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Lincoln ama emerging Media Workshop

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Title: Lincoln ama emerging Media Workshop


1
Lincoln amaemerging Media Workshop
  • Dana VanDen Heuvel The MarketingSavant Group
  • dana_at_danavan.net www.marketingsavant.com

2
Dana VanDen HeuvelThe MarketingSavant Group
  • Dana is the founder of The MarketingSavant Group
    and a widely recognized specialist in emerging
    marketing technologies such as blogging, social
    media, RSS, Internet communities and interactive
    marketing trends and best practices and speaks
    regularly on these topics at industry events.
    Dana is the creator of the American Marketing
    Association TechnoMarketing training series and
    the author of the AMA Marketech 08 guide to
    marketing technology.

SLIDES AVAILABLE WWW.DANAVAN.NET/lincolnama
3
Marketech 08
  • Marketing has not fundamentally changed since the
    creation on the marketing concept and our
    branching out as a child of modern economic
    theory. What has changed is how we, as
    marketers, talk with our customers and the tools,
    techniques and especially the technologies that
    we employ in those conversations.
  • This guide is meant to serve as an overview of
    the marketing technologies available to you, the
    seasoned marketer. Weve provided you with the
    most accessible and actionable tools in this
    guide.

4
Overview Agenda
  • 800 // Begin
  • Overview of TechnoMarketing
  • Word-of-Mouth Marketing and the Power of CGM
  • 930 // Break
  • Mining the Social Media Space for Customer
    Intelligence
  • Customer Community
  • Online Video Videoblogging
  • 1045 // Break
  • Blogs, Podcasts and RSS
  • Emerging TechnoMarketing tools (widgets, Twitter,
    etc)
  • Putting it to work at in your organization
  • 1200 // Adjourn

5
EXPECTATIONS!
  • What brought you here?
  • What do you need to bring back?
  • How will you know when you have it?
  • What do you expect to DO?
  • How should success LOOK, FEEL and SOUND?

6
TO APPRECIATE NEW MARKETING FIRST YOU HAVE TO
UNDERSTAND WHATS BROKEN WITH TRADITIONAL
MARKETING.
7
TRADITIONAL MARKETING ADVERTISING
ADVERTISING CLUTTER MEDIA FRAGMENTATION CONSUMERS
TUNED OUT DOESNT SCALE LESS EFFECTIVE MORE
EXPENSIVE LESS TRUSTED LOWER ROI
8
Crisis In Mass Marketing
Source Justin Kirby Paul Marsden (2006).
Connected marketing. Oxford, UK
Butterworth-Heinemann. xix
  • 18 Proportion of TV advertising campaigns
    generating positive ROI
  • 54 cents Average return in sales for every 1
    spent on advertising
  • 256 The increase in TV advertising costs (CPM)
    in the past decade
  • 84 Proportion of B2B marketing campaigns
    resulting in falling sales
  • 100 The increase needed in advertising spend to
    add 1-2 in sales
  • 14 Proportion of people who trust advertising
    information
  • 90 Proportion of people who can skip TV ads who
    do skip TV ads
  • 80 Market share of video recorders with ad
    skipping technology in 2008
  • 95 The failure rate for new product
    introductions
  • 117 The number of prime time TV spots in 2002
    needed to reach 80 of adult population up from
    just 3 in 1965
  • 3000 Number of advertising messages people are
    exposed to per day
  • 56 Proportion of people who avoid buying
    products from companies who they think advertise
    too much
  • 65 Proportion of people who believe that they
    are constantly bombarded with too much
    advertising
  • 69 Proportion of people interested in
    technology or devices that enable them to skip or
    block advertising

9
Big themes
10
WHATS CHANGED?
"We can't compete on price. We also can't compete
on quality, features or service. That leaves
fraud, which I'd like you to call marketing."
Dilberts Boss
cc 3.0, Megaqwerty
11
  • CONTENT

12
  • CONTEXT

13
  • CONNECTIONS

14
  • COMMUNITY

15
Marketing Into the Future
  • Marketing in the education, corporate, non-profit
    and small business environments is changing in
    ways that were just beginning to grasp.
  • The changes we see are taking shape on three
    fronts.

16
Technological
17
Technology Changes Marketing
  • Social media
  • Video
  • Widgets gadgets
  • Mobile Everything
  • Virtual everything
  • Universal search
  • Web 2.0/3.0/4.0

18
Where Everything Is Headed
Today
Digital
Non-Digital
2006
2050?
1996
Source Google
19
The Revolution will not be televised Gil Scott
Heron
20
Information Proliferation
  • Media Fragmentation - Then, and Now

1960 Now 6 TV channels/home 130 8,400 Magazine
s 17,300 4,400 Radio stations 13,500 None Intern
et stations 35,000 None Pages on Google 10 B
None Blogs 150 M
21
(No Transcript)
22
360? Digital Marketing World
Online Media
Email
eNewsletters
Real Simple Syndication (RSS)
eCards
eMail
Content Partnerships
News
Community sites
Syndication
Special Interest
Manifestos
Blog Search Engines
Conversations
Influencer outreach
Blog Aggregators
Blogs
Chat Rooms/Events
Portals
Search Engine Optimization
Citizen Action
Photo Blogs
Listservs
Keyword Marketing
eAlerts
Message Boards
Search
Meetups
Social Computing
Text-messaging
Press Rooms w/RSS
Online Advertising
Web Sites
IM
Viral Content
Games Contests
Wikis
eAdvocacy
Folksonomy
Digital Radio
Social Bookmarking
VBlogs
Podcasting
Webcasting
Digital Devices
Phones
DVR (Tivo)
Game Consoles
PDAs
Microcasting
Source Ogilvy
23
social / behavioral
24
Social Behavior Changes Marketing
  • Search
  • Networked
  • Low-fidelity
  • Hierarchy of social needs

25
Social Hierarchy of Needs
26
Building Blocks of the Social Web
Identity A way of uniquely identifying people in
the system Presence A way of knowing who is
online, available or otherwise nearby
Relationships A way of describing how two users
in the system are related Conversations A way of
talking to other people through the system
Groups A way of forming communities of interest
Reputation A way of knowing the status of other
people in the system Sharing A way of sharing
things that are meaningful to participants (like
photos or videos)
Gene Smith http//www.atomiq.com
27
Focus on the Long Tail
  • Reach out to the entire web
  • To the edges and not just to the centre, to the
    long tail and not the just the head
  • Leverage customer-self service
  • e.g. Google, StumbleUpon, orkut

28
Harnessing Collective Intelligence
  • Network effects from user contribution are the
    key to market dominance in Web 2.0 era
  • The Wisdom of crowds
  • Users add value
  • Amazon, ebay - User reviews, similar items, most
    popular,
  • Wikipedia content can be added/edited by any
    web user,
  • Flickr tagging images
  • Cloudmark Spam emails

29
(No Transcript)
30
Economic / Market Forces
31
The New Economy of Marketing
  • ROI is within easy grasp (for you, and them!)
  • Can your RD keep up with your market?
  • Transparency reduces cost
  • In the future, organizations will compete on
  • Who can create a rich user community where users
    interact with each other to improve products

32
Internet Business Models 5 Years Out
  • Advertiser-Supported Advertising Brands are
    increasingly launching their own content
    platforms. Some, like Budweiser's BudTV, go it
    alone. Others partner with online media
    properties. PG, for example, embedded Capessa
    inside Yahoo Health.
  • Advertiser-Subsidized Devices Content is a
    commodity. The barriers to entry are obliterated.
    Still, this means we all need to make choices -
    human attention doesn't scale. So how do you get
    consumers to choose your stuff? Simple. Use
    incentives.Marketers will partner with consumer
    electronic companies to co-brand white-label
    gadgets. For example, a Gap-branded set-top box
    could come with exclusive video podcast
    subscriptions
  • Just-in-Time Advertising Digital advertising
    creative and planning, like any marketing
    discipline, follows an arc. It's planned, placed,
    measured and eventually evaluated, tweaked or
    tossed. However, in the digital world, brands
    need to be more nimble.With the help of new
    technology, marketers will rely on "just-in-time"
    campaigns that adapt to conditions. Ad creative
    will morph based on certain triggers. This will
    include sales/ERP data, blog chatter/consumer
    feedback, weather/external conditions and more.

33
Out With the Old Business Models
  • The next generation of marketing will be a
    high-touch, low scale, targeted investment of
    time human capital rather than a flood of
    dollars to win hearts and minds
  • Give something of value away for free
  • Value forward
  • Brand second (last?)
  • Rapidly emerging opportunities (skunkworks
    budget)
  • Participation trumps focus group

34
Emerging Economies Lead Future Online Growth
Netherlands
World averages in 2011
US
Singapore
Norway
UK
Sweden
Japan
France
Israel
Canada
Germany
Italy
Online Penetration in 2011
UAE
Bulgaria
Romania
Czech Republic
Australia
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Chile
China
Philippines
Argentina
Mexico
South Africa
Brazil
India
Egypt
Indonesia
CAGR of Online Population (2006 to 2011)
Note Not all countries are included. Size of
bubble indicates relative size of the online
population in 2011.
Source JupiterResearch Worldwide Internet
Population Model, 5/07
35
WHAT'S NEXT?
36
Web 3.0 for Marketers
  • Open authorship, wiki-base community
  • Nuanced permission
  • All media is rich media
  • Local/GEO IP is perfected
  • Personas are the new target markets
  • Device agnostic marketing experience
  • Search behavior is second nature
  • Marketing has always been unplugged
  • Virtual reality has always been available when
    the real thing failed
  • Brands autobiography written in real time

37
Where Do We Go From Here?
  • Web as a platform
  • Software above a single device
  • Data as the new Intel inside
  • Harnessing collective intelligence
  • Lightweight business models (Saas)
  • Rich Internet applications
  • Leverage the long tail

38
So Much to Learn - Reading!
  • Naked Conversations How Blogs are Changing the
    Way Businesses Talk with Customers (Robert
    Scoble)
  • The Medium is the Message (Marshall McLuhan)
  • Complex Responsive Processes in Organizations
    Learning and Knowledge Creation (Ralph Stacey)
  • The World Is Flat A Brief History of the
    Twenty-first Century (Thomas Friedman)
  • Informal Learning Rediscovering the Natural
    Pathways That Inspire Innovation and Performance
    (Jay Cross)
  • Deschooling Society (Ivan Illich)
  • The Innovator's Solution Creating and Sustaining
    Successful Growth (Clayton Christensen)
  • The Cluetrain Manifesto The End of Business as
    Usual (Christopher Locke)
  • Convergence Culture Where Old and New Media
    Collide (Henry Jenkins)
  • The Wealth of Networks How Social Production
    Transforms Markets and Freedom (Yochai Benkler)
  • Open Business Models How to Thrive in the New
    Innovation Landscape (Henry Chesbrough)
  • The Long Tail Why the Future of Business is
    Selling Less of More (Chris Anderson)
  • Wikinomics How Mass Collaboration Changes
    Everything (Don Tapscott)
  • Seeing What's Next Using Theories of Innovation
    to Predict Industry Change (Clayton Christensen)
  • Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital
    The Dynamics of Bubbles and Golden Ages (Carlota
    Perez)
  • The Social Life of Information (John Seely Brown)
  • The Wisdom of Crowds (James Surowiecki)
  • Complexity and Innovation in Organizations (Jose
    Fonseca)

39
Lincoln ama - 2008
SLIDES AVAILABLE WWW.DANAVAN.NET/lincolnama
  • Dana VanDen Heuvel The MarketingSavant Group
  • dana_at_danavan.net www.marketingsavant.com
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