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Posts mit dem Label Mobile werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Mobile werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Email Opens Tilt Further Toward Mobile

The gap between mobile and desktop click-to-open rates continues to close as more consumers get comfortable reading emails on their mobile devices, according to research from Yesmail.


Desktop vs. Mobile Click-to-Open Rate for US Marketing Emails, Q3 2014 & Q3 2015 (among emails sent by Yesmail clients)


Mobile click-to-open rates for US marketing emails sent by Yesmail clients in Q3 2015 were at 13.7%, up 1.6 percentage points compared to Q3 2014. Desktop click-to-open rates for marketing emails in Q3 2015 were at 18.0%, down 3.8 percentage points from the year before.


Furthermore, Yesmail revealed that the ratio of mobile clicks to all email clicks continues to grow. In Q3 2015, mobile clicks made up 46.7% of the total, 9 percentage points higher than Q3 2014. The share of mobile opens for US mobile marketing emails has also increased in Q3 2015, accounting for 53.5%. It made up 52.1% in Q3 2014.


Email Marketing Open Share in North America, by Device and Industry, Q2 2015 (% of total emails sent by Experian Marketing Services clients)


Separate research from Experian Marketing Services is in line with the Yesmail study. According to the Q2 2015 data, 48% of all emails sent by Experian clients were opened on desktop devices and 40% of emails were opened on mobile phones and ereaders. Some 12% were opened on tablets.



Email Opens Tilt Further Toward Mobile

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Madrivo Grows Mobile and Native Ad Initiative

Madrivo hired Dan Buontempone, a veteran in the performance marketing space, to assist with mobile and native ad initiatives in 2016.


New York, NY (PRWEB) February 11, 2016


By 2017, mobile traffic will account for more than 25% of online ad spending worldwide. That translates to an estimated $15 billion dollars allocated solely to mobile advertising efforts.


Although Madrivo has always been an active player in the mobile channel, the company has recently implemented new strategies that will facilitate exponential growth in terms of market share and consumer engagement. In response to the surge of ad blockers hindering mobile display efforts, they also plan to enhance their native ad capabilities, securing placements that will put brands in direct contact with their ideal customers and potentially generate over 50% more views. Madrivo’s current sales executives have contributed to the brand’s rapid growth with their expertise in niche verticals. Adding Dan Buontempone’s experience from working with mobile and native ad affiliates to the mix will strengthen Madrivo’s competitive edge.


Dan first took an interest in advertising while earning his bachelor’s degree at Hofstra University in Long Island, New York and now has over a decade of experience in the affiliate marketing industry. He takes pride in his ability to match household brands with accomplished publishers that can maximize exposure and forge lifelong relationships with customers. Acting as Madrivo’s newest Publisher Development Specialist, Dan adds a wide variety of affiliates to an already extensive network. His knowledge in the mobile and native arenas coupled with the vision and resources of Madrivo’s senior management will have a measurable impact on the status quo of mobile marketing.


Through its efforts in becoming a leading CPA network, Madrivo gained access to a vast array of the industry’s leading mobile brands, content creators, and media buyers. Dan’s experience with this specific affiliate breed and the addition of his existing accounts will play an instrumental role in Madrivo’s continued efforts to reshaping the performance marketing space. Dan spoke candidly about joining Madrivo’s team, saying “I’ve worked with Madrivo in various capacities in the past and knew they had a sophisticated approach to affiliate marketing. Working for a Top 5 world-ranked CPA network is a tremendous opportunity for me to advance my career and further my industry knowledge. I’m excited to share my talents with the Madrivo team and work side-by-side with some of the brightest, most experienced executives in the space.”


Madrivo intends to dominate mobile and native ad channels by leveraging Techtelligence -the company’s proprietary blend of technology, analytics, and data- to match the mass volume and unrivaled quality they’ve achieved through traditional email traffic. Interestingly enough, while email is still the most effective marketing method in terms of customer acquisition and ROI, less than 50% of brands have a mobile email strategy in place. In the coming year, Madrivo will provide household brands with the strategic resources and campaign management needed to maximize the return on their marketing spend.


Are you looking for mobile traffic? Do you want access to offers optimized for native ad placements? Reach out to Madrivo today for more information.


For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/madrivo/mobile_traffic/prweb13210773.htm



Madrivo Grows Mobile and Native Ad Initiative

The Mobile Marketing Platform Problem with Programmatic

Mobile is indisputably the next big marketing platform. As eMarketer predicts, US mobile programmatic ad spending will reach $9.33 billion by the end of this year and account for 60.5 percent of total US programmatic display ad spending. Moreover, mobile usage has surpassed desktop in the US: Sixty percent of activity on digital platforms occurs on smartphones and tablets, according to comScore.


Number of Global Users (Millions) Report - Digital Platform


So why is mobile user experience still so terrible? It took the Google “Mobilegeddon” to get many large brands to really concentrate on improving their mobile experience. Why did Google have to enact such a steep penalty on sites with poorly performing mobile experiences to get them to pay attention? Honestly, I think it’s partly because crappy mobile UI equals a higher rate of display advertising return. Just like takeover ads that appear when a user visits a site on a desktop computer, or like 30-page slideshows that force you to reload pages over and over, crappy UI creates higher ad revenue, and that demotivates change.


Any marketing team member two drinks into happy hour will admit that much of mobile’s appeal is from high performance, or perhaps more accurately known as “people with fat fingers.” Because, let’s face it, when was the last time you intentionally clicked on a display ad? Most mobile ad clicks are a mistake; you’re juggling a coffee while trying to browse Boston.com, and you accidentally click a giant ad while you’re trying to scroll. As Smart Insights reported in April, across all ad formats and placements, ad CTR amounts to less than 1 click per 1000 impressions. Clearly, these are not the kind of numbers to write home about. It’s far easier to avoid ads with a mouse than when they fill your phone’s entire screen, so naturally, any brand is going to prefer the medium that gets the most clicks.


What about Facebook’s Mobile UX?


US Programmatic Mobile Display Ad Spend - eMarketer


The cutting-edge hipsters of the technological world don’t like to give Facebook kudos, ever; it’s like rooting for the Empire when you watch Star Wars. Despite the fact that Millennials view Facebook as an old-person social media tool (anything that has your grandma on it can’t be that cool), even the most jaded startup-ophile will tip his hat to Facebook for its excellent mobile UX / ad experience that relies on in-feed placements. Facebook is seemingly one of the only brands that actually cares about the mobile experience. The social media platform’s huge reach is causing much of the mobile ad’s rise in programmatic ad buying. As eMarketer states, with Facebook’s US mobile revenues expected to total $5.89 billion this year, and expected to reach $10.32 billion by 2017, it’s clearly doing something right.


The question is, would Facebook still be making this kind of revenue even if it didn’t give a hoot about mobile UX? All signs point to yes.


The Nielsen Norman Group, an evidence-based user experience research company, has an excellent article that outlines the lag in mobile design behind desktop, discussing how mobile has been lurching through trends and hitting dead ends in the process. For example, flat design with its minimal iconography, hamburger menus that hide lists of options for a less cluttered screen, and infinite loading, which allows for content to load in chunks for a smoother experience. Each of these changes has its pros and cons, and over time, Web developers are getting better at melding these techniques together to improve the overall mobile experience. In the meantime, as mobile design improvements moved in fits and starts, our fat fingers have remained steady, showing a consistent stream of clicks on mobile display advertising no matter how terribly they’re presented.


Mobile display advertising is a huge part of programmatic ad spend, and it’s an easy way to hit a growing audience without having to micromanage. Increasing marketing platform sophistication with automated, machine-driven ad buying is making the mobile display market an easy place for ad agencies to dump budgets and report back to their clients with glowing performance charts.


So, we’ve identified part of the problem: There’s no motivation to get better.


What Will Become of Mobile Programmatic?


We’re at a point where mobile UX is “good enough,” and at the same time, programmatic ad buying is becoming increasingly sophisticated in its targeting. There are not that many places left for display ad spends to go. There’s video, but it can’t grab the whole pie. As long as agencies can show a nice graph to their clients, this portion of their ad spend will remain stagnant.


Eventually, good enough won’t cut it. Programmatic targeting will slow until the numbers are too small to eat up enough budget. The positives of mobile ad blockers—saved time, saved money, saved battery power, and increased Web-browsing privacy—will continue to add to the number of mobile ad-block users (just ask The New York Times). More mobile ad blockers will scare away the advertisers who target tech-savvy users, which drives much of the appeal of targeting mobile in the first place. And then, there are the hidden costs of programmatic, as Ad Age points out: “expensive engineers and traders, data-management platforms, research and development, and more.”


So if ad spend isn’t being poured down the mobile display ad drain, where will brands allocate these funds?


Video will be the next marketing platform golden child—eMarketer predicts that US programmatic video ads will account for 40 percent of digital video ad spending in 2016 ($3.84 billion). But will users ever regard video ads as non-invasive? Doubtful. The people have spoken, and they want to take back control in the content they consume, choosing subscription models like Netflix, Hulu Plus, HBO Go, and many other on-demand services over interrupt advertising.


Mobile design will continue to evolve, because clunky display advertising won’t be able to stick around forever; not with an increasingly tech-savvy audience that will begin punishing those who don’t make changes.


Want to learn more about how user experience affects content marketing? Subscribe to the Content Standard Newsletter.



The Mobile Marketing Platform Problem with Programmatic

Majority Of Search Clicks Move To Mobile, Conversions Stay With Desktop

Mobile — where search continues to gain greater importance — will likely see bigger budget in 2016, as companies continue to shift search advertising ad spend from desktop. But it’s still not all good news for conversions.


Marketers are expected to put more “new” dollars toward search compared with other formats, according to eMarketer, citing a report from AdMedia Partners. In fact, 2% of respondents plan to increase search spending by more than 30%, while one in 10 marketers plan to increase search spend by 20% or more. Some 16% have plans to spend at least 15% more, compared with 2015.


Many of the new dollars will go into mobile search campaigns. The industry began to see the shift in the later part of 2015.


Google’s Product Listing Ad format also continues to grow. Clicks on these image-based ads rose 62% year-over-year in the fourth quarter of 2015, and mobile drove much of the growth. Merkle RKG reports that clicks from phones rose 180% Y/Y in the quarter.


Conversion rates remain low, however, compared to desktop. In aggregate, search partner PLA traffic conversion rates came in at 48% lower than google.com PLA traffic in Q4, according to Merkle RKG.


Overall, U.S. retailers spent more on digital marketing from Nov. 1 through Dec. 25, among Kenshoo clients, compared with the same period in 2014. The biggest increase went to mobile search and mobile product listing ads, which rose 93% and 111%, respectively, year over year.


The higher investments reaped rewards for advertisers. Total U.S. search advertising revenue rose 15% in 2015, while U.K. search revenue rose 35%. Higher conversions were a direct result of revenue growth in the U.S., although the average order size remained the same, among Kenshoo clients.


Fifty-one percent of all paid-search ad clicks in the Americas and 55% in Asia-Pacific came from mobile devices in third-quarter 2015, per Kenshoo.


Some industry experts say the money will flow into Facebook and other social sites that are a little less complicated than search platforms. Search ads, while powerful, can become challenging for some types of businesses, especially for those in competitive niches or when selling something new that people aren’t searching for yet, according to Larry Kim, founder at WordStream.


This week, WordStream released a platform to support Facebook, which is basically a mobile application. Kim says Facebook ads let marketers create new demand for products and services before consumers start searching on engines. “You also can remarket to the people who found you from search ads as they browse Facebook,” he says. “As a result, we think that Facebook ads greatly increase the ROI of search ads and vice versa.”



Majority Of Search Clicks Move To Mobile, Conversions Stay With Desktop

Booking.com embraces Google's dynamic mobile ad unit Magic Banner

The chief marketing officer of dynamic mobile ad unit — dubbed the Magic Banner — and will likely announce a deeper partnership with Google in the new year.


The move is significant because it comes at a time when Booking.com has pushed the limits of what Google can offer with its search advertising. And there’s a surge of new companies, such as Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Line, and WeChat, hoping to grab some of that ad budget from Google.


However, Booking.com’s chief marketing officer, Pepijn Rijvers, listed the Google Magic Banner ad as one of the company’s top priorities, a sign that Booking.com is not forsaking Google as it expands beyond search.


Rijvers’ comments came during an interview with VentureBeat this week.


Pepjin Rijvers

Above: Booking.com CMO Pepijn Rijvers


Image Credit: Booking.com



Booking.com spends the vast majority of its ad budget on Google search ads. Booking.com also manages more than half a billion keyword combinations on Google — and still wants more, though Google’s well is running dry on that front.


That’s why Rijvers said he is turning to other forms of advertising, chief among them brand advertising that closely resembles the intent-based advertising that makes search so attractive.


Rijvers and his team are working closely with Facebook to help its offering meet Booking.com’s needs, as we reported last month. [Rijvers will be joining VentureBeat at our Marketing.FWD Summit on February 22 in New York for senior marketers, where he’ll be talking with Facebook’s Vice President of Marketing Science, Brad Smallwood.]


Booking.com is experimenting with numerous companies and formats, but Rijvers said that one of its main efforts is taking its direct-response ad intelligence and applying it to the Google Magic Banner. The banner is contextually aware, allowing targeting based on things like time, location, and weather. The banner was announced last year by Google, which said this August that it would improve the Banner in a second version to make it even more dynamic. It’s also a mobile format, and Booking.com has made a big deal about being mobile-first.


Booking.com wants to use the Magic Banner to advertise things like last-minute discounts on hotels through Google properties such as Google Now, Maps, and YouTube video.


The company is preparing its brand marketing campaign for 2016, and will use this ad format, among others, Rijvers added.


Booking.com partnership

Above: Booking.com parked outside the office of a Google executive to work on partnership


Image Credit: Booking.com



Rijvers said a team of his engineers recently rented a camper and parked it outside of the office of Google’s vice president of sales and global operations, Philippe Schindler (image at right), in an intensified effort by Booking.com to establish collaboration with Google — on the Magic Banner and other projects he declined to mention. Rijvers wouldn’t comment on the details of the likely coming partnership announcement, but one goal is to ensure that Google’s advertising can accommodate the degree of creative input, tracking, and analysis that Booking.com requires.


Booking.com takes for granted that Google’s ad serving platform, DoubleClick, can retarget customers who are most likely to convert, based on what those customers have done before, for example. But it would be nice, Rijvers said, if DoubleClick could improve its algorithm so that it could target those customers who may be highly influenced by a campaign, but for whatever reason have not been quick to click in previous campaigns. Booking.com also wants to target with other contextual factors, such as weather, he said.


All of this requires Google to have a pretty sophisticated API to accommodate the complex bidding algorithms Booking.com wants to run. Booking.com has up to 200 data scientists, with up to eight of them working to test different ad creatives during the bidding process, Rijvers said.


Last month, we reported that Booking.com recently sent two engineers to Silicon Valley to work not only with Google, but with emerging players in the space, such as Facebook. Booking.com chief executive Darren Huston said last month that Facebook is still behind Google in its ad efforts, something Rijvers reiterated today. But both execs were careful to say that they are working closely with Facebook to expand its offerings.


Rijvers said Facebook’s dynamic ad unit is promising, but it doesn’t yet offer an API that lets Booking.com do the complex bidding it wants to do. Booking.com would like to be able to target a single person who may have just updated their relationship status to “seeing someone” with romantic hotel properties in SF, for example. Additionally, it would want to target those properties during a specific time of day and day of the week (say Friday, between 3pm and 6pm), and would want to show only properties with a high review rating and that have discounted rates, he said. But Facebook can’t support this sort of targeting yet.


In terms of advertising, Google and Facebook are two very different companies, he explained. “Google is way more mature. Facebook is very much developing the platform; it is still lagging behind.”


He said Booking.com’s experiments with Facebook have been promising, over the past year generating 350 million people who Booking.com can retarget, if, for example, those people have already visited a Booking.come site. But Rijvers said his job is to find new users, and he has to go beyond re-messaging if he is going to find new users at scale.



Booking.com embraces Google"s dynamic mobile ad unit Magic Banner

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Even mobile telcos need to step up their mobile marketing: Facebook




SINGAPORE – Just because they built the networks that have helped give mobile phones a starring role in consumer life doesn’t mean telcos are better than anyone else at mobile marketing, according to Facebook.




In fact, telcos in APAC direct more than 90 percent of their marketing spend to traditional channels like TV because it’s “what they’re used to,” Jane Schachtel, global head of technology and mobile strategy at Facebook, told Campaign Asia-Pacific. Meanwhile they spend only 4.5 percent on mobile marketing. 



“The very industry responsible for the largest shift in consumer behaviour in recent history should adapt their business to that shift,” Schachtel said.



Facebook has ramped up its efforts to help telco operators in Southeast Asia better engage with mobile consumers. The social platform wants to help APAC telcos own the entire customer journey on mobile.



The main problem facing telcos is not brand awareness, but differentiation in what is often a very “tight market”, said Schachtel.



“To many consumers, their telco has become no more than a SIM card,” she added. “The challenge is to extend the customer relationship beyond just the SIM.”



Instagram now included



In September, Facebook made its advertising platform available in the Asia Pacific region, and since then more brands in the region have signed up to execute campaigns.



For example, Schachtel pointed to a recent effort the company conducted with Dtac in Thailand via Instagram. The branding campaign was centred on bringing “connectivity to life”.





The use of Instagram is a new inclusion to many telcos’ existing activity with Facebook, which has begun to gain momentum in the last year.



For example in Indonesia, Indosat used Facebook to promote its ‘Super Internet’ service.



In less than six weeks, the brand recorded a 19-point lift in ad recall among 25- to 40-year-olds, according to Nielsen’s Brand Effect.



“We gained 26,000 new subscribers thanks to our Facebook activity,” said Prashant Gokarn, chief strategy and planning officer, Indosat. “And unlike other ad platforms, we were able to accurately measure the return on investment.”



Beyond campaigns to the journey



As one of the most popular mobile apps in use in the region, Facebook and Instagram are already mainstay channels in any media plan.



But the company has expanded its pitch to telcos, moving beyond running campaigns on its platform to enabling a more sustained engagement point with consumers.



“We’re offering a way to own and manage their entire customer journey on Facebook,” said Schachtel. “From brand awareness, product launches, subscriber acquisition, upselling, to support and retention.”



She added that telcos in many Southeast Asia countries, including Thailand, aren’t aware of who is on their network.



“With the identity platform that Facebook is, and additional insights on what operator network or what device a user is on, marketers can precisely target the right audience,” said Schachtel.



Combined with the telco’s own data, a robust and dynamic picture of users emerges that can be leveraged to execute initiatives such as identifying when a user is in the market for a new phone or open to additional products.



In addition, telcos can use support apps that open up avenues to re-engage with users post-purchase and become channels for in-app conversions.



“For example, with churn prevention, we can be a telco’s strategic partner in identifying users and delivering programmes that that will build brand loyalty, Schachtel added.



“The customers’ journey is ongoing, evolving, over time, on mobile,” she said. “Telcos can reach them about any of these messages, any time where they are spending their time.”



Asked how many telcos in the region the company is working with, Schachtel said that it works with “most of the major players” in every market to varying extents.



“It’s a matter of understanding and adapting to a mobile-first environment, and many telcos are open about having this conversation,” she added.





Even mobile telcos need to step up their mobile marketing: Facebook

Digital Marketers Banking on Mobile, Social Channels


Subscribe TodayDigital is fundamentally changing marketing as we know it. Not long ago, marketers previously viewed digital marketing as simply one category within marketing — one tool of many in the marketer’s kit. Increasingly, perception is shifting to a more holistic view in which all marketing is part of the digital world.


Research conducted by Salesforce clearly establishes that marketers now view digital channels as the cornerstone of their strategy, and many of these channels now anchor marketing functions.


According to the “2015 State of Marketing” report from Salesforce, 45% of marketers plan to shift spending from traditional mass advertising to advertising on digital channels. The 54-page report, based on a survey of over 5,000 marketers in the U.S. and around the world, looks at marketers’ top priorities across all digital channels, and how their budgets, metrics, and strategies are shifting to support their goals.


Marketers today have mind-numbing number of technologies, channels, and tactics to choose from. The first step toward a solid strategy is finding focus amid the noise — figuring out what works… and what doesn’t.


effective_digital_marketing_channels



Codigo | Retail Media Solutions

As part of the survey, Salesforce asked marketers to share their top challenges that they face while executing their strategy. Some perennial issues continue to plague marketers, such as budgetary constraints and establishing marketing’s ROI. But among the top concerns marketers worry about most is the need to constantly stay on top off all the new marketing technologies and emerging trends.


marketing_challenges


The research also revealed some stark contrasts between marketing in 2014 and 2015 — significant changes for such a short period of time. In 2014, the top areas in which marketers planned to increase spend were scattered across multiple disciplines and disparate initiatives. In 2015, the top five areas are all tied to social and mobile channels.


marketing_spending_increases


Survey participants said the number-one most pressing business challenge facing today’s marketer is new business development. And where is that new business hiding? On smartphones and tablets, which are increasingly responsible for a bigger portion of consumers’ time spent online.


The Mobile Marketing Imperative


According to the report, 78% of marketers today have integrated mobile into their overall strategy, and 46% rate mobile website or app traffic as the most important mobile marketing metric.


Salesforce cautions that if you haven’t yet integrated mobile into your marketing strategy, you need to get started — now — or it will be too late. With 58% of marketers saying they now have a dedicated mobile marketing team, you’re in the minority if you aren’t headed in this direction.


One of the first steps Salesforce says you should take is to figure out who your internal mobile experts are so you can assess any barriers that may exist between mobile and your other channels. Build a digital team that blends mobile, social, email, and web so you can take a holistic look at how your customers currently interact via mobile as part of the marketing journey.


The Salesforce report singles out two specific mobile opportunities: loyalty and location-based campaigns. Marketers running mobile-based loyalty campaigns say they are extremely effective. Salesforce says that if you don’t yet have a loyalty program, developing one with a mobile-first mindset is the smart way to get started.


They also recommend that you don’t wait any longer to test location-based content. With 67% of marketers planning to substantially or somewhat increase spending in this category in 2015, you risk falling behind if you don’t explore it.


“The consumer appetite for location-based content is there,” says Salesforce. “You just need to discover how your business can respectfully and relevantly use customer locations to create a more cohesive journey in the real world as much as in the online world.”


The Return on Social Media


Social media is no longer seen as the fringe marketing outlet that it once was. In the study, 66% of marketers rated social media as core to their business. 78% have a dedicated social media team, up from 57% in 2014.


impact_roi_of_social_media


Salesforce says it’s time to get serious about social, and test new channels. Do your research on channels that might resonate best with your unique audience. Engage in some social listening to see if topics relevant to your brand or competitors are taking place on these lesser-known social networks (they suggest Tagged, for instance).


Salesforce says you need to invest the resources — both headcount and budget — to support social as a viable channel. If you’re not yet seeing significant business results from social, they recommend starting small and focusing on just one platform. What’s the one channel where your social audience is most responsive? Direct more resources to growing that space instead of spreading your efforts too thin.


You should also adopt a round-the-clock strategy. New data shows that consumers are most engaged on social media during weekends — which, coincidentally, is when brands post the least frequently. Designate on-call social managers for every hour of the day, because people interact on their schedule and their own terms when it comes to social media.


“True, you can schedule messages on Facebook and Twitter in advance,” Salesforce points out. “But why schedule posts ahead if no one will be available to reply?” Messages posted to social channels should entice questions and engagement, and few things can frustrate consumers more than a question that goes ignored, especially when the brand posted just moments earlier.


Test what works for your own social audience. Salesforce recommends doing an internal benchmark study. Over a three-month period, track social engagement for time of day and days of week, then see when engagement is typically highest and lowest and focus your social efforts accordingly.


Codigo | Retail Media Solutions

Don’t Overlook Email


With all the glitz and glamour of social media and emerging mobile marketing opportunities, it’s easy to forget about one of the oldest — but still most effective — weapons in the digital marketer’s arsenal: email.


Some argue that there may be a continuing role for email, but it’s importance is waning. Not true; in fact, it’s the opposite. In the Salesforce, study, 73% of marketers said they believe email marketing is core to their business. 60% of marketers in the 2015 survey said that email is a critical component in their strategy vs. 42% of marketers in 2014 — a huge jump in only 12 months.


Salesforce says you need to evaluate email’s role in the customer journey. Subscribers keep their inboxes close, whether in their pocket or an always-open browser tab. Email can guide people through many stages of the customer journey… but first you have to assess and understand the journey you’re currently leading them on.


Ask the following questions as you map your email touchpoints: Are you sending too many welcome messages early on, but too few retention emails? Are your communications steady throughout the journey, or do they appear randomly whenever you’re running a new campaign? How can the email customer journey become more one-to-one instead of one-to-many?


You also need to recognize that your work schedule doesn’t always jibe with your subscribers’ email-reading habits. Consider sending campaigns over the weekend, when subscribers may have more leisure time to peruse their personal email accounts and digest non-urgent messages.


One thing is for certain: your emails must be designed responsively. Salesforce is unequivocal with this advice. Small-screen friendliness must become part of every visual element in your marketing strategy.


In 2014, 42% of marketers “rarely or never” used responsive design in emails. But one year later, only 24% of marketers said they used responsive design “rarely or never.”


Like most marketers, you probably saw a noticeable increase in the percentage of mobile email opens compared to desktop opens last year — possibly even a double-digit increase. Subscribers are voting for responsive design with every click, so if you’re not already designing an easily navigable experience on mobile, it’s time.


Email might have been around longer than social and mobile, but that doesn’t mean your campaigns have to be old-school. Salesforce says you should breathe new life into your email campaigns.


When it comes to email, many marketers don’t test new campaigns, instead relying on old standbys. For example, newsletters are used most often but rank lower for overall effectiveness. Email campaigns with low usage but high effectiveness ratings include abandoned cart (24% use; 93% rate as at least somewhat effective), browse retargeting (24% use; 93% rate as at least somewhat effective), and anniversary (26% use; 91% rate as at least somewhat effective). Some of these campaigns take extra effort to implement, but they may deliver your best email conversion rates.


Try spring-cleaning your email. Send a reengagement campaign that invites subscribers to update their preferences and gain more control over the type and frequency of messages they’re receiving. Make it easy for seasonal subscribers who are interested only in your holiday deals to unsubscribe without resorting to the spam button.


Download the Report


You can download the complete “2015 State of Marketing” report from Salesforce by clicking the link below. There are four major sections tackling mobile marketing, social media, email and the customer experience. The report also breaks down the data by region for the US, Canada, UK, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, Brazil and Nordic countries.


Download Report




EditorLearn from the brightest minds in banking at The Financial Brand Forum 2016 — three days jam-packed with the latest ideas, insights and innovations that will build your brand and your bottom line. The Forum 2016 all-star agenda features world-class speakers from Zappos, Facebook, Twitter, Salesforce, USAA, Gallup and many others. View agenda.




Digital Marketers Banking on Mobile, Social Channels

The New Rules of Marketing and PR: How to Use Social Media, Online Video, Mobile Applications, Blogs, News Releases, and Viral Marketing to Reach Buyers Directly

The most updated edition yet of the benchmark guide to marketing and PR, with the latest social media, marketing, and sales trends, tools, and real-world examples of success


This is the fifth edition of the pioneering guide to the future of marketing. The New Rules of Marketing & PR is an international bestseller with more than 350,000 copies sold in over twenty-five languages. It offers a step-by-step action plan for harnessing the power of modern marketing and PR to directly communicate with buyers, raise visibility, and increase sales. This practical guide is written for marketing professionals, PR professionals, and entrepreneurs who want to grow their businesses and create success. Learn how companies, nonprofits, and organizations of all sizes can leverage web-based content to get timely, relevant information to eager, responsive buyers for a fraction of the cost of big-budget campaigns.


This fifth edition—the most extensively revised edition yet—includes:


  • Dozens of compelling case studies with revisions

  • Real-world examples of content marketing and inbound marketing strategies and tactics

  • A fresh introduction

  • A new chapter on sales and service

  • Coverage of the latest social media platforms, including Periscope, Meerkat, and Snapchat

The New Rules of Marketing & PR is an unparalleled resource for entrepreneurs, business owners, nonprofit managers, and all of those working in marketing or publicity departments. This practical guide shows how to devise successful marketing and PR strategies to grow any business.


David Meerman Scott is a marketing strategist, bestselling author of ten books—including three international bestsellers—advisor to emerging companies such as HubSpot, and a professional speaker on marketing, leadership, and social media. Prior to starting his own business, he was marketing VP for two publicly traded US companies and was Asia marketing director for Knight-Ridder, at the time one of the world’s largest information companies.


visit the website



The New Rules of Marketing and PR: How to Use Social Media, Online Video, Mobile Applications, Blogs, News Releases, and Viral Marketing to Reach Buyers Directly

The New Rules of Marketing & PR: How to Use Social Media, Online Video, Mobile Applications, Blogs, News Releases, and Viral Marketing to Reach Buyers Directly

The most updated edition yet of the benchmark guide to marketing and PR, with the latest social media, marketing, and sales trends, tools, and real-world examples of success


This is the fifth edition of the pioneering guide to the future of marketing. The New Rules of Marketing & PR is an international bestseller with more than 350,000 copies sold in over twenty-five languages. It offers a step-by-step action plan for harnessing the power of modern marketing and PR to directly communicate with buyers, raise visibility, and increase sales. This practical guide is written for marketing professionals, PR professionals, and entrepreneurs who want to grow their businesses and create success. Learn how companies, nonprofits, and organizations of all sizes can leverage web-based content to get timely, relevant information to eager, responsive buyers for a fraction of the cost of big-budget campaigns.


This fifth edition—the most extensively revised edition yet—includes:


  • Dozens of compelling case studies with revisions

  • Real-world examples of content marketing and inbound marketing strategies and tactics

  • A fresh introduction

  • A new chapter on sales and service

  • Coverage of the latest social media platforms, including Periscope, Meerkat, and Snapchat

The New Rules of Marketing & PR is an unparalleled resource for entrepreneurs, business owners, nonprofit managers, and all of those working in marketing or publicity departments. This practical guide shows how to devise successful marketing and PR strategies to grow any business.


David Meerman Scott is a marketing strategist, bestselling author of ten books—including three international bestsellers—advisor to emerging companies such as HubSpot, and a professional speaker on marketing, leadership, and social media. Prior to starting his own business, he was marketing VP for two publicly traded US companies and was Asia marketing director for Knight-Ridder, at the time one of the world’s largest information companies.


check out For More Information



The New Rules of Marketing & PR: How to Use Social Media, Online Video, Mobile Applications, Blogs, News Releases, and Viral Marketing to Reach Buyers Directly

Bacardi social media marketing strategy adds Facebook immersive mobile ads

This effort is mean to help the brand’s messages to be delivered on a quality global level.


Bacardi has now become the first among brands of alcohol to implement a social media marketing strategy that includes the new mobile ad format from Facebook called Immersive Canvas.


This is meant to enhance the quality of Bacardi’s creative when it comes to the mobile sphere.


Now, Bacardi is hopeful that this new component to its social media marketing – which will make it possible to use an experience somewhat like a microsite without ever requiring users to have to leave Facebook – will make it possible to provide more engaging content, when taking into consideration that the creative must be designed specifically for that precise mobile ad format. The claim made by Facebook about the Immersive Canvas service is that it will make it possible for marketing firms to design native speed experiences that are relevant and captivating.


This addition to the social media marketing strategy is meant to help the brand reach the millennial audience.


Facebook mobile social media marketing This new mobile marketing component is a part of a larger campaign that has been launched by the brand. It started on October 12 and has been aiming directly at the millennial demographic as Bacardi works to alter the way it markets its own brand. The intention is to step away from the outline of its lengthy history in favor of a statement that is geared toward cultural relevance.


The latest campaign that has been launched is themed as a party that is located on the back of a truck. As the truck keeps driving, it continues to pick up more people.


According to the global lead for Bacardi rum chief and the marketing officer for North America, Mauricio Vergara, the Facebook social media marketing campaign is going to target a number of different passion points among the millennial generation. These will include arts, music and sports in order to create an approach that has been designed for both relevancy and a dynamic nature for consumers. Through this channel, the hope is that it will encourage a great deal more interaction with the brand than is possible over television commercials, said Vergara.




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Bacardi social media marketing strategy adds Facebook immersive mobile ads

Facebook increases focus on mobile with 'immersive ads' and Conversion Lift update



After unveiling the idea at Cannes Lions this year, Facebook has started testing a new ‘immersive mobile’ advertising format. The ads look like sponsored posts in the News Feed, but when tapped, they open full screen and allow the viewer to flip and scroll through text, photos, videos and other content. It looks like an alternate version of a brand’s website, but will load more quickly and be more interactive because the content is native to Facebook.


Facebook is testing the format with Gatorade, accessories brand Michael Kors, online retailer Mr Porter and French retailer Carrefour. For now, the ads will only appear on Facebook’s iPhone and iPad apps, state media reports.



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Last week, Facebook began testing the new mobile ad format that offers a blank creative canvas for brands to turn their ads into something closer to an app, similar to the Instant Articles editorial format that Facebook has been testing with publishers like The New York Times and National Geographic.


Facebook has also announced updates to its Conversion Lift measurement tool. In January, the company had launched Conversion Lift to help marketers better understand the additional business their Facebook ads drive.


In a blog post announcement, Facebook said, “advertisers come to Facebook to grow their business and connect with customers, and part of growing your business is advertising smartly. That’s why back in January, we launched Conversion Lift, a measurement tool for Facebook advertising that helps marketers understand the additional business Facebook Ads drive.


“Today, we’re adding new capabilities to Conversion Lift that help marketers understand exactly which of their Facebook ads are driving their ad objective best. The updated Conversion Lift measurement tool helps advertisers make more informed marketing choices, so they can continue to grow their business.”


According to the post, conversion lift studies can now be set up to measure lift across purchase channels, like stores, websites and apps, so advertisers can get a holistic view of their ad performance. Multi-channel measurement shows the advertiser the overall effect their ads contributed and can also be viewed by channel to see how the ads drove sales in store, online or in app.


Getting Started with Mobile Marketing


It doesn’t take another blog post from me on the importance of mobile to convince you that it’s a topic critical to your marketing strategy. I hope not, at least.


But for most people, the concept of mobile marketing is still a confusing one. It’s vague and broad. And even though I know that I need to be thinking mobile, I’m not totally sure what that means.


When people talk about mobile marketing, they could be talking about any number of things. So let’s list them all here:


  1. Mobile websites – you should have a mobile version of your website, or build your website in a responsive design template, to attract and keep more people who are searching and browsing on their mobile devices.

  2. Email – email marketing is essentially a form of mobile marketing today. That’s because so many people are using their phones as their primary email consumption method. So you should make sure your emails are optimized for viewing on smartphones.

  3. Text messages – many companies now allow prospects and customers the ability to sign up for text message alerts. It’s referred to often as SMS marketing.

  4. Search marketing – search is more and more becoming a mobile activity. And if you’re advertising through Google or Bing, you need to be thinking about how your ads are targeting people searching on their phones and tablets.

  5. Native apps – companies are creating apps to reach people on tablets and smartphones in a more effective way. If your products or services lend themselves to an app, think about investing in one.

  6. Third Party apps – you can leverage popular apps that are already out there, like Snapchat, Instagram, or Facebook to attract people on their phones to your brand via advertising or organic participation.

  7. In-app ads – iAds is Apple’s advertising platform for iPhones and iPads and there are others like it for all devices. You can create banners that pop up while people are using apps to promote your brand.

  8. Location management – smart companies with brick and mortar locations are actively managing their locations on Google Maps, Yelp and other popular location-based sites to attract more people who are using their mobile devices to find places or products on the go.

  9. Telemarketing – there are specific rules around calling cell phones vs. landlines and if you’re in the telemarketing business, you need to know what they are.

Every company needs a mobile strategy. But that does not mean that every company needs to do all of the above. Pick the areas that are most important, that offer the biggest opportunity, and move forward. Do not let a lack of understanding hold you back any longer.





Getting Started with Mobile Marketing

Facebook Brings Autoplay, Better Targeting To Its Mobile Ad Network, Grows Its Marketing Foothold




A carousel ad, one of several new advertising features Facebook recently introduced to its mobile ad network. (Courtesy of Facebook)

A carousel ad, one of several new advertising features Facebook recently introduced to its mobile ad network. (Courtesy of Facebook)



The auto-play video ads that users see when they check their news feed have been a big money-maker for Facebook. Now, the social network is bringing auto-play advertisements and several new features to apps in its mobile ad network, giving Facebook more ways to expand its influence in the digital advertising market.


The auto-play ads and new features will be available to publishers and developers on the “Audience Network” on Apple’s iOS and Android, the company said in a post on Tuesday. The move gives Facebook the chance to sell more video ads to marketers without upsetting Facebook users by putting more ads on its own apps.


“The Audience Network has been allowing third-party apps to monetize users for a while, and now these apps will see a greater return with a more diverse set of ad units to show,” Jan Rezab, CEO of social media analytics firm Socialbakers said in an email. “Introducing auto-play video here is a smart move for Facebook. It’s been performing well for marketers on the Facebook platform, and it’s a format that’s becoming very familiar to users.”


Facebook’s mobile ad business makes up a growing portion of its overall revenue. In the three months ending on June 30, mobile accounted for 76% of advertising revenue, up from 62% a year earlier. Digital video advertising revenue in the U.S. is expected to rise 34% to $7.77 billion this year, according to forecasting firm eMarketer.


In addition to autoplay ads, Facebook is making other new formats available to apps on the network who support full-screen ads. These apps can now be included in marketing campaigns that show product ads, known as “dynamic product ads,” to users based on items users have browsed on the web. Other new formats include carousel ads, which display a series of images, as well as a click-to-play video ad tool.


“The new features Facebook is rolling out for dynamic product ads mean ads will be more deeply targeted and relevant to the users they’re shown to,” said Rezab. “Facebook is trying to allow marketers to prioritize customers who will make a purchase.”


Facebook created its mobile ad network last year. Native ads now make up more than 80% of impressions on the network.


The social network has been scaling up video ads on Instagram and recently launched spherical and embedded videos. Facebook says it generates 4 billion video views per day, but has come under pressure for promoting this metric. Facebook counts a video view as three seconds, including views of auto-play videos, while its competitor Google-owned YouTube usually counts a view at around 30 seconds.


Video creators have criticized Facebook’s video view metric, saying that many of the videos Facebook counts in its tally were lifted from their original source and uploaded through Facebook’s native player, rewarding the Facebook page for the view and failing to reimburse the content creator. Video creators have also said that three seconds is not long enough to claim that a viewer was meaningfully engaged with a video, especially when YouTube tends to count views much later. In a blog post, YouTube star Hank Green noted a report from the ad agency Ogilvy and Tubular Labs that found that more than 70% of Facebook’s highest performing videos came from other sources, such as YouTube.


Facebook has responded to many of these criticisms, saying it has a system to help prevent unauthorized videos from being uploaded to its site, as well as tools to allow content owners to report potential copyright infringement. The social network said it removes unauthorized content when it receives a valid notice and suspends accounts of people with repeated violations. Facebook also said it is exploring news ways to help protect content owners. Green noted in his post, however, that because it isn’t possible to search for videos on Facebook, it is difficult for creators to track when their content is being freebooted. He also said that the fact that Facebook’s algorithm favors videos uploaded natively leads to more copyright violations.


In June, Facebook gave advertisers the option to choose to pay for a view once a video has played for 10 seconds. The company previously required advertisers to pay the instant a video ad, auto-play or not, came into view.


By comparison, YouTube has long offered marketers a product called TrueView under which they get charged only if a viewer doesn’t skip an ad—an option users have usually after four or five seconds—or if the viewer watches at least 30 seconds of the ad. Twitter charges advertisers for video views of three seconds or longer, but only when the video is completely visible in the user’s screen. Last year, Facebook’s share of the worldwide mobile advertising market was 17.4%, while Google’s share was 38.2% and Twitter’s was 2.5%, eMarketer said.


Follow me on Twitter @kchaykowski and e-mail me at kchaykowski@forbes.com.





Facebook Brings Autoplay, Better Targeting To Its Mobile Ad Network, Grows Its Marketing Foothold

Optimizing Email Marketing for Mobile: 6 Things You Need to Consider

Mobile continues to account for a greater share of email opens. A study from Movable Ink found that in Q1 2015, 67% of all U.S. email opens occurred on a mobile device. This trend will continue, therefore optimizing your email campaigns for mobile is no longer optional.


Optimizing Email for Mobile: 6 Things You Need to Consider


The staggering growth in mobile usage—and the opportunity it presents for marketers—has prompted many to refer to mobile as “the new inbox.” Mobile has enabled an always-on inbox, as many of us find ourselves regularly checking our email wherever we are. And users have come to expect for the emails they receive to be mobile-friendly. A study from BlueHornet found that when email isn’t mobile-friendly, 80% will delete the email and 30% will unsubscribe.


It’s more than simply being “mobile-friendly” from a technical standpoint (although that is critical – see #1), it’s also thinking about your email design and content from a mobile-first perspective. Here are several mobile-specific things you should consider to ensure your emails are optimized for a mobile audience.


1. Use a responsive or scalable mobile template


Mobile-friendly email templates have come a long way in the past few years, with most of the reputable ESPs and marketing automation platforms providing responsive or scalable mobile frameworks that can be used to create your custom emails. Scalable emails are typically a narrow, single column design that uses large text. They will basically look the same regardless of what device they are viewed on. As with responsive web design, a responsive email template will allow your email to look “normal” on a desktop client, but will adjust the content nicely to a mobile device. Responsive templates will give you more flexibility with your design—allowing you to use multiple columns and optimize for mobile users, while also maintaining the desktop experience.



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If you have a well-established email marketing program, this will likely necessitate the rebuilding of many different email templates, auto responders, triggered emails and lead nurturing campaigns. But don’t let the extra work prevent you from converting! Starting with a mobile-friendly, responsive template is the first (and arguably most critical) step in optimizing your email for mobile.


2. Keep your email short, sweet and to-the-point


Mobile users are often multitasking or on the move; they’re in meetings, sitting at a stop light, standing in line at the store or walking down the hall at work. Email can be deleted ever so quickly on a mobile device, so it’s important to make sure your subject line and main copy are enticing, engaging and to-the-point. Creating short and engaging subject lines is key to bringing in readers and making sure they open your email (note that iPhones only allow 32 characters before cutting off the subject line).


And once they’ve opened your email, be sure it contains quality content with relevant information, a compelling offer and a clear call-to-action. Make your design clean, simple and uncluttered. Don’t succumb to the temptation to cram a lot of text in the email; be concise, use easy-to-read fonts and make it easy on the eyes. If your email contains several sections with a lot of content, create a simple table of contents at the top with anchor links that allows users to easily jump to the portions of the email that they are most interested in.


3. Utilize the preheader


You always want your emails to stand out in the inbox and get opened. The preheader is the short summary text and the first item that follows a subject line when an email is viewed in the inbox. Most people simply include a “view in a browser” link or something similar. You should always include the option for the reader to view the email in a browser, but you might want to consider putting something more important in front of that link. The preheader might be a great place to include a summary of your email’s purpose or a call-to-action, since this will be one of the first things that gets displayed in your reader’s inbox.


4. Make your call-to-action buttons finger-friendly


Speaking of calls-to-action (CTA), a typical adult finger covers 45 pixels when pressed on mobile screen, so create your CTAs with this in mind. Make sure your CTA images are padded to avoid frustrating tap errors. The easier it is to click on a button, the more likely it is your readers actually will. It’s also best to use “bulletproof buttons” for CTAs instead of images. Bulletproof buttons are built using basic HTML and CSS and they’re more efficient than images. Lastly, don’t overlook the way you handle links. Smaller screens can make links unclear especially when they are surrounded by clutter. So set links to stand out and make them easy to tap on using a tag and a contrasting color.


5. Be intentional with your use of images


While images can certainly enhance your emails, try to strike a balance between text and images. Your emails shouldn’t be entirely dependent on images; rather the images should support the text that conveys the message you’re trying to get across. Also, when it comes to using images, the smaller the file sizes the better. Mobile devices typically have slower download speeds than desktop computers, so keeping the image file sizes small can really help with the email downloading quickly and efficiently. It also helps your subscribers be less frustrated and less likely to delete your email before it loads.


6. Test, test and test again


Don’t waste all your hard work optimizing your emails without testing extensively! Testing is a critical step in anything digital, and mobile-optimized emails are no different. After you’ve set up your email, be sure to test it thoroughly on all types of mobile devices, as iPhones and Androids render emails differently. And just like each web browser renders web pages differently, email clients (e.g. Outlook, Apple Mail, Yahoo Mail, Gmail, etc.) do as well. Check to make sure that your links work properly, images load quickly and what displays in the preview pane is going to get you an open. And one last check on spelling and to make sure your offer or purpose is clear and compelling won’t hurt either.


With more people viewing emails on mobile devices, you don’t want your email deleted simply because it’s not optimized for mobile users. And more importantly, you want your emails to fulfill their intended purpose—getting opens, click-throughs and ultimately conversions. While there are certainly others, hopefully these considerations will help you make that happen.


View Webinar - 21 Tips & Tweaks to Improve Your Email Marketing





Optimizing Email Marketing for Mobile: 6 Things You Need to Consider

5 Reasons You Need to Be Targeting Mobile Email Users

In recent years, a growing percentage of people have made the transition from desktop to mobile, choosing the latter as their leading digital platform. Web browsing, online shopping and checking emails on mobile have become the norm, especially when all it takes is just a few apps to consume your time with. Mobile has become our “friend”, replacing the same role the desktop filled not too long ago. In order to maintain that friendship, here are a few reasons why it’s important to target mobile users, especially via emails.


  1. Mail is more popular on mobile. Fact.

According to a study conducted last summer, 52% of Americans prefer surfing on mobile over the traditional desktop platform. The numbers may not come as a surprise, as the importance of mobile in our daily lives increases by the hour, including our emails.


Since 2011, there’s been a tremendous growth for emails on mobile platforms, slowly but steadily replacing the desktop as the preferred choice for opening emails. For the past 4 years, email opening on smartphones and tablets has increased with an astounding 500%. These days, more than 50% open emails on their smartphones rather than desktops. The numbers don’t lie – with the steady growth of email apps and mobile consumption, more people will shift to mobile emails, and that’s where the targeting focus should be.


shutterstock_89229358


  1. MMM = Mail’s Making Money

It’s all about the money, and a recent study shows that mobile is gaining plenty by email clicks. According to Yesmail, an email marketing solutions provider, mobile email revenue has risen in 12% from Q4 2014 to Q1 2015, and the numbers are expected to grow even more as the year winds down.



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The statistics are even more astonishing, as 45% of email opens have occurred on mobile while 36% were done on desktop, indicating how mobile email has become more popular. However, one head popping question comes to mind – how did mobile email revenue grow when basically emails apps don’t cost a thing?


Social media and messaging apps are usually free of charge, and the same applies to email apps, as mobile users wouldn’t purchase a service they wouldn’t pay for on desktop. Yet, mobile email didn’t earn money miraculously – like any good app or service, it finds ways to make money. It all depends on the users.


  1. Everything’s become smarter. Even emails.

Mobile users became smarter with time, knowing what suits them right. A top reason for the success of mobile email is the fact that users have a better knowledge of what they’re looking for, especially when it comes to apps. Mobile users wish to save their time while browsing on their smartphones, and checking emails is a time consuming action, especially at work. And as the old saying goes – time is money. Many users have reached the conclusion that if they’re already reading emails on their phones, then why go through all the trouble of viewing their mail accounts when those can be combined? The same users decided to make their email accounts clutter free, using apps like MailWise to keep all their emails in one place. This move may sound trivial, but for many users, this may be equivalent to an epiphany.


[ File # csp5043548, License # 1665188 ] Licensed through http://www.canstockphoto.com in accordance with the End User License Agreement (http://www.canstockphoto.com/legal.php) (c) Can Stock Photo Inc. / Arsgera


  1. Making purchases via emails.

When reading emails, many users take the time to go over social and promotional updates, checking out online sales and bargains, along with reading the standard work emails. Then again, the idea of bidding for that item on the eBay app suddenly doesn’t sound too bad. Moreover, in 2014, e-commerce, and online sales have generated an amazing revenue of $304,100,000,000. With the growing use of smartphones and phablets for online shopping, the numbers will keep getting bigger by the end of the decade.


Not only will mobile sales improve and have better conversion rates, as mobile technology and its accompanying devices will enhance rapidly as well. The mobile experience is consistently improving, and each generation of smartphones outdoes its prior. Smartphones have become bigger, better, faster, and more important – becoming a product which is our second nature.


  1. The ads do work.

An integral part of that nature is to click, stop and shop till we drop. In this case, all done with the touch of our fingers. The same fingers that click on emails will continue to push the “buy” button, generating revenue for retailers, emails and any company or app that does business on mobile.


Mobile users are apparently a great target for advertisers. Contrary to popular belief, mobile ads draw not only clicks, but conversions as well. Although users don’t click on too many mobile ads, it’s still a good way to catch their attention, especially if the ads are located in their email apps. The clicks won’t always lead to a purchase, but they will lead to your product, and that’s a start.


Looking for the perfect experience.


Mobile users have become smart users, as they are always looking for the best experience when browsing on various apps. Mobile companies are aware of that need and work their way to supply that demand, searching for the best ways to improve their products and services. Shopping apps, mobile and desktop alike, aren’t the only apps that will continue their steady improvement – email apps will also be easier to handle, giving a better user experience and a friendlier approach for reading multiple emails and maintaining accounts. Mobile consumers will always look for ways to simplify the experience of online shopping. Their wishes will be granted when email and shopping apps will integrate better, the buying process will become easier, giving users the experience they’re looking for, as well as generating revenue for mobile emails, which function much more than just for reading mail at home or at work.




5 Reasons You Need to Be Targeting Mobile Email Users

Video, mobile show strong growth in IAB's Q1 online advertising report


Video and mobile advertising both experienced double-digit growth in the first three months of the year as digital advertising spend reached $1.15bn, IAB’s latest report reveals.


According to the first 2015IAB Online Advertising Expenditure Report produced by PricewaterhouseCoopers, digital advertising spend reached $1.15 billion in the three months to 31 March 2015, a 5 per cent increase year-on-year.


Video advertising was the star of the show in Q1, chalking up 79 per cent year-on-year growth to $77 million. Mobile advertising also accelerated, leaping 13.5 per cent year-on-year to $230 million.


One in three general display dollars were spent on mobile display, while phone-based advertising lifted 20 per cent between Q1 2014 and Q1 2015, and tablet revenue grew 6 per cent over the same timeframe. As a whole, mobile advertising expenditure now makes up 20.1 per cent of total online advertising expenditure, up from 17.4 per cent last quarter.


According to IAB’s Third Annual Mobile Landscape Study released in April, mobile advertising is now well entrenched in the digital marketer’s budget, with 41 per cent of respondents using mobile as a core component in marketing campaigns.


In a sign of the growing dominance of online advertising, IAB’s report also pointed to the latest Commercial Economic Advisory Service of Australia (CEASA) Advertising Expenditure in Main Media report, which showed digital advertising spend representing 36 per cent of Australia’s $12.8bn advertising market in 2014. This was up from 31 per cent in 2013.


In contract, free-to-air advertising represented 27 per cent of total marketing spend, down 1 per cent; newspapers represented 16 per cent, down 3 per cent; and radio was 8 per cent.


IAB Australia’s CEO, Alice Manners, noted the strong video performance and expected further growth both locally as well as globally.


“The increase in video advertising expenditure is a reflection of the overall growing market understanding of the consumer’s desire to access content across a range of screens, all the time and at any time,” she said.


“The recent IAB NewFronts in New York saw a record number of major players unveil their new content offerings to an industry audience of unprecedented scale. It’s clear the industry is heavily investing in video content and we expect to see this continue to translate into ongoing growth in video here and in every other major market worldwide.”


The IAB’s new report also showed strong growth across general display advertising, which recorded its thirteenth consecutive year-on-year increase since 2002. General display accounted for 34 per cent of total online advertising spend and was worth $388m in the first quarter of the year. Top spenders on general display are motor vehicle, real estate and finance categories.


Search and directories remain the top category, with 44 per cent of the total online market worth $504m, while classified represented 22 per cent, an increase of 18 per cent year-on-year to $255m.


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Video, mobile show strong growth in IAB"s Q1 online advertising report