Monday, December 17, 2012

10 Short Quotations that Sum Up the Year in Digital Marketing

A lot happened in digital this year, but sometimes just a few sentences can explain a lot. What follows are 10 short quotations from digital leaders -- statements that embody the news, ideas, and trends that shaped digital this year. Give them a look!




Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook CEO

"Challenges ahead" image via Shutterstock.

Steve Ballmer, Microsoft CEO

"Carpentry background" image via Shutterstock.



Frank Cooper, PepsiCo CMO

"Broken pencil point" image via Shutterstock.



Marissa Mayer, Yahoo CEO

"Runner" image via Shutterstock.



Ben Silbermann, Pinterest CEO

"Close up of a note paper with push pin" image via Shutterstock.



Mark Pincus, Zynga CEO

"Tree branches on blue sky" image via Shutterstock.



Jack Dorsey, Square CEO and Twitter chairman


"Hand of business women" image via Shutterstock.



John Battelle, Federated Media executive chair

"1100101 blue" image via Shutterstock.



Larry Page, Google CEO

"Night traffic" image via Shutterstock.



And last but not least...





Thursday, December 6, 2012

DR Marketers School Brand Marketers on How to Do a Website Right


The conventional way of viewing marketing is that there are brand marketers and direct response marketers with very different tasks and goals -- it is sort of the great industry divide. But while the KPIs of one group may differ from those of the other, there's a lot we can learn from people on the flipside from us.
In my view, online sellers have a strong edge when it comes to building powerful and compelling websites and online experiences. They know what works for their needs and how to get it done. Here are six approaches they use for websites that brand marketers should consider.
6 seller secrets to building a killer branded website

Have clear objectives, goals, and measures

A direct response site is built for the express purpose of delivering on a clear and simple set of objectives -- driving sales, purchase frequency, basket size, or lead gen rate. Many brands that don't sell online don't have the same sense of focus when they build their presences. They may have generalized objectives, a laundry list of creative brand experiences, house product information, or any of a host of other reasons. But they often don't put KPIs and measurement in place that assess performance or identify ways to improve.
Part of this is because "branding" appears to be a more elusive objective than sales. But in my view, "branding" should be measured in distinct concrete actions such as CRM program adds, Facebook "likes," Twitter follows, video views, pages consumed, etc. Whether or not these measures are a perfect determinant of branding success is unimportant -- clearly they aren't. But any brand should be able to identify tangible actions that indicate brand development. Just because these measures aren't perfect doesn't mean we would be better off flying blind.
To determine your brand website KPIs, consider:
Your purchase funnelWhat steps does the consumer need to take in order to ultimately make a purchase? How can the site speed people through the steps or get more people on their journey?
Your biggest needsIn general, most brands need to increase awareness, purchase, or buying rate. Identify KPIs that reflect your greatest need.
Your purchase cycleIdentify steps that reflect the hours, days, weeks, or months in the buying cycle. If there is a business reason, for example, for why you want people to sign up for monthly emails, then why shouldn't you measure your site on the extent to which it drives them?
Then design your measurement plan at the same time as you are designing your site. That way you can ensure that you will have the best possible data on which to measure success and optimize. If you already have a site, take a couple hours to learn about many of the measurement and testing solutions available so you identify data partners that can truly meet your needs.

Really have an SEO strategy

Many brands spend tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars on websites, creating rich experiences that very few people ever actually see. Many brands appear to spend 90 percent of their effort on appearance and 10 percent on text content.
Search engines are getting better at interpreting visual content, but the vast majority of their focus is on text and the extent to which the text on your site speaks authoritatively about a particular topic, category, or need state. DR marketers know this -- most focus the majority of their energy on the text side, though they still pay attention to aesthetics. However, they understand that getting listed well for category terms requires richness of text content.
The distinction here is for category versus branded terms. It usually isn't hard for brands to get listed No. 1 or thereabouts when someone searches for their brand name. But most people in most categories search first for generic category terms. "Pickup truck" or "half ton pickup" versus "make and model name." 
The balance is to make content rich pages that aren't so text heavy that they put people off. Or is it? There are lots of techniques for parsing text content -- onto tabs on the same page, for example. These solutions also recognize that websites should be tailored to the passionate more than the dilettante. People who go to websites are by definition more interested than people who don't.
It's easy for brands in "mundane" categories to underestimate customer interest in specifics. But every category has its hardcore users and believers. Gearing content to them pleases these potential brand evangelists just as much as it does Google and Bing. It also requires more pages -- pages individually dedicated to a broad swath of specific generic keywords.
To ensure that you get the most out of SEO, make sure someone on your extended team really understands what to do with site structure, formatting, tags, etc.

Avoid "wishful wording"

Make sure that your content is written the way people actually talk about your product and category. This has clear SEO benefits -- your tomato sauce brand will have a lot more U.S. traffic to itssolanum melongena dishes if you call them "eggplant recipes" than if you go all high-brow and say "aubergine recipes."
But there's a larger issue, and that is that brands often talk to themselves and use terms that their customers are unfamiliar with. Brands sometimes use barely known subbrands instead of category terms and parse their content according to company divisions rather than customer thinking.
An online seller knows that the store needs to make it easy for people to buy. Brands that don't sell online have the same imperative, though many resist the current category thinking and try to impose their own thinking. It rarely works. There may have been a time when we could impose thinking on consumers, but this is no longer the case.

Manage your tags

More and more brands are recognizing the need for tag management solutions. All of the first- and third-party tags on your site help you collect information, but they can also increase page load times. The more tags you have, the greater the delay.
Unmanaged tags also pose the danger of data leakage and piracy. What happens on your site is your business. When you choose third-party partners to collect data, you are agreeing to share the data with them. They may also be sharing that data with others and without your express knowledge.
There's another issue -- in many organizations, getting even the simplest tag loaded onto a site can be difficult and time consuming and may require IT involvement. This can slow your ability to change vendors, add new technologies, and the like. Also, it's easy to leave old tags on sites when there is no simple way to manage them.
In just my first few weeks working at Mediaplex, I saw analyses for new clients that show that their sites bear tags from vendors they haven't used in months or years. Some bear so many tags that page loads are slowed by a second or more. By stripping off the individual tags and replacing them with a single piece of lightweight code, these sites were able to markedly increase load times and end the risk of data loss to unknown third parties. Tag management solutions also made it easier to comply with DAA privacy guidelines.
Commerce sites have generally been faster to adopt tag management solutions than brand sites. They know that slow pages and data leakage can make a big difference to revenue. Brand sites should care just as deeply. The same frustrations that can ding online stores can also determine if your customer's first visit to your brand site will be their last.

Customize your site experience

More and more online sellers are using third-party technologies to anticipate the likely needs of site visitors so they can deliver customized homepages and product assortments to them. The broad principle is that the website is behaviorally customized to you. Most of us are very aware of this technique when we visit Amazon, but its use is spreading rapidly to other online sellers. For example, I buy some wing tips and the next time I visit the site I see suits, dress shirts, and dress socks on the homepage -- that sort of thing. The site is betting that it understands what I might like to buy.
The feasibility of doing this on a "brand" site would depend upon your traffic, profit margin, and customer segmentation. But it's worth looking into. At the very least, consider having a registered user experience that adds value versus a first time visitor experience.

Stop thinking "Brand" versus "DR"

Our industry seems to accept the idea that there are some marketing teams focused on hard goals and others on soft goals like brand liking and imagery. The reality is that whether or not you sell online, your marketing needs to deliver on both. Amazon sells online but places a great deal of effort and energy on making its trademark appealing and meaningful. Similarly, the people at Charmin didn't create those cartoon bears to bring American families joy and laughter. The joy and laughter are a means to attract attention and engagement so we'll buy the darned toilet paper!
Spend time thinking of innovative ways that your "brand" website can help you measurably sell more product. Just because competitors have a common "gimme" site design doesn't mean it's the right one. View your site as a way of connecting brand imagery to tangible purchases. How you do that really relates back to your biggest brand needs.
There will undoubtedly be those who think that boiling branding down to selling more product now misses essential intangibles that are necessary to building a strong and lasting brand. I agree. But it doesn't follow that a focus on tangible brand measures negates the value of those intangibles. It simply says that it's better to know that you're doing something for the business than to punt on any measurement at all.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Friendly Advice and Support for Agencies After the iMedia Agency Summit



Yesterday in Phoenix a panel of industry pioneers discussed the ideas and attitudes that helped them create this wonderful, exciting, crazy mixed-up space where we all make our livings. When the panel moved to audience participation, discussion turned to what our industry needed for the future.
There were many great ideas, but I’d like to posit that the most important thing that can happen for digital is that agencies begin to have more confidence in their own value and uniqueness.
I mean that in an incredibly supportive sense. After spending three days with these agency innovators, it's rather difficult not to come to the conclusion that agencies are collections of remarkable and talented people. But that they are compensated by many clients as if they are full of cogs and flywheels. Functional yet wholly interchangeable.
The agency world has become commoditized. No great revelation there, I know. But perhaps worst of all, that commoditization seems to have sunk into the way that many agencies perceive themselves. Too many discussions center around what they would like to do but alas they cannot afford to.
I made the switch from buy- to sell-side about two months ago, and one of the first differences I felt was in the spirit of the people in the organization I worked for. On the sell side, there is a sense of collective confidence. What I remember from the agency side were endless discussions of limitations and barriers.
Agencies possess arguably the most important piece of the puzzle – creativity. Brands need ideas more than ever, and what constitutes an idea has evolved from a creative-driven concept to an integrated idea reflected in execution, media, and more.
Agencies, inasmuch as your identities get defined by activity, the commodity assessment is tough to live down. But that’s not really what you sell or should be selling.
As I sat in the main session at iMedia, I kept thinking about the parallel to the coffee business in the 1980s, and how the name of the game was to deliver a modicum of profitability by cutting costs. Cutting the percentage of expensive Arabica beans in favor of the cheap yet bitter Robustos. Then slashing the price to eke out a little volume. The race to a bitter bottom.
And then! Starbuck’s and Gloria Jean’s upended reality. And tens of millions of people who would never have dreamed of spending a whole dollar on a cuppa suddenly stood in line to pay $4.
Hey, there are and will always be agencies that exude confidence. This post isn't for you. This is for all the great people who don't always feel their greatness because they feel trapped in a race to the botom of comp and service. You’re not cups of generic coffee. You’re Venti Mochas with Whip. It's time to get your collective groove back. Or should that be foam?

Thursday, November 29, 2012

8 viral campaigns that broke the rules and still crushed it


A lot of people have opinions about viral marketing and "what works." Over the years a set of accepted beliefs have been established that tend to guide creative development efforts. Having some basic ideas about what might go viral -- and what surely won't -- has saved countless brands a lot of time and effort.
Many times when brand and agency leaders set virality as an objective, what they really want is free distribution for kerplunk brand messages. That is something that won't work. Viral is about capturing people's hearts and emotions -- about inspiring people so much that they want to distribute the ideas that have affected them to the people they care about. It's not about millions of people spontaneously deciding to distribute videos of paper towel absorbency side by side tests. 
But given that creativity is a field that thrives on innovation and rule breaking, it seems worthwhile to determine if the accepted rules are actually valid. Here are eights brands that broke the viral rules and won views and fans in a big way. With each example, we'll begin with the generally accepted rule and then show how a particular brand was able to get results even though they broke it. 

Oreo's "Daily Twist"

Fallacy: Viral is a one-off thing. It's not for the long haul.The astounding --- no, that isn't hyperbole -- "Daily Twist" campaign put Oreo at the center of daily news and conversation throughout its several month run. The effort published a daily photo that used Oreos to iconically illustrate an important event of the day.
"Daily Twist" helped drive colossal growth in their Facebook followers -- which now total almost 29 million. (Including the author, who is still incredulous that he chose to follow a cookie.) Almost 180,000 web pages have mentioned or highlighted the campaign. Surprisingly extensive fan pages adorn the web as well.
Does it say more about the brand or our culture that Kraft -- that venerable Midwestern family company -- chose this illustration to kick off the campaign?
From salutes to the London Olympics,


to the landing of the Mars rover,


to welcoming a new "Nessie" photo,
Oreo was there in a magical and iconic way. Visit the "Daily Twist" archive and see the daily genius.

Dollar Shave Club

Fallacy: You can't be too much about the product in a viral campaignMany industry observers, including the author of this story, have spent countless hours telling the world that product focus and viral success don't mix. What idiots we were.
Dollar Shave Club proved us all dead wrong.
This stand up presenter ad scored four million views in its first four days online, and the company is selling truckloads of razorblades every month. The immensely entertaining blog and the brand's quirky contests keep the irreverent spirit going daily.
Its success have spawned a virtual publicity machine with coverage on CNN, NY Times, BBC, NBS, WSJ, etc.

The "pink slime" debate

Fallacy: Motivating views is one thing. Motivating action is quite another.What's in your hamburger? Well, what was in your hamburger? British "celebrichef" Jamie Oliver drove awareness of pink slime -- something the industry calls "lean, finely textured beef" -- with a website and viral video that captured the attention of tens of millions of Americans, especially parents.
In weeks, grocers and restaurant chains were stumbling over each other to tout that they no longer sold beef containing pink slime. In my view, a big part of this success was the name they attached to the product. Names can create opinion and set the public agenda.
Soon the leading maker of the stuff had closed three of its four factories and took to the airwaves with an impassioned plea for people to rethink their opposition.
Whatever your opinion on lean finely textured beef, this campaign offers ample proof that viral can move people and prompt action.

P&G "Olympic Moms"

Fallacy: Viral needs to be funny to workThe CW says that to be viral you have to go funny or dirty. P&G proved that dead wrong with its wonderful "Olympic Moms" campaign. Nothing funny here -- instead, Procter & Gamble delivered warm and unbelievably touching. Dare I say sweet?
This particular piece of copy garnered more than 10 million views on a variety of videosites across the web, pulling eager viewers in worldwide.
So strategic, on brand, and wonderful. This is so Procter & Gamble.

FinnAir "Indian Republic Day"

Fallacy: Viral needs to be completely original to work.I love flashmobs and adore the T-Mobile series, the Tourism Ireland effort in Australia, and any of dozens of other FlashMob efforts that have delighted viewers even if they have been done and done
This particular ad from FinnAir juxtaposed multiculturalism with good old fashioned flashmob fun, and garnered more than 5 million viewers. That's about one for every man, woman, and child in Finland! What worked so well here? Was it the delight of seeing Finns getting their Bollywood on? I suppose that is a scosh original, in a way.
Done before? Yes. But fun and successful? Definitely.

Cartier's Jaguar ad

Fallacy: Simple messages work best.I cannot for the life of me figure this one out. Cartier's reimagining of its 165 year history is an orgy of beauty and lack of clarity. And yet it worked. Some 20 million plus people sought out this 3.5 minute ad.
The company had me hooked when the Great Wall came to life. I dare say that this is a triumph of production values (and "Frenchness"). I find myself imagining the storyboard meeting for this baby. To the account people who got this through company approvals: I have nothing but awe and admiration!

Coca Cola's look at Tunisia

Fallacy: Stay away from politics.In our republic divided on blue and red lines, it probably does make sense for brands to stay away from issue politics. But this magnificent Coca Cola music video is a celebration of a universal political value -- the freedom from oppression.
Featuring a huge cast of Tunisians connecting with their athletes and their hard won freedom, this video has an infectiously optimistic spirit.
Throughout the video, the Coke polar bear is an ever-present element. But the commercialism is ultimately fairly minimal as the brand plays second fiddle to a nation in genuine celebration.
And maybe, just maybe, people in other countries including the U.S. can remember that the values that connect us matter more than whether we consider ourselves blue or red.

Google Maps takes on the look of Nintendo NES

Fallacy: Be cool, people. Be cool.Geekiness alert! The delightful dweebs at Google (and I mean dweeb in the nicest way possible) created this entertaining April Fools spot in which Google Maps is integrated into yet another platform -- the 8-Bit NES.
The deadpan employee presenter, the exquisite graphics, and the wonderfully strategic underpinnings really make this work. The message is that Google Maps is available on any platform, that Google wants to help everyone, and that everyone matters.
Nothing cool here, but funny in spades.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

9 Infographics marketers need to see


We all love infographics and the way they make information more clear, entertaining, and telegraphic. Here are nine such illustrations tailored for the viewing pleasure of the inquisitive marketer.

Digital marketing budget trends 2012

It's all about you. Well, all about you and people like you. Here's a summary of digital marketing budget trends for 2012, made simple and tasty looking.

Mobile marketing statistics

It's a bit large for actually viewing on a phone, but for a solid overview of mobile marketing globally, this one's hard to beat.

One nation, under video

We all know that online video consumption has grown rapidly. This clean and simple infographic shows you just how far it's come -- and how fast!

The digital lives of American moms

This is a great overview of moms online, from the kings of consumer data. In one small strip, here's a profile of the American mom and her relationship with digital media. How about that Pinterest, eh?

SoLoMo

Marketer interest in SoLoMo has grown remarkably quickly, and that growth's just getting started. Here's a great summary of the space that gives you all the evidence you need to know that this is a significant part of the future of digital.

Consumer privacy

This interesting infographic demonstrates the growing interest in consumer privacy and strategies to keep data safer. While marketers aren't the target here, its very existence shows that this issue ain't going away.

Digital signage

Don't know much about digital signage? You should. It's growing fast, and its potential proximity to the point of sale means that it can be useful when ROI is paramount. All the signs are here.

Customer loyalty

Loyalty is something we all think about, but this infographic makes the process by which it is built simple and telegraphic.

Facebook 2012

The meteoric rise of this now-dominant web property is made visual in this beautiful and oh-so-informative infographic.