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Overcoming the Learning Curve – Ad Network vs. Ad Exchange

January 16th, 2012 / Banner Network, Design, Digital Advertising, Digital Campaigns, Digital Media Buying/Planning, Web Development by Jordan Yospe - Digital Media Director

Many advertisers we talk to everyday have a general understanding of the display advertising space. They know the jargon of CPM, skyscraper, and ad networks. HyperX prides ourselves on our core products of search engine marketing, web and banner creative services, and specifically our niche banner advertising networks that allow advertisers to get in front of their potential customers. This includes the HyperX Local Ad Network, which we’ve run campaigns on for 20+ markets and hundreds of clients with direct relationships on the sites we advertise with.

We also understand that online marketing is an adapting and changing environment, and enjoy the challenges of each new day. Because of this, as of late HyperX Media has been launching new services in banner engagement tracking, White Labeled Ad Serving, Lead Generation, Pre-Roll Video advertising, Behavioral Targeting, and Retargeting. We are also helping client to leverage the power of the internet, including RTB (real-time bidding) and Ad Exchanges. We view the Ad Exchange environment as complimentary to what we offer with our Hyper Targeting network advertising campaigns, and enjoy helping clients navigate the waters of both. That’s why we wanted to give a few recommendations on the Pros and Cons of RTB Ad Exchanges.

For those not familiar with Ad Exchanges, inventory on the internet has shifted to act much more like a stock market trading floor. Companies have emerged that buy and sell data, and allow for, within nano-seconds, the bidding on inventory online. This has presented an interesting new challenge to marketers, with more control than ever but also more options than ever, which can lead to a machine gun approach where we’re hoping to hit the target. Companies are calling their products “Trading Desks”. Websites put all their unsold direct inventory on the table, and advertisers come in and bid. Highest bidder wins. Period.

There are a lot of intricacies we won’t go into, including cookies advertisers can utilize to bid on specific behavioral or demographic/psychographic information. However, in layman’s terms, here are the pros/cons of this environment:

Pros

Low-cost CPMs to the Advertisers, for a start. For the most part, most inventory on ad exchanges can be purchased for very low Cost Per Thousand’s (CPMs), often below $0.50. Campaigns and sites with a low Click Through Rate (CTR) can still deliver an effective Cost Per Click (CPC)

Transparency. With some ad networks, advertisers don’t always know which sites are serving their ads. This includes our own Hyper Local or Hyper Targeted ad network in many cases. With some ad-exchanges, advertisers can see the sites, and sometimes the pages, they’re running on. This makes display advertising management seem much more like managing an Ad Words or Cost Per Click (CPC) campaign, where the advertiser can find variations of sites/creative that are performing and optimize to those.

Lastly, ad exchanges offer standardization and efficiency. Ad sizes are uniform; the ad buying and selling process is simple. There will only be a single bill. And everything is done in real-time.

Cons

Ad exchanges typically won’t provide premium real estate. Sites tend to save those placements for direct sales. That’s where our HyperX Local product has a huge advantage. We only purchase on proven placements, and only buy Above the Fold inventory (ATF). Some exchanges do have premium inventory, but the CPMs get higher with that type of control and in most cases advertisers are better off working directly with the sites.

Ad exchange inventory is most often for low-value, non-premium/unsold placements. Many impressions are at the bottom of the page, below the “fold” of a typical monitor screen. So a served ad that counts as an impression may not have been seen by a consumer.

Ad exchanges can trigger bidding wars between advertisers due to the pricing structure’s nature. Price volatility is unavoidable and ad inventory will sell at fluctuating prices, as opposed to the set CPMs advertisers negotiate for with an Ad Network. The bidding system also means the highest bidder wins the impressions, so buyers with smaller budgets can be at a disadvantage.

10 Social Media 2011 Highlights

December 27th, 2011 / Digital Advertising, Mobile Advertising, News and Events, Social Media by Alan Pohlman - President

Here is a link to a great Social Media Marketing article with excellent data from ClickZ.

http://www.clickz.com/clickz/column/2134516/social-media-2011-highlights-included

A quick summary of the article:
- Facebook is still King and You Tube is second.
- LinkedIn is picking up some steam.
- Blogs are underutilized.
- Unlike Tricks, Social Media isn’t just for kids.

It’s a quick read with some really good data.

If you are interested, here is the link to the same report for 2010:

http://www.clickz.com/clickz/column/1934373/social-media-2010-highlights-included

Happy New Year to all!

Alan

Social Media Marketing Strategies and Schedules

November 18th, 2011 / Digital Advertising, News and Events, Social Media, Viral Marketing by Alan Pohlman - President

Each week we talk to several new companies that are trying to figure out the best social marketing strategy and leverage social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. Much like the SEM, Blogging, Web 2.0, mobile and lead generation “hot topics” of recent years, there is a lot of buzz and interest in social media marketing right now. A lot of companies feel they need to be doing social media marketing. But where do you start? How often should you be doing it? How do you develop a plan?

John Leavy answers a lot of these questions in a recent and very practical article for Entrepreneur. (http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/220678).

A few key points he makes in the article:
- The real motivation for businesses is to connect with customers and partners.
- It takes time, effort and a balanced schedule of content, so you need a plan.
- Your content should be consistent and compelling. (Don’t neglect it or appear “spammy”)
- He outlines a straight forward schedule that can be adapted by any business.

I really like the schedule John offers because it helps simplify a potentially daunting task of social media marketing into more easy to do daily tasks. Following that schedule would be a great way to start getting your company into the social media space.

Thanks John for the concise article.

If you have any questions about social media marketing or would like to bounce a few ideas off our heads, feel free to contact one of our social media experts any time.

The Continued Emergence of Digital Media

November 2nd, 2011 / Banner Network, Design, Digital Advertising, Digital Campaigns, Digital Media Buying/Planning, Email Marketing, Mobile Advertising, Natural Search - SEO, Paid Search, Social Media, Viral Marketing, Web Development by Jordan Yospe - Digital Media Director

A recent Forrester Research study, an independent research company that provides advice to global leaders in business and technology, shows that interactive marketing/advertising spending will top $77 Billion by 2016!

Other telling stats in the study that show the healthy and growing behavior of online marketing include the rise of both social media and display media. We can see the emerging acceptance by advertisers to shift dollars from traditional media that are fading or losing effectiveness into new mediums online where people are spending the majority of their time reading, being entertained, and working.

Interactive Marketing will Increase In Effectiveness

HyperX Media has made it a focus to keep up with the changing nature of how people are consuming information. We have made it a focus to specialize in digital marketing to aid in the effectiveness of advertising campaigns, striving to put the right message in front of the right person, at the right time. At the consumer level, this includes engaging messaging and creative, coupled with partnerships on the websites they know and trust. It means being relevant for what they are interested in, if they are specifically searching products out via a search engine, or just casually informing themselves on a product through social media or a banner ad. For our clients, this means eye catching, dynamic creative, advanced targeting capabilities, detailed reporting, relevant engagement with their potential customers, and tracking of EVERYTHING from view, to a click to a mouse over, to an engagement, to a lead, and so on.  HyperX is excited to help businesses and consumers usher in a new age in advertising technology. The shift of focus to the online world is a Win-Win because it means more advanced targeting with measurable results for advertisers, and more pertinent, relevant content and ads to those being advertised to.

You can download the Forrester study for yourself here.

Social Timing Insights Infographic from Argyle Social

November 2nd, 2011 / Digital Advertising, Digital Campaigns, Digital Media Buying/Planning, Social Media, Viral Marketing by Jordan Yospe - Digital Media Director

I read some interesting information from one of the leaders in Social Media Marketing, Argyle Social. Some very interesting information to consider when putting together a Social Media Calendar and strategy.

  • B2C interactions get 32% better engagement with their followers on the Weekend, while B2B marketers get around 14% better interaction on Weekdays

To read the full article, visit here.

Let HyperX Media help you with your comprehensive Social Media Marketing and Advertising Needs.

Proud Sponsor of SLC SEM

October 20th, 2011 / Digital Advertising, Digital Campaigns, Natural Search - SEO, News and Events, Paid Search, Social Media by Alan Pohlman - President

Last night was the inaugural event for SLC SEM, a newly formed association of Utah search marketing professionals.  The group was partially the brain child of our director of search several months ago who noticed a need to bring some of the great local SEM talent together to network and share ideas.  He worked closely with Elisabeth Osmeloski from Search Engine Land (http://searchengineland.com/) and what was a really good idea is now a really great group for local search and online marketers.

The group’s focus will be on SEM (SEO, PPC, etc.), but will also tie in how search affects all forms of online and offline marketing.  Participants include search and digital agencies, in-house search teams, consultants, online marketing professionals, students and people who just want to learn about the industry.
The event last night was well attended and there is no doubt future events will be very successful.  They announced that Danny Sullivan (http://searchengineland.com/author/danny-sullivan), widely considered one of the top search “gurus” around, will headline an upcoming monthly event.  They also announced a big event in partnership with Bing and the Sundance Film Festival.

HyperX Media is proud to be a Founding Sponsor of SLC SEM.  We are eager to have an active role in this unique association and watch it grow.  It’s fun to meet with people in the industry and learn from each other.  If the inaugural event last night is any indication of what the group will become, watch out, there are some really good things to come!  We encourage you to become a member if you are near Salt Lake City, or interested in traveling here for our monthly events.

To learn more about SLC SEM, please visit the following:

http://www.slcsem.org/
https://www.facebook.com/SLCSEM
@slcsem

Observations by an Intern

October 12th, 2011 / Digital Advertising, Digital Media Buying/Planning by Jordan Yospe - Digital Media Director
Observations from an Intern
As a marketing student I have been able to learn many different things related to
consumers and how to approach them and build good relationships with them. Marketing is all
about determining the needs of consumers and then creating a product or service that will satisfy
such need. The main focus is always the consumers: if a company is able to create and deliver
value for its customers, the customers will then generate value for the company’s shareholders.
Additionally, I have been able to learn throughout my academic and professional
experience that segmenting the market and determining a target market is the first thing to do
before any money is invested. One size fits all is a misconception in marketing strategy that
should be avoided. I have been able to apply this principle as an intern when creating Facebook
campaigns for several customers. Mainly, we target the market based on demographics, such as
age and gender.
On the other hand, I have learned the different tools to measure success in online
marketing which were unknown to me before my experience with HyperX Media. The
implementation of Google analytics to measure traffic on a particular website, the number of
impressions an ad can generate, and the click through rate are some tools that have helped me
understand how success can be measured in online marketing.

Observations by an Intern

By Allejandro Montana

As a marketing student I have been able to learn many different things related to consumers and how to approach them and build good relationships with them. Marketing is all about determining the needs of consumers and then creating a product or service that will satisfy such need. The main focus is always the consumers: if a company is able to create and deliver value for its customers, the customers will then generate value for the company’s shareholders.

Additionally, I have been able to learn throughout my academic and professional experience that segmenting the market and determining a target market is the first thing to do before any money is invested. One size fits all is a misconception in marketing strategy that should be avoided. I have been able to apply this principle as an intern when creating Facebook campaigns for several customers. Mainly, we target the market based on demographics, such as age and gender.

On the other hand, I have learned the different tools to measure success in online marketing which were unknown to me before my experience with HyperX Media. The implementation of Google analytics to measure traffic on a particular website, the number of impressions an ad can generate, and the click through rate are some tools that have helped me understand how success can be measured in online marketing.

Allejandro Montana is a Senior at the University of Utah at the David Eccles School of Business, studying Marketing. He serves as VP of Finance for the University of Utah Chapter of the American Marketing Association. He is currently working as a Media Coordinator in an intern role with HyperX Media.

Engagement Marketing

September 28th, 2011 / Digital Advertising, Digital Campaigns, Digital Media Buying/Planning, Natural Search - SEO, Social Media, Viral Marketing by Julie Bazgan Martinez - VP Digital Strategy

Engagement Marketing is nothing new. The digital landscape has transformed the way people communicate, digest and share marketing, and receive their advertising, making it more important than ever to incorporate an Engagement Marketing strategy into your online and offline planning.

Dave Chaffey’s recent Ad Tech London presentation on 12 Digital Marketing Trends for 2012 (you can see what they are and download the PowerPoint deck here) states that “An engagement strategy is important to cut-through,” and “The importance of developing an engaging, shareable brand increases each day: algorithms and people FAVOUR THE MOST ENGAGING BRANDS.”

When people interact with a brand in a personal way by participating and engaging, they are far more likely to become brand advocates and word of mouth marketers. This goes way beyond Facebook “Likes.” And with Search incorporating online engagement into its algorithms, it is vital to take a proactive role in strategically growing and nurturing your online engagement. Google using data from Google+ in search results makes the search experience much more personal. The implications of this are highly significant for brands.

Phygital Marketing (when the physical world meets the digital world) illustrates how digital devices and QR code technology are perfectly suited to engage people by combining things we do and interact with in our everyday life with an active, engaging, fun call to action. Check out what Fiat did recently with their Fiat Street Evo app. Hiding prizes in traffic signs? Pretty innovative, I’d say.

There are many ways to acquire customers and keep them engaged. Technology and a sound creative/communication strategy can personalize the marketing experience and keep customers coming back.

Are you incorporating an engagement strategy into your planning efforts? What out of the box and innovative ways are you using to engage your customers?

Are your marketing efforts relying on Interruption Marketing? Is that the best way to spend your marketing dollars? Get in touch with our Engagement Marketing experts at info@hyperxmedia.com for a consultation on what we can do to support your business.

Stop Chasing the Coveted Facebook “Like” Faux Follower

September 22nd, 2011 / Digital Advertising, Digital Campaigns, Social Media, Viral Marketing by Jordan Yospe - Digital Media Director

A few months ago, when watching the news the night Osama Bin Laden was killed, the national news outlet I was viewing decided to pull up their Facebook Page on live TV to show what some of their viewers were saying about the big news.

Below is roughly how the exchange went….

“(News Anchor) Well, Amy Johnson says ‘God Bless America and God Bless our Troops’.“

(Keep in mind this is while they are showing their Facebook fan page live on screen)

Anchor searches for another politically correct viewer comment for a few seconds . . .

“And, Josh Hallowell says ‘The witch is DEAD’.”

(Again, keep in mind their Facebook page is live on the screen, the viewer can see exactly what he’s reading in addition to comments like ‘I hope all of his 72 virgins are men’, ‘Osama down, now off to find Waldo and Carmen San Diego!’, and some other vulgar commentary as well as cuss words.)

It seems that everyone is trying to plug their Facebook page lately. This is for obvious reasons. Despite recent changes to navigation within Facebook that have spurred user complaints, we’ve seen this story before and we’ll see the same result. People aren’t leaving. . . Facebook isn’t going away . . . and while Google + may disrupt Facebook or knock it slightly off course, it will not soon replace the behemoth.

Some have grown somewhat annoyed at corporation’s attempts to use Facebook to appear relevant. Increasingly, we hear across multiple news and media outlets and in television commercials,  “Follow Us On Facebook!”

So, the question is, how do we successfully integrate Facebook into more comprehensive marketing and messaging plans for your business?  We all understand the actual end goal . . . Increased exposure, additional opportunities for sponsorship/advertisers, etc. However, if you do not have something relevant or of value for the user to look at on your Facebook page, why promote it at all? This is the same content question that has plagued all marketers for 15+ years with the invention of the internet and websites.

Many brands and idea promoters want as many Facebook fans and Twitter followers as they possibly can, as soon as they can possibly get them. This is a repeated request we get from companies we work with, “How do we get more Facebook followers? We know we need to be doing social media, but we don’t know why or how.”

A lot of these fans and followers are not true followers. One thing to consider is how many of these fans and followers have hidden you in their news feeds. And, with recent Facebook changes, it may be even harder to market to an already existent pool of “followers”. Marketer Seth Godin calls these “Sunny Day Friends”.  Users that “follow” in a fleeting moment of interest of attempt to take advantage of a one time offer. In an experiment Godin recently conducted on Facebook, 200,000 followers led to 25 clickthroughs. That’s a .01% CTR! Ouch!

Social Graph In the chart above, the curves represent different ideas and different starting points.

Godin says, “If you start with 10,000 fans and have an idea that on average nets .8 new people per generation, that means that 10,000 people will pass it on to 8000 people, and then 6400 people, etc. That’s yellow on the graph. Pretty soon, it dies out.

On the other hand, if you start with 100 people (99% less!) and the idea is twice as good (1.5 net passalong) it doesn’t take long before you overtake the other plan.  (the green). That’s not even including the compounding of new people getting you people.

But wait! If your idea is just a little more viral, a 1.7 passalong, wow, huge results. Infinity, here we come. That’s the purple (of course.)”

His point? Better ideas lead to better social media campaigns. More followers does not equal success. Less followers that are more engaged are better than more followers that are less engaged.

An example of a good use of a Facebook page to promote consumer loyalty: Corporate PR. Sponsor a contest to donate money to vote for the best charity, and donate money to the winning charity. Proper use of Facebook? Yes, you are promoting a social cause and getting good PR from it, all while doing positive viral marketing that is likely to spread. (Good marketing rule of thumb, the more emotional and personal a campaign,  the better!)

Example of a bad use of Facebook page to promote consumer loyalty: “Follow us on Facebook and Twitter”. We hear this often on traditional media, but often one goes to a company’s Facebook page and there is nothing there. Nothing interactive. No call to action. No strategy.  Why should I follow you? What’s in it for me?

Like I said, Facebook has its place and purpose, but too often it is promoted in an attempt to appear relevant and even REPLACE other crucially important marketing and messaging channels. The number of followers or friends you have says nothing to the actual experience or quality of the content you are discussing.

As Seth Godin puts it, “a slightly better idea defeats a much bigger but disconnected user base every time.

The lesson: spend your time coming up with better ideas, not with more (faux) followers.”

Going the Distance with Your Online Marketing Campaign Budget

September 13th, 2011 / Digital Advertising, Digital Campaigns, Digital Media Buying/Planning by Stan Mickelson - VP Sales

Frequently we meet with new clients eager to jump into the world of online advertising. They are launching a new product, service, brand or even a new company. We sit down with them, assess their ideas, efforts, and hopefully their objectives. Then we dance…

We dance around the elephant in the room – the budget.

Often, clients want to skirt the issue, hoping that somewhere in the discussion we will stumble across the exact solution for their needs for less than they want to spend.

Here’s an analogy for anyone considering a foray into the world of online (or any) advertising.

According to Google maps it is 302 miles from Salt Lake City, UT to St. George UT. (They say it will take 4 hours and 48 minutes. I guess they know about the horrible delays in Utah County). Let’s say that your vehicle gets 30 mpg at an average speed of 70 mph. You will need at least 10 gallons of gasoline to make the trip. At $3.50 per gallon, sufficient fuel will cost you $35.00 one way. Maybe you are in a hurry, and need to average 80 mph. You shave off a little travel time and also lower your mpg to 25. Now your trip will cost $42.

If reaching an advertising goal or objective is analogous to travelling to St. George, it is imperative that you have sufficient budget to fill the tank. If you want to reach your objective more quickly, it will require a larger budget. You don’t want end up walking by the freeway carrying a gas can.

Be wary of any purveyors of advertising products or services that will gladly sell you less than a full tank of gas…

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