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Showing posts with label targeting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label targeting. Show all posts

6.11.2014

brand marketing

In a previous post on this blog (the magic 6), I outlined the six best practices for Social Media success. This is the "magic 6":

  1. Brand Marketing
  2. Brand Management
  3. Digital Media
  4. Performance Marketing
  5. PR/Earned Media
  6. Social Media (own budget)

This post is dedicated to Brand Marketing.

Branding precedes and underlies any marketing effort. Branding is "pull" - not "push". It is communication of characteristics, values, and attributes that clarify what a brand is.

The brand does not say "buy me". Instead it says, "this is what I am... this is why I exist. If you agree, if you like me, you can buy me, support me, and recommend me to your friends".

The brand is bigger than any particular marketing effort. The brand is what remains. It is what sticks in your mind associated with the product, service, or organization - whether or not, at that particular moment you bought or did not buy. The brand is ultimately what determines if you will become a loyal customer or not.

The marketing determines if you bought a product or service once, but it is the brand that determines if you keep buying that product. Marketing unearths and activates buyers. Branding makes loyal customers out of those who buy.

Brands connect with consumers to turn them into customers. A bond is created and a connection is established that lasts. This means quality is communicated. The connection between the brand and its customers is what the brand conveys. Customer dialogues are established by marketing the strong brand. Customer bases build up the brand and communities are created. Most of these dialogues have been created by Social Media. 

We must acknowledge the wide range of services and communications currently taking place throughout cyberspace. Social networks/media can be tapped to reveal community and consumer sentiment. Does this help brand quality? Maybe. Think of it this way; the brand has been expanded. 

More uses and more audience.

The value of the brand is elevated by the need and want of individuals and groups. Brands have worked to build a strong, favorable, and unique image in the minds of the target audiences. A strong brand image is established by this "image engagement" with customers. Brands then measure who want their product and who is willing to buy it. Strive to build a brand image with as many strong, favorable, and unique brand associations as possible.

Companies (brands) address customer needs by putting forth a value proposition, a set of benefits that satisfy those needs. We can think of marketing as the identification, creation, communication, delivery, and monitoring of customer value. Satisfaction reflects a person's judgment of a product's perceived performance in relationship to expectations. This "satisfaction judgment" produces brand advocates and user communities. The customers have joined promotional programs (which you create) and "talk" about the brand. They are engaged in the brand. They are the "pull" and they'll increase sales.

In this way, brands stay in touch with consumers' needs and seek new advantages, instead of relying on past strengths. Marketing must balance the communication: search, advertising, social media, direct e-mail, and text/SMS marketing.

As a result, the market share will be secure and a "push" for greater market share will exist. This marketing concept, to go after a larger share of the market, is crucial to achieve superior customer value. 

Remember:
  • Selling focuses on the needs of the seller.
  • Marketing focuses on the needs of the buyer.

Build relationships and networks.

Build an effective network and profits will follow. Own brands to build customer loyalty.





                                                 

                                                                                                    



4.23.2014

direct marketing

Direct marketing is a better brand building tool than conventional brand image ads. Focus on brand reality, because there is no substitute! Brand has power. Brand has status.

Make a brand to increase sales. A brand personality needs worked out!

Therefore, think of brands as people. Opinions are formed with information. Interaction creates more information. This creates more reality - brand reality.

This information creates a conversation for your brand. There is a message in the conversation and this conversation gets passed around. This word-of-mouth approach takes more time and is best in the long run. Your story, created by your customers, needs advertised.

Direct marketing by definition involves a company interacting with its customers. Direct marketing is a powerful brand building tool. Brands built this way really deliver.

Following a strategy which interacts with customers drives sales increases.

A marketer's concentration should focus on the reality of their brand and ways to communicate that attribute to the widest possible audience.

Direct marketing and brand reality are "peas and carrots" that create brand value.

Increase your sales (or following, friends, etc.) and boost your brand value with direct marketing.

12.19.2013

social media reach

Your social meida footprint: fans/followers. Fans are a "reach" which translates into the number of people you can reach when all your posts are seen by all your fans. You target along their extended networks.

Networks are fast-paced. The reach is expected to go down! Not all your followers see your updates. Metrics from different networks will give you the data you need to see who you are reaching.

Metrics to consider:

Organic impressions [Facebook impressions]
Google+ Followers [Potential Reach on Google+]
Twitter Followers [Potential Reach on Twitter]
Twitter Reach [ Via Twitter Analytics]



This way you can find your brand reach and make meaning from Big Data.
Marketing strategies should be measured. Measuring social media is trciky, with no one particular way of doing it. Consider that. Consider to create your own system.

Concentrate on what matters.

 
 

  • Page Organic Reach [Facebook Insights]
  • Post Organic Reach [Facebook Insights]
  • Organic Impressions [Facebook Insights]
  • Post Organic Impressions [Facebook Insights]
  • Google+ Followers [Potential Reach on Google+]
  • Twitter Followers [Potential Reach on Twitter]
  • Twitter Reach [Via Twitter Analytics]
  • LinkedIn Page Impressions [LinkedIn Company Insights]
  • YouTube Views [YouTube Analytics]
  • Pinterest Reach [ Pinterest Web Analytics]*

  • Read more at http://www.business2community.com/social-media/4-social-media-metrics-matter-0718285#ZT7gvVxTPb8Ulgb6.99

  • Page Organic Reach [Facebook Insights]
  • Post Organic Reach [Facebook Insights]
  • Organic Impressions [Facebook Insights]
  • Post Organic Impressions [Facebook Insights]
  • Google+ Followers [Potential Reach on Google+]
  • Twitter Followers [Potential Reach on Twitter]
  • Twitter Reach [Via Twitter Analytics]
  • LinkedIn Page Impressions [LinkedIn Company Insights]
  • YouTube Views [YouTube Analytics]
  • Pinterest Reach [ Pinterest Web Analytics]*

  • Read more at http://www.business2community.com/social-media/4-social-media-metrics-matter-0718285#ZT7gvVxTPb8Ulgb6.99

    8.21.2013

    in-image

                                                                  
    Engagement. A challenge. What can better engagement gives brands? Plenty. How is engagement taken to a new, higher level? That's where the creative community comes in. The creative community is usually open to new, dynamic formats. This is meaningless to brands without delivery to scale.

    Engagement has received a profound impact from contextually-related ads on images. Attention is focused on them. These ads have proven better than standard banner ads. New channels are created for advertisers and monetization is created for publishers.

    Images need to be understood. Research over the last five years has shown that images are a powerful way to advertise. Have we always doubted that? Apparently so. Even when we have been bombarded with images our whole lives. Perhaps it's putting the image category, as I'll call it, into the online experience.

    Technology has come a long way. There are about 5 trillion images online. While not all of them are suitable for advertising, the sheer volume has got to help the contextually relevant ad campaign. To first categorize images, we must first know what images are all about.

    There are three basic image "meanings":

    • COMPUTER VISION. For purposes of in-image advertising, programmatic image recognition has so far been geared toward automobile i.d., skin detection and facial recognition.
    • SEMANTIC ANALYSIS. Information about photos can be identified through meta data.
    • HUMAN CLASSIFICATION. Review and enter information about photos.

    In-image ads can be served as display overlays or embedded links.

    • DISPLAY OVERLAY. Serve a relevant ad during the time a viewer's attention is focused on the ad.
    • EMBEDDED LINKS. Embedded links within images can convey more information about a photo and send people to the marketer's site.
    Examples of both are at the top of this post.

     Understand with this kind of advertising, there are creative and targeting strategies to consider. Concentrate on engaging the target audience. This will make the experience more consumer relevant.