Thursday, 31 October 2019

Here’s how to get the most out of your marketing analytics investment

Gartner recently published their Predicts 2019 research report, outlining several converging trends that pose a threat to CMOs and marketing organizations. The report also makes several bold predictions including that “by 2023, 60 percent of CMOs will slash the size of their marketing analytics departments by 50 percent because of a failure to realize promised improvements.”

The number one success factor for CMOs today is the ability to effectively leverage customer data and analytics. And yet, according to Gartner’s report, companies today are clearly not demonstrating consistent return on that investment, a problem which often stems from a lack of marketing analytics leaders and the organizational structure necessary to effectively translate data and insights into action.

To discuss in more detail, we chatted with one of the authors of the Gartner report, Charles Golvin, to explore what CMOs and marketing leaders can do to buck the prediction and drive stronger results for their marketing analytics investment.

Our conversation, coupled with my own experience, solidified five ways CMOs can improve return on their marketing analytics investment, while also reinforcing why it matters:

1. Build organizational structure to apply better data

Knowing how to effectively leverage customer data and analytics is the number one success factor for CMOs today. And yet, to fully leverage the power of analytics, companies need to develop organizational structure and processes to be able to identify, combine and manage multiple sources of data.

As Golvin puts it, “companies need to build a better pipeline of carrying data from its raw state to decision and action systems for data science leaders to apply insights and powerful analysis to determine the right action and right strategy.”

To build these pathways, companies need a strong methodology coupled with an approach for how data gets aggregated, digested and applied to their various marketing systems.

2. Develop analytics leaders who bridge both data science with marketing strategy

Another key success factor for companies is developing and hiring the right leaders who can bridge both data science and business strategy. Simply put, analytics leaders need to know enough about business to ask the right questions of data. Only then, can they apply data and models to yield better decisions and drive sustainable growth.

This is our philosophy at Wharton – preparing well rounded, analytically-adept business leaders who don’t ask what data can do for them, but what data is needed to increase customer lifetime value (CLV) and how to apply data and customer insights to shape brand strategy.

Gartner regularly conducts surveys about different challenges that CMOs and marketers face, and every year, the one that rises to the top is finding skilled data and analytics leaders to hire,” shares Golvin. “Companies also struggle to find those ‘unicorns,’ or people able to command both data science and business strategy.”

Golvin also pointed out that once a company does hire an analytics leader, companies need the right foundation in place to foster their success. “There’s no value to hiring a data scientist whose output leadership doesn’t understand or know how to implement.”

Too often, we see traditional marketing organizations that aren’t able to effectively apply analytics or don’t understand how to frame the questions for data scientists on their team. The reverse is also a common challenge: analytics leaders don’t grasp how to use data to shape the broader business and brand strategy.

3. Hire a Chief Analytics Officer, or up-level the importance of analytics

So how do companies up-level the importance of analytics and develop the data-driven culture, capabilities and leaders needed to successfully transform their organization? One trend we are seeing is the emergence of the Chief Analytics Officer or Chief Data Scientist across more organizations.

As Golvin notes, “we’re already starting to see the emergence of Chief Marketing Technology Officers, who are focused on deployment of the right technology, architecture and capabilities. The next trend may be marketing analytics leaders at the c-level, who are purely about analytics and understanding the data.”

When companies empower analytics leaders to lead strategy, it can transform the culture, providing a clear vision for what customer data will be used and how to reach the desired business impact. When companies fail to make this investment, it leaves high-caliber professionals in a quandary.

“Too often data science leaders end up doing grunt work such as basic data processing and preparation, rather than using their analytics mindset and abilities to drive actionable marketing strategy, separate the signal from the noise and improve marketing outcomes,” notes Golvin.

4. Focus on better data, not big data

An ongoing challenge organizations face today is what we call “better data, not big data.” Too often we see companies that are collecting data for data’s sake, rather than taking a lean approach where they only collect data when it helps to optimize the experience for their target customers or better prediction of future behaviors.

“As data becomes more integral to marketers, a ‘more is better’ attitude develops, without necessary consideration given to the downside risks,” notes Golvin. “Companies need to do a better job of being transparent about what data they use and how, as well as considering the pros/cons, and risks of incorporating that data into a profile of their customers. More data does not necessarily lead to greater business intelligence – and in many cases can expose the brand to issues that impact customer trust.”

Data collection is in no one’s interest when it’s not meaningfully tied to strategy.

5. Separate the signal from the noise to predict and optimize business outcomes

Improving ROI for marketing analytics requires constant learning and experimentation to separate the signal from noise. There’s no better way to learn about your customer than to see what works and what doesn’t.

While big data and machine learning are great to business intelligence, a well-controlled experiment can deliver far more value. Finding the most impactful experiments to run starts with asking the right questions and maintaining a test and learn mindset where you’re constantly evolving to improve the experience for customers. The iterative adaptation based on these experiments builds momentum.

Many marketers know the “Holy Grail” phrase “deliver the right product to the right person at the right time.” In the past, this was more difficult because we didn’t know where consumers were. Now when marketers use better data, they know where the customer was and is more likely to be – providing the foundation for the ultimate in contextual 1:1 marketing.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Marketing Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

Jeremy Korst is the president of GBH Insights, a leading marketing strategy, consumer behavior and analytics consultancy. In his role, Jeremy works closely with Fortune 500 brands and CMOs to solve marketing challenges, improve customer experience and create strategies for growth. Prior to GBH, Jeremy held CMO or senior executive roles with Avalara, Microsoft, T-Mobile, among other brands. Korst holds a BA in economics from the University of Puget Sound and an MBA in finance and strategy from the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. He serves on boards of both institutions, as well as those of several technology startups. Eric T. Bradlow is the chairperson of Wharton’s Marketing Department, K.P. Chao professor, professor of marketing, statistics, economics and education, and co-director and co-founder of the Wharton Customer Analytics Initiative. He is also the co-founder of GBH Insights, a leading marketing strategy, consumer behavior and analytics consultancy. He has won numerous teaching awards at Wharton, including the MBA Core Curriculum teaching award, the Miller-Sherrerd MBA Core Teaching award and the Excellence in Teaching Award. Professor Bradlow earned his Ph.D. and master’s degrees in mathematical statistics from Harvard University and his BS in economics from the University of Pennsylvania.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Eric Bradlow & Jeremy Korst

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Neura converts mobile-location data into time and consumer attention

Location data has come a long way. From the early days of radius targeting, which is still happening, mobile-location and location history are now being used for sophisticated AI-driven personalization and customer engagement, increasingly without any reference to location at all.

Neura, which describes itself as “a leader in real-world customer intelligence,” announced it’s available as an app for Salesforce Marketing Cloud. I spoke with Amit Hammer, CEO of Neura, about the practical mechanics of what the company announced.

Converting location into consumer attention. Neura promises brand marketers that they will be able to use its Salesforce app to create customized audience segments and then market to them when they’re most receptive (via app notification, email or text) based on real-world activities and movement patterns. Neura’s data can also be combined with other insights in Salesforce to launch fully automated, personalized campaigns from within Marketing Cloud.

This sounds like the familiar “right message, right time, right place” refrain that has annoyingly appeared in so many mobile marketing presentations. But Hammer convincingly unpacked it for me.

Customer-journey builder incorporating behavioral “triggers” for personalized messaging

Hammer argued that app engagement is generally poor – Neura says notifications have average engagement rates below 8% – because messages are delivered at the wrong time, when users’ attention is not available (e.g., at work, sleeping, working out). He says that behavioral insights from offline movement patterns (and related customer inferences) are a much more reliable guide to customer openness to marketing messages.

This is the alchemical transformation of location data into attention-availability (i.e., time).

Agencies or in-house marketers handle all the creative. Neura’s system identifies when each person in each audience segment may be most open to the marketing message. Two “business travelers,” for example, may still have very different work-leisure schedules and corresponding attention patterns. Neura’s system can accommodate those differences. Users may receive the same messaging creative but potentially at very different times of day or days of the week.

SDK integration into enterprise mobile app. Neura works predominantly with mobile-first brands that have app-based audiences. If users don’t have the brand’s app it’s much tougher to gain these insights and the system doesn’t work as well — although there can be some lookalike modeling.

Neura’s enterprise/brand customers install the company’s SDK in their app. Then Neura starts building behavioral profiles of the brand’s audience from scratch.

Privacy is much less of an issue (or perhaps not an issue) here because this is permission-based first-party data. Neura is analyzing data on behalf of the brand, which has a direct relationship with its consumers. In addition, users must affirmatively opt-in to allow use of location.

The system doesn’t rely on pre-defined personas (e.g., working parent, business traveler) and then seek to find those people in the world, but creates customer personas and profiles based on their individual behaviors. As indicated, there is some lookalike modeling but Neura is more often delivering deterministic data.

Why marketers should care. Location is a critical source of data signals about customers. In many cases, offline activities are much more reliable indicators or predictors of preferences, identity, and intent than online signals. However, all of this must be handled transparently.

But when location is ethically and reliably sourced, it can be the cornerstone of relevance and personalized marketing efforts. And the combination of this data with machine learning technology does bring us much closer to – dare I say it – one-to-one marketing.


About The Author

Greg Sterling is a Contributing Editor at Search Engine Land. He writes about the connections between digital and offline commerce. He previously held leadership roles at LSA, The Kelsey Group and TechTV. Follow him Twitter or find him on LinkedIn.

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Search Buzz Video Recap: Google Bugs, Navigation Removal, AMP Updates, OMG I DonĂ¢��t Know & More

This week, we covered the ongoing Google bugs, this time with Google News indexing, Search Console issues, and other issues with Google. Google also is unaware of a navigational removal trick that some say help with Medic Update improvements. Google may change how they handle the noindex in the robots.txt. Google AMP can now support publisher URLs with signed exchanges support. Google does not manually hand rank web pages, they said it would be impossible to do so. Google again said you cannot force someone to legally link to you. Google may change the URL Parameter tool in Search Console. Google search algorithms are designed to be granular. Google said you can use the site command for individual URLs. Most SEOs say when pruning content they like to 301 redirect, not 404 the page. Google uploaded their last JavaScript SEO video, this one on dynamic rendering and is now asking for new ideas. Google’s Paul Haahr said spam fighting is a core competency for Google. When Google says “I don’t know,” they really might know. Google My Business is rolling out short names and URLs. Google Posts can now support highlighting customer testimonials. Google is testing a way to update stale search result pages. Did you know Google’s internal alert system is named OMG? That was this past week in search at the Search Engine Roundtable.

Make sure to subscribe to our video feed or subscribe directly on iTunes to be notified of these updates and download the video in the background. Here is the YouTube version of the feed:

For the original iTunes version, click here.

Search Topics of Discussion:

Please do subscribe via iTunes or on your favorite RSS reader. Don’t forget to comment below with the right answer and good luck!

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Help us chart Amazon’s growth as an advertising platform

As digital commerce continues to grow, product marketers are increasingly including marketplace platforms in their advertising mix. But just how much are they spending there?

Last year, Marketing Land’s inaugural Amazon Advertising Forecast found that 80% of respondents advertising on platforms that support digital commerce campaigns planned to increase spending in 2019. And nearly half said they planned to increase spending on Amazon by more than 25%. 

The survey also found that about two-thirds of advertisers are selling on other marketplaces including Walmart/Jet, eBay and Shopify.

We’d like to see how that’s changed in the past year.

Please click here to answer this year’s survey, it will only take 10 minutes and you’ll be entered into a drawing for a free ticket to any SMX West event in the next two years.

The results will be presented at SMX West 2020 in our digital commerce marketing track.


About The Author

Henry Powderly is vice president of content for Third Door Media, publishers of Search Engine Land, Marketing Land and MarTech Today. With more than a decade in editorial leadership positions, he is responsible for content strategy and event programming for the organization.

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Daily Search Forum Recap: October 31, 2019

Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

Search Engine Roundtable Stories:

  • Google: There Are No BERT Values Or Scores
    Danny Sullivan from Google said on Twitter that BERT does not assign values or scores to specific pages or web sites. It doesn’t work that way. BERT is simply (well, not so simply) about Google understanding languages better. Danny wrote “BERT doesn’t assign values to pages. It’s just a way for us to better understand language.”
  • Google Ads New Lead Form Extensions Beta
    Google announced, ten days after it launched, a new beta called lead form extensions. This gives customers who click on your ads a faster way to give you their information, so you can follow up with them later with more details.
  • Google Maps Now Shows Business Short Names
    Earlier this year Google added short names as an option for businesses in Google My Business. So if you wanted to give someone a quick way to see your business on Google Maps you would send them g.page/[yourcustomname]. Now this short name shows in the about tab in your Google My Business listing.
  • Google: No Plans To Add Google Discover Referrer
    Google’s John Mueller was asked if Google would add to Google Discover traffic a referrer that shows that click as coming from Google Discover versus Google search. John said no, Google has no plans on doing that. He said you can get to the data within Google Search Console’s Discover reports.
  • Google Site Speed Video Starring John Mueller & Martin Splitt
    Google posted another #AskGoogleWebmasters video, this one on site speed and this one is different. It is (1) much longer than the average #AskGoogleWebmasters video and (2) it has both John Mueller and Martin Splitt from Google in the video.
  • Googleween
    Today is Halloween and Google calls it Googleween for some reason, I don’t get it really, do you? đŸ™‚ In any event, here is a photo of a location around the GooglePlex where Google set up some props.

Other Great Search Forum Threads:

Search Engine Land Stories:

Other Great Search Stories:

Analytics

Industry & Business

Links & Promotion Building

Local & Maps

Mobile & Voice

SEO

PPC

Search Features

Other Search

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Why website security affects SEO rankings (and what you can do about it)

website security SEO rankings

A few years ago I started a website and to my delight, the SEO efforts I was making to grow it were yielding results. However, one day I checked my rankings, and got the shock of my life. It had fallen, and badly.

I was doing my SEO right and I felt that was enough, but I didn’t know there was more. I hadn’t paid attention to my website security, and I didn’t even know that it mattered when it comes to Google and its ranking factors. Also, there were other security concerns I wasn’t paying attention to. As far as I was concerned back then, it didn’t matter since I had good content.

Obviously I was wrong, and I now know that if you really want to rank higher and increasing your site’s search traffic, then you need to understand that there is more to it than just building links and churning out more content. Understanding Google’s algorithm and it’s ranking factors are crucial.

Currently, Google has over 200 ranking factors they consider when they want to determine where to rank a site. And as expected, one of them is about how protected your site is. According to them, website security is a top priority, and they make a lot of investments all geared towards enduring that all their services, including Gmail and Google Drive, use top-notch security and other privacy tools by default all in a bid to make the internet a safer place generally. 

Unfortunately, I was uninformed about these factors until my rankings started dropping. Below are four things you can do to protect your site.

Four steps to get started on website security

1. Get security plug-ins installed

On average, a typical small business website gets attacked 44 times each day, and software “bots” attack these sites more than 150 million times every week. And this is for both WordPress sites and even for non-WordPress websites. 

Malware security breaches can lead to hackers stealing your data, data loss, or it could even make you lose access to your website. And in some cases, it can deface your website and that will not just spoil your brand reputation, it will also affect your SEO rankings.

To prevent that from happening, enhance your website security with WordPress plugins. These plugins will not just block off the brute force and malware attacks, they will harden WordPress security for your site, thus addressing the security vulnerabilities for each platform and countering all other hack attempts that could pose a threat to your website.

2. Use very strong passwords

As much as it is very tempting to use a password you can easily remember, don’t. Surprisingly, the most common password for most people is still 123456. You can’t afford to take such risks. 

Make the effort to generate a secure password. The rule is to mix up letters, numbers, and special characters, and to make it long. And this is not just for you. Ensure that all those who have access to your website are held to the same high standard that you hold yourself.

3. Ensure your website is constantly updated

As much as using a content management system (CMS) comes with a lot of benefits, it also has attendant risks attached. According to this Sucuri report, the presence of vulnerabilities in CMS’s extensible components is the highest cause of website infections. This is because the codes used in these tools are easily accessible owing to the fact that they are usually created as open-source software programs. That means hackers can access them too.

To protect your website, make sure your plugins, CMS, and apps are all updated regularly. 

4. Install an SSL certificate

installing an SSL certificate for website security SEO rankings

Image source

If you pay attention, you will notice that some URLs begin with “https://” while others start with “http://”. You may have likely noticed that when you needed to make an online payment. The big question is what does the “s” mean and where did it come from?

To explain it in very simple terms, that extra “s” is a way of showing that the connection you have with that website is encrypted and secure. That means that any data you input on that website is safe. That little “s” represents a technology known as SSL.

But why is website security important for SEO ranking?

Following Google’s Chrome update in 2017, sites that have “FORMS” but have no SSL certificate are marked as insecure. The SSL certificate, “Secure Sockets Layer” is the technology that encrypts the link between a browser and a web server, protects the site from hackers, and also makes sure that all the data that gets passed between a browser and a web server remains private.

why is website security important for SEO rankings, example with http vs https

Image source

A normal website comes with a locked key in the URL bar, but sites without SSL certificates, on the other hand, have the tag “Not Secure”. This applies to any website that has any form.

According to research carried out by Hubspot, 82% of those that responded to a consumer survey stated that they would leave a website that is not secure. And since Google chrome already holds about 67% out of the whole market share, that is a lot of traffic to lose.

research, how many users would consider browsing on a website that is not secure

Image source

Technically, the major benefit of having Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure (HTTPS) instead of Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is that it gives users a more secure connection that they can use to share personal data with you. This adds an additional layer of security which becomes important especially if you are accepting any form of payment on your site.

To move from HTTP to HTTPS you have to get an SSL certificate (Secure Socket Layer certificate) installed on your website.

why does an SSL certificate work for website securityImage source 

Once you get your SSL certificate installed successfully on a web server and configured, Google Chrome will show a green light. It will then act as a padlock by providing a secure connection between the browser and the webserver. For you, what this means is that even if a hacker is able to intercept your data, it will be impossible for them to decrypt it.

Security may have a minor direct effect on your website ranking, but it affects your website in so many indirect ways. It may mean paying a little price, but in the end, the effort is worth it.

Segun Onibalusi is the Founder and CEO at SEO POW, an organic link building agency. He can be found on Twitter .

Whitepapers

Related reading

Accessibility and SEO: Where they overlap and how to optimize for both
Why businesses should implement structured data
siddharth taparia SAP on embarking on search transformation projects
The state of SEO 2019 - Infographic

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Segun Onibalusi

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Brands on Facebook Messenger get three new features to better connect with customers

Facebook has introduced three new features for Messenger designed to help brands communicate with their customers on the platform: “icebreakers” for business profiles, updates to Click to Messenger ads, and more options for users replying to messages from a business.

Icebreakers for commonly asked questions. Facebook is also rolling out “icebreaker” questions that businesses can add to their Messenger profile via the API. The feature offers users the option to click on a common FAQ — like “What are your hours today?” or “Where is your store located?” — to receive an automated response.

“Icebreakers help businesses reduce friction in starting a conversation by surfacing common questions or topics of interest,” writes Facebook on its Developer blog.

Facebook icebreaker feature for Messenger

Click to Messenger ad update. For businesses that already have multiple Facebook apps connected to the Messenger platform, the company is making it easy to select which app they want to use for their Click to Messenger ads (an ad that runs in the Facebook or Instagram News Feed, but opens a chat in Messenger when a user clicks on it).

The company didn’t give explicit details on how brands can select the apps they want to be connected to their Click to Messenger ads, but said the “first phase” of the solution is now available, with additional improvements to be announced in the coming weeks.

More reply options for users. The third feature from Facebook Messenger are reactions and message replies that users can take advantage of during conversations with a business on the platform. The reactions allow users to use emojis to react to a response from a business. The message replies allow for threaded conversations so that businesses can see which exact message a user is responding to. “This adds more clarity to the conversations and helps businesses respond to inquiries better,” writes Facebook.

Why we should care. More and more consumers are wanting direct communication with businesses on social platforms. A recent survey of more than 11,000 people ages 18 to 24-years-old, conducted by Facebook, found that 60% wished they could message more businesses. These latest updates from Facebook do just that — helping create more opportunities for brands to communicate directly with users.

As social platforms — and social usage patterns — trend to a more personalized, messaging experience, brands adept at one-on-one communication with consumers will have an advantage over the competition and a better chance at attracting a loyal following.


About The Author

Amy Gesenhues is a senior editor for Third Door Media, covering the latest news and updates for Marketing Land, Search Engine Land and MarTech Today. From 2009 to 2012, she was an award-winning syndicated columnist for a number of daily newspapers from New York to Texas. With more than ten years of marketing management experience, she has contributed to a variety of traditional and online publications, including MarketingProfs, SoftwareCEO, and Sales and Marketing Management Magazine. Read more of Amy’s articles.

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What Is A Good Click Through Rate (CTR)?

What is a good click-through rate?

It’s the age-old question asked by PPC managers and clients alike. Though we can agree that higher is better, much debate remains as to what constitutes a good vs. subpar account CTR. Below, I’ll give a definitive answer, though I acknowledge that many factors are at play. Additionally, I’ll be answering this question only regarding Google Ads and Microsoft Advertising.

What Are The Factors That Influence CTR?

Network – Search Network text and Google Shopping campaigns will, for the most part, have significantly higher CTRs than Display campaigns, although display remarketing campaigns do have the potential for better CTRs than other types of Display campaigns.

Relevance – This factor combines the complete search experience from query to the landing page.

Image of PPC relevance priority

Instead of listing them individually, I include bid, keyword match type, negative keywords/audiences, quality score, and ad copy as part of the overall relevance factor. The more your keywords and ads relate to each other, the more relevant your ad will be to searchers. These items need to work together to yield a higher CTR.

Ad Rank – Even with high relevance throughout, ad position will sometimes be low. Take into consideration both Google Shopping ad units and ad extensions and the prominence of a text ad diminishes greatly. Finally, if your ad is below the fold on searchers’ browsers, you’ll potentially accrue many impressions without the ad ever being seen!


Pro Tip

Keep in mind, average position will sunset in September of 2019. Moving forward, you should use the absolute and top impression metrics to understand where your ads are positioned on the SERP. If you’d like to understand this Google update from an industry-wide perspective, check out Hanapin’s PPC Newsflash: The End of Average Position, hosted by our president, Jeff Allen.


Device – Dovetailing off ad rank, CTR will vary by device. I generally find mobile CTR to be higher than desktop and tablet. Mobile ads will also take up much of the screen, often giving users only images before having to scroll.

Mobile PPC ad

Data – My general rule of thumb is to have at least 100 impressions on any given campaign, ad group, keyword, or piece of ad copy before optimizing. There are always exceptions, but this threshold is a good baseline, as it gives the specific item a fair chance to succeed.

Vertical – CTRs will vary by vertical, especially when considering competition. For example, “lawyer” related terms are often extremely expensive and have vast search volume. Any of the above factors may be influenced, causing fluctuations in CTR.


Looking for additional paid advertising resources? Check out Hanapin’s resource library for free reports, white papers, and webinars.

Take me to the PPC Resource Library »


So What’s The Verdict?

Based on these factors, a good account CTR is 2%.

Others would argue that 2% is too low. I’m not advocating that once you hit 2% CTR, you’re in the clear. You should constantly strive to improve CTR in conjunction with your cost per conversion and conversion rate goals. My stance is that with all factors considered in today’s PPC world, a 2% account CTR should be deemed good.

Considerations

When I say a 2% account CTR, there will most likely be individual campaigns with better CTRs and those with worse. For example, your branded and Shopping campaigns may have CTRs much higher than 2%, while others may be below this percentage. And having a higher CTR doesn’t always mean a good campaign. It could be an indication that your account is wasting spend by advertising to people less likely to convert, i.e. less interested in your client’s products or services (but still clicking the ad, for some reason). In addition, Display Network campaigns will accrue many more impressions at lower CTRs, weighing down the overall account CTR more than search campaigns. With these considerations, my stance remains that a good account CTR is 2%.

Clients will inevitably ask how their CTR compares to others in their vertical. My answer tends to be cautious, as there are no definitive studies comparing CTR across verticals. There are studies, but none with conclusive data that I would be comfortable standing behind. It’s important to also remember that CTR benchmarks will vary by industry and combining CTR with other KPIs will give a better view of your account’s health.

Using Google’s native tools, we can glean competitive data, but these figures are only estimates. The Auction Insights report provides interesting data comparing metrics such as impression share, Position above rate, outranking share, and overlap rate to your competitors.


Pro Tip

If you’re working to create more efficient Auction Insights reporting, check out Rachael Law’s post, Using Google Data Studio for Auction Insights Reporting. 


Final Thoughts

Both clients and managers will constantly question how to improve CTR. At the basic level, it all comes down to one of the factors outlined above: relevance. Create a well-structured account that easily gives searchers answers to their questions (queries).

You should always be striving to achieve a higher CTR. A 2% CTR is good, but continually improving this metric will make your account great.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Matt Umbro

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Soapbox: Consumers want personalization and data privacy so we need to solve the puzzle

The proliferation of digital, content-driven devices and channels (mobile, smart TVs, social media, etc.) have reinforced a notion that consumers prefer, even expect, personalized experiences. New research says this notion may be more complicated than that.

While global internet users find some types of personalization appealing, there’s no consensus on what tactic is most desirable. Further, in 2018, only 29% of users surveyed in the U.S. and Europe thought that providing more data to companies leads to better products and services, down from 31% in 2017.

Personalization is nuanced by how advertisers derive their tactics and how consumers can perceive them. As we learn more about if, how and why consumers want personalization in the context of data privacy, it’s our responsibility to listen and respond accordingly. 

Advertisers need data and analysis to learn about consumer personalization preferences. Amazon.com, Inc. uses browsing and purchase behavior, in part, to power its product recommendation engine. A restaurant chain might use loyalty program data to improve promotional offers. Some brands use identity data to recognize consumers across touchpoints. 

With so many potentially relevant use-cases to collect and activate data, it’s imperative that a strong campaign objective precedes and informs any data strategy to help ensure only what’s necessary is collected.

The data and technology in our ecosystem give advertisers a lot of power that the industry would be wise to guard against mismanagement. A 2019 data security and privacy survey from RSA found the majority of U.S. and U.K. consumers fear losing control over their information. In addition to minimizing the data advertisers collect to be more purposeful, discerning participants in the adtech and martech industry will listen to consumer fears, preferences and trends. 

Research is beginning to identify a potential understanding-application gap between consumer perception of data and expectation of personalization. The industry would be well advised to educate and empower consumers and each other via clear privacy notices, transparency and consent options. 

Data, technology and advertising have become irreversibly intertwined and the adtech and martech ecosystem has a responsibility to practice ethical data governance, thoughtful usage of technology and relevant advertising as the pretext for personalization.

Soapbox is a special feature for marketers in our community to share their observations and opinions about our industry. You can submit your own here.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Marketing Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

David Dowhan is founder and CEO of TruSignal, a TransUnion company. TruSignal is expert at using offline data and predictive score marketing to fuel digital campaigns, partnering with data providers, media companies, DSPs and digital audience hubs to help power their custom, people-based lookalikes, consumer insight dashboards, and bid-price optimization strategies.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author:

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Pre-made calendar with over 300 holidays to help plan editorial content

holiday plan calendar for editorial and social media content

A carefully planned content marketing strategy contains several key ingredients including an understanding of who you’re creating content for (e.g., your persona or personas), how your content will help them, and some key performance indicators to measure success.

However, even the most thoughtful and well-planned content strategy can run into roadblocks without a detailed editorial plan. The editorial plan should include what categories and topics you plan to write about, how you intend to amplify your content (e.g., social media, email, etc.) and—the most important bit of all—a list of relevant, highly engaging ideas that incorporates a balance of evergreen and time-sensitive content.

Event-specific content can be challenging to create with any consistency, but with some planning and foresight, it is possible to plan out your editorial calendar in advance. One way to do this is to align some of your topics with seasonal holidays, observance days, and themes. 

holiday planner social media

[Image source]

A holiday for every week, month and season 

At CommonMind, we’ve compiled a holiday planner specifically aimed at social media content planning. It contains more than 300 holidays bucketed in three categories as follows:

  • 2019/2020 U.S. National Holidays: This calendar contains all the top favorites like Christmas, New Year’s Day and Tax Day (that last one is somebody’s favorite, I’m sure).
  • Educational Calendar/Events: This includes key dates such as Global Family Day and National Science Fiction Day which are observed globally. 
  • A Food-themed Calendar: Technically, these aren’t holidays, but they’re fun to observe and perfect for helping fill your editorial calendar, particularly if you are in the food and beverage industry (though this isn’t a requirement).

Since a long list of every conceivable holiday can seem a bit daunting to wrap your brain around, we’ve also created an embedded Google calendar that can be viewed in weekly or monthly increments or printed. 

holiday planner for social media example calendar

November 2019 Holiday Calendar – Source: CommonMind

Holiday planning isn’t just for retailers

When people think of the holiday season, it tends to mean the period of time between Thanksgiving and New Year’s (although it’s been creeping up in the calendar to incorporate Halloween as well). But holiday content planning isn’t just for retailers or companies whose business ebbs and flows depending on the season. Here are a few examples of how some lesser-known holidays and observed days can inspire great content.

World Vegan Day (November 2, 2019): This is relevant to a variety of businesses in the health and wellness industry. Here are a few examples:

  • A nutritionist could write a piece about how to create a nutrient-rich vegan diet.
  • A healthcare provider could create a list of physical signs for vegans to be aware of that indicate they’re not getting enough of a specific vitamin or mineral.
  • A fitness expert (or gym) could write about how to ensure vegans have enough energy for various types of workouts.

World Kindness Day (November 13, 2019)

  • A marketing agency could write about an ad campaign or case study which features kindness as the main theme.
  • A veterinary clinic could write about how kindness helps both pets and their owners live happy, more fulfilling lives.
  • Any  number of businesses can write about kindness as their approach to doing business such as through employee wellness and medical programs, community service and involvement, or promoting an internal culture of kindness.

National Hot Cocoa Day (December 13, 2019)

  • This is a cocoa-manufacturer’s dream holiday and the perfect day to promote their cocoa products with a blog post as well as via social media.
  • Food-related organizations (coffee shops, restaurants, caterers, grocery stores, etc.) could create an event around this day (e.g., drop in for a free cup of cocoa!) and promote it via their blog and social media accounts.
  • Retailers can cash in on the height of shopping season by offering free cocoa in stores, coupons that fall on this day, and stories that humanize the company which can be featured on the blog (e.g., feature an employee cocoa-related story).

As you can see, becoming familiar with nonstandard holidays as well as observance days can help spur creative ideas for content that’s relevant to a variety of businesses and industries (you don’t have to sell cocoa to take advantage of National Hot Cocoa Day).

Our Google Holiday Calendar is a great way to familiarize yourself with upcoming holidays and can be imported into your own calendar for easy reference. Since this may be overwhelming, you can also peruse the long list of holidays to begin brainstorming and filling out your editorial calendar for the rest of 2019 and into 2020.

Happy content planning!

Jacqueline Dooley is Director of Digital Strategy for CommonMind.

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This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Jacqueline Dooley

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October Updates to Paid Advertising Platforms

In this monthly post, we bring you the latest from all of the major platforms.

Google Ads

What: Google rolls out conversions by time reporting

Details: Reporting can now be viewed based on the date in which the measured action took place.

Impact: Previously, Google Ads prescribed the conversion action to the date of the click. Much like Google Analytics, this update allows an analysis of performance based on the date of completion(form submission, sale, etc).

What: Easier cross-account analysis with Report Editor

Details: Manager Accounts can now analyze and identify cross-account patterns in their data without leaving Google Ads.

Impact: Prior to this update, customers utilizing numerous accounts for billing or budgeting purposes would need to pull multiple reports or use a data aggregator such as Supermetrics to quickly identify cross-account opportunities. The update allows for this type of analysis to take place within the Google Ads user interface. Unfortunately, this is mainly useful for in-house teams. Most agencies will quickly eclipse the 10 account limit, thus making the feature unavailable for their Manager Account.

What: Location targeting available for Google Smart Shopping

Details: Smart Shopping campaigns now have the ability to target certain countries, states, cities, and zip codes. Radius targeting remains available in the Advanced search link, while exclusions are also an option.

Impact: Previously, Smart Shopping campaigns targeted all countries. In scenarios where an advertiser only has a business opportunity in the United States, the algorithm quickly accounted for that with only a small number of impressions showing in irrelevant geographic regions. That said, the update provides peace of mind for geo-restricted advertisers while eliminating the chance of any such inefficiencies.

What: Google is beta testing lead form extension ads

Details: Google is testing the performance of a new ad extension which helps advertisers capture leads via text ad campaigns. The lead form extensions will include a headline, business name, and 200 character description. Information collected is limited to name, email, phone number, and zip code.

Impact: The convenience of this extension could significantly increase lead generation. Analysis of lead quality and any impact on the customer sales journey will remain important.

What: Google is changing the look of their call-only ads

Details: The business name and headline will show directly below the phone number along with a larger phone icon.

Impact: The new look will help call-only ads stand out from other text ads likely reducing accidental clicks.

Microsoft Ads

What: Microsoft Advertising will follow Google’s lead, to sunset accelerated delivery

Details: As announced in September’s paid platform updates, Google removed accelerated delivery as a budgeting option. Bing will now follow-suit starting November 1st, 2019.

Impact: Standard delivery is the preferred option for most accounts, therefore many advertisers will see little to no impact. For those utilizing accelerated budgets, slight bid and budget adjustments may be needed to maintain current spend levels. Chances are, advertisers have already adjusted to this change in Google with those optimizations “trickling down” to Bing prior to the elimination of this setting.

What: Microsoft Advertising announces a redesign for its user interface

Details: Thanks to Google’s user interface overhaul over a year ago, account managers are no stranger to adjusting to a new navigation system. A definite timeline was not included in the announcement, however, beta testers can request early access from this form.

Impact: Microsoft is aiming to modernize the look, feel, and functionality of the product. A global menu bar will make it easier to switch accounts, quickly access tools, and navigate to settings. The main menu on the far left will be designed for quick and easy access to your campaigns. Much like Google, we can expect early growing pains that will soon be forgotten as familiarity sets in.

Quora

What: Quora expands targeting options for advertisers with keyword history targeting, browser targeting, and gender targeting.

Details: Quora continues to develop as a bonafide PPC platform with a trio of new audience targeting options:

  • Keyword history targeting: Reach people who have previously shown an interest in subjects related to your business based on your keyword set. Ads will trigger on question pages and a user’s feed for those that visited a certain group of pages within a given time period.
  • Browser targeting: Target ad sets to specific browsers such as Safari, Firefox, and Chrome.
  • Gender targeting: Target ad sets to a given gender.

Impact: Quora’s growth as a PPC platform is undeniable. Developments such as these make the path to profitability on the platform more direct. For keyword history targeting, advertisers gain repeat access to a lower-funnel, highly qualified audience. For browser targeting, software with a browser-specific design can be properly advertised. And lastly, advertisers with gender-specific products or messages have gained the ability to properly bid and budget according to that segmentation.

LinkedIn

What: Use and-or targeting for objective-based advertising campaigns

Details: The and-or feature helps you further refine your targeting criteria by using either narrow audience further or exclude people.

Impact: Previously any “or” scenario meant an additional campaign and audience set. This feature provides more flexibility when looking to achieve audience scale.

Did we miss any major monthly updates? Not covering a certain platform close enough? Feel free to let me know on Twitter @Will_Larcom

Feature image from Patrick Slaven

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: William Larcom

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