University of Washington Guest Lecture - Entrepreneurial Marketing

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Online Marketing – Version 2.0 Marketing your business across the new landscape of the Web.

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Guest lecture by Jordan Mitchell at Deb Hagen's UW class on Entrepreneurial Marketing.

Transcript of University of Washington Guest Lecture - Entrepreneurial Marketing

Page 1: University of Washington Guest Lecture - Entrepreneurial Marketing

Online Marketing – Version 2.0

Marketing your business across the new landscape of the Web.

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Today I’ll Talk About

• Online advertising trends and challenges

• Using the Web to gain exposure– Online advertising 101 (media you buy)– Evaluating three example campaigns– Tools to use– Social media marketing (media you earn)– Examples of social media marketing

• Tracking and measuring

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Online Marketing Version 2.0

Then– Banners– 1-2 ad networks– Category/site targeting– “bought” media

Now– Text, display, video, viral– >400 ad networks– Incredible targeting– “earned” media

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US Online Ad Market Size

US Online Ad Market ($ Billions)

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2001 2002 2003 2004 20005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

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Share of US Online Ad Market

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2001 2002 2003 2004 20005 2006 2007

Display vs. Search Advertising

Display Advertising• Untargeted• 25x volume of search yet half the market share• 83% sold <$1 CPM

Search Advertising• Targeted• $81.65 revenue per 1000 searches

Growth lies in targeting people and behaviors.

Search

Display

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Overall Trends

• Focus on performance and ROI

• Continued market growth– 2006 online ad spend per household was $217:

• $980 for newspapers,• $980 for telemarketing, and• $576 for direct mail

– Self-service

• Better targeting

• “Earned” media

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The People-Driven Web

• Business-driven people-driven• Authentic and open communications• No one has control!

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Earned Media

• Word of mouth• Social media marketing• PR• Media interaction• Email forwarding

Media attention earned the hard way, not bought.

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Challenges and Opportunities

• Signal/noise ratio• Capturing and holding attention• “Banner blindness”• Nothing works continually

• More free exposure venues• No limit to what can work; blank slate• Easy and cheap to test different approaches

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Paid Media

Online Advertising 101

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Online Advertising Eco-System

Advertisers / Agencies

Publishers

Ad Networks

Optimizers

Online Consumers

Advertisers want to reach people.

Web sites are the proxy.

80% of ad inventory flows thru networks.

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Rate Structures

• Objectives– Performance– Brand

• Rate structures– CPM (cost per thousand impressions)– CPC (cost per click)– CPA (cost per action)– CPV (cost per view)– Sponsorships (cost per time period)

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Targeting Options

Traditional• Geographic location• Demographic• Site• Category/channel• Search keywords• Day part

Newer• Interest/affinity• Context• Commercial intent• Persona• Social graph• Influencers

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Where to Buy

• Specific Web site

• Ad network– Format (text ad, video, display, etc.)– Vertical (sports, travel, etc.)– Publisher type (blog, community, owned, etc.)– Targeting (behavioral, contextual, demo, etc.)– Rate type (CPA/affiliate, CPM, CPC, etc.)

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Elements of a Campaign

• The advertisement (creative)

• The landing page

• The call to action

• Continual optimization– All of the above

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Tracking and Measuring ROI

• Define your “return” in the form of an “action”?– Registration– Purchase– Monetary value

• Measure cost per action against monetary value

• Simple example: selling UW t-shirts

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Ca m pa ign A Ca m pa ign B Ca m pa ign CCa m pa ign pa ra m e te rs:

Cos t 54.00$ 60.00$ 300.00$ Type CP C CP C CP M

Ca m pa ign Re sults:Im press ions 100,000 7,500 300,000 Clicks 145 75 600 Click -through rate 0.15% 1.00% 0.20%Cos t per thousand 0.54$ 8.00$ 1.00$ Cos t per c lic k 0.37$ 0.80$ 0.50$

Use r Actions (the funne l)Landing page vis its 145 75 600B rowse catalog 100 65 200S hopping cart 25 30 50Com pleted purchases 5 15 25A verage purchase s ize 22.50$ 34.75$ 26.50$ M argin (25% ) 5.63$ 8.69$ 6.63$

ROI Ana lysisCos t per cus tom er acquis it ion 10.80$ 4.00$ 12.00$ M argin per cus tom er 5.63$ 8.69$ 6.63$

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Optimizing Your Campaign

• Measure, compare, change …

• Campaign funnel– Creative (click through rate)– Landing page (click through rate)

• Web site funnel– General usability (eliminating points of friction)– Catalog navigation– Ease of purchasing

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Tools to Use

• Google AdSense– Messaging– Keywords– Landing page optimization

• Google Analytics– Compare all your advertising sources– Count impressions, clicks, etc.– Creative optimization– Landing page optimization

• A/B and multivariate testing

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“Earned” Media

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Earned Media is “Linkbait”

• Funny, useful or controversial content• People online are bored!

• Examples– Videos– Widgets– Games– Blog posts– Pictures

– Facebook status updates– Twitter posts– Emails– Craigslist postings– Contests

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Earned Media

• Benefits – Can be enormously effective– Can be extremely easy/cheap– Helps with SEO– Helps attract/keep people’s attention– People remember it

• Challenges– No recipe for success– Can go horribly wrong– Posers get nothing

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Example: KogiBBQ

http://twitter.com/kogibbq

24,000 followers

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Example: Seattle 2.0

• http://www.seattle20.com• >25K Web site visitors/month

• PR, word-of-mouth, and social media– Facebook group– Seattle Startup Index, top blogger index, etc.– Blog posts, twitter posts, etc.

• First event drew over 300 people @ $50/ticket

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Example: Monk-e-mail

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The Monk-e-mail Pitch

• 2 spots on the Superbowl– $5MM cost– 10M people exposed for 30-60 seconds (but not

engaged)

• One viral campaign– $250K cost– 30M people interacting for 8 minutes

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Earned Media Advice

• Contribute – Write interesting content frequently– Comment on other blogs– Be generous with links– Be authentic!

• Build your audience• Linkbait

– Content that people just naturally link to and share– Funny, useful or controversial

• Spend time on it. Put value into it.

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New Forms of Measurement

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“Buzz” and Sentiment Measurement

• Monitor chatter about your product/brand – What people are saying– Where people are talking about you – Overall sentiment trends

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Friends, Followers, Votes, Retweets

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The Power of Passed Links

• 20% of site visits from links shared (earned)• 14-24 year old demo

– 88% of links followed were sent to them by friends

• 2-4x increase in conversion rates

http://meteorsolutions.com/?fbid=TY2Xsky3p5I

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Conclusion

• Use search engine marketing to:– Test your messaging– Optimize your creative, landing page conversion, funnel, etc.

• Use social media to reinforce your messaging– SEO “link juice”– Just be authentic and contribute value– Develop a following and keep at it

• Continue with other forms of paid online marketing, optimizing for ROI

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Jordan Mitchell

Email: [email protected]

Blog: http://kickstand.typepad.com