Posts Tagged ‘Social Harbor’

Mobile Browsing On the Rise

Tuesday, June 28th, 2011

More and more the digital agency needs to optimize its advertising for mobile platforms. New research from Google and the Mobile Marketing Association show that among users who have smartphones and computers, the smartphone is becoming a more preferred method of internet browsing. 58% of respondents said they had used their smartphone to go online every day. 78% of respondents had the said the same thing of their computer. That 20 point gap shrinks to 9 points when users are asked about methods for connecting to social networking sites. The nominal numbers will also rise. 2011 sees 31% of mobile users owning a smartphone and by 2015 that number will rise to 43%.

smartphone-sales-surge-top-pcs-for-the-first-time_1

ElectronSpy.info

The digital agency needs to begin thinking about mobile viewing options, even when the campaign is not geared to mobile users. The easy difference is the differences in web sites when viewed on a mobile site. Usually these sites are optimized, but the digital agency needs to ask what then happens to the advertising. Mobile advertisements need to also be scaled for small resolutions as well as for slower bandwidths. There are also more abstract and theoretical approaches that need to be considered.

E Marketer: Mobile Activities Rival PC for Smartphone Owners

LinkedIn Offers New Ad Types

Friday, June 24th, 2011

Like FaceBook, LinkedIn is trying to find ways to leverage its social network into its advertising options without compromising privacy. LinkedIn has announced two new types of advertisements to capture this effort. One of these changes is to display within the ad how many of a user’s contacts recommend or follow the advertising company. The other new advertisement shows relevant people from a user’s contacts within the banner ad. It is possible for users to opt out of being featured in these advertisements.

LinkedIn New Advertising

IconSpedia.com

While LinkedIn specializes in type of contacts that may limit its appeal to the digital agency’s client, the digital agency should think about how to incorporate LinkedIn. Because of its business specialization it may never be as successful as FaceBook, but its specialization makes LinkedIn a particularly viable option for advertising solutions. These new social media marketing features will help LinkedIn advertising attain stickiness and a level of affect that makes FaceBook so successful.

Mashable: New LinkedIn Ads Leverage Recommendations & Follows

New Social Network Tools Offer Potential

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

There are two new social networks, Sonar launched in May and Banjo this morning, which may offer the digital agency a new and inventive way to market for clients. Instead of marking friends and then telling you where those people are, these networks treat locations as the friend and then tell you whom else is nearby. Sonar will also flag the other nearby people by how many FaceBook friends you have in common. Both are available for the iPhone, but only Banjo is currently available for Android.

banjo

AllThingsD.com

The verdict is still out on these location friending networks. Effective mobile application development means increasing the apps base usage, so others join up and continue to check in. The other problem plaguing these apps is their counter-intuitiveness. For a brick-and-mortar storefront to appear it would need to be logged into the app and only then would someone else logged in, who also happened to be nearby, see the storefront. Among early adopters, however, that might be precisely why these apps can drive some traffic. If they do take off in popularity then there might be too many nearby contacts to attract much attention, but in the nascent stages it might work very well, especially since the account is free. Digital agency’s using these networks for advertising and social media marketing should wait until there is some growth.

Read Write Web: New Wave of Social Networks Have You “Friending” Your Location

Businesses Need to Better Utilize Twitter

Wednesday, June 15th, 2011

Data shows that Twitter users are quite likely to ask questions but not to direct those questions with an @ or a hashtag. Many of these users are asking for input from their followers or from businesses. Six out of ten Twitter users wish businesses would answer questions over Twitter and data also shows business replies are as trustworthy as replies from regular users.

how-to-use-twitter-business

webdevils.biz

This is a high burden for businesses. Monitoring Twitter usage is relatively easy when people use the hashtags or the @ sign. Monitoring Twitter without those tools requires much more time, but the payoff seems entirely worth it. The digital agency needs to incorporate this into its brand monitoring portfolio. It would also be a wise move to incorporate a method of Twitter contact into an advertising campaign. Maybe some users do not use the Twitter tools (hashtag, etc.) because they are not sure about the appropriate use of those tools. The digital agency can incorporate that education as a means of increasing affective communications.

E Marketer: Twitter Users Want Businesses to Answer Them

Demographics of Online Coupon Use Are Changing

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

A new report by Morpace shows the use of online coupons will continue to grow in nominal numbers, but who constitutes those numbers is slowly changing. Estimates don’t predict much change in the percentage of internet users adopting online coupons. 2009 saw 44% of internet users using them and 2013 predictions put that number just shy of half. With the growth of internet usage, however, that percentage bump will be almost 20 million people. Of the 2011 47%, 33% of those people have previously purchased a Groupon.

Groupon

Photo: AllThingsD.com

Groupon is clearly the darling of online coupon vendors, but the fundamentals may be changing. Normally Groupon caters to the small business, which is great for the digital agency. However, larger firms are now beginning to experiment with daily deal vendors including, but not limited to, Groupon. This changing daily deal partner may have the adverse effect of crowding out some smaller businesses.

Online Coupon Graph

Photo: EMarketer.com

Not only is the daily deal partner changing, but so too is the demographic of users. Normally the Groupon market is mainly married women, akin to regular coupons, making more than $50,000. The largest single group to visit Groupon in January 2011 was over 55. The digital agency has often neglected this older group because of the lack of digital integration in their lives. That assumption seems to be changing, and it may be changing precisely because of economic savings offered by digital integration.

E Marketer: Groupon and the Deal Revolution

Google’s +1 Button Now Everywhere

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

FaceBook may have invented the ‘Like’ button and the placement of that button everywhere, but now Google has a similar tool. Google’s ‘+1’ button had existed only on its search results until Wednesday. Now publishers will be able to put the ‘+1’ on their pages allowing Google to obtain more data about other spaces on the internet.

google-plus-1

Photo: thefastertimes.com

Google searches will improve dramatically as a result of this. Until now Google searches would only benefit if people had clicked on +1 on the search page. Now people will see the button on many regular pages. Google also collects, just as FaceBook does, data every time a page with +1 loads on it. Even if a viewer does not click the button Google obtains some data, and even the viewer’s non-selection of ‘+1’ tells Google something. That in itself is a huge amount of data that will help refine Google searches. And increase the power of targeted advertisements.

Mashable: Google’s +1 Button Challenges Facebook’s Like Across the Web

Social Media for the Evolving Business

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Social media is slowly changing the face of how businesses get, respond, and discover new information. Those that do not adapt will simply die, but the ones that embrace social media, will undoubtedly succeed and be seen as leaders in that field of business.

Courtesy of @Mashable, here are four ways that social media is altering businesses:

1. From “Trying to Sell” to “Making Connections”

Show some personality, that is part of your brand. Engage with your customers by telling them what’s going on when the 9-5 job ends. If you’re transparent and “put yourself out there,” people feel more comfortable about doing business with those companies.

business social networking

2. From”Large Campaigns” to “Small Acts”

Less is more.

Less is more. It bears repeating. The cliché of the decade, but it couldn’t be more true, especially when opting to use social media in your business plan. Focus on the niche mediums that your target audience utilizes. This allows you to better connect and track them; you won’t be wasting millions of dollars blasting your message to world, not knowing who saw it and if they responded to your call-to-action.
People share stories through the web. It is much faster. So if your customer has a negative experience, you need to make sure you address their concerns before it becomes too viral. It pays for companies to pay attention to the one-on-one customer relationships forged via social media.

3. From “Controlling our Image” to “Being Ourselves”

This reinforces rule #1 — personality. Don’t control your employees so that your company is portrayed as this squeaky-clean, monotonous factory. Allow your employees to write and talk about hobbies that they’re passionate about outside of work.
Take a page from Google’s 70/20/10 rule, which allows employees to spend 20% of their time on “Innovation time off” pursuing their own ideas that relate to Google and then 10% of their time on stuff completely unrelated to Google. “By doing this, Google gains a loyal employee by allowing them to do whatever they want without Big Brother looking over their shoulder.  At the same time, it captures innovative thinking due to random stimulation.” (the99percent)

4. From “Hard to Reach” to “Available Everywhere”

People want to interact with and engage businesses via their chosen means of communication, whether that is Twitter, Facebook, discussion forums, etc. Company telephone numbers and e-mail addresses will not suffice any longer. If I’m loyal to a brand, and I see that they use Twitter or Facebook often, it makes me feel more comfortable knowing I can communicate with their company through those means. Allow customers to communicate through their chosen means, not yours.

Don’t be dinosaur and stick with what you’re comfortable with (i.e. old media). You’ll go extinct like they did. Instead, jump ship to where the future of interactivity is going.

Turn Employees into Brand Ambassadors

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Looking for brand ambassadors? Turn to your employees.

AdAge recently published an interesting article on how to turn your own employees into great brand ambassadors for your company. They speak on many points, with an overwhelming conclusion that “consumers increasingly base their feelings about a company on what they know about its people, rather than what an ad agency’s creative team can portray.

Business as we know it is becoming more and more transparent. Companies are (whether by choice or not) giving consumers a look inside their operations.  People can, and will, find whatever they can about you on the internet. You need to make sure these people are reading credible and official information about your company and employees.

AdAge sums it up, “There’s a new and largely untapped resource within corporate walls that can help companies build brand equity, and it’s your employees — specifically those employees with individual personal brands.”

Personal Branding with Social Harbor

The article goes on to emphasize the importance for individuals to have established personal brands on the internet.

As companies begin to understand the interdependent relationship between employees and profits, a new model for hiring and sourcing talent emerges. Social media will pave the way for applicants to build strong relationships with recruiters well before a face-to-face interview. Now, instead of taking traditional applications, jobs will find recruits after they have built powerful personal brands online or through other forms of recognition. Hiring employees who have established personal brands will help companies immediately inherit value and relevance in a crowded market and may lead to quicker results in meeting growth objectives.

Our own conclusion? Get yourself online! Even if you’re not the type of person who surfs the web to network, establish your personal brand out there! At the very least you need to have a presence, ensure people find the right information about you, put it out there yourself!

Search Engine Optimized Profiles (and Pages) at Social Harbor

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Social Harbor

Search optimized profiles are the key to being found on the Internet. And one of the essentials to search optimized profiles is keywords.

Keywords come in all languages, shapes, and sizes. There are long ones, short ones, and even hyphenated keywords. There’s keywords that you’ll never be able to compete for, and ones that you could own within a week. Whatever your keywords are, it’s always helpful to be able to visualize them and see just what words actually appear most on your web page.

There’s a fun AND useful tool called Wordle that allows you to enter long text from a web page (or a blog URL) and then builds you a word cloud, showing you which words are most prominent on that site. For example, Social Harbor does extensive keyword research for their clients, deciding which words are best to optimize for. Below is the keyword cloud Wordle pulled for Ingenex Digital Marketing’s company page on Social Harbor.

Ingenex Digital Marketing Agency

You can see that Ingenex’s page uses the words Marketing and Digital most prominently, as these are the keywords the client wished to be search optimized for. So Wordle has shown that Social Harbor correctly and efficiently built Ingenex’s page with the keywords needed for search engine optimization.

Are the keywords you want to be found for the most prominent ones in your word cloud? Do you need help optimzing your company for searches? Social Harbor builds custom company profiles with extensive keyword research and implementation, a solution that works for search optimization.

Internet Advertising Outpacing TV

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) released their latest reports on Monday, layered with staggering numbers.

Let’s cut right to the chase.

  • Internet advertising set a new high in the fourth quarter of 2008 with $6.1 Billion in revenue. (almost $2 Billion more than two years ago!)
  • Search Marketing grew 20% for the year, coming in at just over $10 Billion, and accounting for 45% of total Internet advertising. (compare that to just 15% share in 2002)
  • Internet advertising revenues exceeded Cable TV for the first time, registering $23.4 Billion in ad spend for 2008

Looking into 2009, it’s already evident that television (and their viewers) are migrating to the Internet. Just about every network and cable station offers their content via the web, something that is exponentially growing. Don’t forget about those ancient newspapers falling off the deep end too (read that post here), we’ve already seen their readers migrate to the Internet.

You can read the entire article on TechCrunch.

There is little room left to argue against the rapidly gowing migration from television and print to web. If you want to reach consumers, you must compete on the Internet.