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

How Marketing Can Be Better Automated With Big Data


Marketing automation is the next big thing. In mid-2013, Salesforce announced the acquisition of ExactTarget which owns Pardot, the marketing automation company whose software-as-a-service application has enabled thousands of companies to automate and manage their online marketing campaigns and boost efficiency. Before this, Adobe had acquired Neolane, another cross-channel campaign management and marketing automation provider while Oracle had acquired Eloqua and Responsys who are leaders in the cloud-based marketing automation space.



It is not hard to understand the mad rush in owning applications and services that help customers automate their marketing campaigns. Not too long ago, online marketing formed a small subset of a business’ larger marketing strategy. Today, not only is online marketing a category onto itself, it is also getting increasingly diversified through channels like PPC, social media, SEO, content marketing to name a broad few. This space is getting increasingly cluttered and without proper automation tools, it can get extremely difficult for businesses to manage and ensure consistency in the various inbound and outbound marketing messages.


Besides this, there are several other benefits to marketing automation: it can drastically improve the efficiency of the sales team and their sales cycle, it saves time and money in mundane marketing administrative tasks including generating reports and sending bulk email communications, improves the targeting and messaging without the need for additional resources and accelerates close rates through persistent follow-ups. While a lot of SaaS-based marketing automation tools have enabled such efficiency improvements in the past, the next step in this industry is to use big data and cloud computing to create a vastly improved marketing automation solution. Here are some areas that marketing automation businesses are working on.


Data Driven Messaging: Marketing automation today largely relies on the marketer setting filters to target prospects and customers through parameters like their location, time zone, purchasing frequency, etc. But marketing communication could become more timely and efficient if it was based on analyzing their buying behavior not just on the marketer’s own website, but also over other complementary channels. This does not necessarily have to be a privacy nightmare for the customer. Tools like BuiltWith already host tons of valuable information regarding the back-end technology infrastructure and business tools used by various businesses. This information from thousands of businesses may be mined using big data to derive crucial insights into potential buying patterns of your existing or prospective customers and marketing strategies may be automated around this.


Predictive Analytics: Marketing strategy today is based off data provided by goals and funnels. While they provide a reactive way to analyze the success of marketing campaigns, big data can help with building proactive marketing automation systems that can yield higher returns on your investments. For instance, big data analytics can tell you whether the navigational path taken by a prospective customer would lead to them signing up or not. Based on this, you can devise an email marketing campaign that could route your prospects through a navigational path that is better suited to bringing them ‘back on track’.


This is an exciting time to get started with marketing automation and with new big data driven strategies, marketing would not only get more efficient, but also smarter.






How Marketing Can Be Better Automated With Big Data

Rare.io Launches Automated Predictive Email Marketing Solution for Online Retailers

Today Rare.io has publicly launched, providing online retailers with an automated predictive email marketing solution.


The Ottawa company says its solutions are proven to drive repeat business and increase average email click-through rates by up to five times.


Rather than blasting every customer that’s ever made a purchase with an identical email, the Canadian startup says, it delivers personalized emails according to the details of an individuals purchase history.  


“Anyone who’s ever purchased anything online knows the relentless spam that’s certain to follow,” said Rob Lane, CEO of Rare.io. “Our predictive email solution is fundamentally changing this practice by creating interesting and timely follow up emails.”


Since quietly launched in February, they’ve sent 17 million emails that are directly attributable for $2.3 million in incremental revenue for the stores.


Online retailers hosted on the Shopify and Spree platforms can implement Rare.io and create custom email design for their customers using simple drag-and-drop technology.



Rare.io Launches Automated Predictive Email Marketing Solution for Online Retailers

Facebook Marketing Partner SocialWire Rebrands as Manifest, Launches Automated Ad Platform

manifestlogo

SocialWire, a Facebook Marketing Partner specializing in ad tech, announced Wednesday that the company has rebranded itself as Manifest.


Another big announcement from Manifest: a new automated ad platform for Google and Facebook, with ads API integration on Pinterest coming soon. Manifest works with retailers such as Neiman Marcus, Gilt and Choxi by promoting their catalogs via search and social.


The automated at platform is focused on helping people discover new products, rather than urging them to purchase products in which they had expressed interest.


Bob Buch, Manifest’s CEO, explained the new platform in a press release:



Unlike retargeting companies, we are helping retailers grow sales by exposing their customers to new products. Retargeting makes sense when a customer is already on the website, but what retailers really want is growth and incremental sales. They have so much gold hidden in their catalogs – we give them a scalable way to realize the full potential of that asset.



The press release went on to show how the ad platform work:



Manifest combines a retailer’s product feed with its proprietary Matching Engine to automatically identify which products will fare best among specific groups of customers. The Manifest platform is constantly performing thousands of micro-tests to verify viability of each product, and automatically scales the best performing product ads across all channels.



So far, retailers on the first-generation Manifest platform, which focused on Facebook and was managed-service only, have optimized more than 14 million products in 4 billion ads to generate more than $70 million in ROI-positive revenue.



Facebook Marketing Partner SocialWire Rebrands as Manifest, Launches Automated Ad Platform

Kahuna Catches $45M to Make Marketing Smarter and More Automated



Kahuna


Kahuna Inc. has raised another $45 million as efforts to help companies get the right marketing message at the right time to millions of people continue to evolve.


Tenaya Capital led the Series B round, which follows a series of executive hires at Kahuna. The company has attracted people from Salesforce.com Inc., Cisco Systems Inc. and Zendesk Inc., among others, despite being a little over three years old.


The application of big data to marketing is still new, and Chief Executive Adam Marchick, a former venture capitalist who grew up in Silicon Valley and also worked briefly at Facebook, said Kahuna is productizing some of what Facebook has done with its growth marketing team.


“This is about understanding the person on both the Web and mobile [devices],” Mr. Marchick told VentureWire. “Facebook…saw that.”


Kahuna’s software uses machine learning to help companies engage and communicate with people–whether they are on email, social networks or mobile apps–by focusing on their behavior regardless of where they are. It reads digital signals that can help marketers decide, for instance, when someone is most receptive to receiving a message; when is the best time to follow up if an action, such as a purchase, isn’t completed; and which variants of messages and marketing campaigns are most effective.


Current investors Sequoia Capital and SoftTechVC also participated in the new round, which takes total funding in Kahuna to about $58 million. Tenaya Managing Director Ben Boyer joins the board.


Read the full article about Kahuna’s funding, including how some of its customers are using the technology, at Dow Jones VentureWire.


Write to Deborah Gage at deborah.gage@wsj.com. Follow her on Twitter at @deborahgage



Kahuna Catches $45M to Make Marketing Smarter and More Automated