call us: +27 21 404 1800

subscribe to our newsletter

Archive for the 'Online Marketing' Category

Corporate Identities within the digital space – keep it consistent, freshen it up

Friday, January 6th, 2012

In May 2011 I was asked to contribute to ClickTale’s Marketing Madness Blog series, a month-long tribute and daily guide to the world of online marketing. I highlighted some points worth repeating as we begin 2012:

After working within the digital industry for more than 8 years, 2 major points continuously stand out:

1.    Digital is still not yet recognized and appreciated in all its glory as an established and integrated marketing channel.
2.    Corporate Identity guidelines often clash with usability best practice.

What do we at Clickthinking recommend in order to achieve the best conversions from your corporate platform?  Keep it consistent, but freshen it up. Read more in the published article:

http://blog.clicktale.com/2011/05/12/corporate-identities-keep-it-consistent-know-yourself/

Corporate Identities - keep it consistent, freshen it up

 

Until next time, Conversion matters!

Anne

Email Marketing: Then and Now

Monday, December 12th, 2011

In 1971 Ray Tomlinson was the first person to use an @ sign/symbol to send an electronic message to a person rather than a computer. Since then, email marketing as a business practice has evolved in leaps and bounds, but often the perception of this highly adaptable and extremely effective one-to-one channel still lies back in the mid-1990s as “out-dated” and “ineffective”.

In reality though, we’ve gone from a mass-market static communication tactic, where a sender would deploy to as many “sourced” email addresses as possible, to today’s email marketing model which possesses the capabilities to deliver highly relevant and uniquely dynamic content to each and every opted-in subscriber. The effectiveness of the channel is easily tracked via a wide range of metrics and the return on investment (ROI) is extremely measurable. And all the while, email marketing is able to easily integrate into a myriad of other marketing channels such as Search; Analytics; and Social.

So how far have we come? Take a walk with us as we review a snapshot of the then of email marketing, and the now:

Email Marketing - A look at the Then and Now

 

If you’d like to subscribe to our RSS Feed to be the first to receive new articles and updates, you can subscribe here.

 

If you’d like to learn more about our Performance Email offering, please don’t hesitate to contact us at emailmarketing@clickthinking.com. We’d love to hear from you!


Until next time, stay engaged!

Clickthinking Introduces Another Power Channel Offering: Performance Email

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

Cupcakes from our Team’s Intro to Performance Email (by Vanilla Ribbon)

It’s with great excitement that I write this, my first blog article for Scent Optimisation, to introduce Performance Email as part of our Conversion offering at Clickthinking. A dedicated focus on one of the most powerful digital marketing channels, Email Marketing, brings Clickthinking’s Global Service Offering to new heights and is sure to enable our Clients to continue the on-going digital journey with all of their valued customers.


Let’s be honest, Email Marketing isn’t new. But as we’ve seen from continued growth across all Global markets (with stable focus on Email Marketing as one of the top 3 areas of online budget investment), it certainly isn’t dead. And with the increasing shift to mobile in both first-world and emerging markets, the 81% growth in mobile email viewership published by ReturnPath earlier in 2011 shows that people are now consuming email anywhere and everywhere.


But what about those who predicted the death of email as social stole the front page digital headlines? As the dust clears and those who zealously foretold the end of [Email’s] days recant their predictions, we now see that Email and Social have emerged as two fantastic engagement channels that not only get along, but when paired together are the life of the party that keeps people talking long after the night has ended. So, it makes absolute sense that with our proven expertise in Search; Design and Optimisation; and Conversion and Analytics, that Email Marketing is included in our [and ultimately our Clients’] digital armoury.


Keeping Updated

In line with the focus on our Performance Email offering we’ll be publishing a monthly newsletter to all of our valued Clients, Partners and Followers, starting end of November. Within this publication we’ll not only provide you with Email-related insights, but we’ll also feature articles from our Search; Design and Conversion Teams. In the coming weeks and months we’ll also be adding regular posts to the latest Industry Insights, Case Studies, and relevant articles to our Scent Optimisation blog – so stay tuned and in touch.  If you’d like to subscribe to our RSS Feed to be the first to receive new articles and updates, you can also subscribe here.


If you’d like to learn more about our Performance Email offering, please don’t hesitate to contact us at emailmarketing@clickthinking.com. We’d love to hear from you!


Until next time, stay engaged!

Clickthinkers share their insights from the EMEA Adobe Omniture Summit 2011

Tuesday, June 14th, 2011

Anne, Adrian and Rob, 3 of our “performance focussed” Clickthinkers attended the Adobe Omniture Summit in London, Europe’s biggest digital marketing conference. This year’s theme was all about social media and while most marketers focus on how to efficiently leverage social media in order to communicate with their customers, the real deal is to determine its actual value. The summit had a number of excellent guest speakers, sharing insights and value about brands, social, technical integrations and performance improvements within an extremely fast moving industry. An industry where customers are no longer only buyers of products, but are truly the centre of attention, empowered with choice through technology. And as much as customers are empowered with choice, we as marketers are empowered with access to data about our customers. We are in a powerful position to use this data to become better marketers!

Summit Mindmap

Summit Mindmap

Anne Scharlow, Head of Conversion:

For me, one of the most impressive speakers was Shaun Smith (@ShaunSmith_CEM). According to him, being BOLD is the magic recipe in order to succeed in an environment where customers are increasingly marketing savvy and have the choice on where to spend their money. These consumers demand authenticity and consistency from their brands. Being BOLD means engaging and entertaining customers, rather than persuading them to buy a product, being honest and sticking to strong and sustainable brand promises.

Customer centricity is about designing products around your customers, and not to assume they will like what a commercial model will present them. When Richard Branson decided to move into the space industry and created Virgin Galactic, he was prepared to constantly fulfilling customers’ needs. The original space ship was not designed to allow weightlessness within the aircraft, but the new one will be. Because this is what they want and how you keep your clients engaged, make them part of the experience and ultimately make them participating in changing the future- with you.

We at Clickthinking design online experiences and focus on perfect customer journeys though the online environment. What I took away here, is that data becomes even more powerful. We love collecting data, review them carefully to unfold valuable insight and we are not ashamed to ask our online audience directly. Surveys, landing page optimizations, testing and solid web analytics tool implementation are key to truly understanding our clients’ clients online and pushing them in the centre of our business.

Rob Stanbridge, Head of Search

I was fascinated by Ann Lewnes, senior vice president of global marketing for Adobe gave an engaging talk that can be summarised as follows:
•Social is Everything
•Messaging is critical
•Marketing is the new finance
•It’s a great time to be in marketing!

There was also number of smaller breakout sessions. Key insights for me from these sessions relating to search marketing is the awareness that paid search and organic search campaigns should be managed together. To quote Josh Palau of razorfish “You don’t have paid goals and organic goals, you have search goals”. Furthermore, 60% of users do not know difference between paid & organic search. So it is critical to have a presence in both to ensure exposure to ensure brands receive share of voice within search results.

In terms of the conversion of paid vs. organic, there is a 4.2% average conversion rate for Organic against a 3.6% average conversion rate for Paid (Marketing Sherpa Search Marketing Benchmark Study).

For paid search campaign optimisation it is critical to give bounce rates of landing pages a higher focus when managing keywords. However it is still important to analyse keywords with high bounce rates within context of the buying cycle.

Another insights from the sessions is the requirement to have all changes to websites go through an iterative testing process to ensure continued improvement of conversion KPI’s.

Adrian Jennings, Organic Search Engineer

My personal highlight of the Omniture Summit was Brian Solis (@briansolis) who spoke passionately about engaging with your customers via social media. It is not about having a social media presence but rather offering your customers what they want through Social Media. 52% of people un-follow a brand on Twitter because the content becomes repetitive or boring over time. A further 41% of Twitter users un-follow a brand when they become overwhelmed by all the marketing posts.  After the summit I ordered his book called “Engage” and am eagerly awaiting its arrival.

An interesting from one of the breakout sessions on search marketing is that organic search accounts for 10% of the search engine marketing spend but is responsible for 70% of the clicks.

My key take away from a search perspective was that we too often see paid and organic search as separate entities but these need to work together to achieve our search engine marketing goals.

View the Adobe Omniture Summit Highlights here
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=euJ0VOqSAeU

Online influencer power: what it means for brands

Friday, January 14th, 2011

As published on Bizcommunity, 6 December 2010.

By Joanne Reidy, Creative Director

Who in their right mind would travel to the seediest part of town, at night, park next to a strip club, and endure a 10-minute walk desperately clutching at personal valuables, all just to eat something as mad as sea urchin pasta? You would – if someone you trusted sang the praises of the best Italian restaurant they knew, detailing the fabulous food, comfortable atmosphere and terrific staff.

You’d reason that if they liked it, you’d be bound to like it too, not so?

In my case, this recommendation didn’t come from a mate. It was from someone I follow online. They tweeted about this fantastic restaurant and linked to a personal blog post which further elaborated on their happy dining experience, prompting me to make a booking.

A stranger convinced me, but not just any stranger, an online “influencer”.

What exactly is an influencer?

In the old days, they would have been called professional consumers. Today, they are better known as brand advocates or global multipliers; I like to call them influencers.

Influencers act as conduits or filters for information. They are ordinary people, like you or me, who are able to wade through all the bulls**t that floods the Internet, and sniff out fabulous deals, excellent new products, and great value usually before anyone else.

What separates the influencer from the ordinary social media user?

It’s simple – influencers are better, more sophisticated consumers.

Information junkies

Influencers tend to be information junkies, consuming different forms of news across multiple channels. They are active users of email, newsgroups, blogging facilities, Twitter, Facebook and other online tools. Within these platforms, they have extensive contact networks and thousands of followers.

Globally, online influencers connect with twice as many people than the average consumer. Trend Stream’s Annual Global Web Index states that influencers make up only 15% of the total social media audience but, due to their hungry patterns of social media consumption, their effect on the online space is very powerful.

Influencers tend to be globally minded and enjoy staying abreast of news and trends locally and international. They share their knowledge, opinions and recommendations not only out of a need for recognition but also out of a sense of responsibility.

Brand managers be warned – you are rapidly losing the ability to directly control how your brand is perceived, received and spoken about. Harness the power of the influencer by focusing on providing a quality product or service offering, accessing the right people online, and then letting them do the talking for you.

Developing the influencer-brand relationship

An increasing number of the people who interact with your brand are no longer the passive consumers they once were. They are now, more than ever, voices that will shape your brand’s image and public perception.

  • Start by scanning the horizon. Identify the critical influencers within your target market and get to know them. These are the folks who make waves online, so they won’t be hard to find.
  • Check out your influencers’ stomping grounds. Discover and observe where and how they spend time on the web. Participate and engage in dialogue with them. Establish a rapport, because simply joining the conversation is no longer enough.
  • Earn their trust by consistently demonstrating your commitment, offering them genuine and valuable insights, and adding value to their lives. Bear in mind that influencers are shrewd consumers who are not easily manipulated, and don’t take kindly to brands that come across as overly self-promoting or insincere.
  • Nurture your relationship with your influencers. Consumers demand authenticity and you will only truly break down the barrier between your brand and the target market if you remain consistently engaged, accessible, valuable and transparent.
  • And finally, recognise and acknowledge your influencers when you can. Influencers are more likely than other consumers to feel respected when asked their opinion. Involve them in your brand by granting them insider access and exclusive content, then get their feedback and work with it. Don’t be nervous to let them define your brand – their trust and the powerful online equivalent of word of mouth marketing are a priceless combination.

Need to share

Influencers have a need to share their knowledge with others and will naturally reward the brands they have faith in. By sharing their experiences with the online community, they can gain massive exposure for a product or service – exposure which is all the more valuable because it comes from an individual and not a brand.

The brand-influencer relationship is still very new in the South African digital sphere. There has been some negative discussion in the online space, whereby influencers who accept sponsorship deals (a very common practice internationally) are accused of selling out to brands.

When the connection between brands and online personalities becomes too obvious, influencers risk being categorised as ‘brand whores’, a harsh label that suggests their individual objectivity has been compromised.

The relationship can be perceived as blatant bribery, and this mars both the brands’ authenticity and the influencers’ authority within their networks. Remember that a genuine and understated brand-influencer relationship can be more effective than an obvious commercial deal.

Consumers are new trend dictators

Your consumers are your new trend dictators. Listen to them, engage with them, and respect their opinions, as well as their clout.

And then let them love you back. Get it right and you’ll reap the benefits – even if you’re selling something as bizarre as sea urchin pasta.

Facebook beats Yahoo in display ads, is it a big deal?

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Statistics released by comScore late last week suggest that social networking site Facebook is at the forefront of the US display ad market.  Facebook ad views accounted for 16.2 % of the market’s total, surpassing all online publishers including giants such as Yahoo and Microsoft.

The report from comScore, a leading digital marketing intelligence agency, shows that a total of 1.1 trillion display ads were shown to American users during the first quarter of 2010, 15% more than the same period last year. Of those, Facebook racked up a massive 176.3 billion display ad impressions.

Yahoo still makes substantially more profit from display ads however, due to their extensive network which serves ads on sites other than their own, combined with the poor click-through rate for Facebook ads. Nevertheless the social networking site is reportedly poised to reach billion dollar revenues for the first time this year. Read the rest of this entry »

Right or Wrong? Teenagers & students use Facebook – it isn’t the right environment for a corporate advertiser

Friday, October 9th, 2009

Facebook.com is the most visited website second to Google on the internet today. It cannot be denied that the volumes are there, but when it comes to its value as a marketing channel it is often questioned for quality and relevance.

Today I came across some surprising Facebook demographics indicating that the primary Facebook audience is neither socialite school girls nor bored mothers at home. The facebook.com audience is in fact one of the most educated and affluent sectors namely young, graduated, employed males.

For confirmation I compared the demographics of reuters.com which attracts a similar target market and is a respected advertising platform, see BlackBerry advertisements below:

BlackBerry advertisements on reuters.com
The demographics for these two sites are startlingly similar. The only real difference is the fact that the facebook.com audience is younger. However this is a positive indicator to the longevity of the site’s influence.

Alexa.com statistics(http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/facebook.com)

Take out: Facebook doesn’t only perform in terms of large volumes of visitors, but it also holds significant potential to reach the educated and affluent members of society. The only question then remains: Is the social environment the place where your market WANTS to interact with you? The web is all about individual control these days after all.

Codename: Caffeine – Google reveal next generation of search to public

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

In an interesting move following the announcement of the Yahoo! and Microsoft deal, Google have released a beta version to the public. The new version has a number of improvements including an increase in indexing speed, supposedly more relevant search results & a more comprehensive database.  We also hope that they have worked on the freshness of their results.

Here’s what Google wrote:

“For the last several months, a large team of Googlers has been working on a secret project: a next-generation architecture for Google’s web search. It’s the first step in a process that will let us push the envelope on size, indexing speed, accuracy, comprehensiveness and other dimensions. The new infrastructure sits “under the hood” of Google’s search engine, which means that most users won’t notice a difference in search results. But web developers and power searchers might notice a few differences, so we’re opening up a web developer preview to collect feedback.”

You can test out the beta version here.

-->