Showing posts with label channels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label channels. Show all posts

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Interactivity model // brands must participate.

What's this 'digital shift' all about?
   
In a digital training course held by the wonderfully insightful and charismatic Heather Albrecht in Sydney last year, I enjoyed my first real delve into digital marketing and its driving forces.

The key questions on everyone's lips are where is it going, and how do we participate in a way that is going to drive the success of our business? The "it" here of course refers to broader social and media trends that are driving consumer choices; creating new contexts in which we must interact in order to engage with potential consumers.

Reflecting on previous consumer trends reveals four distinct phases or models of engagement:
1.  Advertising led
2.  Through-the-line integration
3.  Media neutral (big idea)
4.  Participation

It is this most recent 'participation' phase which represents new models of engagement and is largely influenced by the types of devices we are interacting with. Participation branding is defined as: 
   
"How a brand engages and behaves with consumers across channels and over time to earn their attention and participation through motivating experiences.
   
How consumers engage and behave with each other across channels and over time to influence each other and create motivating brand stories."
   
In the training session, Heather identifies four screens; represented by the television, laptop, iPad and iPhone. The specific motivations and uses for each may vary but often media is also consumed across each of these platforms, the new accompanying trend here of course being mobile.
  
  
It is crucial to understand the technological driving forces behind media consumption and shifting consumer habits, however, it is also important to understand the social behavioural trends being formed from these.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Facebook Social Ads // a difference that counts.

Digital channels are certainly a growing platform for advertising messages, perceived as both cost-effective and impacting, when it comes to connecting with potential consumers. In a recently published study by Nielsen, the effectiveness of Facebook's social ads (Ads with Friends) is compared to standard Facebook advertising. Social ads are those served to users whose friends have interacted with an advertised brand, while standard ads are served to the rest of the population. 
    
    
While individual cases may vary, overall Facebook Social Ads demonstrated a 55% greater ad recall than standard 'non-social' ads - a significant result.
    

    
While these findings are specific to Facebook advertising, they speak to a long standing trend. Personal recommendations have always been the most trusted form of referral - and this is not likely to change. As the advertising industry continues to adapt and come face-to-face with consumer scepticism and desired personalisation, optimising these types of social and personal channels will be the opportunity we must embrace in order to succeed.
  
The full report can be found here on the Nielsen Wire website.