Monday, 31 July 2017

Digital Marketing and sales statistics breakdown 2017

Chart of the Day: Digital Marketing statistics - Converting leads to customers remains a top marketing priority over the next 12 months - part 1 of 10

It is important to know how sales and marketing are evolving, and how/ when this will affect your business. There are various marketing and sales priorities to think about when outlining your business strategy and initial planning but it is also important to know its challenges and how to face these.

Marketers are making the leap into visual content creation while salespeople are slowly shifting from the hard-seller stereotype to a more trusted advisor.

- Brian Halligan CEO HubSpot

In this chart series, I will breakdown the HubSpot ‘State of Inbound 2017’ report for all your sales and marketing needs - taking you through section by section and breaking down its results.

The 10 areas that will be covered are:

  1. Top business priorities
  2. Inbound marketing priorities and challenges
  3. Sales priorities and challenges
  4. Is marketing effective?
  5. Marketing and Sales alignment
  6. The Sales  business
  7. The Marketing business
  8. Distribution channels
  9. Communications and trusted sources
  10. Sales is evolving!

What are your company’s top marketing priorities over the next 12 months?

Top Marketing Priorities 2017

The majority of respondent prioritized converting leads to customers  (70%) and attracting visitors to their site (55%) whilst considerably less (29%) said sales enablement was a top priority.

It is critical to have a structured sales process in order to convert leads into customers. First, think about the process and methodology; find customers, convert and then analyze. In order to achieve this ask questions like:

  • What are my objectives? (attract visitors)
  • What tools do I need to accomplish this?
  • What is my exit criteria?
  • When do I know it’s time to move onto the next stage?

Surprisingly, not that many respondents said that sales enablement was a high priority within the next 12 months. This is placed at a much lower priority even though it is an important part of any business. Without training, coaching, organization, and equipment it can be challenging for your sales team to convert those leads into customers which are what you ultimately want.

The low percentage of this result could be because companies believe their sales team are already trained to a high standard and have the equipment and knowledge they need to push for a higher conversion of customers and the capability to increase revenue from pre-existing customers.

What are your company’s top marketing priorities over the next 12 months? (by geography)

Marketing and sales priorities (by geography)

Increasing revenue from existing customers is most important in Latin America (49%), yet least important in North America and Austrailia/ New Zealand (43%).

As you can see there are slight differences in priorities across different continents. Whilst the highest priority is always converting leads into customers, there are minor differences in other priorities. Austrailia/ New Zealand, Europe/ Middle East/ Africa and North America place importance on growing traffic to their site (58%-65%) whilst Latin America place this just as important as increasing existing customer revenue.

Whilst most continent priorities offer large percentage differences in some areas from others, Asia’s seem to be the most evenly split between the 6 priorities with only a 32% range compared to NAM’s range of 50% difference.

We would love to know how you prioritize your marketing goals, and whether these stay true to HubSpot’s research. Comment below or tweet us to let us know your thoughts.

If you can’t wait until my next Chart of the Day, you can view the full report online



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/digital-marketing-strategy/marketing-and-sales-2017-statistics-breakdown/

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7 Strategies to Boost your Google Shopping Results [Infographic]

How you can get more bang for your buck on Google shopping

The truth is competing in Google Shopping is hard, but if you are a retailer it is fundamental to success online, considering that more advertising spend is now spent on Google Shopping than Google Search in the USA.

There are 7 main strategies that you can implement to maximize your success on Google Shopping.

  1. First, segment your campaigns by branded and non- branded search queries. You will find that performance will vary considerably between the two so it’s important to change your bids accordingly to get the best ROI.
  2. Secondly, comes pricing - to win in Google Shopping you need to keep your pricing competitive otherwise you could see as 2/3 of your conversions disappear.
  3. Bidding is incredibly sensitive on Google Shopping, even a small bid change can significantly increase your revenue so it’s important to keep testing different bids until you find the sweet spot.
  4. Optimizing your product titles is very important if you want to generate more impressions for a certain phrase. By adding it to your product title you should see a healthy increase in conversions.
  5. Each product has a different profit margin and price so it makes sense to set different bids for each product right? To do this you need to segment your Google Shopping feed out into individual ad groups and set product level bids.
  6. Conversions rates vary widely by hour of the day and day of the week, so you need to account for this by increasing and decreasing bids accordingly.
  7. Finally users who have visited your site previously are more than twice as likely to purchase your product, so why not take advantage of this by increasing your bids to capture more of this traffic?

Thanks to Clicteq for creating this infographic.



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/ecommerce/multichannel-retail-strategy/7-strategies-boost-google-shopping-results-infographic/

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Marketing communications planning using the PASTA model

A review of different methods and models for developing a marketing communications plan

Commercial as well as non-profit organizations, routinely confront these typical questions: Do we need social media? How do we introduce our new website? What can we do to publicize our eCommerce Store? How do we introduce our new product? How will our market share rise? These are five commonly asked questions that require marketing and communications expertise.

Whether it be a strategic plan, a business plan, a marketing plan or a communications strategy, their design requires systematic, step-by-step development that takes into account elements of all the other types of plans.

Existing planning systems or methods like the PR Smith’s SOSTAC® method have proven to be particularly strategic by nature. For more details, see this Smart Insights post on the SOSTAC® model. But, in my opinion, such methodologies can be insufficient for answering the more practical questions above.

This article describes the PASTA method, a roadmap for solving operational marketing and communication issues.

Types of Plans

The various types of plans within the marketing and communications disciplines are structured hierarchically:

The activities of an organization start with a business plan, leading to a marketing plan, followed by a marketing/communications plan and a communications plan (advertising and/or media plan).

business plan

The business plan sets out the objectives for the entire organization according to a specific time frame. Those objectives are quantitative as well as qualitative. A few examples: return on investment, competitive targets, efficiency targets and corporate social responsibility goals. In order to bring the business plan to fruition, multiple execution plans are described for sectors such as finance, human resources, marketing and innovation.

The marketing plan contains marketing goals and the strategy to achieve these goals, as in gaining market share, number of products and distribution channels. The marketing plan is the starting point for the marketing/communications plan to determine how and with what tools and resources will marketing goals be achieved. Finally, the communications plan describes how to communicate with various interest groups/stakeholders.

The first two plans in the hierarchy above are strategically oriented, while the last two have an operational perspective. The strategic planning captures the implementation of overall direction. An operationally oriented planning strategy makes it distinct. An operational plan is a normative plan to achieve an intended result. A strategic plan has a much broader horizon than the other ones. A business plan lasts for perhaps 10 years, a marketing plan for three years and a communications plan is only for the coming year.

A business plan lasts for perhaps 10 years, a marketing plan for three years and a communications plan is only for the coming year.

Strategic and operational planning

SOSTAC®, developed by P. R. Smith, is a method used to provide a structure for developing a plan. This method was originally developed to support the process for realizing a marketing plan and is mainly used as a framework for the creation of online planning (Figure 2).

SOSTAC® stands for Situation Analysis – Objectives – Strategy – Tactics – Actions – Control.

SOSTAC

In this methodology, the objectives are divided into broad strategic goals that incorporate specific KPIs (Key Performance Indicators). In daily practice, however, the KPIs can only be determined when the target audience, the proposition and positioning choices are known. Also essential is determining what tools and marketing techniques will be used. There are differences in the strategic and operational plans that Smith’s SOSTAC® does not distinguish between.

Topics in a strategic plan are general. Performing an analysis, determining objectives, targeting a group, determining direction by means of a strategy, setting a budget, determining the implementation and the manner of establishing control.

At an operational level are the topics: analysis, strategy, concept, implementation, and evaluation. There are basic similarities in terminology between strategic and operationally oriented plans. However, the level of abstraction determines the content and meaning of the term. In a communications plan, the term “strategy” is in the concept phase. The explanation of the term strategy here is whether we are going to employ humor or product comparison in our communication tool. The term strategy in a marketing plan means, for example, the choice to position new products in existing markets.

The differences between the operational and the strategic plans are:

  1. Specifically naming targets. With a strategic plan objectives are explicitly mentioned as a phase, but not in an operational plan.
  2. Explicitly name a target group.
  3. The strategy step is of a different order in a strategic plan than in an operational plan. The determination of a strategy is the direction taken in order to achieve the goal. For example, a strategic plan involves the direction in which the company is going. The strategy in an operational plan involves the choices of which communications tools are being used.
  4. In a strategic plan, management of the plan is called “control”, while in an operational plan it becomes “evaluation”.

 Marketing/Communications planning

The development of a marketing plan can be done on the basis of a strategic method, such as P.R. Smith’s SOSTAC®. There are, however, two disadvantages:

Firstly, the determination of the problem must be considered a given and not a part of the methodology. It is precisely the problem framing the direction and the size of the solution.

The second disadvantage of existing methods is that it can be used in strategic planning but not in an operational plan is setting goals or objectives. Determining the goals in an operational plan will take place after analyzing the situation/environment and not before.

The PASTA method

In daily practice, the SOSTAC® method is not workable in developing an operational plan, as described above. The logical process is interrupted by first setting goals and then the strategy. On a strategic level, this is obvious. For example, a company’s objective is to grow in market share, but it must make a strategic choice: Innovate? Buy another company? Or just obtain more market share?

In an operational plan, objectives are part of the strategy. And the SOSTAC® method is not practical because problem recognition is not an explicit part of the method.

The PASTA method can be used to develop an operational plan (see Figure 3): Problem definition - Analysis - Strategy - Tactics - Action (PASTA)

PASTA Method

Problem Definition

First, there must be a clear definition of the problem: Which goal does the client want to achieve? What issues are involved? What strategic objectives underlie the development of a plan?

There must be knowledge about the organization, product or service. But also knowledge about what the client is really asking for. When an organization indicates low brand recognition, it is justified in asking more questions to seek out the reason why.

Analysis

The second step is to analyze the market and the environment in which the organization or the product exists. To create an operational plan, there must first be an examination of the organization, consumers or customers, the product (supply) and competition.

This consists of both internal and external analysis. For internal analysis it is important to ask questions such as:

  • What is the organization?
  • Who does what?
  • What problems does the organization have?
  • What is the organization’s volume of sales, customers, calls and web traffic?
  • What are the company’s strengths?
  • How does the public identify with the organization or the product?
  • What are the tangible and intangible values of the product (value proposition)?

The external analyses are more extensive. Most of the information will come from desk research or existing and available information within the organization. Questions to be answered are:

  • How is the market within which the organization operates defined?
  • How many consumers use the product? What is the market size?
  • Who are the customers or users?
  • What interest groups are important?
  • What is the consumer behavior?
  • What does the decision-making process regarding the product look like?
  • Who are the competitors?
  • How do the competitors act online?
  • Which search engine is important?
  • How do referrers act?
  • Which online actors are important?
  • Who could be an online partner?
  • What are the major blogs on the subject?

 Strategy

The term “strategy” is comprehensive and confusing. It should be regarded within the context of an operational plan. The term “concept” can also be used in place of strategy. The development of a strategy or concept within an operational plan consists of four modules, which are interdependent. These building blocks are: target group, objectives, proposition, and positioning.

Target Group

  • Which consumer segment is important?
  • How is the target group defined?
  • What are the needs of the target group?
  • To what extent is the target group involved in the product? What about the Decision Making Unit (DMU)?
  • What are advantages the target group is looking for?
  • What is important to the product for the target group?
  • Which media is the target audience using?
  • Who are involving partners?
  • How is the target group normally informed?
  • What is the target group reading?
  • What are the communications tools and channels they are looking at?

The better the target group is known, the better the strategy that can be worked out. Many questions can be answered using desk research. Discussions and interviews with members of the audience or an observation of the target group can also provide a lot of information.

A description can be made by creating a Customer Profile[2], which consist of the “Customer Jobs” (description of what the customers want to achieve in daily life), “Customer Gains” (description of the results that customers want to reach and the concrete benefits they want to see) and “Customer Pains” (description of the negative outcome, risks and barriers that are related to the job).

Objectives

What should the campaign achieve? Marketing/communications objectives can be broadly divided into three categories: “Reach” goals, “Process” goals and “Effectiveness” goals. The Reach goal of communicating is to reach the target groups in an effective and efficient way. For this purpose a good segmentation and audience definition are needed, as well as insights into the media behavior of the desired segments.

Process goals are conditions which should be established before any communications can be effective. All communications should capture the attention of the target group, then appeal or be appreciated, and be processed (remembered).

The third type of goals are the Effectiveness goals. They are the most important, since Reach goals only assure sufficient exposure, and Process goals only ensure enough processing of the message to make the Effectiveness goals possible. An Effectiveness goal is a behavior goal: Buy, download, registration etc. An Effectiveness goal is the ultimate goal: to enter into a long-term relationship or obtain a growth in market share.

Positioning

“Positioning” is the creation of a distinctive position relative to the competitors in the perception of the consumer. When an organization wants to determine positioning, it is important to have done a good competitive analysis.

An organization can choose an informational Positioning focusing on the functional attributes and benefits of the product: the product is the best solution, or the price is most favorable, or the delivery terms are the best. There can also be choice of a transformational Positioning. That responds to the needs of the customers to purchase a product. When products have many similarities, the transformational Positioning can provide a good solution. For example, values such as “sociability” and “convenience” are being used. When using a two-sided Positioning, there are functional aspects which are connected to the values and needs of the customer.

That responds to the needs of the customers to purchase a product. When products have many similarities, the transformational Positioning can provide a good solution. For example, values such as “sociability” and “convenience” are being used. When using a two-sided Positioning, there are functional aspects which are connected to the values and needs of the customer.

Proposition

If the target group is known and Positioning is determined and it is clear what needs to be achieved, then a central message and values (Proposition) can be determined. The Proposition is the aggregate offer which can be separated into product, price, distribution (which channel?) and the communicative value of the offer. The value Proposition is shaped by the visible and invisible benefits to the consumer.

The Proposition is a bundle of products and services that represent value for customers. In the Value Proposition Design (Osterwalder et al, 2014), the Proposition is formed by a list of “Products and Services”, the “Gain Creators” (description of how the offer creates advantage for customers), and “Pain Relievers” (description of how the offer alleviates specific customer pains).

The value Proposition is shaped by the visible and invisible benefits to the consumer. The Proposition is a bundle of products and services that represent value for customers. In the Value Proposition Design (Osterwalder et al, 2014), the Proposition is formed by a list of “Products and Services”, the “Gain Creators” (description of how the offer creates advantage for customers), and “Pain Relievers” (description of how the offer alleviates specific customer pains).

Tactics

The next step is to determine which devices, tools, and techniques are to be used. What communication tools and devices (channels) are used to achieve the goal? The channels are the traditional channels such as print (newspapers and magazines) and television, augmented by digital devices (desktop, laptop, tablet and especially the smartphone with internet access).

The tools are the traditional instruments such as advertising, sales promotions (brand activation[3]), direct mail and retail promotion, augmented by typical Internet tools such as the website, the app, email-marketing, bannering and mobile marketing.

The techniques[4] are specific and unique to the internet, such as search engine marketing (traceability), behavioral targeting (communications offering based on the behavior of the user), and affiliate marketing (“sellers” are rewarded based on units sold). Within the Tactics phase, devices and tools and techniques are to be weighed to determine which can be used to achieve the target within the strategy.

Action

Once all the tools and resources have been established, the content for the tools is to be developed to actually carry out the messages. The ads (e.g. AdWords) must be created, the e-mail campaign must be designed, the website should be developed, etc., etc. This step is about creating a schedule, determining a budget and designating people.

  • Time: Making a timetable
  • Money: How can the budget be used? Which channels must be chosen for exposure?
  • People: Who has the expertise to design a tool? Is the developing outsourced?

Examples include a keyword plan, a content plan for social media, sites for link-building and a planning schedule.

So, that’s how I see today’s marketing planning process. I’d be interested to hear your views.

References:

[1]  Smith, PR (2011) SOSTAC® Guide To Writing The Perfect Plan (eBook) published by www.PRSmith.org. PR Smith’s SOSTAC®  is a registered trade mark of PR Smith.

[2] Osterwalder, A., Pigneur, Y., Bernarda, G., Smith, A. (2014), Value Proposition Design. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons Inc.

[3] De Pelsmacker, P., Geuens, M., Bergh, J. van den, (2013) Marketing communications, a European Perspective. Harlow: Pearson Education Limited.

[4] Reijsen, M. van, Zweers, Th., Janssen, H. (2013), Interactive Marketing. Amsterdam: Pearson Benelux.



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/managing-digital-marketing/planning-budgeting/marketing-cdommunications-planning-using-pasta-model/

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Long-tail Keyword Research Strategy to improve your SEO

Are you following these simple long-tail keyword research steps to improve your SEO?

Long-tail keyword research is fundamental to SEO. It has become a focus for achieving high rankings on google search and when strategized and executed carefully, it can produce very rewarding results.

Why are Long-tail Keywords Important?

A long-tail keyword is descriptive in nature and normally consists of three or more words.

More descriptive phrases are low in cost and risk, yet offer a higher probability of conversion. And, as much as 40% of all search traffic on the internet is driven by long-tail keywords.

So why spend resources on finding long-tail keywords that will only drive a small portion of traffic, I hear you ask? Why not just focus on main short-tail keywords and drive heaps of traffic right away?

The number one reason for targeting long tail keywords, especially for start-up companies, is that they generate faster results and are more cost-effective. You can spend years and resources trying to rank for ‘men shoes’ but you can rank for ‘blue soft sports shoes for men’ in just a few weeks.

Long tail keywords are less popular, have lower search volume and are less competitive, making it a desirable focus for an SEO strategy.

There are four steps to finding the right long-tail keywords that will deliver instant results in terms of ranking, traffic, and conversions for your online platform.

1. Study your competitors

First, find out who your competitors are and what keywords they are ranking for. Knowing what keywords they are targeting, and how much traffic they are receiving for targeting those specific keywords, will get you started. If your competitor is using a long-tail keyword for its PPC campaign for a few weeks, it means this long tail keyword is driving traffic and you should target it.

Finding your competitors and looking for the keywords they are targeting is simple. There are valuable paid SEO tools that will do this for you such as BuzzSumo, Ahrefs, and SEMRush. Based on experience and results, SEMRush is my favorite, but you need to test them all and see what gives your company the best results.

Let’s take a look at one start-up company’s keyword research - PakFactory. By using PakFactory’s SEMrush Domain Overview, it can determine the company’s competitors based on its website’s data intelligence:

By clicking on the link of each competitor, you can check out what keywords they are targeting through their own domain overview and how much traffic each keyword is driving.

You’ll find tons of keywords that your competitors use to drive traffic, but how do you know which ones to target? This brings us to the next topic, knowing your main keywords.

2. Know your main keywords first

Do you know your 10 most important keywords that will be used as the foundation of your future google ranking success?

Before looking into your long-tail keywords, it’s important to have a clear idea of what your main keywords are prior to researching your long tail keywords. Why?

Your long tail keywords are the descriptive version of your main keywords. In other words, you need to know your main keywords clearly before you can generate your long tail keywords.

Your main keywords should consist of:

  • 3 or fewer words
  • Medium to high competition (relative to the industry)
  • Higher than 200 monthly searches on Google Keyword Planner (on average)
  • Higher than 200 organic searches on SEMRush (on average)
  • Targeted by one or more of your competitors

Main keywords are what will eventually drive the most traffic to your website after you’ve mastered long-tail keywords. There are some helpful tools that are helpful in finding main keywords:

  • Google Keyword Planner
  • KeywordTool
  • Accuranker
  • Google Trends (predicts what keywords are expected to grow in specific industries)

It is important to keep track of your main keywords’ ranking fluctuations because they will serve as an indicator to whether your long tail SEO activities are working or not.

Once you’ve found your 5 to 10 most important main keywords, the rest of the steps become a lot easier. These main keywords will help you identify relevant long-tail keywords suitable for your online platform.

3. Determine your long-tail keywords

The data from your competitors and main keywords will help you generate the relevant long-tail keywords you are targeting. Let’s assume your main keyword is ‘Trade Show Displays’.

This keyword will be used to determine what type of long-tail keywords you should select and target. Any long-tail keyword that is either directly or indirectly relevant to your main keywords should be included in the list.

You can use the same tools mentioned above to find your long-tail keywords.

Your long-tail keywords must be relevant to what you are targeting. For example,

Main Keyword: Trade Show Displays

Long Tail Keywords: Trade Show Displays Toronto, Trade Show Poster Display, Fabric Trade Show Exhibit Displays, Ipad Display Stand Trade Show

The idea is to find as many long-tail keywords as possible that have low to medium search volume as these keywords will help you rank easily and drive traffic almost instantly.

Your long tail keywords should consist of:

  • 3 or more words
  • Low or medium competition (relative to the industry)
  • Fewer than 100 monthly searches on Google Keyword Planner (on average)
  • Less than 150 organic searches on SEMRush (on average)
  • Been targeted by one or more of your competitors

Incorporate these long-tail keywords in your landing page’s content, continue to optimize your website for more long tail keywords, and make sure your website is search engine friendly in terms of design, layout, and speed. All of these factors will play a role in gaining faster results and eventually help increase the rankings of both your long-tail and main keywords.

When you start targeting long-tail keywords, a major portion of organic traffic will be driven by these keywords compared to a small portion of traffic by main keywords at the beginning stage of your online platform.

4. Track your keyword activity consistently

The reality of SEO is that not all of the keywords you plan to rank for will deliver the desired results, which is why tracking the activities and changes to your keywords becomes a very important task.

Tracking keywords in terms of their ranking, conversion, profitability, and lifetime value consistently will help guide you on which keywords to optimize and focus on and the keywords that will potentially bring the most success to your online platform.

SEMRush Project Ranking Tool will help you identify the position of your keywords on a daily basis. You can also check how your keyword ranking compares to your competitors.

Tracking new and existing keywords and implementing them into your website should be one of your top priorities as this activity can boost your rankings dramatically.



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/search-engine-optimisation-seo/seo-strategy/long-tail-keyword-research-strategy-to-improve-your-seo/

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Get ready for the age of the millennial traveler.

Every brand worth their weight in gold knows their high-value audiences. Often, these are baby boomers and Gen Xers who are at a comfortable, stable phase of their financial lives. But it’s equally important to know tomorrow’s high-value audience — a generation that’s steadily encroaching on the baby boomers’ spending power. The millennials, ages 18 to 34, have surpassed the baby boomers in population size, according to the Pew Research Center. By 2025, 46 percent of US income will be generated by this tech-savvy, experience-hungry generation.

Keeping the increasing spending power of millennials in mind is key for any brand, but travel brands have an exceptional amount to gain by embracing this fact, imagining its ramifications, and then acting accordingly. Travel is where millennials love to invest. In fact, 70 percent of them say they value experiences over things, and they travel more per year on average than older age groups.

But this doesn’t mean that millennial dollars will automatically fall into every travel brand’s coffers — these are discerning consumers with very specific demands. To reach this digitally-native demographic, digital isn’t just nice to have — it’s a necessity. “Millennials aren’t necessarily technologically savvy; they’re technologically dependent,” says Jason Dorsey in a report by Skift.

To engage these consumers online, travel brands must constantly seek ways to personalize and target relevant messages across digital channels and devices. The average millennial owns 7.7 connected devices and uses 3.3 devices daily. Smartphones are the most common, but individuals migrate from device to device throughout a given day. Millennials are far more likely than older travelers to shop for flights and hotels on their mobile devices, according to a recent report.

Members of this demographic also rely on brand-created and social media content as they plan and navigate their travel choices. In fact, 84 percent of millennials usually plan trips based on someone else’s vacation photos or social media updates. These users produce content, share content, and prefer customized content when it comes from brands. They demand new levels of transparency as they engage over time.

This generation comes with some characteristic traits, but multiple sub-segments of millennials exist as well. For example, there’s the “hip-ennial,” who wants to make the world a better place, or the “millennial moms,” who work out, travel, and spend time with their kids. To speak the language of each millennial subset and deliver experiences that resonate, brands can invest now in strategic analytics and programmatic marketing tools that get the job done. But this level of digital maturity takes time, and brands that wait lose out on the first-mover advantage. Failing to be top-of-mind when millennials are ready to spend more than ever on travel experiences will impact the bottom line.

The first steps are to understand the unique traits and interests of millennials, learn to speak their language, meet them where they are, and deliver a great experience. To learn how, read “Millennials Love Travel. How Travel Brands Can Love them Back.

The post Get ready for the age of the millennial traveler. appeared first on Digital Marketing Blog by Adobe.



from Digital Marketing Blog by Adobe https://blogs.adobe.com/digitalmarketing/digital-marketing/get-ready-age-millennial-traveler/

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3 tactics you need to know to optimize your video ad performance online

Are your video ads optimized to their full potential to improve audience watch time and engagement rates?

If no was your answer, then this is the article for you!

It’s easy to get lost or confused in the array of technology that is now readily available for marketing your brand or product online. The benefits of video marketing can provide effective ways to advertise your product - with your creatively the only limit to success.

But how can I improve my video ad performance?

There are three key processes that help optimize video ad performance. Video ads now exist as a powerful marketing medium that maintains double digit growth at ever increasing accessibility and availability. Still, marketers often do not seem to leverage its full potential. Let’s look at some ways of achieving this without breaking the bank.

1. Focus on the Right Metrics

As much as 70% of marketers say that video performs better at conversion than any other type of content aimed at ensuring it. The good news is that demand for it is increasing as well, with 43% of consumers desiring more video content from marketers.

One thing remains constant -  the message about your products and services must reach the right audience at the equally right time. Identification of target audience directly correlates with improved ad performance, which is driven by focusing on the right metrics.

First, think about viewability. Are your video ads ‘within view’? This is crucial in order to keep your viewers interested. Keep an eye on metrics such as completion rates and levels of engagement.

Make sure to add interactive segments to your videos, such as buttons or CTA overlays to get insight into the length of the interval of the ad staying in view, the number of users who watched it in its entirety and what they did after watching it.

Take into consideration the fact that measuring completed views as metrics can be more advisable than focusing on click-through rates, as mere clicking on your ad does not necessarily mean that your ad hit a home run.

2. Reduce Bounce Rates

Engagement and bounce rates are another example of metrics you need to monitor to ensure better ad performance. A genuine detective-style investigation is in order, as you need to ascertain what makes the customer visit your website and leave it immediately.

One of the crucial reasons for high bounce rates are ads that are either irrelevant or placed within a page of content that does not correspond to the ad. Therefore, it is necessary to find tools that allow for automatic placement of ads on websites or within apps based on the relevance to their content.

This may also mean the restructuring of the site as a whole, together with optimizing its loading speed and general performance. In the business of video advertising, even a single wasted second is a luxury that you cannot afford. It can be all that stands between keeping your viewer or having them bounce from your website.

3. Optimize Watch Time

Determining an optimal length for your video ad needs to be balanced against watch time. Make sure you know how long your audiences are watching your videos for, this will help you determine how long your ad should be without losing the interest of potential customers. Also, use this knowledge to strategically place call to actions.

When search engines rank your video, they take into account the watch time as a primary element. The longer the watch time, the more likely they are to treat your video as being higher quality. Therefore, optimizing the content and interactive features of your video will get you increased watch time and, in turn, ensure a higher ranking.

Here are 4 ways to improve your video ad watch time:

  • Start by captioning your ads. Video viewing increases by 40% percent when the video content is captioned. 8% of viewers said they were more inclined to watch videos to completion when captioning was made available together with subtitles in multiple languages. Make sure you know where in the world your audience is watching.
  • You can also tweak your video ad content by creating video thumbnails. Facebook users often deactivate the autoplay feature, you need to grab their attention via thumbnails. First, you need to consider their appearance and suitability in relation to the content you offer. The easiest way would be to put yourself into you viewers’ shoes and ask yourself if would you click on?
  • Research keywords that your potential customers are searching for. Once you detect adequate phrases, make sure that you add them to the titles and descriptions of your videos.
  • Also, do not forget to secure clear visibility of your call to action (CTA) button in form of offers, subscription or links to your main website. You do not want your viewers to leave without knowing what to do next.

Navigating the platforms of video ad campaign management takes a combination of various skills that include creativity, fine tuning and careful monitoring of various elements related to it. As we have seen, the path to success lies not only in keeping an eye on what happens under the hood of your video ads themselves but rather in making sure that none of these components remain neglected.



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/digital-marketing-platforms/video-marketing/3-tactics-you-need-to-know-to-improve-your-video-ad-performance/

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Sunday, 30 July 2017

How to identify Google Penalties

5 sources and a process to help identify a penalty which reduces yours organic search traffic

Keeping on top of SEO and, in particular, the changes to Google’s ranking algorithms and webspam penalties, is a major concern for most businesses and a full-time job for many today.

If it’s not your full-time job, discovering about a penalty will be a nasty shock and the names of the different webspam penalties can be confusing.  To help keep marketers up-to-date with the changes that matter, we regularly update our 7 Steps guides summarising the latest changes and in this post we recommend 5 sources and a process shown in an infographic.

5 sources to find out about the latest Google updates

You can also glean a lot about the latest algorithm changes you may be subject to from specialist communities for SEOs. I talked to Dave Chaffey about what he recommended - these are the ones he recommended to check out if you’re worried you have been affected by a recent penalty or new webspam filter.

  • 1. Google Webmaster Central Blog. Of course, this has to be top of the list. Major announcements and clarifications are released here. For example, when the Panda update struck in 2011 Google issued this guidance on building high quality sites - it’s still relevant today.
  • 2. Moz Google Algorithm Change History. This is good for a single view of the big picture going back through time.
  • 3. SEO Round Table Google updates category - this is personally collated by SEO veteran Barry Schwartz “Rusty Brick”. This is one of Dave’s personal favourites since it covers smaller changes, gives a round-up of views and is a personal review.
  • 4. Webmaster World Google SEO news and discussion - best for SEOs sharing experiences on the new changes - for well over 10 years this has been one of the best sources for detailed discussions of both major and minor updates where forum members share the pain of what they’re experiencing.
  • 5. Publishers dedicated to SEO. Finally, you have the sites focused on SEO including Search Engine Land, Search Engine Journal, Search Engine Watch, and Moz  they’re good for major updates following up with analysis of what Google is saying on and off record, but typically they won’t have such immediate coverage of smaller updates.

A process for troubleshooting penalties

Promodo’s Troubleshooting Google Penalties infographic gives a simple introduction with a practical process chart to take you through the steps of how to ‘get your organic traffic back’ and the associated tools to help along the way. It’s a little dated now, but the main factors of the Penguin and Panda updates it describes still apply.

google penalty shooting promodo infographic



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/search-engine-optimisation-seo/seo-strategy/identify-google-penalties/

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Friday, 28 July 2017

Can you prove the ROI of your marketing? Here are the top challenges we’re all facing.

Chart of the day: Reporting the ROI of Social and Content Marketing proving difficult for marketers

As marketers we are constantly juggling more projects than seems possible at times -  planning the next campaign, delivering the current one as well as all the BAU activity of Email, Automation, Social, linking with the sales team and meeting…oh the meetings. It can feel like your in a whirlwind even with the most well thought out plans but one of the most turbulent times can be when you need to report on the ROI of particular activities. How do you find the right data? Is it accurate? How should your present it? It’s hard.

In a recent survey, TrackMaven asked marketers from 19 different industries what they were finding the most challenging when attempting to prove the ROI of their marketing. Of the many options, they could choose from attributing social and content to revenue leading the pack, followed up by aligning KPIs with overall business goals and attributing.

Proving the ROI on your investment in content production has always been particularly tricky to measure as all the analytics platforms (Google Analytics/Adobe Analytics) focus on reporting by channels e.g. Email, Paid Search, SEO etc. Even using the most sophisticated attribution models will not tell you if it was worth spending your marketing budget on a new long-form blog post or ebook.

That being said it is possible if you have a few things in place first:

  1. An analytics platform (e.g. Google Analytics) configured to report campaigns
  2. Tracking codes added to all you marketing activities utilizing your content e.g. UTM codes
  3. A custom dashboard for reporting on your content

If you have all three of these you will be able to report on the impact of each piece of content has had on each marketing channel from impression through the click and lead to the final sale and beyond via combining your campaign report and your financial reports.

These challenges can all be conquered but it requires you to take a step back from your marketing production line, discover the right KPIs for your business and utilize the tools you and/or configure some new tools to fit your needs. It can be painstaking at the time to get it all working and be accurate but once it’s all working proving the ROI on your activities should take minutes.



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/managing-digital-marketing/planning-budgeting/can-prove-roi-marketing-top-challenges-facing/

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4 Tested Mobile Tactics to Grow Your Restaurant’s Business

Marketing your restaurant is a mobile game.

The emergence of the smartphone has created a culture of connectivity. With 77% of U.S. adults population carrying around smartphones to stay connected, it makes sense that your restaurant follows suit with the big names to capitalize on this growing need to know.

If you look around at what many restaurants are trying, you will see many innovative and forward-thinking strategies that are yielding some great success. Today there are a number of ready-made app solutions that provide access to many of these features being used by the big names.

The rise of app builders now allows you to implement the same strategies used by large chains without all the necessary developer fees.

You can easily borrow some of the thinking behind the success of these big brands and develop your own mobile strategy based on what’s working.

As a small business or even a string of relatively localized eateries, mobile is a solution to your marketing needs. Your company needs to realize the potential a mobile app has. And, with the help of modern technology, you can stay competitive with the franchisees without breaking the bank.

Just look at these four mobile tactics that you can easily implement.

Engage with Your Customers on Their Level

Mobile offers you the opportunity to engage with customers on a much more personal level. Push notes, fan walls, and even social media integration allows customers to hear you on many different channels. The key is finding the right way to harness what mobile has to offer regarding engagement.

Customer engagement is crucial when it comes to millennials. And since 53% of this generation eats out once a week, it’s important to cater to their expectations. In fact, both Starbucks and Chipotle did this when they implemented their mobile strategy.

Both chains understood that the millennial generation expects the places they frequent to have strong social ethics. So, they incorporated these social ethics into their mobile strategy as part of their customer engagement.

Chipotle included a simple game into its app that helped demonstrate a few of its challenges and principles. As a bonus, progressing in the game could net participants a free burrito. By engaging with their customers on an emotional level and offering a targeted incentive, Chipotle successfully increased their sales. In the game’s initial year, Chipotle earned:

  • Over 57,000 customers receiving BOGO loyalty cards
  • Over 22,000 email opt-ins
  • Over 4,200 database opt-ins for the game

The lesson you can learn from Chipotle’s team of mobile marketers is that engagement does not have to be a conversation. Instead, it should be thought of as sending a message about your brand to your clients in a way that invites them to share in your thinking.

Now, you don’t have to go as far as building a game to engage with your customers. You can do something as simple as hosting a contest that invites your customers to create the best slogan that promotes one of your beliefs. You can do this on a fan wall in your app, or through social media. But using your app to engage is a great mobile tactic that works and helps build brand loyalty.

Another big name that has taken engagement to the next level is Starbucks. The coffee giant has recently taken to AI and teamed up with Amazon’s Alexa and Ford’s Sync to create a more personalized experience for customers. AI technology will make it possible to offer customers recommendations based on their order history. This forward thinking, mobile approach has seen Starbucks Rewards members spend an increase in 20% since last year.

Offer Mobile Ordering to Give Your Customers Convenient Options

Mobile food ordering apps are quickly becoming an excellent investment. As more and more big names adopt a mobile ordering platform, customers are beginning to expect the convenience of grab and go. In fact, according to market experts, mobile ordering alone accounts for a 10 to 20 percent increase in sales for the companies who choose to invest in its potential.

Developing a mobile ordering platform on your app does not have to be as costly or as complicated as you may think. With many of the app builders available today, you can create a menu, add pictures, and create different types of checkout options—including pick-up and delivery.

One of the best things about mobile ordering is that customers can easily reorder past orders with a few taps. So, the process is both simplified and streamlined for the end users. And, when the customers are the ones customizing their orders, there is less room for errors on your part. A mobile solution actually helps you get your orders right.

If your customers really like to make additions and substitutions to their orders, then you could learn a lot from Taco Bell. The big name in fast food developed an app that really tapped into what its customer base wanted with its enhanced customization options. Taco Bell’s mobile order numbers are soaring, and the reason is simple. They are getting it right–literally. And, the results are a daunting 20% increase in sales that are directly related to mobile orders.

Stay Connected with Customers Using Mobile’s Communication Features

Push notifications are one of the best tools available to your restaurant. Here are just a few ways that you can use push notifications to promote your restaurant.

  • Send out coupons
  • Seek Yelp reviews
  • Share social media posts
  • Keep customers engaged in the order/delivery stages

There are countless creative ways that you can use push notifications to help your restaurant. The bottom line is clear though, keeping your clients in the loop makes them feel valued. And customers who feel valued become brand loyal customers.

Geofences are a great tool for keeping customers in the loop. Many Main Street restaurants use this tool quite often during local parades or holiday celebrations. They set up a geofence for people who are downtown during the special event, and right before it’s over, they send out an exclusive offer to people who are close by. It gets people through the doors when they are waiting for traffic to clear out from the event.

You don’t always have to use a geofence.  You can also just send out offers to loyal customers who have downloaded your app. That’s the mobile strategy that Dunkin Donuts uses.

The breakfast and coffee hot spot didn’t come up with some over the top game or some futuristic use of AI when it was working on its mobile strategy. Instead, it kept things simple and perfected the art of push notifications. They created an app that makes people want to download it even if they might be disappointed afterward. The hook? Coupons, deals, and freebies.

The keep it simple mobile philosophy has worked well for the big name in pastries. Their app has well over 2.5M downloads. The lesson here is an obvious one: If you want to attract a lot of people, offer to give them free stuff (or at least a tempting discount).

You don’t have to keep things simple if you are one who prefers innovation and forward thinking. Push notifications can be used to keep your customers involved in the complete dining experience. You can keep them informed from the initial order up through the check. That’s exactly what Domino’s Pizza did to reinvent itself. In 2009, the pizza chain ranked last among its competition, so it looked to mobile–specifically communication–when it was rebranding. Using

mobile’s ability to keep customers in constant communication has helped Dominos see a 1,900% growth over the past six years.

Domino’s leaves nothing out when it comes to keeping its hungry customers informed. You can order a pizza and track its progress to your door. You can even order a pizza a few days in advance if you want to. Then, while you wait, Domino’s has a game for you to play, pizza-themed no less. As a shortcut, the next time you order pizza, if you feel like reordering the exact same thing you can do so in just a few taps- all of your settings and payment information can be saved.

Be it a geofence, a push note, or a tracker, communication is a vital part of the customer experience, and mobile has many different options that you can choose from to cater to your clientele.

Offer Loyalty Programs to Keep Customers Coming Back

Loyalty programs are becoming a must. Upgrade your program from punch cards and stamps to a digital version. Punch cards get lost, and people always have their phones. Since your phone can be tied into a digital wallet, you can connect your loyalty program to other options as well.

Not only is this more convenient and more streamlined. It also allows you to collect better data. That data can enable you to make better decisions in the future.

The leader in mobile restaurant innovation, Starbucks, can teach you a lot about loyalty programs. In addition to traditional punch cards, the coffee giant also incorporated prepaid rewards into its loyalty program. The results are astounding. The company has over $1.2 billion dollars in prepaid orders for those who are members of the Starbucks Rewards program. That’s more money than some small banks have as a complete operating budget.

What you can learn here is very cut and dry; mobile loyalty programs are more likely to be adopted by customers for a simple reason: people like to feel appreciated. With a digital loyalty card, or the ability to link a loyalty account directly to a credit card, it easier for your customers to rack up points and enjoy the perks of their loyalty.

Conclusion

Small businesses can be better than chains. They have a high level of consistency, aren’t always obsessed with cutting costs, provide strong local employment opportunities, and can provide immeasurable additional benefits to their local communities. If your business has been around for a long time, use that to your advantage. If your business is new, announce your intentions and build some enthusiasm. Mobile is just another means of connecting with your customers in a more direct way than you were able to before. Remain authentic and charming when you communicate with them, don’t let the technology wash all the character from your brand.

Mobile tactics almost always require you to have an app. Restaurant apps are crucial to a strong mobile strategy. If you still happen to think creating an app for your business would be too expensive or take up too much of your time it would be in your best interest to look up apps for restaurants.

For less than the cost of just about any other primary marketing campaign, you could have an app. Further, you could have it ready to launch in as little as two weeks.

Once you have an app and you implement the strategies listed above you should start to see an improvement in your sales. Of course, how much of an improvement that makes depends entirely on the amount of effort you’re putting into your mobile strategy multiplied by the quality of your restaurant.



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/mobile-marketing/proximity-marketing/4-tested-mobile-tactics-to-grow-your-restaurants-business/

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Want to start your own Digital Agency? Here is what you need to know

At the tender age of 20 I started my digital agency Optix Solutions. 18 years on we are still going and employ almost 20 staff. Here are 5 useful tips if you’re thinking of starting your own business.

At 38 and as a relative old timer of the industry, I thought it would be useful to tell my story. Hopefully I can inspire the next generation because although the internet might have changed dramatically in the time I’ve been going, good old common sense business fundamentals haven’t.

When I started my agency back in 1999 Google and Ebay were both in a garage somewhere. Many companies didn’t have websites so my job was to persuade them this Internet thing was worth investing in! 18 years on and its a little different! In that time we went through the dot com bubble bursting, the birth of ecommerce, web 2.0 and of course social media changing the face of our industry.

Our own startup story

I’ve sat down this morning and thought carefully about the key reasons we were able to grow and succeed whilst many didn’t. We weathered one of the worst recessions the country has ever seen, we’ve had clients go bust on us and we’ve suffered at the hands of poor decisions and issues beyond our control. We kept going though and I’m keen to share a few reasons with you today.

To give you a little context, Optix was started by three friends who met at University back in 1997. In our second year of Uni we created the Limited business and thought it would be a good idea to run it alongside our studies. We spent the first year getting by, doing sites for friends and family for a few hundred pounds. When we graduated, we had the decision of whether to go and get jobs, or just go for it. Many told us we were mad and should go down the conventional route of getting jobs, but we had other plans. We were very lucky that a few kind family members lent us £8000 and about enough to keep going without any sales for 6 months (the three of us were practically living on bread and water!). Fast forward 18 years and we’re a team of almost 20 with clients all over the world. We’ve grown into one of the most successful agencies in the Southwest and have just started a new base in Bristol alongside our hometown HQ in Exeter.

So what are my tips to budding entrepreneurs looking to start their own thing? Here are the five that I’d stand by and would give back to the 20 year old me.

5 useful tips about running and growing an agency

1. Being obsessed by cashflow

 My father drummed this into me from day one. Profit is all well and good but there are many profitable businesses that have gone under due to poor cash management. From the early days I lived my online existence in two places, a spreadsheet which we used for cashflow forecasting (you can download my template here) and our bank account (I’m afraid I can’t give you access to that :). I became obsessed with money and to be quite honest I’ve stayed that way since the beginning. One important tip is to squirrel money away whenever you can so that you have a rainy day fund. I’d suggest at least two months of all costs but more is probably favourable. One tip I stuck solidly to in the early days was that every time I got a cheque in (yes it happened back then) I put the VAT into a separate account so it didn’t come as a nasty surprise each quarter when the HMRC came knocking.

2. Aim for recurring revenue

Our real breakthrough was the introduction of recurring services. For us this included hosting charges in the early days and moved on to digital marketing services. This makes up over half our business now. It does two things for you. When its built up enough it allows you to pay for the overheads of the business before you start making money on new projects and possibly more importantly its means you’re not having to constantly find new business (or at less of a rate anyway). Knowing that each month on the first day that a certain amount of money would roll in was a constant relief to us and allowed us to grow the business over time.

3. Never be too big to take advice

 It amazes me how many people think they know it all in business. Its usually those who come unstuck. Over the years my business partner James and I have had many advisors. We’ve invested large sums of money in these external parties, knowing that they often bring a different point of view or skill set to our business. As I write this today we have three external advisors and I don’t see that changing as the years roll on. Try to find a mentor that fits with you and your business. Ensure they are strong enough to stand up to you and challenge your ideas while having enough empathy for your position that they understand they are only there to guide you. Advisors are also often a good source of leads too (see my next point).

4. Sales is where it starts

Now don’t get me wrong, having an amazing product is just as if not more important if you’re to keep going but you can’t argue with the fact that if you don’t make sales you’ve got no work. Thats just a fact unless you’re giving it away for free and that probably won’t last you long. Now this is a subject I could go on and on about but here are a few key takeaways for you. Positioning yourself as an expert is the best long term way to build sales. By getting to be known as the person to turn to, inbound leads will flood in. This takes years though so you better get going now. Short term, doing smaller pieces of work to prove yourself is key. Try to understand the challenges of others rather than selling your wares. Don’t be one of those people who just talks about themselves all night at the local networking event. Invest your time in asking about other peoples business challenges and it will pay off, I promise. With the social media tools you have available to you now there is very little need to cold call or knock on doors. The likes of LinkedIn and other networks make it very easy to get through the door, around the gatekeeper and sitting in front of the CEO having a coffee before you know it. Remember that someone famous I can’t remember the name of said, ‘your network is your net worth’. Don’t sell yourself short. Price too cheap and its a race to the bottom and you don’t want to be in that game. It only ends badly. Read How to Win Friends and Influence people and check out any books by Jeffrey Gitomer and you can’t go wrong.

5. Employing people is going to be the hardest thing you’ll ever do.

After all, when you created your business I doubt you did it to put food on other peoples tables right? You did it because you’re passionate about something, because you’re good at it. Quickly you find yourself unable to do some of the things you set out doing because you’re managing other people. This is why finding the right people for your business is so critical. One bad egg and I cannot tell you the affect it can have on a whole business. Believe me I’ve been there a few times. My advice? Take your time recruiting, don’t rush to replace people when they leave. If people really want a role, they often show you just how much and are willing to work for it. They are the guys you want. If you want to build your agency then you’re going to have to employ people. Just ensure you’re spending the right time and paying the right amount to get the best candidates.

I hope you’ve found those tips useful. They come from 18 years on the front line so even if I can reach out to one person thinking about starting their own thing and make a difference to their journey I’ll be happy. If you’d like to chat more about this topic then please reach out to me on social media. You’ll find me most places 🙂

Good luck.



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/agency-marketing/growing-a-marketing-agency/want-to-start-your-own-digital-agency-here-is-what-you-need-to-know/

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The Marketing Jackpot: Personalization at Scale

The post The Marketing Jackpot: Personalization at Scale appeared first on Digital Marketing Blog by Adobe.



from Digital Marketing Blog by Adobe https://blogs.adobe.com/digitalmarketing/digital-marketing/marketing-jackpot-personalization-scale/

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26 things to note before you develop a website [Infographic]

Does your website have these 27 features?

Websites are probably the single most important piece of Digital real estate for your organisation. Your LinkedIn company page and Twitter profile may be important, but ultimately the destination you want to bring people to is your website.

That means it is critical that your website is delivering a good experience for your users and a good conversion rate in order for it to be profitable.

Some of these points are obvious, but it is useful to have a checklist, especially if you are about to re-design your company site or even a start-up just building their first site.

Some points that can often be overlooked that this infographic raises are the need to make your users feel secure, especially if they have to register their payment details with you. Social Meda integration and responsive web design is also a must if you want to future-proof your site.

Another seemingly innocuous element of web design that is actually rather important is colour. Choosing the right colour/colours for your site will help you project your brand and convey your message more effectively. Different colours imbue different emotional reactions, Blue is seen as calm and trustworthy, but is also seen as corporate. Whilst yellow is playful and red evokes passion and helps highlight urgency.

Consider all these things and more when designing your website. This infographic covers the basics.

26-things-to-note-before-you-develop-a-website_53d255c081c5c_w1500



from Blog – Smart Insights http://www.smartinsights.com/digital-marketing-strategy/26-things-to-note-before-you-develop-a-website-infographic/

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Synopsys Expands Both Markets and Digital Strategy

Ask any company in the semiconductor industry, and they will recognize the name Synopsys. For more than three decades, Synopsys has been a global leader in design tools and services for silicon chips, as well as being the company with the industry’s broadest portfolio of silicon IP. The company recently decided to leverage its years of software design experiences into a new line of business: software security.

“Now that we’re expanding into new markets, we’re in a position where we need to introduce our brand to customers,” says Dave DeMaria, Corporate Vice President of Corporate Marketing at Synopsys. “People need to understand that we’re not a newcomer. We’re a global company with a long history of quality and annual revenue exceeding $2.5 billion. We can be a trusted partner for the future.”

To connect with new customers, Synopsys decided that it needed to completely rework its digital strategy and deliver a website with fresh content for both existing and potential Synopsys customers. After looking at numerous CMS options, Synopsys chose the Adobe Experience Manager solution in Adobe Marketing Cloud, part of Adobe Experience Cloud.

With the help of partner Hero Digital, Synopsys built its first microsite on Adobe Experience Manager in just four months. Creating or updating content in Adobe Experience Manager Sites is as fast and easy as dragging components from Experience Manager Assets into a mobile-ready responsive template. Jobs that once took a team two weeks now take two people just two hours. The result is a 40-fold boost to productivity while reducing overhead cost.

Synopsys is adding more integrated Adobe solutions to build upon its new digital foundation. Adobe Target, part of Adobe Marketing Cloud, adds personalized search to better engage with visitors from different industries. Using the dashboards in Adobe Analytics, part of Adobe Analytics Cloud, marketers can spot trends in real time and act on market changes quickly.

“The integrated Adobe Experience Cloud solutions deliver all of the tools that we need to transform our digital experience and prepare us for new markets,” says DeMaria.

To learn more about how Synopsys uses Adobe Experience Cloud to improve operational efficiencies, read their full story.

The post Synopsys Expands Both Markets and Digital Strategy appeared first on Digital Marketing Blog by Adobe.



from Digital Marketing Blog by Adobe https://blogs.adobe.com/digitalmarketing/digital-marketing/synopsys-expands-markets-digital-strategy/

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