Showing posts with label Consumer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Consumer. Show all posts

Friday, January 22, 2016

How Unilever leverages core consumer insights for mobile success: Mindshare exec




dove

Dove’s curly hair emojis



NEW YORK – A Mindshare executive at Mobile Marketer’s Mobile FirstLook: Strategy 2016 discussed how Unilever’s Dove and Hellman’s brands built campaigns from core consumer insights that were a hit on mobile and showcased the power of native integrations.


“It is really difficult at times to build a mobile strategy for a lot of CPG brands just because everything is so different all the time,” said Jeff Malmad, managing director and head of mobile for Mindshare North America. 


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“So how do you build campaigns that are really built on a core insight,” he said. “How do you build campaigns that don’t just leverage mobile but leverage desktop, tablets, digital out of home and print. 


“There are all these other touch points you have to consider in order to deliver these types of messages for these types of programs.”


A holistic strategy
The fundamentals of marketing have not changed. Brands are looking for ways to get consumers to engage with their products and eventually make a purchase. 


What has changed is that there are now so many different channels through which to engage consumers. Thus, the challenge for marketers is how to break through the clutter and deliver programs that are driven by an idea first. 


First, brands need to start with an overall concept and leverage it across all the different screens.  The platform should be secondary. 


“I’ve run hundreds of campaigns and the most successful campaigns that we deliver are the ones that really deliver that one core critical insight and then we take that core critical insight and spread it across all the different screens that are out there,” Mr. Malmad said.


“It is not our primary thought of we just need to build a mobile campaign,” he said. 



Zones of mobility
Brands should prioritize their partners for multiplatform campaigns, per Mr. Malmad. There are so many potential partners, it is important to be very specific and choose who you want to work with. 


To help Unilever accomplish this, Mindshare focuses on different zones of mobility. The comfort zone is about achieving scale and reaching a lot of people through partners that can push messages out to traditional media and social media. 


The idle zone focuses on deriving consumer insights from their mobile location history. 


The hot zone of mobility is about trying to reach consumers when they are in a parking lot of a store or walking in the front door using push notifications. 



Love Your Curls
Unilever’s Dove brand worked with Mindshare on the Love Your Curls campaign, which was built around insights related to how young girls and women feel about their hair. 


The research showed that four out 10 little girls do not like their curly hair while 10 percent of women do not love their hair because of their curls.


While the initial push was not meant to be a mobile campaign, it resulted in a significant number of women submitting stories to Unilever. This information was turned into a digital book, with 100,000 consumers downloading the content to their Kindle devices within a short period of time. 


“From a Love Your Curls perspective, this really started to manifest itself into the world of mobile,” Mr. Malmad said. 


Emoji keyboards
From there, further research showed that 76 percent of consumers today are using emojis when they communicate and 72 percent of women want to express themselves through an emoji. 


Unilever and Mindshare decided to build an emoji keyboard for the brand rather than work with the consortium that oversees official emojis, as this can take a long time. 


This resulted in the first curly hair emoji keyboard that was published, with consumers able to download and share it. The keyboard represents different ethnicities and also includes animated GIFs.


Dove’s curly hair emoji keyboard was downloaded more than 890,000 times. 


“We found that there was an opportunity to communicate with the consumer and give them that value so they could express themselves in a way that they do not have an opportunity to do right now,” Mr. Malmad said. 


“The opportunity with keyboards is great, but how do you get people to engage with it, how do you get people to stay with their keyboards,” he said. 


“You will probably see in the future, more opportunities to get people to stay in the keyboard, either through CRM or other opportunities that are valuable to consumers.”


Beacons
The campaign also included TV, with spots talking about the emoji keyboard and a cover wrap on Teen Vogue with the emojis. There was also a social media component. 


On the iTunes store on the day of the launch of the keyboard, Dove was trending as the most downloaded keyboard almost as soon as it launched. 


For the Hellman’s brand, Unilever and Mindshare focused in on the insight that 48 percent of people do not know what they are going to eat for dinner at 4 p.m. 


They build a campaign leveraging inMarket’s beacon network and relationship with Conde Nast’s Epicurious app to provide shoppers walking into grocery and mass merchant stores with content related to meal-time inspiration


“We are not pushing a Hellman’s message to people,” Mr. Malmad said. “We are pushing an Epicurious mealtime inspiration message to people and then they are going into that and experiencing different recipes they can make with Hellman’s.


“This is about integrating the brand in the shopping experience in a helpful way,” he said. 



Native integrations
Users also were presented with a recipe suggestion when they were in the dressing aisle, with the option to save it for later. 


With other campaigns for the brand in the market at the same time, there was a 5 percent increase in perception of brand versatility and a 1 percent lift in dollar share in a $ 2 billion industry. 


“I showcased a lot of different campaigns and one of the things you did not see was mobile banners,” Mr. Malmad said. “I am a big believer in banners. They work really well. 


“But, also at the same time, how do we create experiences that use native integrations, keyboards, push notifications, to drive more engagement and more product sales,” he said. 



Senior Editor Chantal Tode covers advertising, messaging, legal/privacy and database/CRM. Reach her at chantal@mobilemarketer.com.


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How Unilever leverages core consumer insights for mobile success: Mindshare exec

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

If you send out consumer e-mails, you"re currently on mobile

LiveIntent AdaptMobile has actually become one of those giant marketing beasts that both intrigues and discourages any individual running a business. It’s everything about apps, right? And you have to have a coding genius on staff if you desire an app, right? And I have to redesign my entire site and make it slim, best? So it will appear on a phone? And there are different type of phones, so how do I know if it’s dealing with both iPhones and Androids … and isn’t there another sort of smartphone out there? And exactly what about tablets!


At that point, a lot of individuals simply stroll away and leave it for another day. However the reality is, if you’re sending out marketing e-mails, you’re currently on mobile.


LiveIntent would like to point out a couple of intriguing truths:


Email is the most popular activity on mobile.
In an online survey performed by IDC and sponsored by Facebook, most of respondents (78 %) reported utilizing e-mail on their mobile phone– which was more than web browsing (73 %) or Facebook (70 %).


23 % of every mobile Internet hour is spent in email.
If the time invested on the Web through mobile was distilled into 1 hour, 14 minutes would be spent in email, beating out both social networking (9 minutes) and home entertainment (8 minutes) by a significant margin.




Night and Day


LiveIntent’s brand-new file “Email All over: Adapting to the Mobile Nature of Email” likewise includes this interesting chart. It compares email clicks and conversions on desktops vs. mobile.


Liveintent Email Conversions


The white, dotted line represents “perfect performance”. The blue line are the clicks, yellow is conversions. Both mobile and desktop actions peak in the afternoon and drop off after 4. However the desktop conversions do a deep dive into the night hours where mobile really has a small lift late at night. These are individuals who are browsing with a mobile gadget while watching TELEVISION or even after they’ve gone to bed. They’re in unwinded mode which is an even much better time to strike them with an offer.


Think of it. George checks his email at noon due to the fact that he remains in work mode. He’s anticipating a quote from a service provider and an update from his assistant and oh look, there’s an e-mail newsletter from that store with all the excellent fishing gear. Nice. George might open the newsletter but his mind is primarily on work and only partly on fishing.


Compare that to 9 in the evening. George is watching Deadliest Catch while lounging on the sofa with his feet up and his favorite drink in hand. Throughout the business break, he pulls out his phone just to relieve the boredom and checks his e-mail. There’s a newsletter with offer from his favorite fishing gear store. Exceptional. He clicks through and prior to the Deadliest can take another load of crab, George is benefiting from the 20 % off coupon. That brand-new fishing reel is on the way!


There’s just one thing that might put a tangle in his line – – an online store that doesn’t look right or function properly on George’s smartphone. As much as he wants that reel, what are the chances that he’ll stand up, go to his computer and go to shop?


Precisely.


The moral of this story is that your clients are currently using mobile to shop. The only thing stopping them from purchasing from your shop is you.


If a company is to make it through, they should discover how to adjust and that’s a much easier word to handle than ‘‘ modification’. Change implies a full overhaul however ‘‘ adapt’ means you merely require to make a couple of tweaks in what you’re currently doing. Forget apps. Forget mobile marketing and Vine videos. Prior to you do anything else, simply see to it your site works on mobile. Do that and you’re more than halfway there.




Marketing Pilgrim



If you send out consumer e-mails, you"re currently on mobile

Saturday, January 9, 2016

Online merchants say paid search is tops for consumer acquisition

SOROExactly what would you say is the most effective marketing techniques for acquiring brand-new customers?


85 % of sellers in the new 2014 Shop.org/ Forrester Research study Inc. State of Retailing Online research, stated paid search.


Only 81 sellers took part in the survey, which was conducted through May and June of 2014, but even if the number was 810 the outcome likely would have been the very same.


Search still works. It’s familiar to both marketers and consumers and as long as Google keeps turning out excellent results, paid search will continue to be a hit. Think about all the important things you searched for on the internet this week. The number of times did that search start with Google or Bing? I browse for a lot of things on eBay and I find that I improve outcomes from Google than on eBay itself. Very same for Twitter. It’s merely a more efficient method of discovering information and all of us understand it.


Because it’s so effective, merchants said they spend more on paid search than any other type of marketing and 4 out of 5 are investing a lot more than they invested in 2014.


62 % of merchants surveyed likewise plan to invest more on Facebook interactive marketing and other social networks efforts.


Here’s exactly what I question. If companies had to pay just to preserve a presence on social networks (Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest) – – do you believe budgets would shift even further because direction? Marketers commonly groan about the lack of concrete results on social networks, but they remain since it’s mainly complimentary. Would they go if it wasn’t complimentary? Picture how that would effect the whole social networks picture … Food for thought.


Back to the study.


I was amazed to see that 40 % of merchants utilize affiliate programs to acquire brand-new customers. I used to be really involved in affiliate marketing however given that social media took off, it is among those avenues that’s fallen away for me. I think that’s not so for the bulk.


Shop says display screen ads are coming on more powerful thanks to advances in behavioral targeting and remarketing. However Forrester’s Sucharita Mulpuru-Kodali warns marketers not to obtain too caught up in all the new and glossy objects such as complex attribution tools that help you follow customers from gadget to gadget.


One of the most unexpected findings from the research study was that even when a seller does utilize among the more “advanced” kinds of attribution measurement, their actual allocation of marketing invest doesn’t vary that much from those that simply make use of last click.



Something you can measure is how many people open email marketing messages on a mobile phone. 42 % of opens take place on a mobile phone. In 2014, it was just 28 %. Tablet opens rose from 16 % to 17 %. Not as significant however you can see where this is going.


States Mulpuru-Kodali;


I think the essential takeaways from this report are that you require to keep enhancing your Google initiatives, you should not ignore e-mail as it’s still extremely much alive, you should not be too enamored of shiny objects like beacons, and last click attribution– though flawed– still works for now.




Marketing Pilgrim



Online merchants say paid search is tops for consumer acquisition

Monday, August 24, 2015

Consumer financial products will be focus of FTC workshop on lead generation

Consumer financial products will be focus of FTC workshop on lead generation

The FTC is not the only federal enforcement agency focused on lead generation activity by consumer financial services providers. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) also has been focused on advertising and marketing of student loans, …
Read more on Lexology (registration)


Sterling Payment Technologies Launches Lead Generation Website For The POS

Sterling Payment Technologies, a national payment processor and provider of payment solutions to the reseller community, recently launched a lead generation website called ShopPOS.com. Sterling worked with industry leaders and POS partners to develop …
Read more on Business Solutions Magazine



Consumer financial products will be focus of FTC workshop on lead generation