Autospeak-Straight Talk contains articles covering digital and social media marketing social communities and events marketing

20 Believable Marketing Statistics for 2014?

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(Posted on Jan 17, 2014 at 11:49AM )
We all love statistics. And after the one that I saw and commented on last week in my article “Taking Digital Marketing offline” where just over 5% of all sales are made online. it is easy to believe to these strong forecasts for the future.

All aboard or not?

William Cosgrove


2014 Marketing Statistics Infographic

Digital Ads Sway Auto Buyers

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(Posted on Jan 16, 2014 at 10:28AM )
The 34m Americans planning to buy a vehicle in the next six months are twice as likely to be swayed by auto-focused digital marketing as the population at large according to new research.

A study from the from the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) and Prosper Insights –Digital Influence on Auto Intenders, based on intelligence from the Media Behaviors & Influence Study which polls some 19,000 respondents once a year – found that 21% of automotive shoppers were influenced by relevant digital ads compared to 12% of the general population. 

Nor did the effect stop at that category as 71% of this group were also more likely to be influenced by digital advertising across multiple retail categories as the average consumer.

Sherrill Mane, Senior Vice President, Research, Analytics and Measurement, IAB, noted that automotive had consistently been a top sector when it came to interactive advertising spending in the US.

"In particular, there seems to be tremendous mobile and digital video opportunity that auto marketers should be optimising along with other digital and legacy media," she added, pointing in particular to the need to leverage the always-on nature of digital media. 

The study also showed that a majority of vehicle buyers regularly embarked upon online searches for automobiles (86%) and they are twice as likely as the average person to be influenced by sponsored search ads (20% vs. 10%).

In addition to digital, all forms of media influenced the automotive path to purchase, said the IAB, so emphasising the importance of a solid media mix in order to effectively reach prospective vehicle buyers.

"These findings underscore the fact that automotive brands, as well as marketers in related areas like car insurance and vehicle maintenance, would be remiss in not including digital in their media strategy," said Pam Goodfellow, Consumer Insights Director, Prosper Insights.

Several digital lifestyle differences were apparent between auto buyers and the typical adult. For example, automotive intenders were more likely to own a smartphone (75% vs. 54%) or a tablet (42% vs. 33%). 

They were also heavier digital video streamers, both online (69% vs. 56%) and on mobile devices (52% vs. 35%). Consequently they were more likely to regularly watch digital video commercials before streaming video programming (66% vs. 53%).

And in general, auto-intenders were more likely to regularly research all kinds of products online before buying (58% vs. 42%). 

Data sourced from IAB; additional content by Warc staff

The 2014 Marketing Ecosystem

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(Posted on Jan 13, 2014 at 12:02PM )
For maybe the first time in history, there is a surplus of technology and strategy to help advance both sales and marketing of a business, while at the same time a lack of resources and understanding to utilize it to its fullest capacity.

That’s not to say that marketers are less educated or qualified, it’s just that they have become over specialized and often don’t pull back to see the larger picture. This gap between tools available and execution presents an opportunity for those that understand the entire ecosystem.

Marketing technologists (those that understand how it all fits together) will become invaluable as businesses adopt customer relationship management solutions, email service providers, content management systems, and big data. Closing the loop on marketing ROI becomes both easier and more complicated at the same time.

Take this common example, a company exec or CMO attends an industry event and buys in to the latest marketing craze. They hear buzzwords like mobile marketing, SEO, retargeting, inbound marketing, or social media engagement. They come back, tell their senior leaders and their team; everyone gets on board. They say, “Okay, go!”

The CMO’s team will likely look back and say, “So, how are we going to do this?”

Start off with just one of the many components of a successful marketing campaign. How do we send a simple email? Do they use ExactTarget, MailChimp, Contactology, Responsys, Vertical Response, Constant Contact or a dozen others. Say they choose one (or likely had one already), where does the data come from? If it’s any type of intelligent or dynamic campaign, a CRM such as SalesForce, Oracle, Zoho, Sugar, or a dozen others are needed. How easy is it to sync them “out of the box” and pass data back and forth? How does the CRM connect to the company’s sales data? Is it possible to flag the contacts and showcase which ones are more engaged?

Say, that’s vetted and connected. They now have contacts in the Email Tool and want to do triggered emails based on their web behavior, i.e. shopping cart abandonment. How does the Analytics provide that information? Can you get it from Google Analytics or Web Trends? Probably not. Or do you need a more advanced tool like Core Metrics or MyBuys that serves up emails based on web behavior? Now they’re getting closer but is there a better way? How much is that going to cost? What about the user’s over digital footprint and does it go back into the CRM to tell the sales staff?

These types of requirements are now getting into the Marketing Automation world and are likely beyond the scope of the initial project to just send emails. Do they go with a top-of-the-line tool like Eloqua, or Marketo? Who’s going to set that up and what are the requirements? Scratch that, what the heck is marketing automation and what can it do? Maybe a simpler mid-size tool like Hubspot of Act-on is a better fit, but does it meet all the requirements? What are the requiremens? What if they have distributed sending model such as on behalf of resellers or a B2B2B model? Do the tools handle multiple lists of multiple companies and different permissions for all? Who’s going to architect that out? They finally choose one of these and initial email tool now becomes obsolete and gets scrapped. Then they have to re-figure out how this connects to the CRM, which requires an entire new tag that goes on the website to get visitor data.

Now that the infrastructure is almost built, it’s time to consider content. How does the content get created and what specific offer or message will resonate with the audience? How is the audience defined? From the CRM would be best but it’s likely that data needs to be cleaned and segmented. Once you have your audience, it’s time to publish the content across all channels. It should probably go up on their website. This means they need a content management system such as WordPress, SharePoint, Joomla, or Drupal. What are the call-to-actions? How do those actions get back into the CRM and Marketing Automation system? Which one do they post into? How do they trigger a welcome email? And how do they optimize the landing page for better conversions? Does the CRM or Marketing Automation tool host landing pages? Didn’t think of that. Or do they use a tool like Unbounce or WuFoo? Does it post to into the CRM “out of the box?”

Once the infrastructure is in place, the content needs to be optimized to the search engine. Does the site architecture support the content generation plan so that they’ll get traffic over time? How are they tracking your ranking? Do they use a tool like RavenTools, SEOMOz, or AuthorityRank? Does the Marketing Automation tool provide any insight?

Then it’s necessary to consider mobile. If they chose a CMS or ESP, does it support responsive themes? Should they create a mobile site and now they are managing two different sites? Do they use a tool like BMobilize or DudaMobile? How are the emails optimized to mobile? Did they know every email client renders it differently and is about 10 years behind the HTML standards of web browsers? How do they test it, something like Litmus to see how it renders? Do they want to measure the deliverability, how about a tool like ReturnPath?

The point is, there are a large number of options and many moving pieces that need to work together seamlessly in order build and launch an effective targeted digital marketing campaign. Because of this, there is an opportunity for those that understand the whole picture. Marketing technologies will become invaluable as companies move into digital relationships with their prospects and customers.

They’ll be able to come in, ask many questions, identify the company goals and then say something like, “You need the infrastructure SalesForce CRM, HubSpot Marketing Automation, WordPress CMS, Google Analytics, and Unbounce. You can obtain contacts from Data.com. You can generate content with WriterAccess. You can launch campaigns with AdRoll, Google AdWords, Authority Rank, OutBrain.”

More importantly, the marketing technologist could facilitate the setup, configuration, and execution on this type of solution.

By Cody Ward

The Three Biggest Challenges Internet Departments are Facing

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(Posted on Jan 10, 2014 at 11:44AM )

It’s always fascinating for us at AutoUSA to learn about the trends in the market, the changes in customer behaviors and the challenges faced by our dealers. This year’s annual survey results highlighted an evolving marketplace, where customer behavior is changing and forcing dealers to examine their processes, and their positioning in the market.

According to the results from AutoUSA’s annual Internet Marketing survey, the following were chosen as the three biggest challenges that Internet departments are facing:

1) Not Enough Leads (26% of respondents chose this as a major challenge)

Dealers don’t seem to be getting the hoped-for volume of leads they want or expect from their websites. This is interesting because two years ago, “keeping up with lead volume” was the number one challenge. In spite of increased spending on websites and SEO/SEM, and increased traffic, it seems dealers are failing to convert visitors into leads.

To me there’s a simple explanation for this. Consumer expectations and behavior have changed in the last two years. Today’s customers want to be in control of the car-buying process, while many dealers also want control of the process. As a result, dealers and dealer website vendors are saying “It’s all about the lead, give me the lead,” while their customers are saying “It’s all about the information, give me the information.” So when a customer visits a website and is bombarded with chat pop-ups, lead forms and can’t find the information they are looking for (such as price or payment information), they are going to leave the website and find the information somewhere else.

This trend isn’t going to change. Dealers must adapt and give customers the information they want, otherwise they risk losing them to a competitor. Remember, a customer visits only 1.8 dealerships on average before making a vehicle purchase. That tells me today’s consumer has already done the majority of their research online before heading out to their top two dealership choices.

Dealers that focus on the customer’s website experience – making it user-friendly, full of helpful content, and making it convenient for the customer to walk themselves through the process – are more likely to draw customers in than websites that are designed solely as a virtual brochure or to get the customer’s information. Conversion tools that are useful to customers, including trade-in calculators, showroom-visit incentives, and payment quoting tools give customers a compelling reason, or even a reward, to submit their information.

Instead of battling for control, dealers should be helping customers with their search for information. Chances are, those who help the most will be one of the 1.8 dealerships visited.

2) Not Enough Staff (20% of respondents chose this as a major challenge)

Staffing issues tend to be a perpetual challenge year after year, according to our surveys. Whether it’s not enough staff, the quality of staff, staff turnover or staff not following processes – it’s clear that many dealers believe that finding, training and keeping the right staff is a never-ending challenge.

But is it really the staff that’s the problem, or is it that many dealerships haven’t changed their sales model to reflect the state of the market? It’s well accepted that nearly 90% of car buyers start their search online. They, like the majority of us, are used to transacting business regularly online, whether it’s buying books, music, electronics, shopping for homes or travel. The Internet is a common tool, but many stores still treat it as a stand-alone department. We continue to see progressive, successful dealerships with high volumes in Internet sales adopt a model where every salesperson is also equipped to handle Internet inquiries so they can scale to serve more “leads”.

3) Quality of Staff (19% of respondents chose this as a major challenge)

As a young sales manager, I was taught by my GM that a salesperson’s failure (and their subsequent departure from our dealership) was my fault. You hire a skill set, train the desired behaviors, and manage execution of the processes so that you have the best-quality staff possible.

There are many new hires who do not receive enough training and are not held accountable when they don’t follow processes. If quality of staff is your greatest challenge, take ownership of that and improve the quality of your staff, and consequently the customer experience, by providing training and expecting excellence.

Salespeople can be trained to follow Internet processes; it’s no different than training them how to take phone calls or how to deal with customers in person, just a different method of communication.

Other major challenges cited in the survey were as follows:

4) Staff does not consistently adhere to written processes (18%)
5) Marketing budget not large enough to accomplish objectives (18%)
6) Keeping up with lead volume (17%)
7) Lack of staff accountability (16%)
8) Lack of management buy-in (16%)
9) Lack of staff training (15%)
10) High staff turnover (9%)

What is your Internet department’s greatest challenge? How have you dealt with some of these challenges?

POSTED BY Josh Vajda

Being so focused on online marketing we get caught up in our virtual world that we often get boxed in by the bits of information streaming across the world wide web.
 
Think about it! This is a staggering number! Imagine with just over 5 percent of total sales being made online it makes one think of all the opportunities that still lie ahead for us.
 
This makes finding ways to take digital marketing mobile an incredibly important and the conduit to make this happen is the Smartphone. The traditional PC market of notebooks and desk-based units is expected to decline 7.6 percent in 2013 (see Table 1). This is not a temporary trend induced by a more austere economic environment; it is a reflection of a long-term change in user behavior.
 
Beginning in 2013, ultramobiles will help offset this decline, so that sales of traditional PCs and ultramobiles combined show a 3.5 percent decline in 2013.
 
Here are some statistics that that makes the case for the urgency to develop the technology to make this a reality.


Worldwide Devices Shipments by Segment (Thousands of Units)

Device Type

2012

2013

2014

2017

PC (Desk-Based and Notebook)

341,263

315,229

302,315

271,612

Ultramobile

9,822

23,592

38,687

96,350

Tablet

116,113

197,202

265,731

467,951

Mobile Phone

1,746,176

1,875,774

1,949,722

2,128,871

Total

2,213,373

2,411,796

2,556,455

2,964,783

Source: Gartner (April 2013)

Tablets are seeing aggressive price erosion and Smartphones are also becoming more affordable, driving adoption in emerging markets and the prepay segment in mature markets. Of the 1.875 billion mobile phones to be sold in 2013, 1 billion units will be smartphones, compared with 675 million units in 2012.
 
It is said the the trend towards smartphones and tablets will have much wider implications than hardware displacement. Software and chipset architecture are also impacted by this shift as consumers embrace apps and personal cloud.
 
As it all stands today mobile provides us with the means and the greatest opportunities and it will be interesting to see how we develop the ways and how this will all unfold in 2014 and the coming years.


By William Cosgrove


 

Social media destinations today seem to be a what’s trending, what's fashionable media where Social Icons are losing ground and where smaller ones are constantly being replaced with the next technologically fad driven way to communicate and share with one another on the internet.

Facebook makes a weak showing when it comes to ad performance for direct response marketing (lead generation) and this month, during a quarterly earnings call, David A. Ebersman, Facebook's chief financial officer, made a startling acknowledgment that confirms what many had suspected but were never able to prove - that the service had become less appealing for at least some of its users. And though Facebook is still the default social network for many people, perhaps it is no longer as crucial as it once was for social survival.

There are also recent studies that are suggesting that people still prefer non-paid ads for search and show that the higher CTRs come from ads with a lower position that actually look likes an organic result, even though it’s often paid. This points to the fact that people are trying to skip the ads and failing.

Organic search has been and still is the search method of choice. There will always be a reason to reach out over social channels as part of your overall marketing mix but why dedicate more and more resources chasing the next hot social channel when that same technology that is changing the social media landscape on an almost daily basis can now benefit companies the most by originating the bulk of your social media initiatives from your own site.

It is time to look more within your organization to find better and more stable ways of attracting customers and communicating with your existing customer base. And this can be done by forming onsite communities, online events and classified marketing initiatives to organically grow your inbound traffic.
These integrated initiatives can effectively reduce the cost of your online marketing and provide a host of benefits that cannot be achieved or more effectively controlled in any other way.

One Big Broadcast has been pioneering these integrated technologies for years. We can show you how to effectively reduce costs and increase your ROI, Inbound marketing, Service, Sales and Customer retention.

In what direction do you feel this is all going? And what would your suggestions be?


William Cosgrove
According to Urban Dictionary, a "Belieber" is one who is an obsessive fan of Justin Bieber; a person who loves Justin Bieber and believes in everything he can do. This mashup of believer and Bieber may be an extreme example of fandom, but it is a powerful one. It's easy to dismiss Beliebers as just teenage lunatics, but these "lunatics" are exactly what's missing from many of today's brands -- Passionate Advocates.

Justin Bieber has a fan base that is widely known as passionate and captivated, and more than willing to advocate on his behalf. Brands have traditionally used top-down marketing strategies such as advertising, PR, events/sponsorships or direct marketing, but advocacy is a relatively new venture for many organizations. An advocacy-focused marketing strategy helps brands to build the equivalent of Justin Bieber's avid "Belieber" fan base. With over 46 million Twitter followers who retweet, comment and repost his content, we have from a marketing perspective a perfect example of brand advocacy at work. He engages with his fans regularly to develop a relationship with them, fostering advocates who readily market on his behalf. They attend his events, market his products to their network and start their own communities to engage with likeminded fans. Most marketers would agree that brand advocacy programs are a good idea but the ultimate challenge is finding customers that are willing to display their passion for your brand. Social media has definitely made it easier for brand advocates to share their opinions. But what truly drives people to express their passion and trust for a brand and how can marketers encourage them to remain advocates?

Here are some simple steps to create a customer advocacy program that will generate the genuine passion your brand needs while helping your brand to achieve company growth and awareness:


Seek Out The Right Brand Advocates
Identify your brand advocates and learn more about who they are, what they like about your brand and where they are talking about it. Users who are interacting with brand content and "liking" your social media pages are a first step. Social analytics can help you identify what topics or features are driving positive conversations about your brand and who is involved in those discussions. Identifying your advocates isn't a one-time deal either. You should be identifying your advocates continuously. The more recruits you have, the more impact it can have on your sales and marketing.


Build Direct Relationships
Understand what motivates your advocates to interact with the brand and create a steady cadence of communication that is targeted uniquely to them. This most certainly does not involve a paid relationship. Instead, focus on providing access to unique information about your brand such as advanced announcements of events or products, a reward or recognition program or special offers. When your advocates engage with you, respond and do so in a timely manner. When a direct relationship is cultivated, your advocates will be more willing to help market the brand.


Consistently Engage
Devise a content strategy and editorial calendar to ensure that your brand keeps advocates consistently engaged for easy social sharing. Content can range from infographics to GIFs to behind-the-scenes footage of the company to drive excitement and build interest. The goal is to encourage and enable advocacy everywhere so it’s easy for advocates to spread the word with everyone. Think about increasing advocacy levels in three ways:


Volume: Map out customer touch points and ensure that they are given adequate attention. Your social media manager should do more than check the company Facebook page once a day. Leverage your audience to advocate on your behalf by interacting frequently and with variety. Share reviews, distribute news and ask questions.
        
Customization:
Customize messages and generate authentic conversations to create deep fan engagement and advocacy.


Reach: Use various channels, including employee communications, social content, mobile apps and websites to influence your key advocates with trustworthy content at the right time.
  1. Measure Positive Effects of Advocacy
    Measure ROI with real-time dashboards and analytics. A simple positive/neutral/negative tracking system does little to help understand the degree of recommendation around a brand. Instead, brands should pursue a more advanced tracking system that looks at the ability to increase advocacy over time and identifies key drivers. Know when customers promote your product, how many people they reach, who they convert into new customers and how much resulting revenue they generate for your brand. 
Attracting and driving passion for brands takes time and genuine commitment. The challenge for marketers is to find and build relationships with key influencers, sustaining those relationships through engagement, and then measuring the results to show effectiveness. When engaging their audience, brands need to focus on staying visible across multiple channels, being relevant by providing content that matters and responding to advocates with authenticity. These are the key ingredients for a successful customer advocacy program and, once mastered, passion will be ignited and your regular brand believers will be transformed into "Beliebers."

By Russ Fradin is the co-founder of Dynamic Signal and a digital media industry veteran with more than 15 years' experience in the online marketing world.

Leaders in integrated digital marketing technology
Nigel Hollis ,Executive Vice President and Chief Global Analyst at brand research consultancy Millward Brown, and author of two books on developing a meaningful brand tells us that Everything you do in business builds your brand for good or ill, as your actions generate feelings, associations, and ideas in the minds of your consumers.

 He goes on to say that the challenge is to make sure those actions create a meaningfully different experience that people want to repeat. This is because people are predisposed to choose things that stand out from the crowd. A brand’s difference gives consumers an easy rationale for choosing it, and a ready justification for paying a price premium.

Research done by Millward Brown finds that brands with a meaningful difference command a price premium 13 percent higher than weaker category alternatives.

For example, look at Lululemon. Founded in 1998, Lululemon produces sports apparel for women that is fashionable, environmentally friendly, and as technically advanced as sports apparel for men. The company spends virtually nothing on advertising. Instead, it concentrates on building an ardent consumer base by creating a unique customer experience. Instructors wear the clothing at in-store events like self-defense and goal-setting workshops, simultaneously building product awareness and forging ties with local communities. Through the community portal on its website, Lululemon invites customers to share their experiences via Instagram and Twitter.

They are encouraged to apply to become Lululemon ambassadors, “unique individuals … who embody the Lululemon lifestyle and live our culture.” The company now has over 200 stores, and sales soared from US $40 million to US $1.37 billion in eight years. In the US alone, sales grew 40 percent in 2012.

There is a saying that content is the fuel and social is the fire. And for businesses in today’s customer centric marketplace creating a private social networking platform connects your customer and potential customer base into a single-focus environment, enabling them to exchange ideas which will ultimately strengthen your brand and broaden your customer base.

In addition to your overall Digital marketing strategy social communities are a perfect branding platform to show your members your appreciation and dedication to serving them by offering member only specials on purchases and services all geared towards producing devoted customers who will ultimately become your brand ambassadors.

This sense of community creates a win, win relationship where both you and your members can communicate closely and collaborate on such things as events, volunteer efforts, etc which in turn is channeled through organic seo and social networks to generate goodwill across the internet from your website.

In today’s world of being relevant using content marketing in all its forms, what better way is there to be relevant than by creating your own brand ambassador community program.

The following video is a, Food for Thought, testimonial on how creating Brand Ambassadors can work for your business and create a low cost way to gain customers for the long term.

William Cosgrove




We have all heard the cliché that you are just paying for the name. One Big Broadcasts’ clients are paying for results and it is our proven proprietary technology not our name that is providing them.

No other company can offer the fully integrated digital marketing "ecosystem" that One Big Broadcast has developed.
Our living, breathing ecosystem combines powerful blog engines, all with many more touch points than any other platform; with social integration, CMS pages, showroom pages, social communities; events marketing, smart inventory, mobile integration and ongoing support.

-Everything is easily controlled and managed from a central point-Your console- and monitored by our deep analytics that speak to you in language you can understand.

These all combine to turn sites into self contained ecosystems alive with streaming content on thousands of pages across the digital spectrum all emanating from one platform- your website.

Contact us today to find out how you can take the lead with the leader in digital marketing platform technology-onebigbroadcast.com



By William Cosgrove
 Social Communities can redefine the customer experience and how businesses interact with their customer base by taking rewards programs, customer service and feedback to a whole new level. Onsite Social Communities shifts customer support and service to being part of the brand marketing mix.

Onsite Communities brings together the customer's voice with data from enterprise systems such as CRM. In addition to other benefits, engaging customers in community also drives transparency and openness - attributes that modern consumers increasingly expect. In these days of information overload, many people are simplifying their lives to focus on their particular interests.
 
Creating a private social networking platform connects your loyal like-minded customer base in a single-focus environment, enabling them to exchange ideas and develop groups and ultimately strengthen your customer base.

Social Communities are a perfect platform in which to show your members your appreciation and dedication to serving them by offering members specials on purchases, service and financing all geared toward customer retention and satisfaction.
 
Companies with private social networks can experience better customer service, reduced customer complaints and even higher brand loyalty due to brand ambassador programs. Think of having a central place in which to read and understand your customers’ concerns, wants, needs and expectations.

As your community strengthens, your brand’s momentum becomes energized, resulting in increased word-of-mouth marketing and increased sales. The result is a powerful onsite socialcasting platform disseminating these interactions across the social and search spectrum.
 

Social networks also connect to events marketing allowing businesses their customers and event sponsors to manage their own profiles – including creating their own content, updating their company news and social media – which can all be administered with specified permissions tools. This “conglomerate”-style online network harnesses the power of multiple content writers which acts like a magnet to attract search back to your site.

Although your social brand strategy is important, don’t overlook the potential of harnessing your own community in a niche social community network. An onsite social community offers many benefits for you as the business and the customer that cannot be duplicated elsewhere-providing a win-win situation for all.

One Big Broadcast is a pioneer in Social Community and Events marketing technology which is part of our Integrated Digital Marketing solutions.

William Cosgrove