Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

82
Marketing in the Age of Social Media By: Ariel Vinizki
  • date post

    11-Sep-2014
  • Category

    Business

  • view

    4.101
  • download

    3

description

We are going through the 5th revolution in media. What does that mean for marketers? With a case study on the Obama Campaign.

Transcript of Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Page 1: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Marketing in the Age of

Social Media

By: Ariel Vinizki

Page 2: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Last year, spent just 33% of

their $678M U.S. advertising

budget on ads with TV networks

and other traditional media.

Page 3: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

#1 Advertiser in Advertising Age‟s

2009 The Creativity Awards Report

Page 4: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

''We're not in the business of keeping the media companies alive. We're

in the business of connecting with consumers.'' - Trevor Edwards, V.P. Global Brand & Category Management, Nike

Page 5: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Marketing is getting increasingly complex.

Page 6: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Traditional media‟s share of the pie is decreasing.

Page 7: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“Advertising simply doesn't work as

well as it used to ... the old tools are

becoming more expensive and less

effective.” – Seth Godin

Page 8: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

CLUTTER

Page 9: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

SELECTION

Page 10: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

FRAGMENTATION

Page 11: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“In 1965, 80% of 18-49 year olds in the US could

be reached by three 60 second spots. In 2002,

it required 117 prime-time commercials to do

the same.”

- Jim Stengel, Global Marketing Officer, P&G

Page 12: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

TUNING OUT

Page 13: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

TUNING OUT

Page 14: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

• 60% of consumers describe themselves

as “a person who tries to resist or avoid

being exposed to marketing and ads."

• >2/3 of consumers said they would be

interested in products that let them

“block, skip, or opt out of being exposed to

ads."

• 54% say they "avoid buying products that

overwhelm me with marketing and

advertising."

Source: Yankelovich

Page 15: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“I don't watch TV live period anymore. It's all recorded

and watched whenever I get around to it lol I don't have

the time to watch shows when they are on. And if for

some crazy reason my DVR decides not to record

something it was supposed to(it has happened before)

I'll just go to the network website and watch it. Or I'll find

a bit torrent. I think it's pretty cool I can download

movies to my Xbox and the such... but I haven't actually

done it yet. I still like to go to block buster and check out

their selection. It gives me a chance to get out of the

house :-P”

- By acarzt on Apr 8, 2009, hothardware.com

Page 16: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Internet usage is growing at a torrid pace.

• 75% of North Americans use the internet.

• Almost 2 billion users worldwide.

Page 17: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media
Page 18: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“Gaming, once the domain of

kids and a small group of core

fans, is now more mainstream

than ever … the evolution of

gaming consoles into

multimedia devices has

changed consumption habits of

traditional media such as TV,

movie and Internet content,” - Bradley Raczka, Marketing Manager,

Nielsen Games

Page 19: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Gaming is mainstream!

Page 20: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Online poker is multi-billion dollars

Page 21: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

AIDA Advertising Model

Attention Interest Desire Action

Page 22: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Attention

More ads +

More brands +

Less receptiveness +

More non-commercial options +

Tools to avoid =

Attention being the scarce resource

Page 23: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

And even if your ad does break

through and get seen…

Page 24: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Despite an ever-expanding array of

advertising platforms and

sources, consumers around the

world still place their highest

levels of trust in other consumers,

according to a recent

global Nielsen Internet survey.

Page 26: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

So people hate brands?

Page 27: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

… Not Exactly:

• an overwhelming majority of consumers

(76%) welcomed brand advertising on

social networks

• nearly 40% of reported having “friended”

a brand on Facebook and/or MySpace

• 26% have followed a brand on Twitter

• The myth of marketing-free social

spaces is … a myth

• The “dialogue” between brands and

consumers is not only frequent, but also

welcome

Razorfish

Digital

Brand

Experience

Studies

Page 28: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

• Explosion in information is resulting

in an information overload.

• Abundant supply is driving the value

of most information to zero.

• Captive audience gone

– once waited for weather or sports

scores … now have it in real time.

• The only scarce resource is attention.

• We listen to „friends‟ as to what to pay

attention to.

• Friends know us better than any

algorithm.

• Crowd-sourcing your message?

Page 29: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

• Now 3rd largest video viewing

site on the web (behind

YouTube and Hulu)

• 217 million streams in Oct/09

• Amount of time web users

spend viewing videos on social

networking sites went up 98%

this year (source: Nielsen)

Page 31: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Social media are online

applications, platforms

and media which aim to

facilitate interaction,

collaboration and the

sharing of content.

Source: Universal McCann, Social Media Tracker

Page 32: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media
Page 33: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media
Page 34: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media
Page 35: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

What is Social Media Marketing?

Leveraging the internet as a

platform to drive engagement in

order to achieve branding and

marketing communication goals.

Page 36: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“It's impossible to draw a line

between social media and

traditional media - it's all

one.”

“Whether content is created

by the Pros or the Joes it all

has influence, even if it's

small.” – Steve Rubel

Page 37: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

"I just watched a plane crash into the hudson riv [sic]

in manhattan.” - Jim Hanrahan, aka Manolantern

Page 38: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“To find something comparable, you have to go

back 500 years to the printing press, the birth of

mass media … Technology is shifting power away

from the editors, the publishers, the establishment,

the media elite. Now it‟s the people who are taking

control.” - Rupert Murdoch, in Wired, July 2006

Page 39: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

4 Media Revolutions Prior to the Internet:

Printing Press Telegraph/Telephone

Recorded Media – Photos, Sound, Video Broadcast Media – Radio, Television

Page 40: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media
Page 41: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“The moment our generation is living through is the

largest increase in expressive capability in

human history.” – Clay Shirky

Page 42: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Your brand story is no longer linear.

Source: Advertising Age November 9, 2009

Page 43: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Socialism Redefined -Wikipedia, Flickr, and Twitter aren't just revolutions in online social media. They're the vanguard of a cultural movement.

Page 44: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media
Page 45: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Stop Interrupting!

Page 46: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Start Igniting!

Page 47: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

In a million channel world,

brands whose consumers tell

the best stories, win.

Page 48: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Give People A Reason To Click

Page 49: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

So how do all these changes in the

landscape impact advertising?

Page 50: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Time Out! Before we talk advertising...

Start by making a great product.

A great product is the best advertising.

Make better products.

Page 53: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

It‟s Not (So Much) What You Say.

It‟s What You Do (and Other

People Then Say About It).

Page 54: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

The Volume and Quality of Your

Earned Media Will Be Directly

Proportional to the Impact and

Quality of Your Product and Ideas.

Page 56: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Give Me A Unique Experience

Page 58: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Meaning Beyond Money

Page 59: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Meaning Beyond Money

Page 60: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Connect Me With Others

Page 61: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“Your brand is no stronger than your

reputation – and will increasingly

depend on what comes up when you

are Googled.” - Allan Jenkins, Global

Communications Consultant

Page 62: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“The skillful use of Twitter, Google, the

internet and Facebook won‟t make a

weak brand strong.” – Al Ries

Source: Advertising Age November 9, 2009

Page 63: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Transparency and Truth

Page 64: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Crawl, Walk, Run

Page 65: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Lessons For Marketers

Page 66: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

“The campaign was not successful

simply because it got a lot of

people out to vote. It was

successful because it got a lot of

people getting others to vote.”

- Jalali Hartman, Yovia.com CEO

Page 67: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

It Starts With the Product

• Barak Obama does

represent Change

– Race

– Age

– Experience

– Biography

– Regional

Page 68: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Clarity of Purpose

• Determined their positioning and defined the

brand clearly and consistently.

Page 69: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Identify Neglected Customers

• Expanded the electorate.

• Who is the competition

forgetting to speak to?

• How does your offer

speak to them?

Page 70: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Build Communities

Page 71: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Help Others Evangelize For You

• Build communities.

• Give people a sense of ownership in the brand.

• Provide the raw materials that people can

then use to create their own content to share.

Page 72: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Give Up A Little Control

• Have a policy and some control over offensive

and illegal material … BUT …

• Don‟t worry so much about unauthorized use …

allow mash-ups and audience participation.

• Don‟t censor „negative‟ comments.

Page 73: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Reward Me. Entertain Me.

• What do I get out of being

a fan on Facebook , for

following your Tweets, or

giving you my email/

mobile?

Page 74: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Put On A Spectacle

• Attract interest by creating

an experience worth paying

attention to.

Page 75: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Get Key Influencers Endorsing You

• Not necessarily a celebrity –

it could be an influential blog.

• Don‟t pay for it.

Page 76: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Get Media On Your Side

… But Don‟t Rely On Them

• Give them access and align your needs.

– Including your critics.

• Build a direct relationship with your audience.

Page 77: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Mass Media Still Matters

• Despite brilliant use of

web/mobile, Obama still

spent the most on paid

media … by far.

• Mass media pushed

people to the hub

(www.barackobama.com).

Page 78: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Be Transparent

• Address criticism head-on.

• Don‟t censor critics – empower supporters.

Page 79: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

It‟s A Permanent Campaign

• It‟s not a sprint.

It‟s a marathon.

• Don‟t launch and move on.

• Campaigns are on-going

dialogues.

• „Kaizen‟

• Build a community, keep

fostering it and leverage it.

Page 80: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Measure The Right Things

• What is the real objective?

• How will you determine success or failure?

Page 81: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media

Obama = Community Organizer.

Page 82: Marketing In The Age Of Social Media