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Maddy Wood

B2B Tech Marketers Ahead Of The Content Marketing Curve | CMO.com - 0 views

  • B2B Tech Marketers Ahead Of The Content Marketing Curve
  • For B2B technology marketers, original content is becoming a more critical tool to create continuous conversations with customers as they balance a complex mix of formats delivered both digitally and through live events.
  • So marketers have to provide a "curriculum" of materials that educate prospective buyers throughout the purchasing pro
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  • "You really have to cut through the clutter," and social media has raised the expectation that content will be focused on customers' interests.
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    For B2B technology marketers, original content is becoming a more critical tool to create continuous conversations with customers as they balance a complex mix of formats delivered both digitally and through live events. CMI's 2013 benchmark report found that, overall, B2B marketers are spending 33 percent of their budgets on content marketing, and more than half (54 percent) plan to increase their spending the next year. Social media is the most popular tactic, employed by 87 percent of respondents, followed by articles on company Web sites, e-newsletters, blogs, and case studies. But use of most tactics, especially research reports, video, mobile content, and virtual conferences, are rising. Read more: http://www.cmo.com/budgeting/b2b-tech-marketers-ahead-content-marketing-curve?cmpid=TT170#ixzz2EBo4Qofx
Maddy Wood

6 Senior-Level Steps To Digital Marketing Success - 1 views

  • Commit personally: Senior executives need to understand what they want from digital and social. Fortunately, the highest-level goals are generally quite clear. Companies have unprecedented opportunities to build steadily strengthening connections to customers, prospects, and partners. As a result, they can achieve higher margins, lower acquisition costs, and lower customer churn, thereby raising customer lifetime value. Clearly laying out these expectations is a great way to start.
  • 6 Senior-Level Steps To Digital Marketing Success
  • Understand customers.
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  • Map the pieces: This is perhaps the most challenging step. The overarching goal is to create an “ecosystem,” or community, of some sort–in short, a company’s own network that includes customers, prospects, and partners. This enables increased engagement with existing members, while promoting growth by adding new members. A place to start is understanding where the company stands across three distinct digital approaches–search engine marketing based on static Web sites and perhaps email marketing systems; permission-based inbound marketing based on attracting opt-in members and then building engagement through customer relationship management systems and content nurture streams; and social marketing and social sales based on understanding and leveraging social networks. One key question to ask is, “What should be at the center?”
  • the CRM system may take the central position rather than the Web site.
  • the real benefits come from achieving local leverage by encouraging a wide range of employees and partners to develop their own social presence, as well.
  • executives need to understand and articulate how the structure reflects the approach to growing customer lifetime value.
  • Assemble the components: Once the pieces are mapped based on the shape of the customer opportunities, the next challenge is to assemble a specific set of components with an eye toward flexibility and cost effectiveness. Given the remarkably rapid rate of innovation, leaders need to avoid being locked into expensive commitments that won’t be easy to continue to change. A series of principles can really help here.
  • build, test, and monitor prototypes until they work perfectly. Investing extra time and effort at this stage can make the step of expanding the system much quicker and less expensive, as well as making broad implementation much smoother.
  • Engage the organization around content, and marshal the resources to make it successful. Once a system is developed, it has to be used to full effect to capture the available benefits. And in today’s world, that requires a large, steady stream of content. Types of content include articles, blogs, white papers, contests, games, webinars, videos, posts to discussion groups, tweets, and infographics (to name a few). Increasingly, content generation is evolving into a companywide responsibility, rather than simply a marketing responsibility. Senior executives need to embrace and then encourage this. Although this is a relatively undeveloped area, management processes that reward the generation and dissemination of great content will undoubtedly lead to great value. And social management platforms that enable rapid and easy sharing of existing content, along with monitoring for compliance purposes, are already enjoying rapid growth.
  • Constantly measure and monitor in order to learn and improve:
  • margins should improve, acquisition costs should drop, and churn rates should decline
Patrick Sansom

Designing Effective Carousels - 0 views

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    People will only see the first frame or none at all in carousel. Ensure that important content is also placed mindfully in the IA and on another page of your site Use five or fewer frames Match the text and images in a carousel to the branding, so users don't think it is advertising
Maddy Wood

17 Counterintuitive Things the Most Successful People Do - Forbes - 0 views

  • 17 Counterintuitive Things the Most Successful People Do
Antony Mayfield

CBS Credits Web for Grammy Ratings Spike - Peter Kafka - Media - AllThingsD - 0 views

  • Why the spike? A good chunk of it, I assume, has to do with the death of Whitney Houston the day before, and viewers who wanted to see how the biggest stars in music responded to the loss of a peer.
  • Big, live TV events are big events on Twitter and Facebook, which generate lots of online chatter and drive more eyeballs back to the TV screen, where they inspire even more chatter. Cue virtuous cycle.
  • . It says it attracted a million visitors to the various sites and iPad/iPhone apps it operated over the three days leading up to the show. It says it attracted a peak of 165,000 concurrent viewers to a livestream of pre-Grammys red carpet coverage Sunday afternoon.
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  • worked
  • hard, along with Twitter, to get music stars at last night’s show to talk up the event to their own social networks.
  • “You’ve got to look at the ratings and say that there’s got to be a correlation,” says Marc DeBevoise, who heads up entertainment for CBS Interactive. “We wouldn’t be doing it if we didn’t think it was there.”
Antony Mayfield

(1) Showcasing your products and business with Instagram on your site - 1 views

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    Smaill businesses using Instagram
Maddy Wood

Strategic Consultancies Invade Marketing Agency Space - Forbes - 0 views

  • Strategic Consultancies Invade Marketing Agency Space
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    The traditional lines of demarcation between advertising agencies, public relations firms and now strategic consultancies have been blurring for some time.  In many ways, these developments follow the ongoing transformation of the CMO role from one of the grand orchestrator of the organizations' communications efforts to a more fundamental role as a strategic driver of growth and enterprise value. Many of the traditional agency and PR services have not fully  made the adjustments necessary to play in this new strategic arena.
Antony Mayfield

2013: The Year 'the Stream' Crested - Alexis C. Madrigal - The Atlantic - 0 views

  • There are great reasons for why The Stream triumphed. In a world of infinite variety, it's difficult to categorize or even find, especially before a thing has been linked. So time, newness, began to stand in for many other things. And now the Internet's media landscape is like a never-ending store, where everything is free. No matter how hard you sprint for the horizon, it keeps receding. There is always something more.  Nowness also transmits this sense of presence, of other people, that you get in a city when you go to a highway overpass and look down at all the cars at any time of the day or night. Things are happening. I am not alone. Look at all this. 
  • Schonfeld cited Betaworks CEO John Borthwick's thinkpiece, "Distribution Now," which he wrote in April of 2009, just as all this was really getting going. Borthwick concludes his post on the rise of The Stream with two quotes from musician Brian Eno. The old (and better) one begins like this: "In a blinding flash of inspiration, the other day I realized that 'interactive' anything is the wrong word. Interactive makes you imagine people sitting with their hands on controls, some kind of gamelike thing. The right word is 'unfinished.' Think of cultural products, or art works, or the people who use them even, as being unfinished. Permanently unfinished. "
  • I am not joking when I say: it is easier to read Ulysses than it is to read the Internet. Because at least Ulysses has an end, an edge. Ulysses can be finished. The Internet is never finished. 
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  • Take Netflix's decision to release ALL of House of Cards at once. People were flabbergasted! How could they sacrifice the nowness?!  But they did and people loved it. In contrast to live "appointment viewing," of a weekly show, House of Cards felt different, substantial. It was a weighty object that could be watched however you wanted to. 
  • Or take Snapchat and the Snowden-NSA revelations. They highlight a pernicious aspect of this metaphor: while the stream flows quickly past you, it flows into the vast, searchable reservoirs of companies and intelligence agencies. This stream is archived and data mined! On the Internet stream, you cannot keep up with the stream, but the stream can keep up with you. The NSA took advantage of this. 
  • On the tiniest level, many people (myself included) have been launching little e-mail newsletters. I've been writing into the stream for seven years, and I haven't had this much fun in a long time. My newsletter is finite (always less than 600 words) and it comes once a day. It has edges. You can finish it. 
  • Snapchat says: If we can't disappear completely, let's leave as little of a trace as possible. Let's be water vapor, a passing fog, not the stream. 
  • Lastly, look at the huge viral successes of the year, Upworthy, ViralNova, TwentyTwoWords, FaithIt, and all the rest. They take advantage of the structure of the stream and the psychological problems it makes for people. These sites traffic in narrative porn. The whole point of their posts is that they are idealized stories with a beginning, middle, and end. They provide closure. They are rocks that you can stand on in the stream, just to catch your breath.
  • So the simple answer is that there's too much flow and not enough stock. The Internet could rebalance away from the flow (i.e. the stream) and start making more durable things. 
Jason Ryan

The Always-Connected Customer Has Killed Marketing, Finally - Forbes - 0 views

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    You have heard of the 6Ps, here are the 6R's.... Super dumb headline and generally a dumb article, but the Marketing Orchestration concept is useful
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