Archive for the ‘Social Media’ Category

PPC or Banner Ads on a Budget


02 May

Mary White-Cornell  recently asked: If you had $3000 a month for adverting would you do Google Adwords or a banner ad on a local news channel website?

Depends on your business. Are you a service, a product manufacturer, b2b? Is what you sell a commodity or specialized? What are your competitors doing? 

AdWords are economical (low bid rate) and effective (click thru rate) if you can be super specific with keywords –  ”rat catcher” in Milldale CT, or “Chevy hubcaps” for example.

If your keywords are too general, “American cuisine, New York City” or  ”auto insurance” for example, you’ll pay a premium for each click and probably won’t land on the first page.

The other PPC challenge is Quality Score. If google thinks the combination of ad copy, keywords and target landing page don’t all mesh then your adds may not run at all. So you need have the ability to tweak SEO on your landing pages.

You’ll also need to devote more time to PPC. It is not set and forget. The campaigns should be frequently monitored and adjusted to maximize performance and eliminate waste (keywords drawing clicks from non-buyers).

Banner ads: If your product/service is a commodity but your target market is small (due to geography or business focus) then banner ads may be a good bet, particularly with news outlet websites or if B2B, in trade pub sites and blogs. You’ll be guaranteed eyeballs on your ad in a targeted way.

Lets assume you are a semi-comodity service business (restaurant, home builder) with several close competitors. If you stay really local, I’d suggest a mixed approach. One banner buy on the best media outlet tied to a specific promotion or event. Make it a VERY clear call to action. Follow up with a really well thought out, ongoing ppc campaign. If you deal direct to consumer consider mixing in Facebook as well.

 

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Do We Need a Social Dogma Manifesto?


21 Sep

Lars von Trier

Lars von Trier - photo by Christian Geisnæs

Selling social to midsize businesses is at a crossroads. They know they want it, but just don’t get it. Like early days of the Web, prices are all over the map – outdone only by performance claims not spoken in their language.

In his recent post ”What’s holding social media back”  DAMIAN BAZADONA makes a case for cutting the circular buzz-speak out of our pitches, and speaking in terms that make sense to our clients and the real world.

Admittedly this is a tough sell. We get frustrated by what appears to be a stubborn lack of understanding. When sent a link, someone recently asked why his company Facebook page was password protected (He had no account and Facebook was asking him to login) Clients on the other-hand get frustrated by the lazy phrases (like Damian’s example ”Listening is everything”)  and shallow analytics.

Maybe it is time for a Social Dogma Manifesto?

 

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I am digitally distinct! Yeah!


09 Jun

I am digitally distinct! Visit onlineIDCalculator.com

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Through a Brand Darkly – Advertising and Augmented Reality?


07 Jun

ARAs location based social networking and marketing grow exponentially from month to month, the seamless connection between marketing, the cloud and the actual world is in an inevitability.  But it seems to me a further dilution of the real world experience that in the end won’t help brands tell a compelling story.

Overlaying a film of data, no matter how “relevant,” will, in the long run, simply comoditise both the messaging and how we experience reality. Great advertising and marketing should find ways to help consumers be MORE present and engaged with brands in the physical world (where most purchases are still made) rather than wandering around Times Square looking through iPhones at ads overlays in real-time – Seeing through a glass darkly.

From Mashable: Who Owns the Advertising Space in an Augmented Reality World?

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Bill and I consider Viral Video – We should be on TED. I’m pretty sure.


01 Apr

Mark Stevenson: mystery man behind the camera. Bill and I consider how to create a viral campaign

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The Jeep Problem Part 1


01 Apr

I realize that this video may not reflect the best judgment on my part, both what I did to my Jeep and perhaps the act of posting it, I just can’t resist. It was a really rough process (as you will see from how I looked on day 2), but I think it shows how we managed to make lemonade out of the potential destruction of a 3 week old Jeep. End of day, I can’t resist good footage – low or hi production value.

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The Limitless Expansion of Creative Space


13 Aug

15 years ago, if you told me that in 2010 I’d be creating a text message pilot program that delivered customized appointment reminders and health tips to dialysis patients I’d probably assume I would be on my second or third career – Maybe in telecom, or the R&D department at a medical device manufacturer. In fact I in interactive marketing.

Even back then the lines were blurring, but text reminders… But text messages, how is that marketing?

The bottom line is that more and more agency services are edging closer to the client’s bottom line. Programs like the text campaign are laser guided missiles aimed directly big problems. For our client that means”missed treatments,” their #1 cause of lost revenue. The idea is simple, if we identify scheduling problems before they happen and reinforce healthy behavior thru lifestyle tips patients will stay healthier longer.

Deep-dive immersion into client products and services is not new to the agency business. Large agencies and industrial design super-boutiques like Smart Design have been doing it for years. But small agencies, like Signature Advertising where I work, are inching closer to true partnership with clients. The best example in our case is the development of the Private Renal Suite in dialysis clinics – an industry first. This program was conceived and designed solely by the agency. Roll-out cost to the client was in the millions, but the results were impressive. In an industry suffering from record declines the Avantus Clinics posted 13% growth.

Measurable does not mean stupid, boring or lazy.

Like pay-per-click and ad-banners, these hyper-measurable programs are often as much about technology as what is commonly thought of as advertising or marketing, which tend to be creative focused first. The delivery channel is secondary. Unfortunately, this can lead to lazy creative, or worse programmers insert “copy” into public facing messages. They are not fault. They seem to have been born that way. For example, when going thru testing on a website with registration features, the thank you email said: Thank you for registering Gender=Male Mr. Mark Stevenson. Now, this would never have made it past testing, but the programmers honestly saw nothing wrong with it.

In the case of the text campaign, we spend a great deal of time considering the tone messages should hit, and continuity of that tone across all patient touch-points. Luckily, the platform is super-flexible, so tinkering is possible (also a source of problems).

Creative for Creative’s Sake? Hells Yea.

Just like any good ad, pay-per-click ads that work are compelling calls to action not want-ads on crank, and the same holds true with Ad banners. Each must balance annoyance, attention and applicability while still adhering to an overall brand strategy. Even text messages need to say more than “remember your appointment”

As new technology opens up opportunities to expand the scope of our services it is important to remember that creativity is our currency. So marketing and advertising professionals must constantly challenge themselves to expand the boundaries of what they think of as “The Creative Space.”

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I’ll Show You Mine: Facebook, Fear and Friends


28 May

Privacy ObsessionFor all the recent angst about privacy it occurs to me that I don’t know a single person who has suffered significantly as a result of posting too much information on facebook, twitter or linkedin. Yet the belief we are in danger gets passed around like the flu until we are all convinced there is a problem.

So, what are we really afraid of? What have we lost?

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Personal Data Theft. Oh Those Bygone Days of Yesteryear

In 1934 my great-grandfather John Stevenson (not that guy >>>) moved from New York  to Snohomish, WA. Somewhere along the road his identity was stolen. This fake John Stevenson went around the Northwest writing bad checks and generally misbehaving.

Meth Head

Does this happen more often today? I‘m sure it does.
Am I willing to risk a drive across country with Big Brother tracking my every move via EasyPass, while Midwestern meth-head cashiers (pictured) swipe my debit card at every no-name combo gas station/general store between Chicago and Rapid City? Hell yes I’ll risk it!

Imagine trying to get across country with no interstate, no cash machine and no cell phone. You can get nostalgic all you want -  I’d rather read my visa card number and expiration date over a cell phone to book the top rated B&B in Bangor when I’m still three hours out, than roll up on the Econo-lodge at 11 PM hoping to find a room where I might lay my head.

Bruegel

Fun in the village

Nosy Neighbors

Amazingly, until about 100 years ago, with no 4square or facebook people were likely able to identify where their neighbors were at any given moment down to the half-acer. Not only that, without placing a single cookie, or cross-referencing profile and “likes” they could probably predict where almost all the people they knew would be next February 24th and what they would be wearing that day. Amazingly, even with all this data-leakage, life went on with no formal privacy policy, or user agreement. Sure there was an understanding about what was acceptable and what to expect, yet the fact remains that people were literally “all up in each others shit”. I guess when you are born, live and die in the same village, sleeping 5 in a room with wheat thresh for a floor your expectation of privacy is somewhat curtailed.

So much for the good old days.

Online marketing gone wild

The New Dark-Marketing Magic

I suspect what people are most afraid of is Zuckerberg selling them out to P&G or match.com. In this nightmare scenario helpless consumers will be served relevant content about products they may actually want to buy.

Back in the good old days before the internet, benign corporations helped homemakers (or “women“) identify exactly which products she needed and best fit her active lifestyle. How could they tell? Simple: It’s 2:30 Tuesday afternoon and you are watching TV. You want Borax!

Is it perfect? No. But based on what is in my inbox and on my eyeballs things get better everyday. Personally I’d don’t miss those bygone days of the 1990s, when my in-box was filled with urgent messages from Somali bankers and Indian Pharmacists.

Sarah Palin Facebook page

NOOOOOOOooooo

Worst Case Scenarios

With all the cookies, preferences, likes and friends-of-friends access I’ve divulged, my worst experiences relating to privacy on facebook are:

      1. Getting served Sarah Palin ads for about three weeks after clicking on a Rush Limbaugh ad by accident.
      2. Bemusement when my ex-wife’s fiance came up as the number one recommendation for “People you may know”
      3. Annoying need to “reset Safari” every time my kids want to play Poptropica on my laptop.

Fancy Meeting You Here!

Last year, after joining the group “Westchester” on Facebook I discovered my ex-wife’s page (she belonged to the group and they recommended her). With an intoxicating queasiness I poked thru her friends list – people I had known well. Loved even. I missed them. It hurt. I quit the group. I reset all my preferences to “Only Friends.” I pulled down the shades.

But if everyone ducks for cover like I did (briefly) then facebook turns into another gated community filled with nothing but like-minded back-patting chatter and photos of laundry:”Separated my laundry today!” “OMG, looks like my house!

After a few days I realized that facebook privacy preferences were not the problem. I had not been screwed over, or duped by shifting user agreements. My experience was simply the online equivalent of running into her at Barns & Noble with a new guy on her arm while I leaf thru “When Bad things Happen to good People”.

I decided to reopen my facebook settings. I’m not going to stop going to book stores, or using facebook. But I’m not stupid about it either. I don’t run up and down supermarket aisles shouting my most personal thoughts and feelings – that would be reckless. Nor would I follow someone up and down the aisle – that would be creepy. I’ve been socialized to know these things about the physical world since birth.

The lesson in the end is that when it comes to privacy there is no virtual. Whether at the office or on facebook: hurting or being hurt, supporting and being supported, opening-up or hiding-out – it is all just behavior.

Mark Zuckerberg as Saint Sebasitian

Saint Zuckerberg of the Community

Communities thrive when members balance sensible behavior and the willingness to risk opening up.

Ultimately, the problem is not facebook’s privacy policy
it is our own.

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Mark'd Up

Notes from America's Most Beloved Creative Mind