Thursday, 15 December 2016

Digital Marketing Trends for 2017

The 14 top-rated digital marketing techniques for 2017 according to Smart Insights readers

In this article, I’ll take an in-depth look at what I see as the most significant trends in digital marketing for the year ahead. But, it’s not only my view, since I have ‘crowdsourced’ the importance of the different trends rated by the popularity of each trend.

For all members of Smart Insights, we also have a more detailed free download of the marketing megatrends for 2017, which are 9 digital marketing and martech megatrends will help give you an edge in 2017? In the download we discuss machine learning and artificial intelligence which for me, is the biggest trend in marketing right now. Machine learning techniques actually apply across many of the techniques we discuss in this post including Big Data, Marketing Automation, Organic Search and Social media marketing.

To get our readers’ views on the most important trends at a top-level, we asked Smart Insights readers to give their views on the most important trends. We asked:

“Select one marketing activity that you think will give your business the biggest incremental uplift in leads and sales in 2017 (or your clients if you work for an agency or as a consultant)”.

Thanks if you shared your opinion, we had 2,352 responses from marketers around the world! Here are the results for 2017:

While this doesn’t have a controlled sample of our free research reports like Managing Digital Marketing, it does canvas opinion widely. Note that these trends aren’t necessarily the most important channel by volume of leads or sales, rather it is the tactic which will give the biggest increase in the year ahead, so it shows what is becoming more important.   By asking for just one tactic, this helps shows the the top 3, 5 or 10 top-level trends.

To help the decision on which technique to choose, we expanded upon the short labels you see in the graph to help scope the response more carefully. For example, 'Big Data’ is a nebulous term, but when we expanded it to include insight and predictive analytics, it shows the value of the specific marketing techniques for Big Data and this help explains why this is in position number two.  Here is the full listing of digital marketing techniques:

  • Big Data (including market and customer insight and predictive analytics)
  • Content marketing Communities (Branded niche or vertical communities)
  • Conversion rate optimisation (CRO) / improving website experiences
  • Display (Banners on publishers, ad networks social media including retargeting and programmatic)
  • Internet of Things (IoT) marketing applications
  • Marketing Automation (incl CRM, behavioural Email marketing and web personalisation)
  • Mobile marketing (Mobile advertising, site development and apps)
  • Paid search marketing, e.g. Google AdWords Pay Per Click
  • Online PR (including influencer outreach)
  • Partnerships including affiliate and co-marketing
  • Search Engine Optimisation (SEO or organic search)
  • Social media marketing including Social CRM and Social Customer Care
  • Wearables (e.g. Apple Watch, activity trackers, augmented reality)

Let’s now explore key tactics and marketing technology within each of these tactics which will be important in the year ahead.

1. Content marketing trends

Content marketing has been in the top 3 for the last 3 years we have run this post.

2. Big Data

As defined in our question, Big Data marketing applications includes market and customer insight and predictive analytics.

3. Marketing Automation (including CRM, behavioural Email marketing and web personalisation)

Like content marketing, Marketing Automation has been in the top 3 for the last 3 years we have run this post.

4. Mobile marketing (Mobile advertising, site development and apps)

Mobile was in the top 3 three years ago, but as more companies have adopted mobile responsive web design and email templates they have seen less need to focus on it, or opportunities for growth.

However, research shows that retail conversion rates are significantly lower for smartphones, so there is work to be done for many businesses to optimise conversionn on mobile, although they will likely always stay lower than desktop.

5. Social media marketing including Social CRM and Social Customer Care

When I meet marketers at events and training I find there is still huge interest in social media, thanks to its reach and options to engage audiences and encourage advocacy or 'social media amplification’ to give it the full treatment.

6. Conversion rate optimisation (CRO) / improving website experiences

This is the technique I selected a year ago as the one technique which Smart Insights hopes to see the most growth from in the year ahead.

7. Internet of Things (IoT) marketing applications

IoT is one of the most important marketing technology applications of the last 2 years, but it is of most relevance to devices makers and retailers, so it is relatively low down in this ranking.

8. Search Engine Optimisation (SEO or organic search)

Mobile marketing SEO techniques will be particularly important in 2017 with Google’s recent announcements about the mobile index.

9. Wearables

Wearables are one of the hottest consumer consumable commodities (e.g. Apple Watch, activity trackers, augmented reality)

10. Paid search marketing

Google AdWords is the most important form of Pay Per Click and here Google has been pursuing their 'Mobile-first’ strategy by building out these features.

11. Online PR (including influencer outreach)

Online PR today is inextricably linked with Content marketing, SEO and Social media, or it should be. But this doesn’t get a top rating since the others are important.

 13. Communities

These are branded niche or vertical communities.

14. Display advertising

This includes banners on publishers, ad networks social media including retargeting and programmatic.

15. Partnerships including affiliate and co-marketing

A neglected aspect of digital marketing, perhaps unsurprisingly unsexy.

Other trends

This is an interesting category since readers can tell us what we’re missing

 

 

 

 

The 5 types of marketing trends that all businesses should consider

'What’s New?’, 'What’s Hot?’ and 'What’s Next?’ are some of the most common questions I get asked through the year when I’m speaking at events or training.

As marketers plan ahead for where to invest their marketing budgets in the year ahead, interest in the latest innovations and trends increases yet more, so for the last few years, I’ve reviewed future opportunities from different angles, for example, here are the digital transformation and marketing integration trends in 2016; marketing technology innovation in 2015 and digital marketing tactics in 2014. We’ve also looked specifically at the top eCommerce trends for 2017, which overlap with general marketing trends but have important differences.

The interest in trends and new marketing opportunities is no surprise, since when thinking about how to get the most from digital marketing, there are so many new platform changes from the likes of Apple, Google, Facebook and LinkedIn that influence the latest trends. To give just one example, as I write this, Google announced a new mobile Shop The Look AdWords feature which retailers in that sector will need to review and implement.

In our popular Digital media cheatsheet covering the latest changes, we catalogue over 250 organic and paid tactics that digital marketers need to consider across the main platforms - it shows the challenge of keeping up-to-date.

I’ll now take a look at 5 types of trends marketers need to consider and highlight the   'Marketing MegaTrends’ that we recommend  all businesses consider. I’ll also show some examples of interesting new techniques approaches which are more likely to important in specific retail sectors.

1. Customer behaviour and characteristics trends

Devising marketing plans and campaigns should always start with understanding customers changing needs, wants and characteristics, so that’s where we start our review of the trends.

As this waves of changes diagram I created for my Digital Business and Ecommerce book shows, marketplace changes including consumer behaviour happen on different timescales. While the zeitgeist of different memes changes daily, changes in technology, communications and commerce change on a slower scale.

Marketing trends - Waves of Change

When considering trends, we have to look at different timescales. Some tech trends are short-lived 'fads’, others are longer-term megatrends. In this article I will highlight both.

From a consumer device usage perspective, two major trends are the increased growth in smartphone adoption and the ongoing popularity of mobile and messaging, particularly by mobile as highlighted by KPCB analyst, latetest Mary Meeker’s Global Internet trends review. While growth in North America and Western Europe is reaching a plateau, extrapolating trends from Asia shows future expansion.

mary meeker smart phone growth

The growing importance of mobile marketing and apps is shown by these stats (Source: Smart Insights Mobile Marketing Trends statistics compilation):

  • More than 50% of searches are on mobile
  • 91% of Facebook usage  (Daily Active users) is on mobile
  • 80% of  Facebook advertising revenue is on mobile
  • 90% of mobile media time is spent in apps

From Facebook’s Mobile Messenger through Facebook’s acquisition of WhatsApp and rebuff by Snapchat to the popularity of apps in non-Western markets like WeChat, there is a continued and growing wish for consumers to communicate directly outside of public social network pages. This is really the last frontier for social media monetisation, so we can expect to see some major changes here in 2017 with new options for paid media on messaging apps, although this will be limited since the app owners have committed in the past to keeping messaging ad free.

So, reaching and influencing consumers as they move from public social media to messaging will remain a challenge to businesses, but as this next trend shows, there will be new options for reaching consumers via messaging.

Artificial Intelligence is now starting to deliver on its promise and have now developed to the stage where brands are developing bots that give consumer assistance. Likely you’ll know about Apple’s Siri, Microsoft’s Cortana, IBM’s Watson, and the latest addition, Facebook’s Bot Engine for Messenger, which went live in April this year. Google too announced its assistant service at Google I/O 2016.

Online publisher TechCrunch have noted this trend, saying that Chatbots have suddenly become the biggest thing in tech, explaining that they promise to:

“Unlock the ability to provide personalised, interactive communication akin to talking to a human customer service or sales rep, but at scale for much cheaper than call centres”

An example of a chatbot application based on the API Facebook has built into Messenger is this service from the Hyatt hotel group who also use Zingle a non-AI messaging solution from a startup that seeks to combine messaging from multiple sources including Facebook and Twitter.

2016 trend - Artificial Intelligence

Google has also been innovating in this area with the Google Assistant technology announced this year. These services are described this way by Google:

“The assistant is conversational—an ongoing two-way dialogue between you and Google that understands your world and helps you get things done. It makes it easy to buy movie tickets while on the go, to find that perfect restaurant for your family to grab a quick bite before the movie starts, and then help you navigate to the theater.”

2. Marketing Technology trends

We’re close followers of changes in Martech since there are so many great services available for gaining market insight and for creating more relevant online communications. We review changes in Martech across our Essential Martech wheel and free report which shows the main options across the customer lifecycle which we define in our RACE digital planning framework.

Martech 2016 infographic

You will see that across the lifecycle, may of these technologies are established. For example, search marketing insights tools (Reach); marketing automation tools (Act); web personalisation tools (Convert) and Marketing automation or Cloud services (Engage). Others such as Programmatic (Reach) are less well established. Across all of these the main megatrend is the growing popularity of marketing cloud solutions targeting different types of business from the likes of Adobe, HubSpot, Infusionsoft, Marketo and Salesforce.

We see the biggest new trends in Martech surfacing in 2016 and important into 2017 as applying artificial intelligence and predictive analytics as described above. Plus, there will be more consolidation as the marketing cloud vendors mentioned above build out their services and integrate different technology better.

Within marketing cloud solutions, there will be more emphasis on a newer approach to consolidate customer data from different first-party and third-party sources across the customer lifecycle. Related to this is exploiting this data through customer data platforms, predictive analytics.

Predictive analytics is well-established in has specialist applications such as assessing credit risk and fraud in financial services, but we predict that its general use in marketing will increase as marketing automation services move to more use of automated lead scoring and grading based on algorithms rather than human-defined rules. Here is an example of scoring propensity to buy/subscribe from DataStories - a consultancy we have used to understand the behaviour of subscribers based on frequency of visit, dwell time and the type of content they have consumed.

3. Trends in Marketing Techniques

At a top level, new digital marketing techniques are unlikely to evolve, rather it is the new services from the platforms that we talked about in 1. that will become more important. The main digital marketing techniques are now well established under the inbound marketing umbrella term. Although digital marketing has given many opportunities for communicating digitally with our audiences - see this list of more than 100 marketing channels by consultant David Sealey, these can only be managed at a higher level and these main digital marketing techniques will likely remain constant. In our Toolkits within our member area and our Digital Marketing Skills report we simplify these many channels down to just 8 key techniques which are essential for businesses to manage today AND for individual marketers to develop skills.

8 core digital marketing activities

For each of these techniques, the megatrend cutting across all of them is still mobile device adoption, but not simply Mobile first - mobile device management.

Most businesses now get the basics of mobile marketing right. They provide a responsive website design, meaning that their site is 'mobile-friendly’ in the consumers AND all-seeing Google’s eyes. The trend in 2017 will involve optimising mobile experiences which may mean providing more tailored experiences for different devices through an adaptive design. It will also mean making detailed optimisations needed to encourage conversion on devices. Some of this may be forced as the recent Google move to reduce rankings of sites using pop-ups on smartphone from 2017.

Businesses will also continue to grapple with how mobile fits into the customer journey in relation to other devices and offline interactions with consumers - and in particular, how it is measured.

I believe Eric Schmidt, then Chairman of Google did the marketers a disservice when he talked about a mobile-first approach. The reality is that while smartphone use is overwhelmingly popular for some activities such as social media, messaging and catching up with news and gossip, the majority of consumers in western markets also have desktop (and tablet) devices which they tend to use for more detailed review and purchasing. So we need to think about strategies to engage the Multichannel Majority not just 'smartphone adoption.  This explains why mobile conversion rates are much lower in retail and why the breakdown between traffic for retail sites is broadly equal between smartphone and desktop. Audience measurement platform comScore has talked for some time about strategies to engage and measure the multiplatform majority across devices and I think there will, or should be more focus on that in the years ahead.  There latest data for the US is striking in shows how the multi-device majority dominate, particularly amongst millenials.

Multichannel Majority Mobile comScore

Over the past three or four years, readers have voted for the importance of Content Marketing amongst the marketing activities available. We have seen an ongoing popularity of content marketing as an activity businesses are focusing on to achieve growth as shown by our 2016 research with HubSpot on Content Marketing trends - see the Competing on Content Marketing infographic for more insights on how content marketing is managed today.

Within content and inbound marketing, I think the ongoing discussions will be around getting the right balance of content quantity, frequency and quality and of course, measuring the Return-on-Investment of Content Marketing. This article around research from Buzzsumo gives an interesting summary of Why Content Marketing’s Future Depends on Shorter Content and Less Content. I agree with the less content part, although not necessarily the shorter content part as research shows that longer content can be more effective in business-to-business. All of the top 10 Smart Insights posts including this one are based on longer, in-depth content.

4. New platform marketing trends

As I mentioned at the top of the article, many communications today between consumers and brands are mediated using services and operating systems created by the major platform providers.

For example, consumers search through Google or Bing; use Facebook for catching up socially and messaging; business communications through Microsoft’s LinkedIn and use digital devices via Android or iOS. Since these top-tier platforms are looking to grow their audience share and monetise their audiences, many of the most frequent changes in digital marketing today are on these top-tier platforms and other key platforms like Instagram, What’s App, Pinterest, Snapchat and Twitter.

Since we referenced these trends previously, I won’t cover them again here, other than to say we try to help alert members to the most important changes, from all the many new platform updates each month in our newsletter and 'What’s Hot’ feature in the members area.

Instead, let’s look at what consultants Gartner have identified as emerging technologies. The latest Gartner 2016 Technology Hypecycle highlights many innovations which the mega platforms like Google and Facebook, with their mega budgets and research teams are working on integrating into their services, for example, Augmented Reality, Cognitive Expert Advisors (described above as AI Chatbots), Smart Data discovery (of which Predictive Analytics is one approach) and IoT integration including the Connected Home.

It’s interesting to note that Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality are in the Trough of Disillusionment. However, they may be relevant in some niches, for example, we described how Virgin Holidays are rolling out Augmented Reality in store.

Many of these advanced technology approaches may not be relevant for customer-communications from your 'average business’, so in this article I have looked to highlight more practical communications innovations businesses can apply in 2017. In their separate marketing hypecycle, it’s interesting to see the technologies they have identified which are in line with what we describe in this post.

On the Rise marketing trends

  • General-Purpose Machine Intelligence
  • Ad Blocking
  • Customer Data Platforms
  • Real-Time Marketing [that’s personalisation, not Real-time PR]
  • Personification
  • Programmatic TV Advertising
  • Cross-Device Identification
  • Virtual Personal Assistants
  • Programmatic Direct Advertising

5. Marketing Management trends

The final category of trends for marketers and business leaders to be aware of, relate to how marketing is managed. The main ongoing trend here is Digital Transformation which is the integration of digital marketing activities and technologies into wider marketing and business activities to create a 'digital business’.

Digital Transformation has been around as a concept now for several years since a focus was put on it by MIT and consultants such as Cap Gemini, PwC and Accenture. While these consultants mainly work with larger organisations, the Smart Insights - UBM research report on Managing Digital Marketing covering organisations of all sizes shows that many business are actively working on digital transformation.

You will see a significant proportion of one-third of businesses for whom digital marketing isn’t relevant. These are typically smaller businesses or startups for whom integration is less of a challenge.

The growth in digital transformation is fuelled by many of the changes in adoption of mobile and digital devices covered before. Namely, by the need to integrate better way ways of communicating with consumers via digital devices and in particular, mobile and social channels.

Digital transformation is helpful in encouraging focus on both longer-term and shorter-term planning horizons. As part of a transformation programme businesses should introduce longer term roadmaps for introducing digital technologies, analytics and processes techniques. To encourage optimisation and agility in planning, in the shorter term, 90-day optimisation plans should be created which seek to make changes to marketing across the customer lifecycle to improve results. These focus on 'Always-on’ marketing activities rather than too much focus on campaigns which won’t typically address major improvements to inbound marketing, marketing automation or improving the customer experience.

That brings us to our final 'Megatrend’ which relates to improving integrated communications across devices based on insights about how consumers switch between channels as they respond to persuasive prompts and follow their buying journey model.

Lifecycle Marketing Optimization describes an integrated, data-driven approach to improve the effectiveness of interactions with customers on different devices and in different channels. This marks a move away from optimising individual touchpoints such as Paid Search or Media, landing pages, emails and conversion pages in isolation, but instead views them as a multi-step, multichannel process.

To take a couple of final examples of how marketing technologies can support this process, next month I’m talking at event for the Ensighten Customer Data Platform which helps integrate data from different marketing technology vendors into a single place to understand the customer journey and the value that different touchpoints contribute.

At a website, channel and engagement level, we’re currently reviewing Intercom which offers options to engage audiences not just on the web, but on different channels also including web, email,  in-app and push notifications. It looks to be a powerful technology and covers more channels than just web, but it isn’t full lifecycle since it doesn’t cover remarketing through media.

So, I have covered 9 Mega trends for marketers to review in their strategies for 2017. Which do you think will be most important for your business to support growth. Or perhaps there is a trend I haven’t included yet and will update this post. There is room for a tenth.



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/managing-digital-marketing/marketing-innovation/digital-marketing-trends-2016-2017/

via Tumblr http://euro3plast-fr.tumblr.com/post/154508890309

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