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    Snippets from ad:tech Singapore 2008

    ad:tech Conference in Singapore

    logo_adtech_singaporeLast week, I had the honor to speak and the pleasure to netork at this year's ad:tech. ad:tech is a digital marketing conference that attracts interactive agencies, clients, brand specialists and media planners. This is the 11th year of ad:tech conferences.

    Slide1 [Google Keynote]

    Some snippets from ad:tech:

    • Every time when the 'G' index refreshes, 25% of the content is new
    • 118 bio email & IM sent every day
    • Of all searches 67% are influenced by 'some offline',  37% by TV and 30% from Print
    • 29% of Amazon sales come from partners
    • "It is about making domains social rather than making social domains" - Brad Garlinghouse, Yahoo! Vice President of Communications and Communities (great title!)

    Slide4 [Google Keynote]

    More snippets [via Andrew Agbay, Universal McCann]:

    • Question: Why do we need SEM if your brand is already the top result in organic search? Answer: "Sum is greater than the parts." In one study (iCrossing Search Synergy Natural & Paid Symbiosis, March 07), the % increase in clicks to the website when SEM is used with SEO was 91.8%
    • If there are ad networks in online advertising, there are also ad networks in mobile advertising
    • Users of social media are increasing, however, engagement is flat! Thus, making social media more "social" is critical. Social networking sites should start connecting to other websites the targets use
    • The most popular widget in the world is the...clock

    FusionBrand

    "Here are some [more] random notes [from Fusionbrand] that were either sufficiently disturbing or interesting enough to merit being jotted down on the back of my speaker's badge. Also included are some hit-or-miss inspirations that occured to me during the event:

    • 10 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube each hour
    • Before long, 40-60% of all traffic on the internet will be video
    • New business idea?: centralized "dashboard agency," which would provide the necessary integration among multiple sets of numbers and linkages to corporate goals
    • No sleep?: 18-25 year olds were asked what they would do with an extra 15 minutes a day. A healthy percentage said they would spend it on social networks

    Slide2 [Google Keynote]

    What's tired:

    • "Positioning": Amazingly, I did not hear this relic from the 1970s mentioned once
    • "360-degree marketing": The audience laughed when this term was heard
    • "1:1 marketing": Experts agreed that failures with 1:1 marketing were making it difficult to sell segmentation today
    • "Viral marketing": Usually referred to in the sense of a prehistoric ancestor to social networking

    What's wired:

    • Engagment: Every speaker mentioned it at least five times. However, some speakers only mentioned in the sense that "we want customers to engage with us." Engagement must be a two-way street
    • Measurement: Once measurement was a dirty word among creative-driven executives and agencies. Now the entire marketing world seeks to be data-driven
    • Entertainment: The primary tool for engaging with consumers on the Internet
    • Mobile marketing: After a decade of hype, everyone kept promising that yes, really, I swear, this is the year that mobile marketing takes off
    • A lot of pokes: There are 530 million users on social networks worldwide
    • So that's why you need 15 minutes extra a day: 20% of all Internet users have visited a social network within the last 30 days
    • Three types of media: Owned (internal), bought (advertising, etc) and earned (WOM, etc.)
    • Emperor-has-no-clothes speaker insight: Why do we have campaigns with a beginning and an end? It just requires so much energy and money to start a new campaign. With social networks, promotion never ends.
    • New buzzword to learn: ROPO (Research Online, Purchase Offline)
    • Best quote heard: "A lot of companies think social networking means, 'We want you the consumer to tell us how great our products are.' -- Josh Sklar, Global Chief Creative Agency, BLUE
    • Best case history: Coke Zero in Australia. Coke tried to pave the way for a product introduction by mimicking an "underground" slackster/hipster movement. Of course, it was outed. Lesson: Always be authentic.
    • Most overused case history: The UGM effort to promote Tahoe. It backfired when environmentalists used the UGM effort to blast the Chevy gas-guzzler. However, Chevrolet won brownie points by letting the critical videos remain online.
    • Sign of times: Nestle in Philippines upped its digital marketing budget from 9% to 25% this year.
    • New boy toy: After the conference I bought the Creative Labs version of the hot-hot-hot Flip video camera. The New York Times called it "one of the most significant electronics products of the year." If this takes off like the iPod, pretty soon 80% of the traffic on the Internet will be video."
      [FROM Nick Wreden; EDITED]

    Slide3 [Google Keynote]

     

    Online Ad Price Index

    PubMatic

    The PubMatic AdPrice Index is a broad-based measure of ad network pricing information. It is based on anonymous data from over 3,500 publishers who work with PubMatic for ad network and layout optimization services.

    chartImage_July_2008

    The June PubMatic AdPrice Index indicates that the sputtering economy is still having an affect on the overall monetization of online advertising, while certain verticals, especially social networks and gaming, had a significant upswing in ad pricing.

    The biggest surprises this month came from the social network and gaming verticals. Social networks showed a very sizable 66 percent average eCPM increase going from 19 cents in April to 32 cents in May. While this is an increase from April, this is still not back to as high as the March average. Gaming also experienced a strong surge, with the vertical's average eCPM increasing 51 percent. In April, the gaming average eCPM was 66 cents and in May, the average eCPM was $1.00.

      Key Findings 

      verticalsImage_July_2008
     

    pdf_icon Download the electronic version of AdPrice Index - June 08 free of charge.

     

    Search Advertising Research Best Practices

    Microsoft Advertising

     Audience Intelligence is critical to developing and managing a successful search marketing campaign.

      • Validating assumptions about your keyword list and audience profile is the critical difference between success and potential failure
      • Predicting user behavior gives the marketer the insights to make strategic decisions and helps to improve ROI

    adcenter_labs

    Microsoft adLabs is developing advanced tools to better understand how to effectively aggregation keyword lists:
      • Context-based Acronym Resolution: expand acronyms and abbreviations based on related search keywords
      • Keyword Group & Mutation Detection: given a word or phrase, find a set of similar words. Detect frequent misspellings or alternative spellings of the same keyword in search query logs
      • Search Result Clustering: Cluster a set of documents, such as search results, into semantically related groups in real time

    pdf_icon 

    Download the electronic version of Research: Best Practices free of charge.

     

    Dell takes Social Media seriously

    Dell's Hearing Test

    29162-dellLYour home page is Google," said Jarvis [Dell CMO]. "It becomes really important the right things are appearing on it."

    Since then, the company has embarked on a concerted effort to turn around its image online, reaching out to consumers in blogs and soliciting advice on how Dell can improve. The end goal for Jarvis is not touchy-feely: He wants to spend less, not more, money on advertising. One way is to cut down on the need for advertising altogether by having satisfied customers spread positive word of mouth.
    "The Germans and British no longer believe anything you say in an ad," he said. That makes advertising pretty pointless. You have to think of how you're going to reach people in different ways."


    One key way to achieve this is to move as many customer interactions -- Dell estimates it has over 2 billion per year -- online and away from expensive distribution like catalogs.

    The numbers weren't pretty either: The company's own 2006 analysis of its "share of voice" online found 48 percent of chatter about Dell was negative. Its renewed focus on customer communications coincided with the rise of the social Web, as more people gathered online to share thoughts, rate products and contribute to a community Web experience. [now 21%] 

    Over the last two years, Dell has worked day by day rebuilding its ties to its customers. Its problems could not be solved by an ad campaign with a cheery message, Jarvis said, but a reorientation of its culture to solving customer problems and listening to their complaints and advice.

    The searing experience of the battery recall and "Dell Hell" helped the company, believes Pete Blackshaw, evp, digital strategic services, Nielsen Online and author of the forthcoming Satisfied Customers Tell Three Friends, Angry Customers Tell 3,000.

     

    "Social media is a grand experiment," Dell's Jarvis said. "It has a future. I don't see it crashing down. Social interaction, communities and participation are absolutely the fabric of the Web." 

    Be there or be left out of the Conversation

    MSN/MTV Circuits of Cool – Social Networks 

    Circuit of CoolBrazil, India and Sweden are the biggest users of social networking sites with Holland, Denmark and Germany using them the least.  Globally, young people have an average of 84 contacts in their social networks, with Brazil having the highest (239) and Japan the lowest at only 18 contacts.
     
    Young people are generally aware of social networks – only 18% have yet to use them. 70% of 14-24 year olds use the sites and over half regularly update their profile.  Young females (14-17 years) visit them the most – 63% visit weekly, compared with 54% of males of the same age.
     
    How are Social Networks used?’
    From flirting to ‘checking people out’, networks tend to be relatively small. Globally, social networks allow young people to ‘feel connected’ to their existing friends rather than to meet strangers. The idea of social networks being ‘open to everyone’ has less appeal than the idea of smaller communities among people they know. While they use technology such as IM to arrange their social life, the sites are forums to share and relive experiences.
     
    Reasons for having a personal profile 
    In the UK and US, where penetration is high, the sites stop them from ‘feeling left out’. They are on them because ‘all their friends’ are. In Germany, where there is low penetration, sites are used to meet people with similar interests. In China, youths use social networks to express themselves, keep a blog, upload content and meet new friends (many Chinese youths don’t have siblings). 
     
    What’s on their profile page?
    Photos
    are the most popular form of content to put on personal pages and over a third of youths add music and video.  When viewing other people’s pages, 57% want to see content about that person to see what they have in common with them. 
     
    Are Social Networks here to stay?
    The jury is out! An ever increasing amount of time is being spent on social networks (36% claim to use them more than a year ago), more youths are joining (16% have recently joined), 48% think the sites are going to grow, and only 13% claim to be getting bored with them.

    pdf_icon Download the electronic version of Circuits of Cool Summary Booklet free of charge.

     

    Employee Blogging

    Nielsen BuzzMetrics :: White Papers

    logo_nbzmAs more and more companies and brands turn to corporate blogging—or turn their employees loose to blog on their own—they're encountering some common challenges and opportunities along the way. This white paper examines the ins and outs of employee/corporate blogging, and includes a checklist for anyone who's turned to a colleague at work and suggested, "Hey! We should start a blog!" Should you?

    blogging_employee

    pdf_icon Download the electronic version of Employee Bloggers free of charge.

     

    Bring the love back II

    Inspiration, anyone?

     
     

    Advertising Trends, Social Media & Web 2.0

    Remix Conference - Southeast Asia, Bangkok May 2008

    Digital Advertising Trends (by Chris Schaumann)

       

    Video: Future Shape of Advertising

    Video: Bring the Love back

    Video: Hygea – Case Study from the Future

    pdf_icon Download the electronic version of Digital Advertising Trends free of charge.


    Social Media & Web 2.0 (by Chris Schaumann)

       

    Video: The Machine is us/ing us

    Video: Digital Lifestyle

    Video: Nike Japan – Kimewaza Case Study

    pdf_icon Download the electronic version of Social Media & Web 2.0 free of charge.

     

    Digital Lifestyle

    MSN Video