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Carri Bugbee

Small Businesses Adopt Facebook Commerce - eMarketer - 0 views

  • 37% of Facebook store operators were using the site as their sole sales channel.
  • No matter the size of the business, consumers still express hesitation when it comes to making purchases on social networks. According to JWT Intelligence, privacy was shoppers’ main concern when asked about F-commerce in June 2011. Similar percentages of consumers questioned whether Facebook was secure enough to be a safe purchase platform.
  • small businesses find the channel appealing because it lets them “leverage their scrappiness,”
Carri Bugbee

How Heavy Sharers Boost Facebook Pages - eMarketer - 0 views

  • top-performing brand pages, compared to average brand pages, had a higher percentage of fans considered “sharers”
Carri Bugbee

Get Ready: Commercial Viral Videos to Take Up Even More of Your Time - eMarketer - 0 views

  • social media-driven campaigns would see the most growth in commercial production in 2014,
  • it makes sense that the commercial production space is shifting its efforts to viral video. Out of the US smartphone users surveyed, 44% said they watched viral videos on their phones, the second most popular digital video type they viewed regularly; 43% of computer users and 37% of tablet users also reported watching viral clips on those devices.
  • The top hurdle to managing rights and royalties for commercials was the need for a system to track them, cited by 32% of respondents. A close 30% were concerned about others using an asset despite not having the rights to it
Carri Bugbee

When It Comes to Social Measurement, Corporate Marketers Can't Get It Together - eMarketer - 0 views

  • more “advanced” metrics had generally seen the most growth. For example, engagement—the top KPI—had jumped 32% in the past two years, while sentiment tracking showed year-over-year growth of 38%.
  • sales conversions and brand ambassadors dropped by 38% and 58%, respectively, between 2012 and 2014. Still, web traffic as well as followers, fans and group size—simple and relatively useless figures—ranked second and third, which Useful Social Media said was “slightly disconcerting.”
Carri Bugbee

Infographic: Why Influencer Marketing Works - 0 views

  • That’s why 65 percent of brands are already participating in influencer marketing. Smashbox Cosmetics recently launched an incubator for YouTubers to use their studio space and products. Many brands are also teaming up with photographers on Instagram to reach new audiences.
  • An eMarketer study also that found that advertisers earned an average of $6.85 for every $1 they spent on influencer marketing last year.
Carri Bugbee

Rivals Chip Away at Google's and Facebook's U.S. Digital Ad Dominance, Data Show - WSJ - 0 views

  • eMarketer predicts the combined U.S. digital ad market share of Alphabet Inc.’s GOOGL -0.23% Google and Facebook will fall for the first time this year, shrinking to 56.8% from 58.5% last year. At the same time, overall digital ad spending in the country is likely to grow nearly 19% to $107 billion in 2018.
  • That would give Google command of 37.2% of the market, down from 38.6%. Facebook’s market share will likely be 19.6%, down from 19.9%,
  • Advertisers’ relationships with Google and Facebook have grown tense in recent years amid controversies over ads appearing next to inappropriate content, measurement discrepancies, and questions over the tech companies’ roles in Russia’s efforts to spread misinformation to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
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  • While it is a relatively small player in the digital ad industry so far, Amazon.com Inc. AMZN +1.92% is among the companies emerging as a potential rival to the duopoly. The retail giant is projected to bring in $2.89 billion in U.S. digital advertising this year, a 64% increase over 2017.
  • Snap Inc., though still a small competitor, is forecast to grow its U.S. digital ad revenue by 82% to more than $1 billion in 2018 while increasing its share to 1%, according to eMarketer.
  • Twitter faces more obstacles. The social-media company’s digital ad revenue in the U.S. is expected to decrease 4.9% to $1.12 billion in 2018.
Carri Bugbee

The Ideal Social Media Post Length: A Guide for Every Platform - 0 views

  • In 2016, BuzzSumo analyzed more than 800 million Facebook posts. Based on their findings, posts with less than 50 characters “were more engaging than long posts.” According to another, more precise study by Jeff Bullas, posts with 80 characters or less receive 66 percent higher engagement:
  • Paid posts: 5 to 18 words Every Facebook ad needs three types of content: a Headline, Main Text, and a Description. After analyzing 37,259 Facebook ads, AdEspresso found that ads did best when the copy in each element was clear and concise. According to the data, the ideal length for a: Headline, the first text people read, is 5 words. Main Text, the snippet above your image or video, is 14 words. Description, the text that lives directly below your headline, is 18 words.
  • Videos: 30 to 60 seconds With video, one of the primary measures of success is how long people watch, also known as your video retention rate. In 2016, Kinetic Social tracked 2 billion social ad impressions and found that 44 percent of 30- to 60-second videos on Facebook were viewed to completion. Meanwhile, videos that ran under 30 seconds or over two minutes saw completion rates of 26 and 31 percent, respectively. A more recent poll, from 2018, showed that 33 percent of Facebook users preferred to watch shorter videos, from 30 to 50 seconds long.
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  • Organic and promoted tweets: 71 – 100 characters Whether you’re running an ad or not, data from Buddy Media shows that tweets containing less than 100 characters receive, on average, 17 percent higher engagement than longer tweets. This is, in part, because shorter tweets are easier to read and comprehend. Short tweets also give retweeters enough room to add their own message.
  • Organic Instagram posts: 138 to 150 characters
  • Sponsored Instagram posts: 125 characters or less
  • Instagram hashtags: 5 to 9 per post at less than 24 characters each
  • According to research by TrackMaven, posts with nine hashtags receive the most engagement:
  • YouTube videos: 3 minutes
  • YouTube titles: 70 characters
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