remarketing reminds those consumers who didn’t convert the first time about the original offers as well as new opportunities, and seeks to bring them back for conversion."

    "Most remarketing models are based on identifying consumers who expressed initial interest in a product or service on a web site or landing page or website but didn’t convert," he adds. "With Remarketing, advertisers can reach out to these past visitors with an ad relevant to their interests before they left the website.  Matching these banners to users who are most likely to respond to them increases brand awareness, site visitations and conversions."

    Remarketing might be particularly effective around the holidays. Customers that showed some interest in products might need a little extra encouragement to go through with a gift purchase. For that matter, products browsed around the holidays may be retargeted later as potential birthday gifts.