On Brands, Technology and Feelings.
(20)12 Things to think about:
1. CAN WE BET SMALL AND WIN BIG?
2. WHAT WILL BE THE NEXT BIG THING?
3. CAN WE PREDICT THE FUTURE?
4. WHERE DO WE LOOK FOR INSPIRATION?
5. CAN THE BRAND BE THE CURATOR?
6. HOW IMPORTANT IS THE PRODUCT?
7. WHICH CHANNEL IS THE BEST?
8.. WHAT IS HAPPENING IN THE MARKET?
9. WHAT IS A VIRAL?
10. WHAT IS GOOD CONTENT?
11. IS THERE A KEY TO INNOVATION?
12. HOW BIG ARE THE POSSIBILITIES?
The Dark Side of Social Media: It's Time to Take Tech Back by Brian Solis, SX...Brian Solis
"We're at a digital and human crossroads," according to Brian Solis, a digital analyst, anthropologist, and best-selling author. As an early geek apologist of Web 2.0 and social media, Solis saw digital Darwinism as a forcing function of humanity. Now he believes we have unwittingly become the problem we were trying to solve.
After studying technology's evolution, the effects on business and society are undeniable - we f'd up. But it's not all our fault.
By design, social media and personal devices were meant to suck us in. But, there were also unforeseen consequences as a result. We fell to the dark side.
In this rousing and personal anthology, Brian (an eternal optimist) will share the history of how the disrupters became the devils and the opportunities for us to resurrect our idealism.
On Brands, Technology and Feelings.
(20)12 Things to think about:
1. CAN WE BET SMALL AND WIN BIG?
2. WHAT WILL BE THE NEXT BIG THING?
3. CAN WE PREDICT THE FUTURE?
4. WHERE DO WE LOOK FOR INSPIRATION?
5. CAN THE BRAND BE THE CURATOR?
6. HOW IMPORTANT IS THE PRODUCT?
7. WHICH CHANNEL IS THE BEST?
8.. WHAT IS HAPPENING IN THE MARKET?
9. WHAT IS A VIRAL?
10. WHAT IS GOOD CONTENT?
11. IS THERE A KEY TO INNOVATION?
12. HOW BIG ARE THE POSSIBILITIES?
The Dark Side of Social Media: It's Time to Take Tech Back by Brian Solis, SX...Brian Solis
"We're at a digital and human crossroads," according to Brian Solis, a digital analyst, anthropologist, and best-selling author. As an early geek apologist of Web 2.0 and social media, Solis saw digital Darwinism as a forcing function of humanity. Now he believes we have unwittingly become the problem we were trying to solve.
After studying technology's evolution, the effects on business and society are undeniable - we f'd up. But it's not all our fault.
By design, social media and personal devices were meant to suck us in. But, there were also unforeseen consequences as a result. We fell to the dark side.
In this rousing and personal anthology, Brian (an eternal optimist) will share the history of how the disrupters became the devils and the opportunities for us to resurrect our idealism.
(20)11 things to think about for brands and marketers.
What will be the next big thing? Will it be anything like the last big thing? Can we be inspired by what the big things have in common?
“When it comes to the future, there are three kinds of people: those who let it happen, those who make it happen, and those who wonder what happened.”
-- John M. Richardson, Jr.
The rate of change that both customers and businesses have to deal with today, is nothing short of phenomenal. Now imagine the world that the children of today and your customers of tomorrow are going to grow up in…
Delving into the Net Generation and the Next Net Generation, this keynote is a trip into the future, through the eyes of the children that will grow up in it. Part inspiring, part scary - Future Kids Future Customers is an in-depth examination of how our culture will become affected by the technology around us and the social and market changes it is causing. It will make you re-look at your business model, re-examine your customer service strategy, re-invent your products and re-convene your strategy team.
The future waits for no one. Better to be prepared.
The kids of today are growing up in a crazy technology-infested culture, a culture that will have a profound effect on the way we market to, service, find, hire and retain the next generation of customers and staff. This keynote looks at the trends affecting the customers of tomorrow, your kids of today. www.andyhadfield.com
Microsoft's annual inspirational global hackathon, oneweek invites all employees to tinker. There are new product expos, a speaker series and parties. CEO, Satya Nadella wraps it all up with a rousing talk.
Exactly the kind of All Hands you’d expect from a company laser focused on reinventing culture.
Here you can see some of the work we did with Microsoft around changes at play there, especially culture. We created this as an internal e-book to spread the word about change, it's now available for public viewing!
Every time a rich idea is oversimplified we have done it a disservice. That is especially true in marketing. Soundbites and tag lines have their place but consumers are craving more information to make informed decisions. We hope you enjoy this paper from Swystun Communications.
Africa has a certain flair for innovation - this keynote explores how Africa has managed to continue to innovate despite disadvantages. It covers Alternative Energy, Mobile Payments, Crowdsourcing, Scratch Card distribution channels and Alternative Power.
Stories of a continent solving real problems, not #FirstWorldProblems!
Bob Sutton author of "Scaling Up Excellence" & “Good Boss Bad Boss” says. “But, if you want to see real innovation, often you have to hire defiant rule-breakers who don’t think much of corporate culture.”
How to cultivate Positive Deviants in your organization who can drive the change and innovation you need to keep your business ahead in the market.
Culture 2.0: Why Digital Cultures are a Competitive Advantage - Brian Solis K...Brian Solis
"Digital cultures offer a competitive advantage" says Brian Solis, leading digital anthropologist, futurist and keynote speaker. Brian shared the importance of building a digital culture to compete in an era of what he calls "digital Darwinism." At the center of it, is not technology, it's a renewed human-centered approach to employee engagement and experiences designed for modern trends, life and work styles and competitiveness.
Communicate Your Value - and Brand Yourself to Win (Designer Edition)Eric Weaver
Presentation to the Seattle Graphic Artists Guild on 3/27/13. Audience: design professionals. Topic: learn how to create a personal brand strategy, why it's important, how to create a personal online footprint, best practices and cautionary tales.
What If PR Stood for People and Relationships By Brian SolisCision
In partnership with Vocus and Cision, Brian Solis released his new e-book, “What If PR Stood for People and Relationships?,” illustrated by world-renowned cartoonist Gapingvoid.
A principal analyst at Altimeter Group, Solis is an award-winning author, prominent blogger and frequent keynote speaker. In the free e-book, he challenges PR pros to use technology to strengthen stakeholder relations to deliver business outcomes. Solis says relationships must be the guiding force for the modern communicator’s actions.
Check out the e-book to learn:
• A vision for the PR industry in the digital era
• A PR-centric approach to adapting new technologies
• The means to avoid “shiny object” syndrome
Fallon Brainfood: From Boring to Big BangAki Spicer
...From Boring to Big Bang: How Causes Can Get Interesting And Get Attention From News and Newsfeeds . Presented at Strategy for Good Twin Cities, December 10, 2011.
Aki Spicer, Director of Digital Strategy at Fallon Worldwide, challenges social entrepreneurs and non-profits with a framework for brainstorming their marketing initiatives into bigger, more "social" ideas.
Presenstation made at the Bombay Management Association Seminar on How to use Social Media for Business. Grass root level understanding on using Social Media, Case Studies and suggestions on building Social Media Strategies
(20)11 things to think about for brands and marketers.
What will be the next big thing? Will it be anything like the last big thing? Can we be inspired by what the big things have in common?
“When it comes to the future, there are three kinds of people: those who let it happen, those who make it happen, and those who wonder what happened.”
-- John M. Richardson, Jr.
The rate of change that both customers and businesses have to deal with today, is nothing short of phenomenal. Now imagine the world that the children of today and your customers of tomorrow are going to grow up in…
Delving into the Net Generation and the Next Net Generation, this keynote is a trip into the future, through the eyes of the children that will grow up in it. Part inspiring, part scary - Future Kids Future Customers is an in-depth examination of how our culture will become affected by the technology around us and the social and market changes it is causing. It will make you re-look at your business model, re-examine your customer service strategy, re-invent your products and re-convene your strategy team.
The future waits for no one. Better to be prepared.
The kids of today are growing up in a crazy technology-infested culture, a culture that will have a profound effect on the way we market to, service, find, hire and retain the next generation of customers and staff. This keynote looks at the trends affecting the customers of tomorrow, your kids of today. www.andyhadfield.com
Microsoft's annual inspirational global hackathon, oneweek invites all employees to tinker. There are new product expos, a speaker series and parties. CEO, Satya Nadella wraps it all up with a rousing talk.
Exactly the kind of All Hands you’d expect from a company laser focused on reinventing culture.
Here you can see some of the work we did with Microsoft around changes at play there, especially culture. We created this as an internal e-book to spread the word about change, it's now available for public viewing!
Every time a rich idea is oversimplified we have done it a disservice. That is especially true in marketing. Soundbites and tag lines have their place but consumers are craving more information to make informed decisions. We hope you enjoy this paper from Swystun Communications.
Africa has a certain flair for innovation - this keynote explores how Africa has managed to continue to innovate despite disadvantages. It covers Alternative Energy, Mobile Payments, Crowdsourcing, Scratch Card distribution channels and Alternative Power.
Stories of a continent solving real problems, not #FirstWorldProblems!
Bob Sutton author of "Scaling Up Excellence" & “Good Boss Bad Boss” says. “But, if you want to see real innovation, often you have to hire defiant rule-breakers who don’t think much of corporate culture.”
How to cultivate Positive Deviants in your organization who can drive the change and innovation you need to keep your business ahead in the market.
Culture 2.0: Why Digital Cultures are a Competitive Advantage - Brian Solis K...Brian Solis
"Digital cultures offer a competitive advantage" says Brian Solis, leading digital anthropologist, futurist and keynote speaker. Brian shared the importance of building a digital culture to compete in an era of what he calls "digital Darwinism." At the center of it, is not technology, it's a renewed human-centered approach to employee engagement and experiences designed for modern trends, life and work styles and competitiveness.
Communicate Your Value - and Brand Yourself to Win (Designer Edition)Eric Weaver
Presentation to the Seattle Graphic Artists Guild on 3/27/13. Audience: design professionals. Topic: learn how to create a personal brand strategy, why it's important, how to create a personal online footprint, best practices and cautionary tales.
What If PR Stood for People and Relationships By Brian SolisCision
In partnership with Vocus and Cision, Brian Solis released his new e-book, “What If PR Stood for People and Relationships?,” illustrated by world-renowned cartoonist Gapingvoid.
A principal analyst at Altimeter Group, Solis is an award-winning author, prominent blogger and frequent keynote speaker. In the free e-book, he challenges PR pros to use technology to strengthen stakeholder relations to deliver business outcomes. Solis says relationships must be the guiding force for the modern communicator’s actions.
Check out the e-book to learn:
• A vision for the PR industry in the digital era
• A PR-centric approach to adapting new technologies
• The means to avoid “shiny object” syndrome
Fallon Brainfood: From Boring to Big BangAki Spicer
...From Boring to Big Bang: How Causes Can Get Interesting And Get Attention From News and Newsfeeds . Presented at Strategy for Good Twin Cities, December 10, 2011.
Aki Spicer, Director of Digital Strategy at Fallon Worldwide, challenges social entrepreneurs and non-profits with a framework for brainstorming their marketing initiatives into bigger, more "social" ideas.
Presenstation made at the Bombay Management Association Seminar on How to use Social Media for Business. Grass root level understanding on using Social Media, Case Studies and suggestions on building Social Media Strategies
How Chartered Accountants (and other professionals ) can use Social Media for find new business oportunties. Presentation has reference to relevant case studies
This presentation covers basic concepts, various social media platforms, the exponential growth of social media, case studies on how social media has benefited businesses. Also this presentation lays our a detailed road map on how chartered accountants can use the medium for business purposes
This presentation covers basic concepts, various social media platforms, the exponential growth of social media, case studies on how social media has benefited businesses and a detailed road map for building one's social media presence on the web.
Slides from a lecture at Goldsmiths looking at the change in online identity. Asking whether we can be more playful with our social media engagements. Also notes on analysing how 'Human' social media output is from Arts Organisations in the UK.
Y&R Advertising sent some of its brightest minds to the SXSW Interactive Festival and here’s what they had to say about the trends at the intersection of technology, innovation, and advertising, and what they mean for brands today.
You’ve heard of social media, you have a Facebook account, and you may have even delved into the world of tweeting, but are these social medial tools utilized to help jumpstart word of mouth buzz and traffic for your website and business? Learning social media can mean the difference between millions of views. Combining the powerhouse of social media makes your business more relevant, more watched and more successful.
Tippie MBA Marketing Academy Guest LectureLydia Fine
These are the slides from my guest lecture at the Tippie Full-time MBA Marketing Academy session on December 1, 2011. Contact Lydia Fine at lydia-fine@uiowa.edu with questions or clarifications. Please cite Lydia Fine, University of Iowa as your source if you reuse any of this material.
This guide is produced free by the Institute of Creative and Cultural Entrepreneurship. It is for Artists, Start-ups, Charities and Cultural Entrepreneurs. It offers a powerful and unique human perspective on digital marketing and the power of social media.
Goldsmiths Social Media Markting Course - 9th Nov - Discovering the essence of each social network by looking at the words of their CEO's. More details at: http://www.gold.ac.uk/short-courses/social-media-marketing/
http://www.christopherhogg.net
Explore Sarasota Collection's exquisite and long-lasting dining table sets and chairs in Sarasota. Elevate your dining experience with our high-quality collection!
What You're Going to Learn
- How These 4 Leaks Force You To Work Longer And Harder in order to grow your income… improve just one of these and the impact could be life changing.
- How to SHUT DOWN the revolving door of Income Stagnation… you know, where new sales come into your magazine while at the same time existing sponsors exit.
- How to transform your magazine business by fixing the 4 “DON’Ts”...
#1 LEADS Don’t Book
#2 PROSPECTS Don’t Show
#3 PROSPECTS Don’t Buy
#4 CLIENTS Don’t Stay
- How to identify which leak to fix first so you get the biggest bang for your income.
- Get actionable strategies you can use right away to improve your bookings, sales and retention.
Best Crypto Marketing Ideas to Lead Your Project to SuccessIntelisync
In this comprehensive slideshow presentation, we delve into the intricacies of crypto marketing, offering invaluable insights and strategies to propel your project to success in the dynamic cryptocurrency landscape. From understanding market trends to building a robust brand identity, engaging with influencers, and analyzing performance metrics, we cover all aspects essential for effective marketing in the crypto space.
Also Intelisync, our cutting-edge service designed to streamline and optimize your marketing efforts, leveraging data-driven insights and innovative strategies to drive growth and visibility for your project.
With a data-driven approach, transparent communication, and a commitment to excellence, InteliSync is your trusted partner for driving meaningful impact in the fast-paced world of Web3. Contact us today to learn more and embark on a journey to crypto marketing mastery!
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Arts adminsocialmediamasterclassmar2016 day1-160207192550
1. What does it mean to be digital - The
Art & Joy of over-sharing
ICCE Entrepreneurs Masterclass
8th of March 2016
London
2. Bring you to the latest thinking about digital
marketing.
Understand your digital identity.
Understand how to communicate
Know how to create a social media strategy.
In short you will be you own little digital
agency.
By the end you will
3. In the last 24 months this has
happened.
• Smartphone penetration is now at 78%(UK).
• Mobile and Tablet is the preferred way for new
customers to find out about new
brands/Events/Ideas.
• People can begin a journey with you from
anywhere.
• Smart phones are the hub of people’s lives. They
way they organize themselves. There is a place for
you on someone’s phone.
4. Owned Media, Bought Media, and Earned Media
Think of Smartphones as your BBC 1, BBC 2, ITV
– a device that you can distribute content on.
There is great value in what is shared. Facebook
and Twitter don’t make you pay for it.
Smartphones & Sharing
5. I wanted to see how
I had changed
because of my use
of smartphones, and
the best way to do
that was to go back
just 7 years.
The golden age of mobile phones
7. Less able to remember information as we crowd
source answers from friends and Google.
We are less able to concentrate if we know we
have a message on our phones.
Often what we think of as multi-tasking is in fact
just task switching.
Distraction is hindering our ability to process
memories and store them long term. (Long term
effect unknown)
(Don’t worry this has happened before)
Some side effects
Your logo here
8. This happened in the last week!
Facebook’s results – now over a billion daily active users, 78% of
ad revenue from mobile
http://investor.fb.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=940609
Facebook’s now generating 8bn video views a day (it’s doubled
since April)
http://techcrunch.com/2015/11/04/facebook-video-views/#.utqin1:3hRD
BBC launches a paid download store for recent and old shows (UK
only
http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2015-11/05/bbc-store
Amazon opens a physical store in the US
http://www.geekwire.com/2015/its-official-amazon-is-opening-its-first-
ever-bookstore-in-seattle/
26. People post – whole business strategies.
Slideshare
Linda.com
A whole business school of videos.
What are the most under rated Social
Networks?
27. Timeline Attention Span
• Which Social Network has the
longest attention span half-life?
a)Facebook
b)Twitter
c)Direct Links via Messenger
d)Youtube
30. Your logo here
We tend to live in the
distracted present, where the
forces of the periphery are
magnified and those of in front
of us ignored. Our ability to
create, plan, much less follow
through on, is undermined by
our need to be able to
improvise our way through any
number of infernal impacts
that stand to derail us at any
moment.
Douglas Rushkoff
Present Shock
31. Narrative Collapse
There is no society doesn’t tell
stories.
Storytelling is how we transmit
value, it has a cultural use.
It creates context. It is
comforting and orienting. It
helps smooth out obstacles
and impediments by recasting
them as bumps along the road
to some better place.
But
How do we tell stories and
convey values without the time
required to tell a linear story?
32. Create a character
Put them in danger
Heighten tension unbearably
Release tension (with a product).
Traditional Narrative Technique
Your logo here
34. Your logo here
Douglas Rushkoff
- 'You don't click the remote to
change channels because you
are bored, but because you
are mad. Someone you don't
trust is attempting to make you
anxious.'
What makes you change TV
channels?
38. Public and Private are blurred in Social Media.
DAVID: @davidRathband. 3016 Tweets. 319
Following. 11042 Followers. Sad to announce
Mrs R has called time on our marriage.
Separation permanent.
KATH: @KathRathband. 2754 Tweets. 605
Following. 1228 followers. Slight inaccuracy in
the tweet by @pcdavidrathband – He left us
and refuses to come home. #TheTruthWillOut
40. Personal Data
Fitbit, Garmin, and Nike—say they don't sell personally identifiable
information collected from fitness devices. But privacy advocates warn that
the policies of these firms could allow them to sell data, if they ever choose
to do so.
41. Most data companies see people like this. They are
interested in great and profitable migrations of wallets.
They only really see computers – they don’t see the people
46. We are all changing.
With our new
knowledge of Social
networking, comes
a desire to
understand the
value of the types of
our new social
relationships.
How much can we
trust these
technologies?
How much do we
trust the people
within our networks
Also how much do
we trust our
governments.
52. Everyone has at least two identities.
We have a work identity and and home one.
When it comes to our own digital brand it is
helpful to try and bring these persona’s
together.
What is your personal brand
53. Write down the roles that you have in your life.
Father, brother, entrepreneur, writer, sometimes
a teacher.
Choose at least 6.
What excites you about each of these roles?
Come up with a 8 word sentence to describe
yourself.
e.g – 101 Dalmatians - Spotted puppies avoid
futures as fur coat components.
Exercise
54. Look at your roles.
Look at your partners, potential customers,
stakeholders.
Look at what their job is . Define it.
What are their biggest problems.
What are they trying to do?
How can you help them as individuals?
How can you make their pains go away, how
can you help them grow?
Pains and Gains.
61. Fragments are often de-
contextualised. You don’t
know what came before of
after.
You have to build context
– You have to create a
sense of satisfaction in
non narrative means.
How do you rebuild
context and narrative?
You provide the trust &
Authenticity by sharing.
Fragments & Authenticity
63. You need less contracts.
Important when you can’t monitor your
employees work.
Trust is especially needed in the creative
industries.
Litigation Is less frequent.
Less resources to protecting yourself. Tax,
Insurance, bribes or private security.
Low trust discourages innovation. More time to
dealing with bad employees, partners etc
Trust
Your logo here
64. (Arrow 1972) – Economic actions that require
some agents to rely on the future action of
others are accomplished at lower costs in
higher trust environments.
“Virtually every commercial transaction has
within itself an element of trust, certainly every
transaction conducted over a period of time.”
Much economic backwardness in the world can
be explained by the lack of mutual confidence.
What trust makes possible.
Your logo here
66. Exercise
Fill in the time line completely. (25mins)
Once you have finished. Choose one of the
metaphorical images and use it as the title
for a 5 minute piece of automatic writing.
You are not allowed to let your hand stop
moving during these 3 minutes.
Write about a project you are interested in
developing.
67. Taking control of the fragments
The sip pitch. – It is the pitch you can do
whilst someone is taking a sip of their drink.
A sip pitch is always the answer to the
question about what you do. Or what your
project is.
So what do you do......
Oh me? I ……….
It it a good sip pitch it will be intriguing
enough to illicit another question.
68. The Trust Curve & Social Media
Your logo here
Social media
gives
momentum
Sip
Pitch
74. Markets are conversations.
Markets consist of human beings, not demographic sectors.
Conversations among human beings sound human. They are conducted in a
human voice.
Whether delivering information, opinions, perspectives, dissenting arguments
or humorous asides, the human voice is typically open, natural, uncontrived.
People recognize each other as such from the sound of this voice.
The Internet is enabling conversations among human beings that were simply
not possible in the era of mass media.
In both internetworked markets and among intranetworked employees, people
are speaking to each other in a powerful new way.
These networked conversations are enabling powerful new forms of social
organization and knowledge exchange to emerge.
As a result, markets are getting smarter, more informed, more organized.
Participation in a networked market changes people fundamentally.
People in networked markets have figured out that they get far better
information and support from one another than from vendors. So much for
corporate rhetoric about adding value to commoditized products.
Here are the first 10 points
79. It is the Social Network that is most open
with Data.
It is the social network where influencers are
most open with themselves.
They are in fact a modern newspaper
curated by yourself.
Let’s looks at Twitter
Your logo here
85. Hashtags make your posts searchable in
Twitter.
Hashtags are after-thoughts, theatrical asides.
Hashtags prove your are human.
Hashtags improve your search engine rankings.
An exercise in Hashtags
86. Let the weekend begin!
Wearing socks with Crocs is so stylish
Just dropped my second ice cream cone.
Daily Memes - #FollowFriday
Let’s make some.
87. How to get involved in
conversations.
Find your industry’s hashtags.
Listen to the conversations. (Lurk Moar)
Find people you like who are building up social
capital. Follow them.
Retweet what you agree with. But always make a
comment.
They will then follow you.
88. Rule 65: Every cat leads to another cat.
Hemingway and Anonymous.
89. #SocEnt (social entrepreneur/entrepreneurship)
#SocEntChat (monthly social entrepreneur chat by Ashoka)
#socialentrepreneur (for those who don’t know about #SocEnt)
#Prize4SC (prize for social change)
#4change (that’s right, “for change”)
#BoP (base/bottom of the pyramid)
#nonprofit (self-explanatory)
#nptech (nonprofit technology)
#SSIR (Stanford Social Innovation Review)
#i4c (internet for change)
Research your industry’s Hashtags
91. What is the privacy situation for what you post?
You lose your rights to the content that you post.
There is no choice, or nothing could be shared.
Twitter is not liable for anything that is shared.
Social Media also use Cookie Data. To try and
make advertising effective. Twitter scan
conversations for key-words, as does FB.
Use of data in marketing is quite benign.
92. New Data tools
Twitter is the most open with Data
In groups of three investigate the following tools and be prepared to report
back to the group about what they do and why they might be valuable.
Group 1. - http://nuzzel.com
Group 2. - http://lissted.com
Group 3. http://www.ritetag.com
Group 4 http://discovery.affinio.com/
Group 5 http://bluenod.com
How could these tools help in the launch of Coffee Club?
93. Compare the audience of @hasbean @PACTcoffee and @cafedirect
Find the number of followers who follow all three accounts.
Look at a few of their followers biogs, what does this tell you about
them?
Look at the percentage of @contacts, Retweets and URL tweets
Which business do you think is doing the best job?
What is Pact Coffee doing that is different to the rest?
The amazing Followerwonk
97. Aims of today are…
1. To understand the relationship between data and
creativity in modern digital advertising.
2. To understand different types of data and how it is
used in digital advertising.
3. Show some megatrends.
4. Understand the differences of earned, owned and
bought media.
5. To understand models of video distribution
5. Case Study Time
99. Fork in the road
Data
Creativity
One way to look Media Agencies as
Google re-sellers.
100. Personal Data
Your logo here
Fitbit, Garmin, and Nike—say they don't sell personally identifiable
information collected from fitness devices. But privacy advocates warn that
the policies of these firms could allow them to sell data, if they ever choose
to do so.
102. To make sure your ad gets to the right person.
To measure how engaging the ad was.
To try and re-target you to buy stuff.
To try and find more of you.
To optimIn digital advertising, data is used
in three basic ways.
ise campaigns in real time.
103. Think of engagement data as the chemical
reaction between the viewer, the viewability of
the ad, the offer, and how busy that person was
at the time.
110. An example of how data is used.
Your logo here
The chance of an Web user clicking on an ad and
going straight to the purchase page is about as
likely as a pedestrian hailing a taxi and asking the
driver to take him or her directly to the place
advertised on the side of the cab – VERY SMALL.
It is more likely the user will make
a note and visit later. Online,
you can measure exactly this:
the branding effect.
111. Your logo here
User Sees a banner, remembers it,
but DOES NOT CLICK
Adserver sets a cookie set in
internet browser
Goes to site within 90
days and buys
something
User Gets another
cookie set in
browser
Cookie sent back
To adserver / agency
Events
Correlated
Post Click and Post View
112. What happens when you clear your cookies?
Have you assessed how visible you are?
Here’s how free and easy Twitter is with
Data.
Followerwonk
Privacy - What do you do?
Your logo here
113. Privacy & Social Media
You lose your rights to the content that you post.
There is no choice, or nothing could be shared.
Twitter is not liable for anything that is shared.
Social Media also use Cookie Data. To try and
make advertising effective. Twitter scan
conversations for key-words, as does FB.
Use of data in marketing is quite benign.
114. To find which creative is working.
To find which sites worked.
To find which times worked best.
Optimise campaigns in real time.
To stop wasted money.
The internet is an ever expanding canvass – there is little
choice.
Real-time Optimisation.
Your logo here
115. Owned Media, Bought Media, and Earned Media
Think of Smartphones as your BBC 1, BBC 2, ITV
– a device that you can distribute content on.
There is great value in what is shared. Facebook
and Twitter don’t make you pay for it.
Smartphones & Sharing
117. Here are the main providers of
data in digital marketing
Your logo here
118. Types of Targeting
When using an ad server
Site
Date
Time
Browser
Connection
Speed
Operating System
IP address
Frequency Capping
Internet Service Provider
Geo-IP
Key-word and key value
Cookie-targeting
Re-targeting
Optimisation Engines
S
T
A
N
D
A
R
D
Contextual/behavioural combined
R
E
T
A
R
G
E
T
I
N
G
Surround sessions
Contextual
I
N
T
E
N
T
I
O
N
A
L
Audience Segmentation
Tastes and interests
128. Interactivity – Click Here!
Measurability – especially ROI calculations
Targetability - Like never before.
Flexibility – defining trait.
What defines Digital Marketing
from other forms of advertising?
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130. Your logo here
Douglas Rushkoff
- 'You don't click the remote to
change channels because you
are bored, but because you
are mad. Someone you don't
trust is attempting to make you
anxious.'
What makes you change channels?
131. Old broadcast model is broken
The consumer is in control; interruption just doesn't
work any more.
Brands that are not relevant will be ignored.
Brands need to create situations where people seek to
spend time with them.
Keywords: explore, learn, share, question and play.
Agencies create this time’.
By the end of 2007, the forecast is that 50% of all
media consumed shall be digital
Marketing 10 years ago – What is still true?
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132. The consumer is no longer captive – they
are a constantly moving target. Escape from
ads is easy.
Hence the use of data. With second
screening, linear narrative structure is
completely changed.
Is narrative is more like a computer game.
What’s different? Smartphones.
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133. In the last 24 months this has happened.
• Smartphone penetration is now at 75%.
• Mobile and Tablet is the preferred way for new customers to
find out about new brands.
• People can begin a journey with you from anywhere.
• They are an accessible way to distribution tools for your ideas
and content.
• Smarthpones are Newspapers where people curate their own
news.
• Facebook and Twitter Own this space. 86% of our time mobile
time is spent via apps and not mobile web.
134. If the ad before the video content was 6
seconds people watched the content.
If it was 7 seconds people didn’t take a risk
on the content.
They didn’t take the risk of bad content.
Fragments & Youtube Rule
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135. One of these models is very profitable for media agencies, one
isn’t.
136. Goldsmiths Video Fragment
A small video advertising Case
Study
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141. Video engagement can mean a hundred
different things: watching the ad, watching
part of it, starting the ad, clicking on the ad,
finishing the ad,
Read more:
http://insights.wired.com/profiles/blogs/how-
to-measure-engagement-for-online-
video#ixzz3rp7G3RaV
Video Engagement
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Everything is connected.
The Pixar Theory that all of the Pixar movies actually exist within the same universe.
http://www.pixartheory.com/ - demo of connections
Everything is connected
So how do you start taking back the power of your brand in order to tell your brand story?
You start by looking for patterns and realising that everything is connected. Everything you are, everything you do and everything you say.
All the world’s a stage
Session 1: Who am I? 15 minutes
Most of us (and this applies to businesses as well) are trying to manage at least two personalities. Who we are in our professional context and who are we in our social context?
There is only one version of you. The more you fight to keep them separate the more fragmented you become, the more energy you use and the less time you spend being who you are really meant to be.
We tend to wear masks. There are lots of different psychological and sociological theories about why masking but I’m quite interested in the concept of Dramaturgy, the theory that we wear different character and or social masks depending on the audience, situation, and or view of the theatre of life that we are currently performing in.
But is that authentic and what does that do to the story we are trying to tell about ourselves and our personal brands? Do we push out narratives rather than have or be open to have dialogue and real connections?
Now I’m going to ask you to strip that back and hold a mirror up to yourselves for a moment. Look at the person behind those different masks and see what patterns see and can you make any connections?
What character, identity or masks do we wear?
What excites us but those different masks or identities?
I’d like you to take 8 pieces of paper and on the top of each write down what role you currently play (personally or professionally) e.g. Mother, Daughter, Entrepreneur….(2 mins)
When you have written all 8, go back to the first piece of paper and now write underneath, what excites you about that role.
Now I want you to rank those pieces of paper in order of importance to you where you are now in your life/ career. Don’t worry the order can change but this is about you in the NOW.
Now looking at your top 3, find a partner and have a short discussion about each of those roles and there reason they excite you.
Ask for some to share with the group and reflect on any personal revelations/ surprises.
What’s your story?
Describe yourself in 6 words or less.