יום שלישי, 2 בספטמבר 2014

traffic

Traffic is important for your SMB, but not all traffic is good. Marketing your website is vital to drive traffic to your website. However, a number of website owners focus on number and not on relevant traffic.
Getting relevant website traffic is not that easy! Attracting the right visitors is much more difficult than creating the actual website for your SMB, and from getting just general traffic. You can have the greatest looking site in the world, but without relevant traffic, is there any point? Here are some tips that will help you get more relevant traffic to your website.

What is Website Traffic, and How do you Know if it’s Relevant?
If you have asked yourself this question over and over again, it is time to sit down and look at your website traffic. Website traffic is driven by pay-per-click ads, social media, search engines, links on other websites 

QAs

Alan questioned the extent of deception that some brands would go to in order to drive clicks to their content. Brands need to realize however, that content marketing can and will blow up in their faces if the content doesn’t deliver value, or if they try to camouflage sell tactics as content. So what if you succeed in driving eyeballs to your content. If it doesn’t deliver value, consumers will rebel. In a nutshell – don’t try to bullshit the audience.
3.     Think differently about measurement
Unfortunately, many marketers focus on clicks and thus fall into the deception trap because that is the only way they know how to measure success. The challenge to prove the business value of content is real, and this was something that Omer Sher from P&G brought up. He explained that even before creating the content, brands have to determine the “business objective of content” to ensure that the marketing component of content marketing is realised at the end. He added that content must be viewed as part of the larger “content marketing ecosystem” and created with the business uplift factor in mind.
[Content Conversations Singapore 6]
Content marketing requires investment, but how do you translate that into business outcomes?
The group discussed the need to switch the yardstick of success and to base success on the audience’s perception on content quality, instead of just the number of clicks. An alternative idea from Jim Ribbans at Fox International Channels, was to split one good piece of content and dedicate resources to developing more good content out of those separated pieces. At a lower cost and with a wider outreach to non-traditional platforms (e.g. websites, social media), these pieces of content can achieve both quality and audience reach. Of course, content quality needs to be prioritized over platform quality.
[Content Conversations Singapore 7]
Omer also talked about choosing the right agency partners because they can help you explain the business of content, and link it back to the business strategy, which leads me to my last point.
4.     Partner with the right people
There are multiple parties in the content marketing ecosystem. Who delivers the most value? What roles do they play? Kudos Content shared that journalists are no longer sole content creators and need to work with brands to finalise a piece of editorial content that is of value to both parties. At the same time, media or public relations agencies help mediate the two parties, whilst working to bridge the gap between creation and distribution. The whole content marketing process is now a giant amalgamated concept.
[Content Conversations Singapore 8]
The content creation process
Content creation is a lot about collaboration and finding the right partnerships. The key to success is effective communication across all partners so everyone is on the same page and can rely on each other. Of course, this takes effort and calls on today’s content creators to invest quality time in their partners to guarantee a project’s success.
I personally find this new content creation process very interesting in the way it engages everyone, from creator to distributor to consumer. I attempted making sense of this huge “ecosystem” and my main takeaway is the need to jointly assess all the content assets with partners and work together to craft out a content creation process that suits your brand’s specific needs. But the job isn’t done once content is published. What is critical is to also put in place a process that allows brands to take signals and feedback from consumers’ interaction with the content, and feed it back into the content creation process. Content creation is never linear.
P.S. if you ever feel boxed in by the wealth of options (e.g. platforms, publishers, industry contacts, etc.) or face a ‘tyranny of choice’, keep calm and ask yourself Nick’s simple guiding questions:
5 Simple Questions to Get to the Content Marketing Strategy:
1.     What are your goals and objectives?
2.     Is your editorial strategy top-down (from supplier to consumer) or bottom-up?
3.     What form or content do you want?
4.     What distribution channels are you using?
5.     How do you monetize this?
The biggest pitfall in content creation is to let the ‘tyranny of choice’ lead to a ‘paralysis of choice’ - where content creators cannot decide on one platform and therefore, take zero action.
To wrap it – this was certainly a night to remember, and I look forward to taking the conversation to the next level at our next Content Conversations, where we will be discussing content distribution. Stay tuned for more details to come. If you are not already part of the Meetup group, please sign up here.
If you want to hear more about how Outbrain can help you get results from your content marketing in Asia, please don’t hesitate to get in touch with me directly or through our team email address – asia@outbrain.com

content convention

At our last Content Conversations Meet-up in Singapore back in November 2013, we debated about whether content marketing was worth its hype. We decided collectively that it is real, powerful and here to stay.
Yet we see many brands today hesitate to embark on their own content marketing journeys. What’s stopping them? In a word – fear.
Lack of knowledge of how to create good content is the single biggest barrier to brands embarking on their own content marketing journeys. To tackle that challenge, we brought the industry together again for our 3rd Content Conversations Meetup in Singapore late last month, to discuss and dissect great content, and find out just what makes content discoverable, searchable and shareable.
Armed with a new ‘in the round’ format and a star-studded line up of some of the best content creation minds in the region, we packed the house with a record turnout of over 100 social media, marketing, start-up and public relations aficionados to tackle the content beast itself and find out how brands can create great content.
[Content Conversations SIngapore 1]
 With my co-host Don Anderson from Fleishman Hillard, we facilitated an enlightening, fast-paced, and sometimes controversial discussion that yielded some great insights from the likes of Click2View’s Neal Moore, BrandNewMedia’s Nick Fawbert, P&G’s Omer Sher, Yahoo! Singapore’s Alan Soon and more.
Not limited to the on-site discussion, we also saw a fluid exchange of ideas via live Tweets from the audience, using the hashtag, #ContentConversations.
Here is a recap of some of my key takeaways from the night:
1.     Good content is a great story
At our last event, we talked about how people love to tell and share stories, and the most compelling stories appeal to people the world over, regardless of geography, culture, age, gender or language. That is in a nutshell, what brands need to get to. Every brand has a great story to tell – they just need to find it.
[Content Conversations Singapore 3]
 The challenge is finding honest stories that also resonate with the brand identity. It is not just about creating content that appeals to the consumer. It should also be built upon a brand’s goals and objectives. Alan Soon from Yahoo! Singapore shared the example of Bowen’s Big Mango publicity stunt. The ‘disappearing act’ certainly stirred up hype, but enraged consumers in the end when it turned out to be a stunt for a local fast food chain. Alan emphasised the need for an ‘elevated view’ on how to encourage brands to dig deeper into what that brand really stands for.

dig!

Developing the relationship between your brand and an audience it critical to any content marketing effort.  But who is that audience, how are you connecting with them, and how can you develop those relationships at the scale required to meet business objectives and not those of the simple hobbyist?
In general, content marketing cuts a wide swath across the marketing spectrum, creating a range of possibilities for blending tactics to generate a cohesive and lasting impression.  But any honest assessment of this space will show you just how complex it is, with media opportunities from search to social, display to discovery, all of which carry inherent benefits and tradeoffs.
Welcome to the morass that may otherwise be known as audience development.
We’ll aim to provide a clear lens into cost, effectiveness, insight and analysis – the ingredients, shall we say -- that might help you put together your own recipe for success.
Dig in. 

video

Video is well on its way to becoming the whiz-kid of content marketing. The form is mobile and dynamic, highly shareable, and, if employed correctly, can be far more engaging than standard text-driven marketing. Video also offers a brilliant way to give your company a human face, and to target a younger, more tech-savvy market. Despite these notable and proven assets, however, many marketers have been slow to dive in to this trend, and are now scrambling for ways to take advantage of video content marketing.
If you’re a marketing or brand leader who’s nervous about video, you may not be able to put it off any longer. YouTube predicts that soon 90% of internet traffic will be video. While that may seem like a bold claim, the fact that YouTube logs over 1 trillion hits per year makes that claim one to take notice of.
With that in mind, and to help you get started or take your video campaigns to the next level, we’re presenting some of our favorite do’s and don’ts for executing killer video content marketing.

mobile go!

Mobile Marketing Campaigns are a Must Today.
Mobile marketing campaigns are reaching a growing audience which means one of two things for your company’s content marketing strategy. As mobile is only increasing in usage, companies can adapt to it and increase their consumer base. Alternatively, they can remain in their current desktop-oriented strategies and eventually see erosion of their client audience.
Since 2009, consumption time on mobile among has tripled among Americans and  now accounts for 12% of all media consumption. With little reason to project a downturn in this trend, companies that grasp the need to adapt now will be that far ahead of the competition in a few years.
Why Use Mobile Marketing?
study by Outbrain revealed that mobile devices are taking a slice out of the pie of content delivery enjoyed on desktop. Though 82% is still accessed by desktops, the remaining 18% is being accessed by more 

content health

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