Promotions 2.0Blurring the line between interactive advertising, promotions and social network marketing.

Archive for the ‘Measurement’ Category

April 27th, 2010

Social Brand Referrals Work

Social Brand Referrals

A great deal of buzz over the past two years has been focused on the concept that Facebook referrals (peer-to-peer referrals) are emerging as a major factor in brand effectiveness. We’re finally beginning to see the results of studies that are based on these concepts. Morepace, a market research company, has recently found that 68% of the 110 million US Facebook users are more likely to buy a product or visit a retailer based on a positive Facebook friend referral.

This is a very powerful finding and defines the strength and absolute neccessity to include social communications strategies in any brand/promotional endeavors.

Let us know if we can share with you how social messaging can positively impact your promotional efforts and  measurably impact your business.

December 21st, 2009

3 Steps to Creating Social Media Value!

Social media has become mainstream media with over 300 million users on Facebook alone and, according to Forrester Research, most of those people interact socially at least once a month. This year Marketers will spend almost $1 billion on display ads in social networks and another $750 million on social media marketing.

Thousands of brands have entered the Social Media space this year, but many marketers still struggle to create social media value. Creating value for your consumers can be broken down into these three steps.

Step 1: Be Active
Companies must establish an active presence in social media that creates value before consumers will be willing to share with others. Dunkin’ Donuts illustrates how an engaging Facebook fan page can create value for customers and connect them to the brand. The company’s page has a variety of content including contests and quizzes. It also promotes other company content on other social media sites (Twitter, YouTube), and serves as a distribution point for promotions and news about local store openings.

Step 2: Connect
To connect with consumers, brands must establish strong relationships with brand followers. This means finding ways to connect with consumers beyond simply trying to sell them something. In other words, they need to find their advocates, connect with those people who are fans of the brand and will speak favorably of it online. These connections enable companies to communicate value propositions and encourage sharing. For example, Life is Good maintains a Facebook page. The company promotes local events and virtual rewards sent among Facebook members — the clothing is not even mentioned explicitly. Sales and promotion of the company’s clothing line is left to the website and catalogue.

Step 3: Give
Online interactions with brand followers and fans need to involve two things: an opportunity to contribute and an incentive. Promotions and contests are an excellent way to engage brand followers and fans. We recently helped Godiva create a  promotion for the holidays that let’s consumers send their friends on Facebook virtual gifts for a chance to win a year of Godiva chocolate. If the receiver wins, the sender also wins.

By making themselves available and engaging fans and followers online, companies can augment and improve marketing efforts significantly. Many marketers are unsure about how to enter social media marketing and fear that social media campaigns aren’t measurable. By following these steps and taking a data-driven and measured approach to social media marketing, marketers can identify, recruit and engage socially active customers and create ongoing value.

April 9th, 2009

Moving from Clicks to Conversions

For over a decade, Website publishers have relied on an old advertising model: Publishers provided advertisers access to online viewers, and the more desirable those viewers, the more online publisher charged for banner impressions. Like the early days of television this model worked (for a while), but as advertising clutter increased and consumers began to see banners as noise click-through rates have dropped to an all time low.

Marketers are now shifting their focus from a one dimensional awareness approach to  integrated marketing strategies that leverage the engagement cycle to move consumers from awareness to conversion.

Unlike the sales funnel. Engagement is better thought of as a cycle, a series of touchpoints designed to create engagement with a brand in order to drive a purchase, each time in a meaningful and valuable way to both brand and consumer.

In the world of interactive promotions the engagement cycle is driven by three primary stages: awareness, activation, and conversion (or purchase). Throughout the cycle, marketers must measure in order to add value throughout the cycle.

Continue on…