The document outlines an assignment for students to develop a 20 minute presentation in pairs that will be assessed based on criteria such as displaying understanding of products and including tips on how teams can succeed in digital. It also provides statistics on digital usage globally and in New Zealand to provide context. Students will be tested at the end of the first day and are assigned homework to describe perceptions of digital usage in their regions.
6. The Assignment
By the end of this course you will have developed and presented a 20 min
presentation for your teams. This is your assessment and it will be presented in
pairs to a judging panel of two people, a sales specialist and a technical specialist.
The assessment criteria:
•
•
•
•
Does the presentation display understanding of our products?
Does the presentation include tips on how your teams can succeed in digital?
Does the presentation include how you will help your teams achieve in digital?
When questioned by the panel how correctly and confidently you answered their
questions.
8. Every Second
• 100,000 tweets
• 684,478 items shared on
Facebook
• 2,000,000 searches on Google
• 48 hours of video uploaded to
YouTube
• 47000 apps downloaded
• 3,600 Instagram photos shared
• 571 websites created
• $272,000 spent online
9. Other Stuff
• Gangnam style generated $8m in ad revenue
• Customers who watch video of a product are 85%
more likely to purchase
• Video and email marketing can increase CTR by
more than 90%
• 95% of Smartphone users, look up local info, 61% call
and 59% visit the business
• Digital revenues forecast to increase 8.6% for the
next 5 years
10. NZ Users
• NZers spent 20 hours a week on a Social Media website
in April 2013
• 64% of mobile users in NZ have spent money on an
activity via mobile
• >50% of NZers are now accessing the Internet via a
mobile phone.
• Each month 57% of NZers use the web to search for
businesses, products and services and of those 17% use
the internet exclusively.
• 57% have performed a search on their Smartphone after
seeing an offline ad
• >50% of traffic on NZH comes via a mobile device
11. NZ Advertisers
• 50% of Kiwi SMEs do not have a website
• Nearly 20% were not using any online tools at all.
• 28% planned to invest in mobile channels, either ensuring
their site was mobile optimised, building an app, or using
text messages to communicate with customers.
• 38% planned to start using search engine marketing,
• 32% planned to start using search engine optimisation,
• 31% intended to invest in video.
12. NZ Digital Ad Spend
• Total online spend (Q1 - Q3 2013) $338.29M
• Up 27% year on year
• Display – up 9% [$85.73M]
• Classified – up 13% [$95.22M]
• Search and directories – up 41% [$145.64M]
• Video – up 21% [$8.29M]
• Mobile – up 104% [$3.40M]
• In 2013, Facebooks NZ revenues doubled
• In Q1 2013, Search and Directories accounted for
$40.93 million dollars in NZ - IAB/PWC report Q1
2013 (Up from $25.81 million Q1 2011 - 58%
increase)
13. What helps facititate a digital salespersons
success.
Vision
Inspiration
Coaching
Celebration
14. Vision
•
Move the focus from unit sales to the right solution
for the customer’s problems
•
A clear path for the future of sales teams
incorporating online elements to print campaigns.
•
Online is a big part of the future mix of in our product
portfolio. How do we prepare now for that
future?
15. Inspiration
•
Support and understanding of the digital environment, both your own
regions websites and the Herald national product.
•
Digital targets
•
To provide ideas and solutions
•
Being active in the digital area and giving more importance to the
product
•
Making available the correct tool for the job. iSchool grads have been
trailing a tablet and feedback is excellent
16. Coaching and Communication
•
Regular scheduled time dedicated to one on one coaching and
support.
•
Encouraging teams to work with the digital champions
•
Communication with editorial to get feedback or ideas
•
We need to be seen as leaders in the media industry with advanced
knowledge of product. This is not just in our online content but in
advice capacity to the client’s online presence. Coach to upskill
26. Facebook – What your teams could use it for
To see what your customers are up to:
• Anniversaries
• Promotions
• Sales
Put a link to the Facebook page in
Salesforce
34. Twitter – What your customers are
doing
Conversing with an engaged
audience
35. Twitter – What you and your teams
should be doing
Follow your customers – event leads
Post about your interests – and #hashtag!
Retweet your publication’s articles
37. Google+ - Why EVERYBODY should be on
Google+
Google+ isn’t competing with us – there are
no ads
Google+ is influencing organic search
results and SEM quality scores
38. Bringing them all together – generating
sales
Some suggestions:
• Watch for customer events and problems – Twitter and Facebook
• Contribute to communities – Linkedin and Google+
• Connect with your market – Linkedin
• DON’T SPAM!
• Engage to build relationships – Twitter, Linkedin and Google+
• Converse with the prospects problems in mind – Twitter, Linkedin and Google+
This is not quick result and requires investment.
43. Product Team
• What is a Product
– A portal where our customers engage with brand, consume
content and interact with adverts. Eg: nzherald.co.nz, nz
regionals websites, mobile apps, tablet apps
• Who is in Product team
– Web Designers, UX specialist, Analysts, front end developers
and Product Managers
• What do we do?
– Product Managers are internal and external liaisons.
• Internally we work with the cross functional team (Editorial, commercial,
technology, marketing and senior management).
• And externally we enable our audience to engage with brand on the
technology platform of their choice.
45. How do we strategize initiatives or ideas
•
•
•
•
•
Organisational direction and needs
Innovation and inventions in technology space
First to market opportunity
Market trends
Competitor analysis
47. Visualising the product
•
•
•
•
•
Content strategy and uniqueness
Advertising strategy and other revenue options
Strengths and weaknesses
Marketing – Audience growth and engagement
Design, UX and IA
48. So… from concept to development
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Conceptualise the brief or idea
GOOB (Get out of the building) for ideas
Blank paper or whiteboard
Design (with consumer in mind, not the
stakeholders)
Usability and User Experience
Development (technology)
Go-to-Market (Marketing strategy)
Commercialisation
Continuous review and Improvements
50. Some Achievements
•
The NZ Herald brand now exists on 10 separate platforms reaching over 65% of NZ,
being the first news brand to launch the iPad app, iPhone app and Windows 8 app
•
NZ Herald has the largest Social Media news audience in Australasia
•
NZ Herald launched the AU and NZ first responsive mobile site
•
Most awarded digital news brand in Australasia (Webby’s, Panpa, Cannons,
WAN/IFRA)
•
10 Regionals Sites are being integrated into the NZ Herald by July 31 = 9% audience
spike
•
Launched the first fantasy sport game in NZ this year and have a tipping game (65,000
players in 2013)
•
The Listener moved to a hard pay wall model Oct 2012 and includes all content from the
printed magazine plus some limited digital only content. Learning's for NZ Herald
•
FoodHub is a new recipe focused vertical that aggregates content from other APN
publications. Launched Oct 2012.
•
NZ Woman’s Weekly female site in NZ with over 100% audience growth year on year
51. How can you get involved
• Have a kick ass idea? – we’ll help shape it for
you
– Write a quick brief with what the idea is, how does it help product
to make revenue or increase audience, can we get a sponsor,
etc
– Remember all ideas are good ideas
52. Key Initiatives for 2014
• Personalisation (data driven)
• Develop niche products to retain audience
and grow brand engagement
• Data Journalism
• Data Driven Advertising
• Design optimisation to grow engagement
• Custom Publishing – mobile platform
• Community platform development
• Ecommerce and transactions
54. Revision Activity (time allowing)
• Choose a topic
• Create a movie poster about the topic on flipchart paper
• The poster is to include:
• Four main points
• At least one picture
• Have a clear AIDA format
• Prepare to present your poster to explain the four points
and describe how the poster fits the AIDA format
56. Wrap up and Tonight’s Assignment
Bring it home:
In your teams be ready to present the following tomorrow morning:
• Describe your perceptions of the online world as it is used in your
regions, for example
• Describe a business using social media or how they might use
social media
• Describe people using iPhones, iPads, Android phones in your
region
61. Background
•
Town Centre launched new web & mobile sites for ARM and NZRNN - Nov 2012
•
Town Centre project radically de-scoped by ARM – resulting in loss of:
–
–
Community building functionality – for local communities & local business
Community related commercial opportunities
62. Background
•
Essentially what was delivered was a redesign
•
NZRNN web & mobile sites controlled &
developed by ARM – NZ had little/no
input into product roadmap
•
No ability to improve on initial designs
•
Site architecture resulted in poor user
experience
•
ARM URL structure limited analytics
tracking
•
Lack of timely technical help from ARM
63. Bringing the sites back to NZ
Benefits of integrating the NZ Regional sites into the nzherald.co.nz domain:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Cost savings – hosting & maintenance in AU - $285K
Greater scope to monetize the Regional inventory
Efficiencies created by a single platform
Good positioning for a potential paywall opportunity – bundled subscription
packages with NZH & NZR
Competitive advantage for APN – Increased nzherald.co.nz UB numbers –
potential to match or exceed stuff.co.nz
A more comprehensive content offering for the NZH & NZR readers
Improved analytics tracking
Maintain the same Regional URL’s (http://www.hawkesbaytoday.co.nz/)
Common user experience mechanisms
64. Integration - key criteria
• Brand identity - Regional sites must retain their individual
brand identity so that readers who only visit for regional
content feel they are visiting a regional site
• Strong alignment of the user experience with that of
nzherald.co.nz – this will assist NZH readers with discovery of
regional content
65. Driving traffic to regional sites
Publications dropdown
menu on nzherald.co.nz
will list all regionals –
driving traffic to the
Regional sites
66. HOMEPAGE
•
Individual brand identity
•
Clean more news focused designs
•
Larger image sizes to feature the
great photography
•
Clean navigation – all content in
top level navigation menu
•
Network navigation for NZ Herald
67. ARTICLE PAGE
•
Individual brand identity
•
Alignment with user experience of
nzherald – assisting nzherald
readers to discover regional
content
68. Integration
•
•
•
NZRNN integrated into nzh platform August 20 2013
Positive response from users and advertisers “cleaner” “easier to navigate”
Initial drop in audience – a known risk which was communicated to business
prior to launch
•
Looking at strategies to mitigate traffic loss (replacing features/sections
which were de-scoped by Development)
Staff now comfortable with new content management system – additional
training to be provided at regional sites
•
69. Loading content
Media Services
(Auckland)
Times Age, Wanganui Chronicle (Mon – Sat)
Daily Post, Northern Advocate (Sat)
Content
Administrators
(Auckland)
Bay of Plenty, Hawke’s Bay (Mon – Sat)
Daily Post, Northern Advocate (Mon – Fri)
Shared content, galleries, video
Digital Advocates
Extra content, galleries, video, comments, polls,
ranking, editor’s picks
Ad Ops
Ad campaigns, marketplace adverts
Marketing
Promotions, marketing promo spot
70. The products
• Live link through to www.rotoruadailypost.co.nz?
• The products – banner, wallpaper, mrec,
marketplace
• Carousel was de-scoped (only had 3 clients)
• Other solutions for clients – rss feed
• Sections and buckets
71. 2014 – Key challenges
•Re-build audience growth
•Improve commercial offering to Regions
•Improve National sales
72. 2014 - Business priorities
Revenue
• Regional Sales rollout early November
• Improve Regional Advertising proposition
• Offer new advertising products
• Ensure regionals have access to new commercial
innovations
Audience Engagement
• Focus on raising time spent on site/PPV
• Emphasize discoverability of local, unique content
• More focus on of local content
• Focus on Video content
• Improve access to content through NZH Homepage
73. 2014 – Initiatives
Revenue
1.Location based Adv for SME’s (mFlyer)
2.New Regional Mobile App
3.Marketing Services (Google trial)
4.Classified Carousels
5.Improve ‘marketplace’ to reflect local offerings
Audience Engagement
1.Introduce ‘Most Popular’
2.Regional video training
3.Launch of new tools E.G. ‘Follow the’ story
4.Focus on local SEO and specific SEP pages
5.Local Marketing to promote sites
75. Data sources
• Adobe Site Catalyst (Omniture)
Internal reporting tool for the digital product team, editorial staff and key business stake holders
Adobe services are primarily used for APN eyes only content & product performance measurement
• Nielsen NetView & Market Intelligence
Netview recently released audience measurement service using hybrid methodology – allows us to
see limited competitor data
Market Intelligence is the legacy system that was used for measuring traffic to NZ based sites (both NZ
and international audience) plus basic demographics of that audience
Primarily used as a sales tools – but we do use it for competitive insights
• comScore
An audience measurement tool similar to NetView but using different methodology
Primarily used as a sales tool – but we do use it for competitive insights
• Hitwise
Competitive analysis tool that provides in-depth Mosaic demographic profiling.
Sales tool – key for demographic profiling
NOTE: All measurement services will generate different data as they use different methodologies. The key discipline
is to make sure that we are consistent is what source we are using when looking at performance.
75
76. Terminology
Metric
Metric for
What does it mean
Used by
Also known as
Unique browsers
Audience
Provides a guide to the number of readers that visit the
site.
It does not represent actual people, it represents web
browsers and different devices which can lead to
duplication over long periods of time (monthly data for
example).
Nielsen Market Intelligence,
Omniture
UB
Unique visitors
Audience
A metric created by comScore that best reflects actual
people.
comScore
UV, Total unique visitors
Page impressions
Traffic
The number of times a page on site has been loaded.
Nielsen Market Intelligence,
Omniture, comScore
PI, Page views, PV
Visits
Visits
The number of times a unique browser or visitor has come
to the site in a certain time period
Nielsen Market Intelligence,
Omniture, comScore
Visits, Sessions
Pages per visit
Engagement
The number of pages that are consumed each time a user
comes to the site
Nielsen Market Intelligence,
Omniture, comScore
PPV
Nielsen Market Intelligence,
Omniture, comScore
ASD, average time spent
per visit
Nielsen Market Intelligence,
Omniture, comScore
APD, average time spent
per visit
The average amount of time spent per site visit.
Average session duration
Engagement
Can be measured in seconds or minutes dependant on the
analytics tool.
The average amount of time spent on a page.
Average page duration
Engagement
Can be measured in seconds or minutes dependant on the
analytics tool.
76
77. Key metrics to take into account
Traffic and audience
For an advertiser they look at our unique browsers/audience to make sure their product or brand will reach
the amount of people they need it to, but they will purchased based on page impressions.
Demographics
Demographic information allows tailoring of propositions, showing that their brand can be exposed to either
their target market (if we fit that) or how we can compliment their current offering.
Engagement
Engagement metrics can be helpful in Sales when demonstrating that we can offer premium product. These
metrics would help support the traffic and audience numbers.
77
78. When to use us
There are a number of different scenarios that you can use Ad Ops, Research or Product
Analytics a few of which are…
Pitching to a new client or for a new campaign
This is a great chance to speak with the Research team, discuss the story we want to tell. How do we fit into
their offering, what are the latest or forecasted numbers for the period that they are looking at etc.
Inventory queries
All inventory queries should be directed to the Ad Ops team.
Audience demographics
The Research team can help with top level demographics as well as Mosaic profiling.
Post campaign reporting
Where it has been an integrated campaign it will be potentially a mix of Product Analytics, Ad Ops and
Research that will be providing reporting. To keep things easy, feel free to contact one person and we can
pull the information.
For any ad served content, Ad Ops will help
Section numbers
For information on specific sections come through to Product Analytics
78
79. What else can we provide?
APN tracks all of the core components of a site and page specific elements such as the section
ID’s, tags, page types, content types, page names etc., through to the hour of day, day of week
and content placement on a page.
A few key ways where Product Analytics can help are:
Using the insights we collect to see how people use the site, how long do they spend in a
section, what other sections are they likely to view in an average visit, etc.
What the performance is like from different referrers, if an advertiser wants to target social
users and they have a campaign linked to editorial content on the site, we can look at how
much will that reader consume on average in the sections.
If a lofty target has been insisted upon by an advertiser, we can provide insights in what
changes may be needed to achieve the target (if there are any).
Work with Ad Ops with Mobile App traffic and audience estimates.
79
83. Section & Page Type Targeting
• Section
•
Eg. National News
• Sub-Section
•
Eg. Crime
• Page Type
•
eg.Quickread, Video and Photo Galleries, Saved articles
84.
85. Note:
• When targeting to a sub-section, the ‘Section’ rates must be used,
plus an additional 10% load.
• Inventory for sub-sections needs to be checked with the Traffic team
(traffic@apn.co.nz) before booking.
86. Contextual Targeting
• Keyword and Tag targeting to align Ad with relevant context.
• This is booked as a product in it’s own right and is not an ‘addon’.
• 760x120 and 300x250 ad sizes to be supplied. The ad unit
which fits the page will be displayed.
• 5 Tag classifications and 30 Keywords per article page.
• It is important to carefully consider the keywords chosen.
Negative keywords can also be added to ensure you avoid the
following situations….
87.
88.
89.
90.
91.
92.
93. Geographic Targeting
• Country / Region / City targeting based on ISP location.
• All campaigns targeted to NZ Eyes by default.
94. GPS Targeting - Mobile
• Can select a GPS point and target a radius around it.
95. Time Targeting
• Day of Week
• E.g. Monday and Wednesday only
• Window of Time
• E.g. 10am – 12pm daily only.
104. Frequency
• Types of Behaviour
• Casual
i.e. Page views to a category
• Intent
i.e. Search terms
• Action
i.e. Purchase
105. Pro’s
•
•
•
•
•
•
Right audience for your brand
Deliver higher degree of relevance.
Improves user experience
Can buy audiences that are not available e.g. Small Business
Transparent data
Increases Site Optimisation
Con’s
•
•
•
•
•
Users can delete their cookies
Multiple users per ‘browser’
Context is King
Limited reach – Small number of uniques to page views
Impact lessened by other Behavioural targeting
106. Products
Pre-Built Segments
in Audience Science e.g. Travellers
50,600 unique users and 1.1million page views per week
Bespoke Solutions
e.g. Heart of the City
107. When to sell
• Up-selling tool rather than Primary Offering
• If audience not otherwise available
• Lower CPM than section targeting
Note – Behavioural Targeting should be measured by brand value
rather than CTR rate.
108. How to Book BT
•
•
•
Check with Traffic on the target you are wishing to use and
whether there is available inventory.
Use the Behavioural Targeting Products in Mediamanager
with plenty of notes.
Rate for standard Ad sizes is $25 CPM (subject to review)
111. Commercial Team Ad Ops
APN NZ Media is a division of APN New Zealand Ltd.
112. What is Ad Ops
•
Ad Ops controls and operates the ad servers as their primary responsibility.
Almost everyone in the company depends on us for something. Whether it’s the
marketing team trying to get a promotion live, the finance needing accurate
historical reports, the Product development team trying to evaluate and implement
a new technology, or just the day to day interaction with the Sales team to
understand what clients want. Ad Ops is an information hub within the company,
and a key resource for getting things done!
•
From a strategic standpoint, virtually any new technology, from workflow
management to analytics to data management eventually needs to interact with
the ad server, so Ad Ops is inherently at the centre of those conversations and
product rollouts
•
Responsible for pricing, ad product creation, inventory management etc
•
In summary Ad Ops refers to processes and systems that support the sale and delivery of
online advertising, we really do it all..
113. Our Team
Commercial Manager
Tama Sefuiva
Commercial Product Manager
Lisa Moore-Bocarro
Campaign Manager Team Lead
Melissa Evans
Campaign Manager
Morgan Johnston
Campaign Manager
Katie Ly
Art Director
Scott True
Advertising Operations
Specialist
Taryn Simmen
Campaign Manager
Charlotte Baker Ly
114. When to come to us
• Supply inventory projections for future orders for sales on flights that
are more outside of the square - Sales and coordinators can pull
basic inventory reports (product)
• Generate reports internally and externally
• Deal with creative issues
• Check creative concepts executions
• Provide feedback on how successful ad/campaign might be and
provide feedback and suggestions
• You can come to the Ad Ops team for anything really relating to
digital campaigns whether that’s inventory projections, GeoTargeting, Time Targeting, BT Targeting
• Screenshots – please organise if needed with us first
115. Products
•
When booking in a digital campaign you need to select which product used whether you want your campaign to
run across the site or in a particular channel such as National News, Business, Sport and so on.. The product you
select determines where your advertisement will run. Words to look out for SOV, Daily Buys Freq caps, Time
Targeting, Geo Targeting, Contextual (keywords)
•
Most campaigns are sold on a cost per 1,000 or CPM therefore you always need to enter in a cost per impression
as below
•
Example: If you wanted to booked a Headline Rectangle 300x250 on the Northern Advocate for 23,500 page
impressions @ $13.90 CPM the flight would look like below
•
Please note there are a few exceptions where the cost is fixed such as sponsorship buys, production costs,
textlinks etc which are listed with a flat rate buy in the rate card, or which can't be attributed to an impressions
goal, e.g. marketplace. For these products only that you should use the Flat Rate option.
116. Big Banner 760x120 or
728x90 run at the top of the page
Medium Rectangles 300x250
Depending on how long the articles are
we can serve up to three rectangles on
the page
1)
Headline Rec (above the fold)
2)
Content Rec within the article
3)
Direct Rectangle
117. • 300x600 or
Half Pages
- this ad size runs in the headline
rectangle position
• 460x400 or
Super
Rectangles
this ad size currently runs in
the content rectangle position
120. Text Links & Relevant Offers
Special Offers
Special Offers move from the bottom of
the page to the side bar. They will
maintain the same format but operate as
a carousel.
50x50 Logo with up to 90 characters.
Relevant Offers
Relevant offers are contextually targeted
by keyword, tag or article I.D. They are
given more space and are placed in line
with the content. The heading will
change dynamically depending on the
type of booking made. E.g. Now
Hiring, Now Leasing, Press Release.
Image: 140 x 93
Heading: Max 70 characters (Similar to Google
search results)
Text: Max 200 Characters
121. Rich Media
•
Rich Media refers to online advertising that makes use of a range of interactive digital media including streaming video and audio
that is fetching to the eye or created in a format that isn’t standard GIF. More specifically this means that the ad pulls in additional
information from a server beyond what is served up with the initial load.
•
Rich media must be 3rd party ad served – this means that we are not hosting the creative via SAS but rather a third party supplier
such as double click, media mind or facilitate. There are extra costs involved with third party ad serving but there are added
bonuses when using this service.
122. Billboards 970x250
•
•
This is one of my personal favourite ad units its big and its easily closed. We prefer to have as limited animation within the creative
as possible. The idea of these rules is to not annoy readers and to reduce the close rates for advertisers. Once the ad is closed, its
replaced on the next impression by either a rectangle (when served on the homepage) or a big banner (when served elsewhere
on the site) the Billboard ad can be expanded again so everybody wins.
Billboards can run on the Homepage or as channel buys such as national news etc
124. All messaging in the wallpapers must fall within the 130 pxl line as
below, anything outside of this area will be cut off from a large part of
our audience for users on smaller screens.
125. Contextual Targeting
•
•
•
•
300x250 and 760x120
Is a form of targeting
your advert to specific
content via a list of
keywords
The server scans the first
250 words of an article
and if one of the
keywords supplied is
found then your ad will
be served.
This is a great way to
target your core
demographic.
126. Geo-Targeting
•
We can target to specific
regions or even countries
•
We can even target cities
based on weather
temperatures
128. How to check inventory
SAS http://apnnz.aimatch.com
•
Reports > Product Reports> filter by date and
product > Run Report
You can use this tool to pull all projected inventory
except run of site. We need to use a separate report
for all ROS avails due to the tier ie Standard CPM –
Pre-emptible.
To pull ROS inventory Report> BI Reports > ROS
Inventory > and filter by dates required
131. Servers
• Media Manager
- is a system used to booked all print and digital campaigns. Once a campaign
has been entered into media manager you will export the IO and send on to client/agency to approve. Once approved you will
need to convert proposal which is when we are alerted to the booking. PLEASE BE 100% SURE THE DETAILS ARE CORRECT
BEFORE CONVERTING THE IO.
• -
is the system used to ad serve all the creative. You will need a login to pull Product reports to check inventory avails, BI
Reports (post campaign reporting)
132. How are we going to facilitate the success of
our teams?
• We care about the reader/ user/ advertiser
• Two tips from Google, Vodafone and Gen-I
• What can we do that is in ad managers team’s power/ authority that can
make their lives easier and allow them to focus on sales?
• How best can we be aware of how our salespeople’s efforts are focused so
we can provide balanced advice on how to achieve current and future goals?
• There is a small Auckland crew who can be available to help you enable your
people if asked. What can the Ad man team do to make it easy to help?
133. The Assignment
By the end of this course you will have developed and presented a 20 min
presentation for your teams. This is your assessment and it will be presented in
pairs to a judging panel of two people, a sales specialist and a technical specialist.
The assessment criteria:
•
•
•
•
Does the presentation display understanding of our products?
Does the presentation include tips on how your teams can succeed in digital?
Does the presentation include how you will help your teams achieve in digital?
When questioned by the panel how correctly and confidently you answered their
questions.
138. Real world example – a possible digital client
What we can help them achieve:
How will we help them achieve it:
139. How I am going to help you with digital this year.
Editor's Notes
Learn something new every dayYou cant do it on your ownTalk about iSchool
Use workbook
Only 12% of user genetated posts are seen on fb
LinkedinPersonal professional promotion through profiles, discussion and sharing
Facebook
Take it seriouslyTake the good with the bad – DO NOT DELETE OR IGNORE negative feedbackKeep in mind posting will not get to most of your followers or friends. A post on the page will be presented on the newsfeed of less than 20% of people following your page and will be seen by even less. Facebook wants you to pay!The demographic on Facebook is changing. Facebook has admitted that it needs to focus on the Teen and young adult market. Seems they don’t want their antics seen by their mothers.
LinkedinPersonal professional promotion through profiles, discussion and sharing
LinkedinPersonal professional promotion through profiles, discussion and sharing
Split up into 3 teamsDraw a illustrated flow chart about how this works for the journey of buying:ChocolateA replacement laundryA phoneDiscuss advertising across all mediums and where each one could fit.
Also talk aboutTechnology innovations and new tech products coming out – hero strategyFirst to market – 60% market sharemarket needs also does the competitor analysis
Product Management—finds and quantifies market problems and turns them into product requirements.User Experience—focuses on understanding the user needs and tasks, designing the product interface and assessing the design usefulness.Engineering—focuses on the technology and builds the product.
Design – why apple is successful. Dumb it down. Design should be simple, unique to your audience. Consumers should understand without any training or educationUsability – not just being sexy, but being effectiveDevelopment – HTML5, re-usability and responsive designsMarketing – tell people and advertisers what we are doing. Get them involved. You don’t know the results until consumers use it. Through trade, media and social releasesContinuous review and improvement – through analytics and feedback (social)
We needed a better solution so the decision was made to bring the site back to New Zealand