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Archive for the ‘Digital marketing’ Category

From TV to Twitter, how brands are managed in 2010

May 15th, 2010

I was reading a blog post on econsultancy.com, and it dawned on me that how marketing has completely transformed totally changed in last couple of years from a Philip Kotler book of Marketing Management to 140 characters on a Mobile screen or twitter . I remember how we learnt to create a ‘Brand’, an aspiration for its customer, to be one proud buyer and consumer of that ‘brand’. Those day ‘brands’ use to only talk and communicate. But the rules of the game have changed, really changed. Email marketing came, then mobile and now social. Social media has completely changed the communication process in marketing and even in brand management.

Please read this great article on ‘The Transformation of Brand Management’. Today’s marketing and communication goes beyond offline and one way communication. Today consumers are asking questions and ‘Brands’ are answering them to engage them. Brands want to hear from its consumers, learn, adapt and change as per the requirement of their consumers and its happens in 140 letter count or less. Amazing a million dollar brand is managed on a platform that has zero marketing $ cost.

Keep reading

Digital marketing, Mobile Advertising, digital direct marketing, mobile and email marketing, permission based marketing

Email Marketing - Best Digital Marketing Channel of 2010

April 4th, 2010

According to the latest report released on Adweek, Permission based Email Marketing is identified as the best digital channel both in terms of  performance and targeting the customer. The study was conducted in December’ 2009 in conjunction with the Direct Marketing Association E-mail Experience Council “and other media partners,” Some excerpts from the survey are :-

  • E-mail and search regarded as the best digital channels that worked last year.
  • 39% respondents rated permission based Email as the “strongest performed channel in 2009″
  • “Reaching a target audience” was the main objective for the online efforts followed by “generating high-quality leads.
  • “Clicks” is the prime action desired by most companies for their online efforts
  • “Leveraging the  online video ” was the preferred experimental tool

Please read the complete survey on Adweek

I’ll look forward to sharing the latest industry surveys and studies with you all

Thanks

Buzz on EkoBuzz, Digital marketing, digital direct marketing, permission based marketing, self service marketing, targeted marketing

10 Best Marketing Conferences & Exhibitions

March 29th, 2010

singaporehomepage

Dear readers, recently I was working on EkoBuzz marketing plan and was budgeting for the marketing conferences and exhibitions we want to participate and promote EkoBuzz in the calendar year 2010. I started looking and realized that there is no place or website that provides us this information, so I spent couple of hours on the web and researched some of the best and most sought after events in the field of marketing.  To make it convenient and save time of other marketers, below is the list I created. Hope to see you soon.

Kellogg’s Marketing Conference, Chicago

AD Age Digital Conference, New York

The Power Of eMarketing, San Fransisco

Interactive Marketing For  Small Business,  Chicago

Mobile Marketing Forum, New York

Social Media Conference, Los Angeles

Affiliate Summit  East  2010, New York

DMA 2010, San Fransisco

Internet Marketing Conference, New york

ADTECH, New York

Lets grow this list together

Thanks for reading

Digital marketing, Mobile Advertising, Text/SMS marketing, digital direct marketing, mobile and email marketing , ,

B2B Email Marketing Best Practices

March 8th, 2009

I am a great fan of Simms Jenkins, a nationally known email marketing expert. I have finished reading his book The Truth About Email Marketing. The book reveals 49 proven Email Marketing Best Practices. It is a must reader for all marketers. Simms also discussed about the best practices for B2B email marketing. Please read and enrich your understanding of email marketing.

According to Simms

  • Know your audience: If you are mailing to IT network administrators, an image-heavy newsletter probably will not be well received. Instead, send a text-only message. Follow the cues of what your audience is like and don’t take a one-size-fits-all approach
  • Mobile email triage is real: Escape the mobile email gauntlet. An increasing number of business executives use their mobile devices/PDAs to perform email triage. This means that if you have a weak message or lack something compelling or of immediate value to your email, you may have the busy exec delete your email while in a meeting. On the flip side, a unique email with a relevant purpose may get saved for the executive to read in the office.
  • Make it easy for the mobile audience: Click here to read on your mobile phone is becoming more commonplace on B2B emails and may help you escape mobile email rendering snafus.
  • From & Subject lines: Emails from a CEO to a fellow executive tend to resonate. Ensure your From line is from someone who matters. Combine this with a short Subject line that can break through the clutter while demonstrating a reason for the user to read this email.
  • Short and sweet: Whether read on an iPhone or laptop, make your message count. That means make sure it gets read. Long emails without clear calls to action will get skimmed and deleted. Make your value proposition above the fold and obvious to the people that will browse over your email looking for a reason to read (or delete).
  • Don’t oversell: Too many promises, customer raves or pricing information may overwhelm your audience and diminish your opportunity to have people click on a link where they can find the details of the service or product being offered.
  • Respect the audience’s time: Frequency is a significant issue for all mailings, but if a business subscriber doesn’t respond to the first two messages, it doesn’t mean you should send to him even more frequently.
  • Test: I received seven different emails from a lead generation company in the span of five minutes this morning. The emails actually contained decent messaging and links to at least one relevant case study. They had me until hello occurred seven times. Someone was asleep at the wheel when the campaigns were segmented and set. Do your due diligence before an email is sent as these campaigns did more damage than good.
  • Offer something unique: A white paper can often work, but they are everywhere, aren’t they? Provide access and perks that are gold to the C-suite audience. For example, one client attempting to register business executives for an annual event tested pricing breaks versus admission to a VIP event. Remember, the B2B audience usually isn’t spending its own money so you can guess which offer performed better.

  • Remarket: We had major success with one client recently by creating follow-up campaigns based on how each user responded (or didn’t) to the initial campaign. Using your metrics can guide you to a better and more relevant strategy. (You can find the case study of how this client generated $120,000 from remarketing here.)
  • Buzz on EkoBuzz, Digital marketing, mobile and email marketing, permission based marketing, self service marketing, targeted marketing

    Mobile Marketing – What’s beyond SMS?

    July 22nd, 2008

    With over 2.2 billion mobile users across the globe, mobile is the obvious medium choice for marketers and brand mangers to reach the mass audience. We have seen numerous successful mobile marketing campaigns in different parts of the world and most of them are SMS based. SMS (Short Messaging Services) or Text Messaging is the most popular and commonly used form of mobile marketing services. Besides SMS mobile marketing also includes MMS (Multimedia Messaging Services), Mobile Internet, Mobile Video, Voice Messaging, Mobile Advertising, LBS (Location Based Services) and Mobile Social Networking.

    Each category of mobile marketing services is meant to address a different marketing challenge. Not very many marketers and agencies are currently concentrating on MMS, LBS and Mobile Social networking. SMS is simply a text-based message sent to targeted mobile consumers. It is easy to use and is acceptable to all types of mobile phones.

    Voice Messaging has tremendous potential as it provides a personalized human touch and consumers are already familiar with this functionality on their mobile phones. Voice can be used as a great customer engagement tool and to drive them to more advanced services like video, downloads, internet etc.

    Voice messaging can have different applications - Mobile Advertising, Content Downloads, Streaming Content or Alerts, Viral Voice Application, Interactive Voice Response (IVR), Voice Chat Services and Voice Search.

    Mobile Marketing Services providers have different voice messaging options that can be well integrated in the current traditional, non-traditional and digital campaigns.

    Voice services will help raise awareness and ultimately, educate consumers who aren’t familiar with mobile data services. Voice provides an easy means of access to an application where consumers can then be sent text messages, multi-media messages, or other access for the voice services.
    What is the future of Mobile Marketing? Mobile Web is gaining traction: according to Nielsen Co., In the U.S., 16% of mobile phone owners routinely access the Internet from phones, while 57% use some kind of non voice service, such as sending messages.
    Mobile Web, the future has arrived and the mobile phone companies are focusing on selling the new phones with the ability to access the Internet.

    Please send your feedback and comments

    Kriti Jaising
    EkoBuzz

    Digital marketing, Mobile Advertising, Mobile Marketing and SEO, Text/SMS marketing, digital direct marketing, mobile and email marketing, permission based marketing, self service marketing, targeted marketing , , ,