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    • A message from Banksy
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Metro Misses the Mark

Filed under: Ambient,Brand,Marcomms,Outdoor,Social Media,Uncategorized — Ian J MacDonald @ 8:53 pm

A campaign here in Toronto caught my eye recently. Metro, the free pick-up newspaper, are trying to promote their paper on the basis of it’s ‘sharability’. Presumably attempting to counteract the now well-established phenomena of people sharing news content online via their social networks. You can almost see the chain of events here.

- Research to see why people prefer consuming news content on tablets and smartphones on their commute rather than print.
- Research shows the ability to share news is a key driver.
- Marketing department confuse digital sharing in a closed network of social media contacts with sharing your used paper with a stranger.
- Hence the campaign below is born.

Of course the moral of the story is that even the best insight in the world is damaging if in the wrong hands. Use market research in context and never follow it blindly. It’s s guide to finding the answer, not *the* answer.

And the best thing about it? These ads are running on the TTC, frequently adjacent to this ad which, if adhered to, rather screws up the sharing idea!

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Facebook Changes – 5 Things Brands Need To Know

Filed under: Digital Marketing,Social Media — Tags: Brand, Facebook, General Consulting, Social Media — Ian J MacDonald @ 9:45 pm

Announcements at F8 this week mark a real turning point in the way in which brands interact with consumers on Facebook. Here’s the top five things you need to know.

Facebook Timeline New Profile View

Facebook 'Timeline' - The New Profile View

1. Timeline – the new profile page
This is one of the biggest changes users will notice, rolling out on 2nd October. Whereas once a Facebook profile was a digital snapshot of a person, it now becomes a digital autobiography. Actions and content such as photos are organised by time, with the timeline stretching back – a bit creepily if you ask me – to ‘birth’!! If brands want to find a meaningful place in a user’s profile, they really need to find ways to truly add value to users and be part of their life, enabling and enhancing their activity. Think about the power of an estate agent being indelibly inked into a user’s autobiography because they bought their first house through them – the opportunity for brand affinity is enormous.

McDonalds Facebook Brand Page Vision

A vision of a future brand page

__ __ _____ Just as importantly, this will impact the fan pages of brands too eventually. Zuckerberg has spoken of a wish to make all profile pages equal. Imagine the brand story you could tell on such a page if you are an iconic brand with heritage such as McDonalds, (see below courtesy of mashable) Kellogg’s, Lamborghini, or Auto Trader!!!

Take out: Find creative ways to be a part of the digital autobiography, forget static snapshot profiles.

Take out: Start thinking about your own page overhaul now.

2. News feed & ticker
Users will now have more control over what appears where in their news feed because they can mark or unmark certain stories as ‘top stories’. News is now split between ‘top stories’, ‘most recent’ and ‘from earlier today’. So those brands which post un-engaging or irrelevant content will find their posts enjoying fewer and fewer impressions. To be honest, this will only punish brands which have remained blissfully unaware of Edgerank – the algorithm which has dictated what appears in a user’s newsfeed since April 2010. It’s just that users have more explicit influence over Edgerank now.
All actions and stories will show up in the new ‘ticker’ however, which is a ‘natural’ feed of activity in the top right. Which brings us to another point – interaction with a brand will now be more visible than ever thanks to the ticker, so encouraging existing fans to comment on a post, upload a photo and so on will mean your brand page is noticed by more of their friends. Encouraging interaction specifically with posts will ensure they gain a good Edgerank score and appear to as many fans as possible.
Take out: Your posts are going to need to be brilliant to encourage users to mark them as top news. Encourage more interaction. It’s so much more than just ‘liking’ now.
Take out: Keep a programme of doing something non-intrusive, such as uploading a photo to your page’s album or commenting on a post, every hour or as often as possible – you will appear in your fans new ticker every time, but in a less intrusive fashion, meaning you stay top-of-mind.

Facebook Like Button

The humble Like button - goodbye, old friend

3. Facebook ‘Gestures’

Previously, the only thing a user could do to an ‘object’ on facebook – a person, a post, a comment, a video – was ‘like’ it. Now, a publisher can combine any verb with any noun, which takes indicating a preference for something way beyond the humble and one dimensional ’like’. The new verbs begin to make a user’s true feelings and behaviour more transparent and will likely lead to an explosion in sharing and content discovery, which is good news for publishers.

Take out: Publishers now have more options for allowing users to share their behaviour, and should consider what benefits this could bring. If ‘Zuckerbergs Law’ holds true (that the volume of content shared grows doubles every year) Facebook will soon become an even more serious driver of traffic and conversion. Make sure you’re involved in that!

4. Media partnerships
Some exclusive partnerships have been announced, such as Guardian, Spotify and Netflix which will mean that users do not have to leave the Facebook environment in order to read news, listen to music or watch a movie. I’m a little perplexed by this one. I can see what’s in it for Facebook (can we envisage a day where you don’t ever have to leave facebook.com? Scary) but for the partners it is quite a gamble. They are essentially forgoing much of their own site traffic and control over their own site to allow their content to be consumed in a foreign environment. To put it bluntly, once more users are reading the Guardian on facebook than on Guardian.co.uk which is entirely possible, Facebook have The Guardian by the balls. The upside of course, is the frictionless sharing and no doubt massive increase in consumption of their content within the Facebook environment.
Speaking of frictionless sharing, the last point to mention is that apps will only need to ask for permission to post to a users wall once now rather than each time.
Take out: Think carefully before exporting your site’s core offerings to Facebook. That’s an awful lot of control to give up. It’s different for every brand but a programme of using Facebook to interact yet ultimately drive traffic and registrations to your own site, still feels right for most brands.

What are your thoughts on the impact to brands of Facebook’s latest changes?

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One Response to “Facebook Changes – 5 Things Brands Need To Know”

  1. lotnisko mazury Says:
    October 14th, 2011 at 1:38 pm

    It’s good to educate – thanks for sharing your mind.

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One Facebook Fan = 20 Visits. You don’t say.

Filed under: Social Media — Ian J MacDonald @ 11:53 pm

Marketing land was abuzz this week with the unveiling of new Hitwise survey data that revealed that in the retail sector, each facebook fan drove an additional twenty visits to the site of a brand. Social Media devotees rejoiced! At last something tangible to show for all that fan building, and from a source as trusted as Hitwise.

But hang on, there’s a few things which you need to understand before you run into the boardroom requesting a larger Social Media budget.

1. It draws inference from tenuous methodology.

To quote from Robin Goad’s blog post:

“We took the top 100 retailers ranked in the Hitwise Shopping and Classifieds category and benchmarked visits to those websites against the number of fans those brands had on their Facebook page. We then also looked at the propensity for people to search for those retail brands after a visit to Facebook using our Search Sequence tool.”

Basically they are looking at a list of brands and saying, how many fans so they have? Now, let’s look at how much traffic they have and draw some inference. Is it surprising that the brand with most visits overall will generally have the most fans?

2. It is pretty shaky to assume visits = revenue. And you don’t have to these days.

Hitwise are a little restricted in what they track. It’s all about traffic flows, traffic profiling and market share – and that’s great when you need that. But with web analytics tracking now very commonplace, there’s no reason why brands shouldn’t know how many sales are coming directly from their facebook posts. Just pop a query string on there and voila you can monitor post click behaviour versus another traffic driver like display or PPC. Why try to justify building a loyal community of repeat customers on the basis of the rather uninspiring ‘visit’ or ‘frequency’ when you could just express the value in conversions and revenue?

3. If the information surprises you, panic.

If you couldn’t have figured out yourself that making someone a fan on facebook will encourage them to visit your site more often through prompts appearing in their newsfeed and more generally building an interactive relationship and staying front-of-mind, you should rethink whether marketing is the industry for you!!

4. The timing is rather convenient

Experian are launching a cost-per-acquisition service for gathering facebook fans. How timely then, that they spit out some tenuous data claiming to ‘finally solve the riddle of ROI from Facebook’, which it doesn’t in the slightest. This also means that those big black holes in the methodology probably involved some rounding up.

5. It’s different for every brand

The incremental visits created by fan growth will be different for every sector, every brand. Depending on if it is high frequency brand (retail) or low frequency (automotive) if your strategy is exclusive time sensitive offers (lastminute.com) or engagement and front-of-mind maintenance (domino’s) etc etc. It’s really dangerous to generalise and say if ‘If I recruit a fan that’s 20 more visits this year’. Evolved marketing is about benchmarking against yourself and your prior performance, it’s about continuous improvement. Don’t look at the other guy too much, it can lead you astray.

6. Remember it’s visits, not visitors

As such this means Facebook fan page marketing falls into the retention category, it’s about driving frequency and yield from existing customers. What would be really interesting to look at would be Facebook’s ability to generate new customers and acquisition through recommendation and word of mouth. Overlooking this understates the importance of making someone a fan. Not only will they visit more often, they will refer friends and highlight your brand in their friends newsfeed, be that organically or through sponsored stories.

Conclusion

All in all I found the announcement pretty ‘so what’ and not especially convincing. There are much better ways to demonstrate the value of your Social Media activities. Think about actual ROI tracking and also work to understand both the retention and acquisition benefits of turning a customer into a fan. That said I do think Hitwise is a fine tool and they have some smart people over there, but this foray into Social Media hasn’t left me all that impressed.

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6 Responses to “One Facebook Fan = 20 Visits. You don’t say.”

  1. John Says:
    June 25th, 2011 at 12:43 pm

    Im not sure what you are disagreeing with here.

    On the one hand you appear to dismiss Hitwise’s methodology (and actually are guilty of a strawman argument) whilst then agreeing that facebook is a great dsriver of traffic.

    All Hitwise have tried to do is put a number on it. They admit that this varies depending on the vertical so your point about it being different for every brand is already covered.

    The only thing you are right about is the ‘convenient’ timing with the release of their Facebook fan acquisition product with techlightenment. But its logically flawed to criticise the data just because they are creating a buzz!

  2. Ian J MacDonald Says:
    June 25th, 2011 at 11:18 pm

    Hi John thanks for your comment. I’m not really disagreeing with anything – I am saying that these findings are not as interesting/new as they are made out to be. Hence the title ‘you don’t say’.

    Yes I agree with Hitwise that Facebook is a great source of traffic but that doesn’t mean that I have to approve hitwise methodology. I can agree with someone that coke is a popular soft drink, but if they reached that conclusion by surveying 4 people then I would find their methodology to reach that conclusion inadequate – but I would still agree with the conclusion as a fact. I think if you read the original hitwise blog post you will see that it is they who have constructed a straw man. I have not had to over simplify their methodology before attacking it because they themselves offered so little detail on their methodology.

    My point about it being different for every brand is not aimed at HW but at marketers who have gobbled up the headline and conveniently dropped the ‘vertical’ caveat. Plus I am saying it is different for brands within verticals even – which is different to them just saying it is different for different verticals.

    Overall as I say I am not attacking the data per se, but more to highlight to marketers that this announcement isn’t actually all that interesting nor surprising if you dissect it, for the reasons I state.

    Thanks again for your comments.

  3. Aubrie Says:
    June 28th, 2011 at 3:04 pm

    You have good points there, so I always check your blog, it seems that you are an expert in this field. keep up the good work, My friend recommended your blog.

  4. Ian J MacDonald Says:
    July 12th, 2011 at 4:43 pm

    Simply email me a copy to approve before publication, at ianjamesmac@gmail.com. Thanks for your comment.

  5. rut ham cau Says:
    July 30th, 2011 at 5:15 am

    thanks this is just what i was looking object of! i am bookmarking this any longer

  6. all 3 Says:
    August 22nd, 2011 at 7:30 pm

    Well put from an important blogger

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Are B2B and B2C Dead? Is It Now All About B2P?

Filed under: Direct Marketing,Social Media — Ian J MacDonald @ 8:45 pm

The below is a preview of the keynote I will deliver at the Innovation in Communication conference, Thursday 23 May 2011, London UK.

Edited highlights from the presentation are below.

Definition – what do we mean by B2P?

When I received this brief, I decided to ask around some fellow professionals what they understood by the term B2P. I also did some reading on the internet, and it quickly became clear that actually there are a number of different views on what B2P really means.   Do we mean;

  1. Improved technology and systems enabling dynamic personalised communications?
  2. That web 2.0 has destroyed boundaries between B2B audiences and B2C audiences and created one single audience of people?
  3. Social Media, social proof and the availability of information means contextual peer recommendation is more important than what a brand says?
  4. And therefore, that creating advocacy amongst key peers and influencers online has become more important than push marketing?
  5. Social Media enabling interactive relationships with audiences?

Actually, we mean all these things. B2P is an approach which finally recognizes that our audience are people, like us, and seeks to make the most of this opportunity through new technology and platforms. There is no doubt that Social Media, along with other trends such as mobile, is the future. But does that mean B2C and B2B will become redundant in favour of B2P?

The Argument For B2P Replacing B2B and B2C

This chart, based on a Business.com 2009 survey, shows that in fact both B2B and B2C marketers are making use of the same channels of social media. In fact, B2B marketers are more active on the whole than B2C. If marketers on both sides of the fence are making use of Social Media and frequently, the same platforms, does this not suggest the beginnings of a homogenous approach?

Audience convergence is another argument for a holistic approach. In the past, we had our consumers (B2C), and our business customers (B2B), neatly divided and so we could speak to each separately, most of time and with the exception of ATL media such as TV. In more recent times through technology we were able to market to them as individuals – you could say the beginnings of B2P. An example of this is Amazon’s dynamic suggestions tools. But nevertheless audiences remained separate.

However, the advent of Social Media has meant that audiences have merged – they can see what a brand is saying and doing to other audiences, and even more interestingly, they can see what those other audiences think of the brand too. A brand can’t forbid a business customer from becoming a fan on facebook and interacting with that brand’s public customers for example. This is often an uneasy situation for the brand! Crucially, people, be they B2C or B2B customers, now enjoy interactive, transparent and direct relationships both with brands and with each other. So why separate them out if they have naturally grouped themselves?

The issue of audience cross over is not new. Ask Gerald Ratner whose business forum speech intended for the IoD audience in 1991 destroyed his empire when consumers didn’t find it funny that he described his products (and thusly their possessions) as ‘crap’. But, in a Social Media world, it’s more pronounced than ever.

The Argument Against B2P Replacing B2B and B2C

Differences in B2B and B2C marketing

The table above demonstrates the fundamental differences between the two audiences and disciplines which will not go away. Ditching B2B and B2C convention might be fine, if Social were the only game in town. But it isn’t. Take a look at Pepsi to see the role that traditional communications still play.

In 2010, Pepsi boldly announced that they were going to spend 50% of their branding budget in Social Media. They even passed up the chance to advertise during the Superbowl for the first time in 15 years. Meanwhile Coke continued investing in product placement in American Idol and superbowl spots. This bold move unfortunately resulted in Pepsi losing 2nd place for market share to Diet Coke for the first time in years. In 2011, Pepsi are relying again on TV and interestingly – product placement in American X Factor. Well, if you can’t beat ‘em…..

Although the basics of Social Media strategy can be easily applied to either B2C or B2B activities, as Social Media marketing matures from infancy, there are defining trends emerging in each sphere. In the consumer space, the driving trend will most definitely be towards Social Commerce – that is, group buying power and recommendation which is dependent on a large number of buyers being available.  Look no further than Mark Zuckerberg: “If I had to guess, the next thing to blow up will be Social Commerce”. Of course he has a vested interest in that being true, but with brands like GAP announcing sales of $11 million through Groupon, it’s hard to argue with him. (Note that if GAP had not built a brand through traditional media they couldn’t have achieved this, to the earlier Pepsi point).

The AIDA model of advertising has been in use since 1898, invented by E. St. Elmo Lewis and has been a rough conversion funnel for almost any product or service ever since, with minor variations.

However what Elmo could never have dreamt possible, would be that any one individual could have access to peer opinions of such quantity that they were statistically robust, within milliseconds. This brings us an additional step which is becoming more and more important to all people – ‘recommendation’ – but this is much more so for a B2C context as scale is required.  eConsultancy found that 90% of all purchases are now subject to social influence. Of course, they always were, you could ask your friend or your brother their opinion. But the ready availability of many, many opinions via Social Media explodes the relevancy of recommendation.

In the B2B space, the defining trend will be toward transparency and deep, ‘always on’ relationships.

These two trends are arguably different sides of the same coin, but they are nevertheless distinct approaches in their own right.

John Butler, former Head of communications at Dunnhumby, is already stating that Demographic targeting is dead and that Social targeting is where it’s at. His research has found that demographic targeting produces an average 2% response, whilst purchase based targeting elicits a 50% response. But purchase based targeting with social targeting or context – an enormous  80% average response

Over on the B2B side, the driving trend is more towards transparency and interactive relationship building through thought leadership. Social Media has broken down the walls between those inside the business and those outside. We regularly try to encourage a social culture throughout my current organisation. Twitter takeovers with key senior directors (previously not customer facing) is just one example, as is a personalised response from customer services when an unhappy tweet mentions the brand. With this approach, isn’t the real evolution within B2B going to be P2P, not B2P? We want to treat customers as people but not portray ourselves as people? This seems counter productive.

Conclusion

B2P as a philosophy and at a basic level is valid across both B2B and B2C audiences.

But there are still many differences between B2C and B2B – Social Media alone does not justify homogenous approach.

Especially as with more tools becoming available and Social activity fragmenting, B2B and B2C marketers are likely to be riding very different trends. Recognising this, and staying on top of those trends, now that is evolved marketing.

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4 Responses to “Are B2B and B2C Dead? Is It Now All About B2P?”

  1. Chris Williams Says:
    May 28th, 2011 at 10:49 am

    Excellent viewpoint, totally agree we mustn’t get carried away with Social – many differences remain and ‘traditional’ media still has it’s place.

  2. Kathlyn Staudinger Says:
    June 13th, 2011 at 11:09 pm

    Excellent post. I was checking continuously this blog and I am impressed! Extremely helpful info specifically the last part :) I care for such info much. I was looking for this particular information for a long time. Thank you and good luck.

  3. links of london charms sale Says:
    June 23rd, 2011 at 1:59 am

    Brilliant blog posting. I found your post very interesting, I think you are a brilliant writer. I added your blog to my bookmarks and will return in the future.

  4. Alan Gayle Says:
    October 11th, 2011 at 2:31 pm

    This is a great blog post Ian, I leaned a lot from it. I agree with your conclusions.

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Seven Top Tips For Growing Your Facebook Fan Base

Filed under: Social Media — Tags: Facebook, General Consulting, Social Media — Ian J MacDonald @ 4:23 pm

I’ve been working with Facebook for around 3 years now running various pages and groups, and in that time I’ve learnt quite a bit about growing your advocacy base. Of course, you shouldn’t be targeting growth for the sake of it – but here I will assume that you are already doing all the good stuff that makes Facebook such a vital channel in evolved marketing, such as interacting, responding, and nurturing a community of advocates who will return to you again and again – and tell their friends about you.

1. Consider Facebook Ads
Sounds like an easy one, but too many people overlook this channel as they demand Social Media marketing to be ‘free’. There’s no such thing as a free lunch, and actually advertising can work out cheaper if you put any monetary value on your time and effort (you do, don’t you?). The hugely useful Facebook targeting system enables narrow segmentation, targeting and relevant positioning, meaning you can only attract the users you want to. One word of warning – advertising tends to work better for established brands with high awareness. A random brand will struggle to entice a ‘like’ without the user having done business with you already.

2. Link to your page from your site
There are a variety of formats available from Facebook itself, from the standard ‘like’ button, to ‘facepile’. An added bonus with such functionality is that it not only attracts new fans from your existing userbase, but it also provides social proof for visitors to your site. Hey, if I land on a site I don’t know and 26K other people (and maybe even some I know) have taken the trouble to ‘like’ that brand, I’m feeling confident about moving forward in the conversion funnel.

3. Contra with other page owners
Build relationships with other page owners with similar demographic targeting. Try to avoid competitors in most circumstances, but consider if I own a page for a luxury fashion brand and you own a page for luxury spa breaks, why not highlight the benefit of each other’s pages to our respective users and grow both our fan bases? There is a risk of promoting ‘replacement goods’ as everyone is a competitor when you think about it, but in these days of collaborative strategy, it’s worth a thought.

4. Encourage interaction
When your existing fans interact with your posts and content, that action is posted to their activity feed. This raises awareness of your page’s existence within their network. When combined with a Page ad targeted to ‘friends of fans’ (see 1) the combination just might bring them to you. Speaking of which…

5. Optimise your landing/welcome page
Don’t ever dump non-fans onto the wall. It’s boring and you’re asking them to deduce from your wall what the value proposition is for them by becoming a fan. That’s not evolved marketing. Evolved marketing is figuring out your value proposition (ask yourself again and again, why would anyone want to like my page?) and then articulating it in a solid creative execution. Remember AIDA and apply it to your design. This is the science of response. Try different executions – find what turns browsers into fans.

Here’s an example. You have 2 seconds to convince me and any other user to like your page.

Wha…Whe.. Why….ah, too late, ASOS.                        Good work Lacoste.

ASOS.com Facebook Landing Page

6. Incentivise your fans – (and then mention it on the welcome page!)
Your fan base are your strongest advocates. They are the people that talk to friends and family about your brand. So keep them sweet – exclusive offers, competitions, add something to their Facebook experience, don’t just hijack it for your own ends. Need an example? You have an interesting new product on your site. You could just post it asking your fans to come and take a look. Or, you could run a small competition based on clues or a treasure hunt of your site, spot the difference, it doesn’t matter, do something different, interesting and with a prize up for grabs. Fans lap up such amusing pastimes!

7. Use Insights for all the above
Facebook Insights get better all the time and are vital for understanding your sources of new likes. The data is all there, you just have to figure it out!

These are just 7 of the tips I’ve found that really work. Like any strategy, you need to apply it to your own business, your own brand, your own sector. Some will work better for you, some will work worse. But they do work.

I’d love to hear about some of the things you’ve found which help to grow your community on Facebook.

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2 Responses to “Seven Top Tips For Growing Your Facebook Fan Base”

  1. Ian Sullivan Says:
    April 25th, 2011 at 7:46 pm

    Great article Mr Mac. Would you also advise using alternative media to focus your audience to your Facebook page and increase its fan base? Twitter, QR codes, RDS or LinkedIn for example?

  2. admin Says:
    April 25th, 2011 at 8:27 pm

    Thanks Ian. I would indeed advise such an approach – cross pollination of twitter followers to FB fans for example can be a good growth channel. However I try to stay aware of the duplication occurring – I’ve met a few peers who add all the followers together across the platforms and express them as unique, where there is bound to be some dupe.

    Likewise, promoting social presences in paid for media, be that outdoor, TV etc is also a great way to build fans, especially if the ad features a Socially enabled call to action or proposition.

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