Green App Machine
Posts mit dem Label Roundup werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Roundup werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

M&A round-up: The rise of channel marketing and the decline of 'conventional' ad agency ...

As the month of May draws to an end, one thing leapt out at me as I looked back at some of the deals of the past four weeks or so – and that was that of the dozen or so deals done during the month, hardly any were ‘conventional deals’.


When I say ‘conventional’, I mean an ad agency buying out, or acquiring, a majority stake in another agency, or two agencies merging. But this kind of deal has been in decline – if that’s the right word – for a while now.


These days, it’s all about acquiring capabilities – to beef up an offer, perhaps, or to expand into new channels.


Interestingly, most of the deals during May link into the field of channel marketing. We’ve looked at this before in The Drum of course, but as so many deals were done in May I thought it would be appropriate to revisit it.


For those who don’t know, channel marketing is the use of partnership to allow a brand or service to reach a wider audience, rather than just trying to sell one thing in one place. In effect it’s a kind of B2B marketing that has been used for ages by tech companies (eg Microsoft or Sandisk working with vendor or retailer partners) and by the grocery industry (eg Heinz working with the supermarkets) to reach end users or consumers. Another example might be a jeweler selling on QVC rather than via a few specialist jewellers; or selling beer at music festivals and football games rather than just through pubs and shops.


As a channel – or perhaps more accurately, discipline – the lines of what defines channel marketing have become increasingly blurred, and it increasingly overlaps with other forms of B2B marketing, shopper marketing, events, experiential and even performance and affiliate marketing.


One of the longest, but most effective channels, is the impulse/convenience retail chain. In the latter, a manufacturer would typically supply, say, crisps to a wholesaler, who would then supply a corner shop, whose owner/staff would then pass on to the crisps to the consumer. At each stage, marketing is involved: manufacturer to wholesaler; wholesaler to retailer; and finally retailer to consumer.


Sometimes there will be marketing from the manufacturer directly to the consumer – in the form of a TV advertising campaign for instance – but for this (expensive) investment to succeed, everyone in the chain or channel has to have bought in to the idea and to stock and pass on the product: no good advertising something that can’t be bought anywhere.


For channel marketing to be effective, relationships and support networks have to be built. Specialist agencies are often used for this purpose. An example of this would be 3ree, an agency based in Singapore, which was last week acquired by Always Marketing Services, China’s leading field and shopper marketing company (which is majority-owned by WPP network JWT).


Founded in 2010 by Tan Li Li and Isabel Cheong, 3ree offers event management, sourcing and production of marketing premiums, project management for exhibitions and activations, and design and creative services, as well as digital marketing; so it’s a classic channel marketing agency.


Always offers trade marketing, including merchandiser management and retail audit; retail marketing, including promoter management, in-store activation and retail environment designs; as well as shopper marketing, including point of sale design, events and road shows, as well as premium design and production.


The two businesses complement each other very well (and 3ree fits in nicely with WPP’s long-term strategy of making acquisitions in growing territories or channels) and the acquired agency has business in key Asian markets, including Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, India, Japan, Korea and Australia. Clients include Microsoft, Mitsubishi Electronic, Seagate and StarHub.


We’ve written before that the big audit and management consultancies – EY, KPMG, PWC, Deloitte, McKinsey and so on – with their ability to offer strategic insights, represent one of the biggest challenges to the established agency networks, so it was no surprise to see KPMG snapping up Nunwood, an independent consultancy specialising in customer experience management and feedback technology a fortnight ago. 


Founded in 1996, Nunwood has offices in Leeds and London.  Advising companies across the retail, telecoms, financial and leisure industries, its acquisition enables KPMG to offer a full-service customer management programme to its clients, from mapping the customer journey to measuring ongoing feedback. Nunwood’s ‘Fizz: Experience Management’ technology is used by organisations like British Airways and Nationwide to provide customer information to hundreds of managers, often in real time.


Commenting on the transaction, Richard Fleming, head of advisory at KPMG, told the media: “This deal is strategically very important to KPMG as it will enable us to provide clients with the tools they require to be truly customer-centric. Nunwood’s understanding of the issues driving customer behaviour, and the way they focus on improving customers’ experiences mirrors our approach of putting technology at the heart of everything we do.


“By combining forces we will be able to help clients take action, so that each decision they make is based on real-time customer feedback.  At a time when companies are worrying about their market share, the combination of KPMG’s Customer and Growth capability with Nunwood’s expertise in managing the customer experience will create an advisory business ideally placed to help our clients as they grapple with the realities of a fluid customer-base that is increasingly selecting services on the basis of their experiences.”


Again, from those remarks there appears to be an intent to sew up the channel experience. On a smaller scale, another recent channel marketing deal that caught my eye this month was digital agency Stickyeyes’ acquisition of Peterborough and London-based content marketing agency Zazzle Media. Content marketing is a discipline which has an increasingly close relationship, and overlap with, channel marketing.


So it’s another astute buy: the joining of the two companies represents a very good fit of digital and content marketing expertise. Both brands will remain independent, but will work in an integrated fashion: Stickyeyes will continue to provide SEO, paid search, social media, PR and digital consultancy Zazzle the content marketing.


And there have been more – Publicis’ media network ZenithOptimedia’s acquisition of the Czech and Slovak performance marketing agency B2B  Group; UK outfit Periscopix being bought by the giant US Merkle group; or Candy Crush tycoon Mel Morris’ investment in Derby-based channel specialist BriefYourMarket.com (which specialises in intelligent, preference-based newsletters and e-mails). As a side note, it’s worth pointing out that BriefYourMarket.com achieved growth of 3,821% in the space of just 12 months, making it one of the UK’s fastest-growing companies.


There was also the April merger between Pink Gorilla Marketing and Hairy Lemon Events in Leeds, creating a company (the somewhat inelegantly named Pink Gorilla Hairy Lemon) that will on fashion shows, bar and restaurant launches, sample sales and corporate events. Given that Leeds is starting to boom again after the recession, and has a comparatively young population, it’s not hard to see PGHL picking up clients pretty quickly.


Even last month’s £190m buyout of price comparison firm uSwitch by property site Zoopla, which looks on the surface to be one internet company buying another, demonstrates the importance of channel marketing in today’s increasingly blurred marketing landscape. 


Barry Dudley is a partner at Green Square, corporate finance advisors to the media and marketing sector




M&A round-up: The rise of channel marketing and the decline of "conventional" ad agency ...

M&A round-up: The rise of channel marketing and the decline of 'conventional' ad agency ...

As the month of May draws to an end, one thing leapt out at me as I looked back at some of the deals of the past four weeks or so – and that was that of the dozen or so deals done during the month, hardly any were ‘conventional deals’.


When I say ‘conventional’, I mean an ad agency buying out, or acquiring, a majority stake in another agency, or two agencies merging. But this kind of deal has been in decline – if that’s the right word – for a while now.


These days, it’s all about acquiring capabilities – to beef up an offer, perhaps, or to expand into new channels.


Interestingly, most of the deals during May link into the field of channel marketing. We’ve looked at this before in The Drum of course, but as so many deals were done in May I thought it would be appropriate to revisit it.


For those who don’t know, channel marketing is the use of partnership to allow a brand or service to reach a wider audience, rather than just trying to sell one thing in one place. In effect it’s a kind of B2B marketing that has been used for ages by tech companies (eg Microsoft or Sandisk working with vendor or retailer partners) and by the grocery industry (eg Heinz working with the supermarkets) to reach end users or consumers. Another example might be a jeweler selling on QVC rather than via a few specialist jewellers; or selling beer at music festivals and football games rather than just through pubs and shops.


As a channel – or perhaps more accurately, discipline – the lines of what defines channel marketing have become increasingly blurred, and it increasingly overlaps with other forms of B2B marketing, shopper marketing, events, experiential and even performance and affiliate marketing.


One of the longest, but most effective channels, is the impulse/convenience retail chain. In the latter, a manufacturer would typically supply, say, crisps to a wholesaler, who would then supply a corner shop, whose owner/staff would then pass on to the crisps to the consumer. At each stage, marketing is involved: manufacturer to wholesaler; wholesaler to retailer; and finally retailer to consumer.


Sometimes there will be marketing from the manufacturer directly to the consumer – in the form of a TV advertising campaign for instance – but for this (expensive) investment to succeed, everyone in the chain or channel has to have bought in to the idea and to stock and pass on the product: no good advertising something that can’t be bought anywhere.


For channel marketing to be effective, relationships and support networks have to be built. Specialist agencies are often used for this purpose. An example of this would be 3ree, an agency based in Singapore, which was last week acquired by Always Marketing Services, China’s leading field and shopper marketing company (which is majority-owned by WPP network JWT).


Founded in 2010 by Tan Li Li and Isabel Cheong, 3ree offers event management, sourcing and production of marketing premiums, project management for exhibitions and activations, and design and creative services, as well as digital marketing; so it’s a classic channel marketing agency.


Always offers trade marketing, including merchandiser management and retail audit; retail marketing, including promoter management, in-store activation and retail environment designs; as well as shopper marketing, including point of sale design, events and road shows, as well as premium design and production.


The two businesses complement each other very well (and 3ree fits in nicely with WPP’s long-term strategy of making acquisitions in growing territories or channels) and the acquired agency has business in key Asian markets, including Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, India, Japan, Korea and Australia. Clients include Microsoft, Mitsubishi Electronic, Seagate and StarHub.


We’ve written before that the big audit and management consultancies – EY, KPMG, PWC, Deloitte, McKinsey and so on – with their ability to offer strategic insights, represent one of the biggest challenges to the established agency networks, so it was no surprise to see KPMG snapping up Nunwood, an independent consultancy specialising in customer experience management and feedback technology a fortnight ago. 


Founded in 1996, Nunwood has offices in Leeds and London.  Advising companies across the retail, telecoms, financial and leisure industries, its acquisition enables KPMG to offer a full-service customer management programme to its clients, from mapping the customer journey to measuring ongoing feedback. Nunwood’s ‘Fizz: Experience Management’ technology is used by organisations like British Airways and Nationwide to provide customer information to hundreds of managers, often in real time.


Commenting on the transaction, Richard Fleming, head of advisory at KPMG, told the media: “This deal is strategically very important to KPMG as it will enable us to provide clients with the tools they require to be truly customer-centric. Nunwood’s understanding of the issues driving customer behaviour, and the way they focus on improving customers’ experiences mirrors our approach of putting technology at the heart of everything we do.


“By combining forces we will be able to help clients take action, so that each decision they make is based on real-time customer feedback.  At a time when companies are worrying about their market share, the combination of KPMG’s Customer and Growth capability with Nunwood’s expertise in managing the customer experience will create an advisory business ideally placed to help our clients as they grapple with the realities of a fluid customer-base that is increasingly selecting services on the basis of their experiences.”


Again, from those remarks there appears to be an intent to sew up the channel experience. On a smaller scale, another recent channel marketing deal that caught my eye this month was digital agency Stickyeyes’ acquisition of Peterborough and London-based content marketing agency Zazzle Media. Content marketing is a discipline which has an increasingly close relationship, and overlap with, channel marketing.


So it’s another astute buy: the joining of the two companies represents a very good fit of digital and content marketing expertise. Both brands will remain independent, but will work in an integrated fashion: Stickyeyes will continue to provide SEO, paid search, social media, PR and digital consultancy Zazzle the content marketing.


And there have been more – Publicis’ media network ZenithOptimedia’s acquisition of the Czech and Slovak performance marketing agency B2B  Group; UK outfit Periscopix being bought by the giant US Merkle group; or Candy Crush tycoon Mel Morris’ investment in Derby-based channel specialist BriefYourMarket.com (which specialises in intelligent, preference-based newsletters and e-mails). As a side note, it’s worth pointing out that BriefYourMarket.com achieved growth of 3,821% in the space of just 12 months, making it one of the UK’s fastest-growing companies.


There was also the April merger between Pink Gorilla Marketing and Hairy Lemon Events in Leeds, creating a company (the somewhat inelegantly named Pink Gorilla Hairy Lemon) that will on fashion shows, bar and restaurant launches, sample sales and corporate events. Given that Leeds is starting to boom again after the recession, and has a comparatively young population, it’s not hard to see PGHL picking up clients pretty quickly.


Even last month’s £190m buyout of price comparison firm uSwitch by property site Zoopla, which looks on the surface to be one internet company buying another, demonstrates the importance of channel marketing in today’s increasingly blurred marketing landscape. 


Barry Dudley is a partner at Green Square, corporate finance advisors to the media and marketing sector




M&A round-up: The rise of channel marketing and the decline of "conventional" ad agency ...

Social Media News Roundup: Prepare to Lose Likes on Facebook

It’s been a busy week for social media marketing news. But fear not – we’ve kept a keen eye on all the latest happenings in the world of social media, from Facebook’s plans to purge Page likes, to the sheer scale of ISIS’s activity on Twitter. Read on for more…


Facebook to Purge Page Likes From Inactive Accounts


Facebook is planning to “[make] Page likes more meaningful” by removing likes from inactive users, the company announced yesterday.


Facebook dislike icon.


The purge will take place over the coming weeks. We don’t know if the update will happen on a set time or date, or whether likes will gradually be removed over time. Either way, you can expect your Page to lose likes shortly.


Facebook says it’s removing likes to promote consistency, and to help businesses get “up-to-date insights” on users who actively follow their Page.


Likes will be removed from users who have “voluntarily deactivated or memorialised” their accounts. If they decide to re-activate, their Page like will be reinstated.


Twitter Improves Ad Targeting With Partner Audiences


Twitter has improved its ad targeting capabilities with a new venture dubbed ‘partner audiences’.


The feature, which was unveiled yesterday, lets advertisers choose from a list of more than 1,000 audience categories, generated by Twitter’s Marketing Platform Partners.


Twitter

Source: Twitter Advertising Blog.



Twitter says the new targeting options will help advertisers “drive the highest possible ROI with [their] advertising campaigns”.


From the news release:



…By using a partner to provide the desired audience, an auto brand can connect with audiences that are in-market for a new car. A CPG company can reach customers that have previously purchased products in their category. And luxury brands can limit campaigns to shoppers who earn a household income above a certain threshold.



Partner audiences can also be excluded from advertising campaigns, and can be combined with look-alike targeting to help ads reach a wider audience based on users’ interests.


Twitter says early tests have helped Nestle improve engagement for one of its campaigns by 52%, compared to the brand’s overall performance last year.


Pinterest Also Planning to Boost Ad Targeting Options


Just a day before Twitter announced its partner audiences feature, news broke of Pinterest’s plans to refine its own ad targeting options.


Pinterest logo


As Ad Age’s Maureen Morrison reports, the online scrapbooking platform is set to increase the targeting categories available to advertisers.


Currently, there are only 30 categories available for its Promoted Pins product. But when the changes come into effect, “advertisers will […] also be able to target users by audience, such as ‘outdoor enthusiast’”, as well as being able to choose from more refined versions of existing targeting categories.


Morrison wrote: “Previously, for example, a marketer may have been able to target interests broadly in sports, but now it will be able to target specific sports like soccer.”


The plans were revealed by Eric Hadley, Pinterest’s head of partner marketing, speaking at the company’s ‘Pinstitute’ event.


Hadley also spoke of plans for animated pins that animate as users scroll. He declined to confirm whether Twitter would roll out a much-rumoured ‘Buy’ button.


The new features will reportedly undergo testing over the coming months.


Instagram Finally Allows for Clickable Adds, as Part of New ‘Carousel’ Ad Format


In what some might call a long-awaited move, Instagram is finally allowing advertisers to place clickable links to products within ads.


Hand-shaped


The links will be integrated into a new ‘carousel’ ad format, the company announced in a blog post yesterday.


Carousel ads, the post explains, “give brands more flexibility in telling their stories by allowing people who view their ads to swipe left to see additional images and link to a website of the brand’s choice.”


The new format is likely to significantly increase Instagram’s value as an ROI-generating advertising platform. Without the ability to include links, Instagram has been seen largely as a useful platform for building brand recognition – but not for direct, measurable ROI.


Instagram will be testing carousel ads “on a limited basis” over the coming weeks.


Twitter Tests Easy Access for Tweet-By-Tweet Analytics


Twitter is testing a new feature allowing advertisers to access analytics for individual tweets, straight from their Twitter timeline.


As Marketing Land reports, the feature has been spotted in various forms, including a small bar graph icon, and a ‘View Tweet Activity’ button.


Twitter tweet-by-tweet analytics tests - format one.

Source: Marketing Land.



Twitter tweet-by-tweet analytics tests - format two.

Source: Marketing Land.



Once clicked, the image provides statistics on tweet views, link clicks, photo views and more.


This information is already accessible from the Twitter analytics Dashboard, but this feature, if it rolls out officially, should make it easier for advertisers to access the insights they need, when they need them.


Twitter confirmed it was testing the new feature.


Users Can Now Embed Twitter Videos on External Websites


As the war for video domination rages between YouTube and Facebook, Twitter is quietly improving its own video sharing functionality, having launched native video creation in late January.


Its latest move is to allow Twitter-native videos to be embedded on external sites – a feature that, so far, Facebook has yet to implement.


The video-sharing widget, announced on Monday, is accessible from the ‘•••’ button on individual tweets, much like the ‘embed tweet’ feature.


How to embed videos on Twitter.

Source: Twitter Developer Blog.



Organisations Promoting Safer Sex Struggling With Social Media Censorship


Advertisers who promote safer sex are facing censorship by social media sites, who are flagging their ads as inappropriate, based on their sexual content.


The Atlantic journalist Amber Madison spoke to several organisations that had faced censorship, including the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, whose Bedsider campaign had gained more than 50,000 followers on Twitter, but had found itself in violation of the platform’s advertising policy for its racy tweets.


To read the full article, click here.


Study Reveals At Least 46,000 Twitter Accounts Promoting ISIS


A new study claims there are ‘at least’ 46,000 Twitter accounts working to promote ISIS activities.


Much has been made of ISIS’s use of Twitter to promote its reign of terror, but few would have predicted the scale of the problem. And according to the study, called The ISIS Twitter Census, 46,000 is the researcher’s “most conservative” estimate – the actual figure could be as high as 70,000.


The BBC reports that the number of ISIS-promoting accounts is likely increasing at a rapid rate, despite Twitter’s efforts to shut down the offending accounts.


Aaron Zelin, an expert on terrorism, told the BBC that the accounts could reach millions of followers. However, he said direct recruitment into ISIS doesn’t tend to happen on Twitter, but on peer-to-peer platforms like WhatsApp, Skype and Kik.


More Social Media Marketing News and Views


Read last week’s social media news roundup: Facebook Advertising Comes of Age


Download your free editorial calendar eBook, including expert advice on integrating content marketing and social media strategy.



Social Media News Roundup: Prepare to Lose Likes on Facebook