Now that Meta is rolling out the paid, ad-free subscription option in the EU, users are forced through a prompt to make a choice.

1. Pay for an ad-free Facebook or Instagram
2. Use them for free, but with ads

Meta Ad-Free Subscription Prompt

Some users are looking for a third option: Deactivate my account.

They seem to think that they are being forced to pay now. They’re not.

And Meta likely doesn’t even want you to pay. This is merely their way of providing an option to comply with regulators. You can just keep using those apps the way they always have, free and with ads.

Some users seem surprised to learn that their data is used for ad targeting. Some people complain about this while on TikTok, using the app for free because it is monetized with ads. Ads that target them based on their behavior.

Whether or not these reactions are rational doesn’t matter. This prompt that forces people to make a choice between paying and using Meta apps for free with ads is resulting in some users threatening to abandon the apps entirely.

Will it impact usage numbers? We’ll see with Meta’s Q4 financial report.

The post Meta Has a Problem in the EU appeared first on Jon Loomer Digital.

chimpanzee wins competition after learning about performance marketing

Remember when shopping and advertising were simple? Then the internet came along and changed the game.

In today’s world, with tools like omnichannel marketing, businesses aren’t just reaching consumers. They’re having full-blown conversations across various online platforms.

What’s even more exciting is that marketers can now keep an eye on how their ads are doing, minute by minute. They can see which ones consumers are clicking on, which ones we’re ignoring, and adjust on the fly.

This isn’t just throwing ads out there and hoping for the best. It’s about making every ad count. This smart, data-driven approach is what we’re discussing today, and it’s got a name: Performance marketing.

In this post, we’re exploring the essential tools, techniques, and best practices you need to elevate your performance marketing game to its peak potential.

Quick Takeaways

  • Performance marketing is a results-driven approach where advertisers pay for specific actions, ensuring budgets align with tangible outcomes.
  • Key tools for performance marketing include analytics platforms like Google Analytics, networks like ClickBank, landing page builders such as Unbounce, and A/B testing tools like Optimizely.
  • Marketers can leverage techniques like programmatic advertising, retargeting, predictive analytics, and personalized content to optimize campaigns.
  • Success in performance marketing hinges on understanding your audience, setting clear objectives, embracing A/B testing, ensuring transparency, and staying updated with industry trends. 

What Is Performance Marketing?

In 2021, digital advertisers spent $455.3 billion on online ads around the world. This number is expected to grow to $646 billion by 2024. With so much money being spent, new ways of online advertising, like performance marketing, are becoming more and more popular.

bar graph shows digital advertising spending worldwide in billions from 2020 to 2024

Image Source: Statistica

Performance marketing is a digital marketing approach where advertisers pay based on specific actions or results.

Instead of paying upfront without any guarantees, with performance marketing, you pay only when a particular action—like a click, sale, or lead—is completed. This ensures that your marketing budget is directly tied to tangible outcomes.

You might be thinking, “How is this any different from traditional marketing?”

Traditional marketing often means paying up front, like for an ad spot, and then crossing your fingers. But with performance marketing, you’re in the driver’s seat. You know exactly where your money’s going because it’s tied to real, measurable actions.

Here’s a few key models in performance marketing to know:

  • CPA (Cost Per Acquisition): Payment is made when a purchase occurs.
  • CPC (Cost Per Click): Payment is made when an ad is clicked.
  • CPL (Cost Per Lead): Payment is made when a potential customer provides contact information.
  • CPM (Cost Per Thousand Impressions): Payment is made for every 1,000 times an ad is viewed.

We’re big fans of performance marketing here at Marketing Insider Group. It’s straightforward, it’s efficient, and it lets us make decisions based on actual data. Plus, it feels good knowing our marketing efforts are making a real impact.

Essential Tools for Performance Marketing

While it’s essential to have fun with your campaigns, it’s equally important to be equipped with the right tools to ensure success. Here’s a quick guide to some key tools:

Analytics and Tracking Platforms

These tools are crucial. With platforms like Google Analytics, you get insights into user behavior, while Mixpanel offers a deeper dive into specific user actions. It’s about understanding and optimizing your audience’s journey.

screenshot shows example of Google Analytics as a tracking tool for performance marketing

Image Source: Eclipse Media Solutions

Performance Marketing Platforms and Networks

These platforms bridge the gap between advertisers and publishers. Platforms like ClickBank and ShareASale ensure your ads reach the right audience, maximizing your campaign’s potential.

Landing Page Builders and Optimization Tools

A compelling landing page can make all the difference. Tools like Unbounce and Leadpages help you design pages that not only capture attention, but also drive conversions.

A/B Testing Tools

Making decisions becomes easier when you have data to back them up. With tools like Optimizely and VWO, you can test different versions of your campaign elements and see which one resonates best with your audience.

Advanced Techniques for Performance Marketing

As you get more comfortable with the basics of performance marketing, it’s time to explore some advanced techniques. These strategies can elevate your campaigns, offering even more precision and efficiency. Here’s a closer look:

Programmatic Advertising

This is automated ad buying at its finest. Instead of manual placements, programmatic advertising uses algorithms to purchase ad space in real-time. It’s efficient, targeted, and can significantly boost your campaign’s reach.

Retargeting and Remarketing

Ever noticed ads from a website you recently visited following you around? That’s retargeting in action.

graphic shows how retargeting and remarketing works

Image Source: CartStack

It’s a way to re-engage potential customers who’ve shown interest in your product or service but haven’t converted yet. It’s like a gentle nudge, reminding them of what they might be missing out on.

Predictive Analytics and Machine Learning

By analyzing past data, these tools can predict future trends and behaviors. It’s like having a crystal ball for your marketing strategy, helping you anticipate what your audience might want or do next.

Personalization and Dynamic Content

Today’s consumers expect tailored experiences. By using data to customize content based on user behavior and preferences, you can create a more personal connection, increasing engagement and conversion rates.

Best Practices for Performance Marketing Success

Performance marketing is all about results, but achieving those results requires a strategic approach. Here are some best practices, backed by insights and data, to ensure you’re on the right track:

1. Understand Your Audience. Before launching any campaign, it’s crucial to know who you’re targeting. Tailor your ads to resonate with your audience’s preferences, needs, and behaviors.

2. Set Clear Objectives and KPIs. Know what you want to achieve. Whether it’s increasing website traffic, boosting sales, or generating leads, having clear goals allows you to measure your campaign’s success accurately.

3. Optimize Creatively. About 88% of consumers say that authenticity is important when deciding what brands they like and support. This means it’s important to make sure your ads are both engaging and useful to your audience.

graphic shows that 88% of consumers say that authenticity is important when deciding what brands they like and support

Image Source: Oberlo

4. Embrace A/B Testing. Don’t settle on the first version of your ad. Test different variations to see which one performs best. This iterative approach ensures your campaigns are always optimized.

5. Monitor and Adjust in Real-Time. The digital landscape is ever-changing. Regularly review your campaign performance and make necessary tweaks to stay ahead of the curve.

6. Ensure Transparency and Compliance. With increasing concerns about data privacy, it’s essential to be transparent about your advertising practices. Adhere to industry regulations and best practices to build trust with your audience.

7. Invest in Retargeting. Retargeting is a powerful way to re-engage potential customers who’ve shown interest but haven’t converted. It’s an effective strategy to boost conversions.

8. Stay Updated. The world of performance marketing is dynamic. Stay updated with the latest trends, tools, and techniques to ensure your strategies are current and effective.

By following these best practices and staying committed to continuous learning and optimization, you’ll be well on your way to performance marketing success.

The Transformative Impact of Performance Marketing

Performance marketing has revolutionized the way we approach digital advertising. It’s not just about spending, but rather about spending smartly, making sure every dollar is tied to tangible results. With the right tools and strategies, it offers a roadmap to measurable success.

At Marketing Insider Group, we’ve witnessed its transformative power and are excited about the possibilities it presents. As the digital landscape evolves, leaning into performance marketing will be key to staying ahead and achieving impactful outcomes.

Ready to boost your performance marketing game? Check out our SEO Blog Writing Service or schedule a quick consultation to learn more about how Marketing Insider Group can help you earn more traffic and leads for your business.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=8994

There are two ways to run ads to promote Facebook groups. In both cases, the objective is Engagement.

I covered the first version in a blog post recently. Within the ad set, select the Facebook Group conversion location.

Facebook Group Conversion Location

If you don’t see that conversion location, you may assume you don’t have the ability to promote your Facebook group. But, there’s one more thing to check.

Using the “On Your Ad” conversion location, click the Engagement Type dropdown menu. You may have an option for Group Joins.

Group Joins Engagement Type

Once you select the conversion location and engagement type, you’ll be able to select a Facebook group as the destination when creating your ad.

Facebook Group Destination

But if you get this far and can’t select a Facebook group, it’s because you can only select groups that are linked to your business page. To fix this, your page needs to be an admin of the group.

Are you running ads to promote your group?

The post Two Ways to Promote Facebook Groups appeared first on Jon Loomer Digital.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=8988

If you have a big event coming up, Reminders Ads are a great way to make sure that your raving fans don’t forget about it.

It doesn’t matter what the event is — whether it’s online or offline. It could be a sale, going live on Instagram, or a physical event. Reminders posts and Reminders Ads have one very simple purpose: Remind people.

If you’re active on Instagram, you may have seen Reminders posts before. We’ll start with them, but you can actually skip right over them and create Reminders Ads.

Let’s get to it…

What Are Instagram Reminders?

Reminders posts are unique to Instagram and only available to professional accounts. You can create reminders for an upcoming online or offline event.

The time of your event will be displayed in the local time for each person. When someone chooses to get reminders for your event, they’ll be notified three times:

  • 24 hours before the event
  • 15 minutes before the event
  • At the time of the event

Of course, you can also create Reminders Ads.

Create Reminders Ad

To create a Reminders ad, you’ll need to use the Engagement objective.

Engagement Objective

Select “On your ad” as the conversion location in the ad set.

On Your Ad Conversion Location

Select “Reminders Set” as the engagement type.

Reminders Set Engagement Type

The performance goal will be “Maximize Reminders Set” with no ability to change it.

Maximize Reminders Set Performance Goal

Only Instagram placements are available (Instagram Feed and Stories), even if you use Advantage+ Placements.

Get Reminders Instagram Placements

When you create your ad, the call-to-action button used will be “Remind Me.”

Remind Me CTA Button

Provide the details of your event by including event name, event start date and time, and an optional event end date and time. If you’ve previously created the event, you can simply select it here.

Get Reminders Event Details

Ideal image dimensions are likely 9:16 where the text is centered at the top. This way, it can work both as a Story and 4:5 in the feed.

Get Reminders Ad

How Might You Use Reminders Ads?

It’s important to remember that a Reminders Ad is super basic. We aren’t creating the event itself with these ads. We’re only creating a way to remind people of something important that is going to happen. Those who ask to be reminded will get alerts up until the time of your event.

Because this is so free form, you can use Reminders Ads for just about anything. But a good example during the holidays would be a big sale.

Of course, you shouldn’t abuse this. There’s no reason to create new Reminders Ads every time you have a sale. But, if there’s a bigger sale than normal and you want to stand out at a time like Black Friday, this might be a good option.

Your ad needs to be very clear about why your event is special to provide motivation for people to request reminders. These ads should also provide details about what they should do or where they should go at the time of the event.

Maybe you’re going live on Instagram, which would be easy. But if you have a sale at your physical store, provide the address in your ad. If the sale is online, provide the URL to where they need to go.

Your Turn

Have you used Reminders Ads? Will you?

Let me know in the comments below!

The post How to Create Reminders Ads for Instagram appeared first on Jon Loomer Digital.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=8950

two colleagues shaking hands in a stock photo

Nonprofits know how crucial marketing is for acquiring supporters, earning donations, and fulfilling their missions. But these organizations also often have tight budgets and limited staff time. Sometimes, you just need extra support to effectively promote your cause—and that’s where sponsorships come in.

Corporate sponsorships can provide your nonprofit with the funding or marketing support you need to thrive. Let’s discuss how to find, secure, and leverage these opportunities.

What Are Corporate Sponsorships?

Sponsorships are one of the many ways businesses can participate in corporate social responsibility practices. To engage their customers and employees and boost their reputation as a socially conscious business, companies develop philanthropic programs in which they financially support nonprofits.

When sponsoring a nonprofit, companies will provide direct support to that individual organization, usually for a specific event or project. This support can take many forms, including:

  • Financial: A business provides monetary support by funding a major event or giving a grant to purchase new technology.
  • In-kind: Instead of giving you money directly, companies may donate goods like equipment, venue space, or auction items. Or, they could donate professional services such as event planning or catering.
  • Media: Some businesses focus their sponsorship on marketing alone. A company might fund your marketing campaign, donate advertising space, or provide in-kind marketing or web design services.

Successful corporate sponsorships benefit both parties—companies get a reputation boost and positive brand awareness, and your nonprofit receives funding and access to a wider audience.

How to Find and Secure Sponsorships

While sponsorships sound ideal, you may be wondering: Are many companies interested in sponsoring nonprofits? Will you be able to find and secure one for your organization?

The good news is that companies love philanthropy. In fact, 94% of major corporations plan to increase or maintain their charitable giving in the next few years. That means there are plenty of available opportunities for organizations like yours.

This graphic explains that 94% of corporations plan to heighten or maintain their charitable giving in the next few years.

To find and secure a corporate sponsorship for your nonprofit, follow these steps:

  • Start with existing relationships. First, consider companies you’ve partnered with before and businesses that your board members have connections to. Any relationship you already have with a business will help you make a good case for a sponsorship when it comes time to make the ask.
  • Research potential sponsors. Look for local businesses and larger companies with shared interests or values that may align with your mission. For instance, a soup kitchen might seek out local restaurants. Once you have a short list, do more research to find things you have in common, such as charitable interests or goals. Then, check their website to see if they’ve sponsored similar nonprofits before.
  • Prepare a pitch. Draft a pitch that outlines why the company should sponsor you and what a sponsorship would entail. Explain your mission, detail how your work lines up with their company values, and highlight any existing connections, such as employees who are already involved with your nonprofit.

Remember to reiterate the benefits for businesses when you make your pitch, like the positive reputation boost they’re likely to receive. Then, once you secure a partnership, work out the details of the sponsorship together. Come to an agreement about what exactly the business will provide and for how long, along with how your nonprofit will publicly recognize the support.

Tips for Using Corporate Sponsorships to Market Your Mission

After securing a sponsorship, you can get to work leveraging it to promote your cause! While marketing your mission may look different depending on the type of sponsorship you receive, these basic tips should help.

Communicate Your Mission Effectively

Whether your sponsor donates marketing services or just provides a platform for you to promote your organization yourself, it’s crucial to communicate your mission accurately and effectively. To do so, consider:

  • Creating a brand guide for your nonprofit that outlines how to talk about your mission, including any phrases or topics that should be avoided. This will also help you maintain consistency across your marketing materials, boosting brand recognition across channels.
  • Incorporating impact stories that bring a human element to your content and give your audience a clear idea of the impact you create. Use real stories of your beneficiaries, donors, or volunteers that demonstrate your mission in action, and include concrete details to bring the stories to life.

If your sponsor creates any joint marketing materials or provides in-kind production and design services, ensure that they portray your mission genuinely. Provide them with your nonprofit’s brand guidelines, impact stories, and existing materials so they have an accurate idea of how you speak about your mission. And don’t be afraid to ask them to change something if it isn’t accurate to your nonprofit’s work.

Maximize the Extra Media Exposure

No matter what the details of your sponsorship are, you’ll gain increased media exposure just by partnering with a business. When they promote your event or campaign website, you’ll get access to a new audience of potential supporters. This is especially true if you secure a corporate sponsor whose audience is already interested in similar causes to your own!

Plus, you may be able to access new marketing channels with your sponsor’s support. These might even include paid advertisements like:

This graphic illustrates types of free advertising your nonprofit can access with corporate sponsorships, also outlined in the text below.

  • Print ads
  • Influencer ads
  • Retargeted ads
  • Google ads
  • Social media ads
  • Community radio ads

As you develop marketing materials for these new channels and audiences, maximize the expanded reach by tailoring your content to the interests of your sponsor’s audience. Lean on values that your nonprofit and the company have in common, and present your cause in ways that would appeal to the business’s customers.

For example, say that your nonprofit works toward marine life conservation and your sponsor is a sustainable clothing company. In this case, you’d want to lean into customers’ interest in sustainability and explain how they can make even more of a difference on the environment by donating to your nonprofit.

Any kind of corporate sponsorship can broaden your nonprofit’s reach and allow you to get your mission in front of more people. But when you choose the right business to partner with and thoughtfully plan out your marketing strategies, you and your corporate sponsor can achieve great things together.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=8945

B2B Tech Decision-Makers Look for Content to Inform Them of Industry Trends
67 percent of B2B technology buying decision-makers have said that finding trend data was the top reason they engaged with content, with 39 percent having done so to compare product solutions, and 33 percent to find new business strategies — three of numerous findings of interest to B2B marketers contained in newly-published survey data. MarketingCharts

How the Responsibilities of B2B Marketing Teams Are Changing [Report]
57 percent of B2B marketing leaders have indicated that business results including sales, revenue, margin, market share, and return on investment (ROI) represented the core responsibility that has increased in importance the most over the past several years, with 51 percent pointing to customer acquisition and 43 percent noting the push to prove effectiveness, according to recently-released report data. MarketingProfs

LinkedIn Launches New Ad Campaign Which Highlights the Confusion Around B2B Buzzwords
From cloud sales to CPGs, LinkedIn’s newly-launched “No One Knows What You Do” ad initiative has sought to take a lighthearted riff on explaining the many B2B buzzwords used by the Microsoft-owned platform’s 100 million users, LinkedIn (client) recently announced. Social Media Today


“Not everyone gets it – not our parents or friends or loved ones. But even if they don't understand, LinkedIn has the people who do. With over 70 million decision-makers, LinkedIn is the place to B2B.” — Keith Browning @TweetOfKeith
Click To Tweet


What Are B2B Content Marketers’ Biggest Challenges? [Survey]
57 percent of B2B content marketers have said that when it comes to their largest obstacles, crafting the right content for a particular audience topped the list, with 54 percent pointing to consistent content creation, the same percentage noting the challenge of differentiating content, and 45 percent who said overcoming SEO challenges — some of the findings in newly-published B2B content marketing report data. MarketingCharts

Meta Adds New Tools for Reels Creators, Including A/B Testing, Reach-Based Incentives and More
Meta-owned Instagram has begun rolling out a slew of new Instagram Reels metrics, along with a new Professional Dashboard content management system, offering B2B marketers more content performance data on the platform, Meta recently announced. Social Media Today

2023 LinkedIn Benchmark Report [Rival IQ]
Brands have been twice as active on Microsoft’s LinkedIn professional social network than on TikTok, while video and photo content has been the most successful for brands on LinkedIn — two of numerous findings of interest to B2B marketers contained in newly-published Rival IQ report findings. Rival IQ

2023 November 10 statistics image

Google Ads Editor version 2.5 rolls out with 16 new features
Search giant Google has released an array of new changes and features to its popular Google Ads Editor product, including new ad strength and deep linking updates, as the firm seeks to streamline the tool, Google recently announced. Search Engine Land

LinkedIn on the overlooked 5th ‘P’ of marketing: customer promise
In addition to the traditional promotion, price, place, and product of B2B marketing, LinkedIn and its B2B Institute think-tank have sought to add promise to the customer as a new fifth “P” element, and The Drum recently explored LinkedIn’s collaboration with organizations including Cannes Lions to place greater focus on the customer promise. The Drum

Ad, PR Jobs Increased 2.3% In October
When it comes to marketing job growth, jobs in the advertising and public relations sectors grew by some 2.3 percent during October, according to newly-published U.S. Bureau Of Labor Statistics data of interest to B2B marketers. MediaPost

Is AI in Search Changing B2B Content Strategies? [Report]
31 percent of B2B content marketers have said that they have placed greater strategic focus on user intent data due to the influx of AI technology among search engine firms, with 27 percent creating more thought-leadership content, and 22 percent crafting more conversational content, according to recently-released survey data. MarketingCharts

ON THE LIGHTER SIDE:

2023 November 10 Marketoonist Comic Image

A lighthearted look at “The AI Pivot” by Marketoonist Tom Fishburne — Marketoonist

Researchers Uncover the Fastest Semiconductor Yet — IEEE Spectrum

TOPRANK MARKETING & CLIENTS IN THE NEWS:

  • TopRank Marketing — B2B Galvanizers: Influencer Marketing Takes Hold In Business-to-Business — MediaPost
  • TopRank Marketing — B2B influencer marketing drives revenue — Financial Promoter
  • Lee Odden / TopRank Marketing — October 30, 2023 Content Chat Recap: How Influence Elevates Your B2B Marketing — Erika Heald
  • Lane R. Ellis — Gliding Beyond Limits — The World’s Longest Cross-Country Ski Streak — Minnesota Trails

FRIDAY FIVE B2B MARKETING FAVORITES TO FOLLOW:

Brian Piper @brianwpiper
Carmen Collins @CShirkeyCollins
Cassie Kozyrkov @quaesita
Matthew Jaffe @matthewbjaffe
Amber Naslund @AmberCadabra

Learn more about TopRank Marketing‘s mission to help elevate the B2B marketing industry.

Have you found a top B2B marketing news item that we haven’t yet covered? If so, please don’t hesitate to drop us a line in the comments below.

Thank you for taking the time to join us for this week’s Elevate B2B Marketing News, and please return again next Friday for another array of the most up-to-date and relevant B2B and digital marketing industry news. In the meantime, you can follow us on our LinkedIn page, or at @TopRank on Twitter/X for even more timely daily news.

The post Elevate B2B Marketing News Weekly Roundup: AI Changing B2B Search, LinkedIn Benchmark Report, & Google’s New Ads Editor appeared first on B2B Marketing Blog – TopRank®.

If you subscribe to an ad-free Facebook or Instagram in the EU, “Your ability to advertise and monetize with ads will be limited.”

Ad-Free Subscription Flow

From “Understand how subscribing to use Meta Products without ads limits your ability to advertise and monetize with ads”, if you subscribe the following are no longer available to you:

  • Running ads and boosting posts for an Instagram account
  • Running ads and boosting posts for your Facebook profile (for example, boosting your own Marketplace listings)
  • Running ads for a Facebook Page, if the Page is linked to an Instagram account that has a subscription to use Meta Products without ads
  • Participating in partnership ads on Instagram or Facebook
  • Monetizing with Ads on Reels and In-stream ads

Advertising Restrictions on Subscribers

If you subscribe, you can still boost posts or run ads for a Page if the Facebook Page isn’t linked to an Instagram account that has a subscription to use Meta Products without ads

Confused??

This seems to be primarily focused on Instagram since you don’t create a personal Instagram account to manage a business Instagram page. If you subscribe to an ad-free Instagram, you can’t run ads to that Instagram account or to the linked Facebook page.

Facebook profiles and pages are slightly different. You can’t subscribe from your Facebook profile and run ads to promote your personal products on Marketplace. But it appears you can subscribe using your Facebook profile and continue to run ads for businesses that you manage.

Maybe just don’t subscribe to an ad-free Facebook or Instagram if you’re an advertiser, though. You know?

The post Ad Limitations on Subscribers appeared first on Jon Loomer Digital.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=8933

a man filling out a positive customer review, because the website he just visited had customer-centric content

Dear marketing professional, meet your new (very demanding) boss… Your customer.

Today, top marketers are using content marketing not to persuade, but to engage with the consumer, meeting buyers where they stand, providing what they want.

With a great experience, customers are 5X more likely to make a purchase. From visiting your website to learn about your brand, making a purchase and getting a response from customer service, to staying up to-date on your social media channels with what’s going on with your business, every interaction should be seamless, fluid, and positive for the consumer.

How exactly can you master the art of ‘customer first’? How can you ensure that your messaging is going to evoke those feelings of being included, appreciated, and inspired that you want your customer to feel when they visit your site or open an email? You need to create the content that your audience wants.

Customer-centric businesses are 60% more profitable than those that are still driving their brand-focused strategies. In order to remain competitive today, providing value-driven content is essential. When your inbound marketing is done brilliantly, it won’t just generate more leads. It will establish lasting relationships with your buyers.

This is the gold of good marketing. Repeat customers spend 67% more than new ones, on average.

So what can you do to ensure that all your digital content knocks the socks off of your audience?

Understand the Customer-Centric Marketing Model

The customer-centric marketing model is nothing new. Nor is it surprising that it is so effective at engaging customers and driving growth – what customer wouldn’t enjoy getting more from the brands they engage with, and as a result, gravitating towards those brands? Customer-focused companies are known to be 60 percent more profitable than those that aren’t.

Think about it, today we take for granted the information we get from our CRM and the ease with which we can connect with our target markets via multiple platforms. Segmented email campaigns, user-generated social media content, brand ambassadors who truly want to be a part of our brand communities and invite others onboard.

These things weren’t part of mainstream modern marketing until recently.

CMOs putting a priority on being more customer-focused is part of the shift that the industry is going through. With better marketing technology and the insights gained from digital empowerment, marketers can do more. This priority shift is the part in the process where the customer focus, and subsequent experience, gets more dynamic. Where before, the strategy was to offer content in a couple places to attract and maintain interest, such as a blog and email newsletter, now the strategy is to provide content at every touch point – and it has to be content with character.

Know Your Buyers as Well as Your Old College Roommates

Listen, watch, observe – and dig. Read what consumers in your industry are saying on social media to discover pain points. Put out customer surveys when someone visits your website or makes a purchase. Read customer reviews for your business – and your competitors.

Spend the time to make your buyer personas come to life.

You need to get to know your buyers like an old friend, becoming able to anticipate their needs, recognize their style preferences, and understand the best ways to communicate with them. You also want to know their goals ( in relation to your brand) and what it is that they value the most (quality, customer support, cutting-edge style).

When you know your audience is looking for ways to get more out of your product, post how-to videos on YouTube or offer educational white papers on your website. If consumers are consistently raving about the quality of your competitor, then you know exactly what to focus on for your next campaign.

The more deeply you know your buyer personas, the better you will be able to craft content perfectly suited to them. And guess what? The more your content speaks to them, the more they’ll respond by signing up for your newsletter, following your brand on social media, or making a purchase.

Create an Emotional Attachment

Consumers feel a greater affinity for a brand they can make an emotional connection with. When 1,400 advertising campaigns were evaluated, those that were purely emotional turned out to be 31% effective. The purely rational were 16% effective. Combined campaigns were 26% effective.

For example, families are more likely to trust (and buy from) brands that express care and concern.

20-somethings want to feel excited and involved. Make your next campaign to target your younger audience feel like a social movement and see what type of reaction you get.

A study on human emotion found that our feeling spectrum is founded upon four basic emotions:

  • Happiness/joy/serenity – which encourage sharing
  • Sadness – promotes empathy and connectedness
  • Fear/surprise – can trigger bonding
  • Anger – creates stubbornness, as well as energy and action

You can use these guidelines to help work with emotion within your content, encouraging a greater response with your customers and helping to leave a greater impact.

Learn to Listen

“Most people do not listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply” – Stephen Covey.

Once you’ve isolated your audience, it’s time to truly listen to them. Pay attention to the conversations you’re having with them. Are you offering them the right content at the right moment across their journey? It’s important to shift your story based on the questions your buyer is asking. Ardath Albee, CEO of Marketing Interactions, suggested marketers ask themselves, “Is your content relevant to them at that moment? Are your buyers on the channels you think they are?”

SnapApp CEO Seth Lieberman argued there are three things to listen for: Doing (behavior); Thinking (resonance); and Saying (sentiment).

How to do it:

  1. Pick your KPIs (you have to know what you’re looking for)
  2. Wallow in the data (understand the nuances and ebbs and flows)
  3. Ask why
  4. Look for correlation then causation
  5. Don’t over-engineer
  6. Test test test

When companies step outside of their bureaucratic mindset and embrace a more collaborative, agile view of how to do business, they leapfrog over the legacy brands that drag their feet to the ad agencies year after year.

As Stanford’s Nilofer Merchant put it, “…to consider new ideas, you have to be willing to let go of ones that no longer serve you.”

Bingo.

I’d take that one step further. In that process of collaboration that Merchant rightly advocates comes the need to listen to others’ perspectives. The more that collaborators put themselves in each other’s shoes – and their customers’ – the more effective collaboration will be.

In a word, empathy.

Mind you, empathy isn’t all about messaging that connects with your audience and customers; that messaging needs to extend into your replies to criticism as well. Though unkind comments might sting at first, they often are opportunities to make a difference – and a customer for life – depending on your response.

Use their feedback as a springboard for change. Reframe it as target customer research, and you can see negative comments as your chance to win these customers back. Who knows? If your response meets their needs, you might even get some referrals out of your efforts.

When you take marketing out of its silo and realize that it often spills over into customer service and research, your content and messaging will be among the select few that your target audience consumes and even actively seeks out.

Stop Short of Marketing Overload

As someone who does content marketing for a living, AdAge is practically required reading. Not so much for what it teaches us about modern marketing. More so for the comic material it provides that marketing is so much more than advertising.

As I sat down to leaf through the articles one August afternoon in 2016, something unusual caught my eye.

An article – in the old school marketing industry’s bible – that questioned the validity of excessive marketing. A wake-up call that made me realize that above anything else, empathy is essential for effective marketing in the coming decade.

It was an argument that I’ve been making for some time. To see it in this legacy advertising industry publication, though, took me aback. I had to read more.

That article was Jack Neff’s superb “Are Brands Optimizing Their Marketing to Death?” As I read, I found myself nodding in agreement as I realized that here was someone – in the marketing and advertising industry, no less – that saw the same trends that I did.

His insights inspired part of a chapter in Mean People Suck. That chapter, “Our Customers Know We Suck,” speaks to marketers’ tendency to solve revenue and website traffic challenges with – you guessed it – more marketing campaigns.

In reality, as Neff points out, the “more campaigns” strategy looks to be as dated as the slick cigarette ads of the 1960s:

And – like cigarettes – too many of the same ads can cause an early demise for companies that insist on running them. I’ve used this ad in some of my marketing keynotes. It’s pure gold. And not in a good way. There’s a whole story behind this ad that is even worse. Ask me about it some time!

Procter & Gamble, for instance, discovered that when they cut back on some of their targeted Facebook ads, they experienced a surprising outcome: their sales increased!

One of the reasons, Neff points out, appears in a recent Advertising Research Foundation study. That study revealed that if someone sees a digital banner ad over 40 times in a month, sales begin to drop. In fact, as a Key Media Solutions post pointed out, after only ten views of an ad, we become annoyed – even angry.

Who in their right mind thinks running annoying ads is a good idea? Apparently, plenty of brands.

  • Even though 200 million-plus people are paying good money for ad blockers to stop these ads.
  • Consumers reject brands that bombard them with annoying or irrelevant content. Is that so hard to understand?
  • Even though studies reveal that 61 percent of consumers are influenced by custom content that helps them live better lives and make more money.

Why? Perhaps it’s because no one inside these brands – with the notable exception of Procter & Gamble and others that have escaped the bureaucratic matrix – dares to tell the emperor that he’s buck naked.

Focus on Delivering Value to Customers

The only kind of marketing that helps businesses connect with real people is personal content. Not just targeted, or personalized – personal content.

By connecting with consumers, marketers can see real business results. Brenner shared a study that Jim Stengel, the former CMO of Proctor and Gamble, conducted, revealing that brands that focus on connecting with their consumers on an emotional level have a growth rate triple that of their competitors.

Andrew Gaffney, Publisher of Demand Gen Report, noted that it can be a huge competitive advantage if you can figure out if what you’re talking about matters to your audience. As SnapApp CEO Seth Lieberman put it: Your only job (as a marketer) is to deliver value to your audience.

OK, so how do you deliver value?

Even when you’ve acknowledged that knowing your buyer is key to a successful content strategy, it can be difficult to get started. Marketers can get overwhelmed by all the persona options.

Erin Provey, Service Director at SiriusDecisions, shared her three-step plan with the crowd:

1) Isolate the audience. Simply make the conscious decision to choose a buyer!

2) Really get to know them.

3) Understand the environment in which they’re operating.

She stressed that, “Buyer-centricity is a philosophy. Buyer-specificity is a best practice.”

Step into Your Customers’ Shoes

As branding expert Derrick Rozdeba points out, on any given day, your customers are “bombarded with over 5,000 brand messages.” Of that 5,000, Rozdeba notes, only 12 get customers’ attention.

You can overcome that saturation with content that gets their attention from the first sentence to the final paragraph. “How?” you ask.

Rozdeba put it well: “Put our branding feet into the consumer’s shoes for a day.” When you streamline your customer journey by putting customers’ needs at the forefront of your messaging, you get their attention.

When you put yourself – and your marketing team – in your customers’ shoes, you’ll look at those statistics and run as far away as you can go from “those” ad agencies. You’ll do the research yourself (or outsource the research to a like-minded agency like ours) and find out who your customers are.  You’ll learn what keeps them up at night. You’ll identify what they really need.

And, after you’ve learned the answers to those questions, you’ll create content that speaks to them. Content that soothes their three-o’clock-in-the-morning woes.

Contrast that with Coca-Cola’s misstep a few years ago. Instead of replacing their chief marketing officer (CMO), they eliminated the role altogether, replacing it with that of a “chief growth officer.” (They’ve since re-hired one.)

Talk about navel-gazing. Instead of a customer-focused role (marketing, after all, involves outreach), they focused on a company-focused role (growth – about as self-serving as it gets). And now their CEO is admitting that he sees “limited effectiveness in brand advertising.”

The CGO fulfilled his role to a T. At least, at first. In announcing the new role, he stated the philosophy that led to this change, “If you want people to love to drink Coca-Cola, please show in your commercial people who love drinking Coca-Cola…”

His mocking tone in criticizing the brand’s former tone wasn’t lost on E.J Schultz, the AdAge writer who reported on the change. Gwynn pointed out that the CGO role’s new direction veered off its old “Open Happiness” tagline to “re-Coca-Coliz[e]” the drink. Whereas the previous content iteration emphasized a customer benefit – happiness – the new philosophy and related content would be variations on the product-centric theme.

It didn’t last long. In December 2019, Simon Gwynn reported in PR Week, the beverage giant retreated to its previous structure, tapping Manolo Arroyo to assume the recreated CMO role.

In fact, even during the tenure of the CGO, Francisco Crespo, the company discovered that it needed to tap into customer benefits.

Coke’s superb Ramadan ad, portraying the beverage as the perfect drink to quench the thirst that built up over hours of going without eating or drinking, demonstrated that customer benefits – the “Open Happiness” vibe – won the day after all.

The beverage giant, as it did back in the 1980s with “New Coke” – another bad management decision – overcame its misstep with the power of empathy.

Make Relationship Building and Gratitude a Brand Priority

The driving force behind the move from brand-centric to customer-centric is the evolution of the customer relationship from ‘me’ and ‘them’ to ‘we.’ The more you can make your customers feel like they are a part of your brand, the more likely they are to stay tuned in and continue being loyal customers.

Great customer service, thoughtful social media and email marketing, and worthwhile loyalty programs can all help strengthen the bond between brand and buyer.

Whole Foods does an excellent job of relationship building, posting social media content that makes followers feel like a good friend.

The tone is warming, engaging, and encourages interaction. This is the type of marketing that keeps consumers coming back.

Loyalty programs may take significant time and effort to set up, but once they get going they are easier to manage. When done well, they can be a simple way to help your business grow and make your customers feel loved and wanted. And it can be used as another source of market research, revealing which rewards motivate your customer base.

Possibly even more effective, and less expensive, is a simple expression of gratitude. A study found that 91% of customers are more likely to purchase from a company that shows appreciation. Anything from a thank you note along with a product to a genuine email or phone call can ensure you’ve got a friend for life in your customers.

Continually Refine Your Content to Reflect Customers’ Priorities

How well is your customer-focused content working? This is where you can look at the qualitative as well as the quantitative data, through customer surveys, feedback, and reviews, and make an assessment. You can always improve your approach, whether you need to spend more time educating your buyers on how to use your products, inject more storytelling and personality into your content, or even improve upon or expand your services to respond to customer needs.

To get an overall idea of how well your content is doing, track your churn rate over time. This will show you how many customers you are losing. A 10% annual churn rate is average for most industries. If you can keep your numbers below this benchmark, and ideally getting smaller, then you can be confident that you are going in the right direction.

Content marketing is an incredibly effective and budget-friendly way to market your brand, but it only truly can work when your content is created for the consumer. If it’s not, you might be publishing articles, tweeting, and posting videos – to the wall.

Plan for Greater Customer-Centricity

CMOs have a few tricks planned for the next couple years to make this happen. When SiriusDecisions asked global CMOs what marketing trends they plan on using, here’s what they said:

1. Interactive content – Preferably the tech-driven, augmented reality, 360-degree video kind.

2. Visual storytelling – There are two choices for CMOs going forward. Marketing teams with resource-packed in-house video production teams or working relationships with a video production agency. Video and other types of visual content are playing a bigger role, but they are also getting more imaginative, futuristic and high-tech.

3. Mobile marketing – This isn’t just mobile-responsive websites. It also encompasses dealing with the consumer shift to smaller mobile: smartwatches. This will change the way we engage with customers at different touch points. We’ll have to adopt SEO strategies that are better aligned with voice search and start veering towards better quality audio content.

4. Customer communities – This is a big one. It is being able to invite customers into an experience – a brand ‘world.’ It will include everything from more sophisticated online forums and content libraries to more social media interaction and in-person events.

Overcome Challenges to Customer-Centric Marketing

If there weren’t any obstacles to achieving customer-centricity, the role of the CMO or Marketing Head wouldn’t be any fun. The biggest barriers cited by global CMOs are insufficient organizational readiness and not enough data.

Of the 300 B2B marketing leaders surveyed, 79 percent did say their organizations are somewhat empowering regarding culture transformation. Somewhat is, however, not enough for dealing with the challenge of poor processes and the need for skills training and professional development. Marketing teams may also need new roles created to offer content that isn’t just strategic, but brilliant, such as more creatives and expert content producers. That is what will give brands a competitive edge.

Most marketing leaders do not have an established role to identify B2B marketing competencies and to create the solutions for lack of skills and training. What does the typical global brand spend on upskilling their marketers? 67 percent only spend $1,500 a year, or less.

A lack of data was also cited as a major challenge for being able to create the type of customer experiences that many consumers are coming to expect. There are plenty of metrics being used and analyzed today, cost per lead, web traffic, net promoter score, lead quality score, social engagement. But they aren’t insightful enough.

Part of this dilemma is the fact that metrics can only offer so much accurate information about individual customers. Too many numbers will likely drive marketers away from the goal of better understanding human beings. The other side of this issue is that more sophisticated metrics and analysis are necessary to convince C-suite to jump on board with marketing campaigns.

Marketers will have to work with what they have while software providers create more sophisticated resources to make it easier to gain a better understanding and make well-informed decisions. Using an agile approach, which makes room for fast adjustments as decisions work or fail, is one of the best ways to gradually keep improving the customer-centric strategy, edging ever closer to customer experience nirvana. Which, perhaps, is something we shouldn’t expect to attain in the first place. Maybe focusing on the process, rather than an unattainable end, is the most fruitful growth strategy of all.

mime in striped sweater thinking about content marketing vs. native advertising

I often find myself talking with fellow marketers, agency representatives, and even editors of marketing publications. To my surprise, a lot of them think that native advertising and content marketing are one and the same. Let’s set the record straight.

Content marketing wears many hats, but one thing it’s not: Advertising.

It’s not just a one-off activity like a native ad. Instead, content marketing is about consistently drawing an audience to your brand’s digital space by sharing content that resonates with them.

Simply publishing a single article on another site? That’s a paid ad campaign.

Now, native ads can be a great tool to share content from your site, especially if you aim to redirect visitors back to your brand’s hub. But to make it work, you need compelling calls to action and the right amount of internal links within that native ad.

I’m settling this debate once and for all. In this article, you’ll learn the distinctions between content marketing vs. native advertising, their key characteristics, how they function, and which strategy offers a better ROI.

Quick Takeaways

  • Native advertising blends with its surroundings, while content marketing consistently offers valuable content to build trust with the audience.
  • Studies by Fractl and Moz show content marketing has a superior ROI compared to native advertising.
  • Content marketing targets inbound traffic with metrics like leads and shares, whereas native advertising focuses on social engagement and campaign views.
  • While native ads face challenges like brand perception and high costs, content marketing thrives on quality, leading to better organic rankings and conversions.

What Is Native Advertising?

Native advertising is a form of online marketing that blends with the content around it. Unlike traditional ads that stand out and sometimes disrupt your reading or viewing experience, native ads are designed to feel like a natural part of the content. They adapt to their surroundings.

graphic shows how native advertising works

Image Source: AdPushup

Here’s what else you need to know about native advertising:

Relevant Content

If you’re reading an article about office productivity, a native ad might introduce you to a new project management tool. It’s content that aligns with your interests, making it more engaging.

Integrated, Not Intrusive

Native ads fit smoothly within the platform they’re on. Whether you’re scrolling through a news feed or reading an article, these ads appear in a way that doesn’t interrupt your experience. They’re there, but they don’t shout for attention.

According to a recent study, native ads are considered to be the least intrusive type of advertising.

graph shows that native ads are the least intrusive type of advertising

Image Source: MeetAnshi

Subtle Promotion

Native ads don’t feel like traditional advertisements. Instead of a hard sell, they offer valuable information or insights related to what you’re already consuming. It’s a softer approach, but it can be just as effective.

Clear Labeling

While native ads blend in, they’re not trying to deceive you. You’ll often find labels like “sponsored” or “promoted” accompanying them. It’s a way of maintaining transparency while offering content that adds value.

Diverse Platforms

Native advertising isn’t limited to one platform. From social media feeds to news websites, you’ll find these ads everywhere. Platforms like Outbrain or Taboola specialize in distributing native ads, ensuring they reach the right audience.

What Is Content Marketing?

Video Source: DigitalMarketer

Content marketing is the art and science of creating and sharing valuable content to attract and engage a target audience. Instead of pushing your products or services directly, you’re creating and sharing content like:

  • Blog posts
  • Ebooks
  • Podcasts
  • Case studies
  • Videos

This makes your audience more informed and more likely to engage with your brand.

Here’s what sets content marketing apart:

Value-Driven Approach

At the heart of content marketing is the idea of offering value. Whether it’s a how-to guide, a webinar, or an insightful article, you’re giving your audience something they can use, learn from, or be entertained by.

Builds Trust and Authority

By consistently delivering high quality content, you position your business as an expert and thought leader in your field. Over time, this builds trust. When your audience thinks of a topic related to your industry, you want them to think of you first.

Long-Term Strategy

Content marketing generates 3x as many leads as traditional outbound marketing, but costs 62% less. But to achieve these kinds of benefits, you need to remember: Content marketing is a marathon, not a sprint.

It requires you to nurture relationships over time. As you consistently provide value, you’ll find that your audience grows, and their loyalty deepens.

Diverse Content Types

Content marketing is a lot more than just blog posts. It encompasses a wide range of formats, from videos and podcasts to infographics and Ebooks. This diversity allows you to reach different segments of your audience in the ways they prefer.

graphic shows 11 popular types of content marketing

Image Source: E2M Solutions

Owned Media

One of the beauties of content marketing is that you own the content. Whether it’s on your blog, your YouTube channel, or your newsletter, you have control. You’re not renting space, but rather building assets that can continue to engage audiences over time.

Content Marketing vs. Native Advertising: What’s Better?

Content Marketing, of course!

Fractl and Moz analyzed survey responses from over 30 content marketing agencies and cost data from more than 600 digital publishers, and they found that content marketing has a better overall ROI compared to native advertising.

How Is Native Advertising Different From Content Marketing?

While both can aim to increase brand awareness, the goals of content marketing vs. native advertising are very different.

graphic compares content marketing vs. native advertising

Image Source: Plista Blog

Content marketing intends to reach, engage and convert through inbound search, social and direct traffic.

According to the survey, native advertising aims to increase social engagement. These differences are reflected in the KPIs for content marketing and native advertising.

The top metrics measured for content marketing are number of leads, high-quality links and total social shares. Native advertising, on the other hand, looks at engagement metrics and impressions like campaign views, social engagement and site traffic.

Native ads are ads. And survey respondents confirmed this.

What Makes Content Marketing More Effective?

Kelsey Libert, Partner and VP of Marketing at Fractl, says that the ‘pay-to-play’ nature of native advertising means that native ads have to be branded, and this can be a major turn-off for social media audiences and results in lower editorial syndication.

Readers are less engaged with advertising content when compared to editorial content, and metrics show that advertising content on average has lower:

  • Social shares
  • Engagement rates
  • View counts

Libert points out several other weaknesses with native advertising on social media, including its lack of SEO benefits, high cost to scale and limited reach due to paid partnerships. Content marketing, on the other hand, “lives and dies by its merit.”

Content marketing is created based on the needs and interests of the consumers, and when done correctly it has real value for the audience it is created for. Successful content marketing earns reach and social engagement based on the quality of content, which is something very few native ads accomplish.

That’s why content marketing also enjoys other benefits like increased organic rankings and optimization for conversions.

graphic shows 6 main benefits of content marketing

Image Source: Neel Networks

To be fair, this is not to say that content marketing is without weaknesses. One of the biggest challenges content marketing faces is in securing the commitment of the brand in a long-term investment that also requires some patience to see that investment pay off.

With the new FTC guidelines, it is becoming more challenging for brands to create share-worthy native ad content. Content marketing ultimately has a higher overall ROI and greater impact on marketing KPIs compared to native advertising.

How Can They Work Together?

Now, this doesn’t mean you have to kick native advertising to the curb! Coupled together, native advertising and content marketing pack a strong one-two punch.

We mentioned a few of the downsides of native ads, like coming off as less appealing and trustworthy to viewers. This is where content marketing picks up the slack. Rather than creating traditional native ads that are branded promotionals, use the content you’ve already crafted for your blog.

For example, Zemanta is a programmatic ad platform that does just that. Zemanta gives you the tools to place your blog content in-line with other relevant content across 95% of worldwide publishers.

Say you sell fire pits. Using Zemanta, you can get your “How to choose the right fire pit for your backyard” article in line with the latest Home and Gardens “Backyard fire pit ideas.” This retargeting gets your content in front of viewers who are already interested in your product.

Valuable Content Is Still King

Content marketing vs. native advertising? The answer is obvious.

Impactful marketing means delivering genuine value to your customers. By centering your content around helpful insights and tangible benefits, you pave the way to connect, captivate, and convert your audience.

Remember, content marketing isn’t a fleeting campaign or a native ad. It’s a dedicated journey to creating meaningful content. When you consistently produce top-notch content and fine-tune for engagement and conversions, you’re bound to reap the benefits.

Are you ready to create high quality content? Check out our SEO Blog Writing Service or schedule a quick consultation to learn more about how Marketing Insider Group can help you earn more traffic and leads for your business.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=8914

Meta and Amazon announced that you’ll be able to buy from Amazon directly from ads on Facebook and Instagram without leaving the apps.

For that to work, users will need to link their Facebook or Instagram profile to their Amazon account.

Amazon says benefits include the ability to see real-time pricing, delivery estimates, product details, and checkout with Amazon without leaving Facebook or Instagram.

For advertisers, this doesn’t mean improved attribution in Ads Manager. I covered why in a video yesterday.

But a streamlined experience where people can purchase through Amazon without leaving Facebook or Instagram would mean less friction and conceivably more sales.

Of course, the impact this can make surely relies heavily on how willing users are to link their profiles to Amazon. This streamlined experience will only exist for those who do. If they don’t, the assumption is that ads going to Amazon will behave the way they always have.

And, truthfully, those ads don’t perform all that well. Not only is attribution an issue, but it’s an interruption to the user experience to open a new website to learn more about a product.

The post Streamlined Purchase Through Amazon appeared first on Jon Loomer Digital.

Did you miss our previous article…
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