AdAge Viral video chart – New Media, New Measures

The beauty of where this all goes – AdAge Viral video chart

http://adage.com/digital/article?article_id=143824

As I spent some time today on AdAge getting my daily dose of what’s happening and who’s who, I came across a great article that was talking about the most successful viral campaigns of the week. What was intriguing and also wonderful at the same time is that AdAge was referencing “Visible Measures” viral ability chart as a reference guide to who was winning the race. So there we have it – a publication that was once dedicated to a traditional advertising model paying homage once again to the power of digital and and non-traditional. Google’s Chrome video took the lead with an impressive 1.86MM views on a new spot they published online. Toyota was close behind with 1.85MM views regarding a campaign they put together for the Sienna.

What I love most about this example is the market’s willingness to understand and give credibility to the power of digital and social media. However I must say there is a great opportunity to provide more insight into this report than just how many views have been achieved. There is so much more data available to help you understand the true impact and connection that these impressions have had with the eyeballs that have viewed them. If harnessed correctly, marketers have the ability to make those moments so much more impactful to both the brand and the consumer experiencing them.

Brian

Google Fiber Initiative Report – Round Two

Below is the second in our series of reports ranking the online share of voice for the cities participating in the Google fiber initiative.

This report updates our initial metrics based on the insights we’ve collected from our research, which includes all of the direction submitted through blog comments on our first report and emails we’ve received directly. And on that note, thank you to everyone who took the time to contribute to this research on behalf of your city. As we hope we’ve shown in these reports, active participation is essential to any good online efforts, and yours is much appreciated.

Please note that if your city did NOT make the top 10 in our report, it is no indication that you are in any way not competitively positioned in the initiative. Again, Google has multiple factors in their decision making process, including how interested a community is in working with Google, community support, local activities, needs and resources, approved construction methods, local regulatory issues and area broadband speeds. And though most participating cities assert that online interaction in their campaigns will increase the chances of favorability in their selection, ultimately Google will decide which factors are most relevant.

The second report is available for download here. Just click on the image below.
And please reach out to us through the comments below if you have any questions or comments on the information and insights we’re presenting.

 

Download Media Kit (6MB ZIP)

2010 – A pragmatic view

I enjoy Judy Shapiro’s pragmatic approach to 2010.  Meeting the business objectives is the number one goal, even if that means avoiding the glitz and staying with the tried and true.  It is easy to be lured down the path of shiny objects only to find expectations are too high and performance underwhelms.  I speak from experience on this one.  A grounded platform based upon facts and data is where I like to start.  Then a comprehensive integrated campaign, with the appropriate amount of attention-getting bling, can follow. Continue reading

New Strategies for Managing Social Relationships – SRM

Back in 2002, when we were trying to get our new catalog company off the ground, we quickly learned the value of a customer.  The old saying “it is easier to keep a customer than get a new one” came to life when we were buying names of prospects and less than 1.2% of them became customers.  The house list was our bread and butter and we learned how to squeeze every last drop of value out of it.  We quickly became experts in segmenting our list using the RFM model: Recency, Frequency and Monetary value.  It worked well.  A new customer was a live customer and we did everything we could to let them know they were valued and keep them engaged.  We incentivized heavily to increase purchase frequency and treated our best customers like royalty.  Now, segmentation goes much deeper and CRM models have become much more sophisticated, but the same fundamental principles still apply.  Today, with brands engaging customers through social channels, how are these relationships managed?  What are the rules in a world driven by return on engagement not return on investment?  Social Media is changing the brand-to-consumer relationship driving the need for new strategies to take advantage.  We call this new strategic approach Social Relationship Management (SRM). Continue reading

Are you content with your content plan?

Content is the Key

Question: In this developing world of social media and digital marketing, we all know that we need to reconsider the way we’re delivering content to our audiences, but do you feel like you have things under control? There are threads everywhere discussing how we’re losing control of the conversations going on around our brands and how we’ve entered into the age of transparency in messaging. The rage today seems to be around monitoring and measuring and conducting damage assessment and control once a conversation is made public. But let’s consider content in the context of measuring and monitoring and think about how brands can move from “reactive content victim” to “proactive participant in a meaningful conversation.”

So then, how are you developing content in the new media age? How are you planning to update all the social media channels and blog(s) your company is launching, or has already launched over the course of the year? These are big questions, and unless you know the answers to them, you may want to consider scaling your digital media plan to accommodate your ability to create content that will effectively represent your brand effectively in a two-way conversation with your audiences. The key word there is “two-way,” because you’re entering an environment that is built on networks and opinions and transparency, and if you’re merely in a position to launch messaging (even if you’ve spent millions of dollars testing its relevance) into the digital space without being able to measure its effectiveness and, more importantly, without having a strategy on how to respond if a conversation erupts around your thought, you’re leaving yourself vulnerable.

As we get into it, here’s a little background on where we are and where we’re heading:

Web 2.0 has enabled a two-way dialogue. Audiences have become “search savvy,” information flows and, most importantly, the line between professional and amateur content has started to blur. The challenge isn’t finding information, it’s knowing what to do with it…

The new age of Web 3.0 is about semantics. It’s enabling a new distribution relationship around content/data centered around Filtering (information and content) and Context (delivering the right message, at the right time, to the right person, with the right device). This approach to content is creating an open source social structure that will allow databases to talk to each other and encourage social network content that urges audiences to use snippets of content as they please and where they please to reach new levels of meaning between brands and audiences.

These changes are creating a MARKETING STRATEGY SHIFT…

Web 2.0 asked us to build massive sites and drive traffic to a place where we could try to control messaging. Web 3.0 is asking us to create content that can travel throughout the digital world via conversations with multiple participants, creating connections that drive content consumption, data collection and new content generation.

So, here’s the rub, and it’s a simple “if/then” proposition: if we’re now in a position that requires us to create content that will enable and respond to conversations about our brand, then how do we generate content plans that aren’t simply focused on feeding information and stories out to audiences, trusting in their ability to run with it? The answer’s simple: plan. Build a plan that maps out your entire content strategy across all your channels for the entire year. Of course, you need to leave some room to be reactive, but if your marketing plans are aligned with your business objectives, you should be able to create a conversation that you can feed to your audiences and interact with in an organized, ongoing basis throughout the year. And if you do this well, you’ll be able to measure not only the sentiment of what’s going on around your brand, but also the effectiveness of your content (for good or bad). Once you know that, you can create a content baseline that allows you to generate planned, targeted content year after year that is valued internally for its measurable effectiveness and externally for your contributions as the subject matter expert around your brand.

Digital Marketing Taken to a Whole New Level with Google.

This year at Advertising Week 2009, Andy Berndt (MD of Google Creative Lab) and Tom Uglow (Creative Lead for Google) gave a presentation introducing “87 cool things, even a few from us.” In the presentation, they highlight some of the more recent achievements to come about in the interactive world using a combination of Google tools.

Google shows some of the most creative campaigns and projects that help expand our knowledge of what is possible, while inspiring us to create a more meaningful experience for the consumer.

Check it out.

87 cool things, even a few from us

Way to go, Chase Amazon Visa!

chase-amazon-com-business-visa-card

It’s official. I’ve finally had an amazing customer service experience with a credit card company. I started my company on credit cards. I had a LOT of them. So, being a responsible guy, I recently went through and closed all the accounts I’ve finally paid off.  The way you do that is to call the credit card companies and tell them what you want to do. Of course, I’ve decided to keep one or two cards open for regular use, and I’ve made my decision on which to keep based on the following:

1. Interest rate

2. Incentive programs

All that said, I started my calls and met with interest rates ranging from 13 to 25% from Citibank, Capital One and US Bank, as well as really lousy customer service. They’d say, “Oh, I’m so sorry you’ve decided to close your account! May I ask why?” To which, I’d reply, “High interest rates.” To which, they’d reply, “Oh. Well, I’ve closed that account for you. Can I do anything else for you? No? Goodbye.” *CLICK* That was, until I called Chase to close my Amazon.com card.

I called them and received all them same “Oh, I’m so sorry!” stuff, but once she (and I say “she” because I can’t remember the CSR’s name, but she should get a raise) got through that, she actually offered me a reduction from 13% to 9.5% on my interest and jumped through all sorts of hoops to make sure that my points program is optimized for my spending habits. When I asked her why she was so helpful, she said that every time I went to use one of my credit cards, she wanted me to use my Chase Amazon card. No other reason. From there, we talked about how we were both newly married and how she is expecting her first child. All in all, she demonstrated the level of customer service and care that companies HAVE to live in to if they want to survive the wave of Customer Service 3.0 that’s accompanying the digital marketing age.

Consumers are getting smarter and less patient with rude corporate dictatorships. It’s time to think things through on the business side and decide if you’re going to be a company that actively participates and plays nice with your customer base, or it you’re going to try to live according to the old rules.

Think about it and let me know where you land. Also, get a Chase Amazon.com Visa card. You’ll be happy you did.

Cheers