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Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

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Latest posts from Danny Brown

Enjoy the latest posts from Danny Brown, and feel free to add your own thoughts in the comments after the post.

Quit Trying to Market With a One Size Fits All Mindset

Blurred lines

As marketers, we focus a lot on data to help us create strategies and tactics that will appeal to our core demographic.

We collate reams of information from various channels – social, mobile, print, media, research studies – and filter out the non-useful to drill down into the qualitative information needed to offer our campaigns a better chance of success.

The problem is, we’re allowing the data to drive our decisions, instead of our decisions being driven by the insights we, as humans, gather from the automated machine learning solutions.

This leads us to market with a one size fits all mentality, when – as any good marketer will tell you – we should be doing anything but.

The Perils of Driving Decisions Using Simple Data

Part of the problem comes from the instant result mindset we’ve forced upon brands in the age of social media.?Pre-social media, word-of-mouth campaigns and more traditional marketing and advertising was built with longer-term thinking when it came to results.

Now, if your Facebook campaign doesn’t garner you 1,000 new fans, or your blogger outreach campaign doesn’t drive sales, it’s clear that social media and selling/marketing/advertising don’t go together.

Except they do, and this is continuously being shown by the brands that do it right.

The reason the complaining brands aren’t seeing return is because the brand manager or CMO has read a survey or two from leading publications, and used them as the basis for the demographic knowledge for his or her upcoming campaign.

For example, let’s say your brand is targeting millennials. Now, depending on who you talk to, the age range for this consumer group can vary – but they’re primarily folks that were born between the early 80’s and the early 2000’s.

If you were to read a recent study of over 500 millennials from technology vendor SocialChorus, whose product is aimed at brands looking to connect with advocates, you’d get the following takeaways:

  • They are educated and big digital users, particularly Facebook, but they distrust advertising;
  • 67% have never clicked a Sponsored Story;
  • 95% say friends are the most credible sources for product information;
  • 98% are more likely to interact with a friend’s social update than they are with a brand.

Going by this information, which was featured by respected publication Huffington Post, as a brand manager you’d be thinking:

Okay, so we’ll use Facebook to target our ads, because we still have 33% of the audience to go after, and we’ll look to offer their friends freebies to share since our own brand updates won’t be engaged with.

And that’d be all well and good – until you read this survey, from marketing data specialists Valassis.

Valassis-Millennials-Top-Coupon-Deal-Sources-Sept2013

In their findings, which surveyed more than 5,100 respondents (10x more than the SocialChorus one), a different view of millennials arises:

  • 51% prefer newspapers for coupons and deals, compared to only 23% using the digital channels of blogs and savings sites;
  • Email coupon alerts accounted for 50%, as opposed to the Facebook-heavy usage that the previous report highlighted;
  • Mobile is a huge driver for millennials, with 45% saying they’d accessed a coupon in an email via mobile, and 32% downloading a coupon via smartphone.

So, going by this data, you’d swing your approach from Facebook marketing to a more traditional approach using print, complemented with a mobile-focused campaign that incorporates email sign-ups.

Except you’d still be missing a core part of the story.

Why Data is Only Telling Half the Story

The two surveys highlighted here so far from SocialChorus and Valassis show the purchasing preferences of millennials – depending which one you take notice of, it’s either by recommendations from friends, or by coupon ads in newspapers, or email/mobile offers.

However, neither of these surveys have countered in a third option – that of situational decision-making.

True influence webinar

It’s all well and good having data that shows you the atypical behaviour of a demographic, based on surveys and publications from that specific market. Yet these behaviours are only as good as the situational knowledge we have about that audience.

In his article over at AdWeek entitled The Millennial Male is Not Who You Think He Is, Sam Thielman shares something that many surveys don’t take into account – the situational factors that impact today’s millennial male (essentially half the target audience for brands in this market).

From Thielman’s article:

  • As a collective, they have $1 trillion in student debt;
  • Just 62% are employed, of which half of these are part-time jobs;
  • Over one third live at home with their parents;
  • They’ve lost a third of their median net worth in the last 8 years.

Simply put, millennials don’t necessarily have the disposable income to spend on the marketing approaches the surveys from SocialChorus and Valassis would suggest brands implement.

Instead, as Thielman continues, brands need to look to alternative methods of advertising – digital viewing channels like Netflix, Hulu and Apple TV, for example. However, given that many consumers use Netflix to avoid advertising, brands will have to think smarter than simple ads.

Perhaps the biggest spanner in the works is the belief that millennials prefer friend recommendations over brand marketing. Not according to a survey by Bazaarvoice from 2012.

Millennials user generated content

According to that survey, conducted with over 1,000 correspondents:

  • 51% trust user generated content (UGC) from strangers, over that of their friends, when it comes to making a purchase;
  • 84% of millennials said that UGC influenced their decisions, with only 3% saying it didn’t impact them at all;
  • 71% feel brands care about the opinions of their consumers.

Based on that data, a blogger outreach campaign would be much more effective to run a marketing campaign. Now you can see where the confusion could come in.

Three surveys, three different recommendations, three different data points – yet all about the same target audience. And that’s before you even get to the viability of whether or not your target audience is going to be able to afford your product or not.

Simple Data Out, Insights In

It’s not all doom and gloom. The surveys I highlighted here all have valuable information, and can be used to really hone in on what the best approach would be for your target audience, if your brand sits in the millennial consumer market.

Where the problem arises is when it’s the only data that a brand marketer, CMO, or similar uses to put together the strategy for any upcoming campaign.

It’s just one part of a far bigger picture, yet it’s the ignoring of this bigger picture for quick hit data that is messing everything up. Instead of the simple data, we need to be collating everything into a more insights-led overview.

  • Is there any data that crosses over between reports?
  • Does the data vendor understand my market?
  • How does the data correlate to the specific audience I’m after (geography, financial, brand affinity, local laws);
  • Does the data make sense from an archival behaviour aspect?
  • Does the data allow for long-term building approaches or short-term fire sale targeting?

As you start to build out your knowledge graph from these questions, you can add them to your previous knowledge points based on previous campaigns, results, and increased understanding of your audience (in this case, millennials).

This collates all the data, new and old, and offers actual insights for your campaign versus trusting the latest survey that may or may not be relevant to your brand’s goals.

It’s a longer process; but it’s one that actually builds around known specifics versus unknown intangibles.

Which one do you think offers the greater return potential?

The Sunday Share: Why Behavioural Data is Key to Social Selling Success

Human behaviour

Human behaviour

As a business resource,?Slideshare?stands pretty much head and shoulders above most other content platforms.

From presentations to educational content and more, you can find information and curated media on pretty much any topic you have an interest in.

As a research solution, Slideshare offers analysis from some of the smartest minds on the web across all verticals.

These include standard presentations, videos, multimedia and more.

Which brings us to this week?s Sunday Share.

Every week, I?ll be sharing a presentation that catches my eye and where I feel you might be interested in the information inside. These will range from business to content to social media to marketing and more.

This week, a presentation Andrew Jenkins and I created for Social Media Week Toronto.

Today, businesses and organizations are looking for more from social media when it comes to lead generation, customer acquisition, churn, and more.?This presentation highlights how companies can use behavioural insights from freely available data to not only meet these needs, but exceed them.

Enjoy.

image: C. Bucheli

5 Years at DannyBrown.me: Anniversary Giveaway

Grandiose

5 years blogging dannybrown.me

Today sees the five year anniversary of this blog. While I’m still a little bit behind Gini Dietrich, it’s still a nice little milestone to reach personally.

While I’ve been blogging on and off since 1999, it’s this blog that has really fallen into place and become the starting point for everything I do elsewhere online. It’s helped me in my professional goals, and it’s introduced me to some fantastic people, either in the comments or via email – so thank you for being here.

Instead of running through how this blog has changed and matured in the last five years, I’d like to offer you guys something instead. After all, I’m just the conduit – you’re the ones that add so much more to the experience here.

So – here’s what I’d like to ask you to do:

  • Leave a comment here sharing what’s changed for you in the last five years, personally or professionally (or both);
  • Then, tell us how you see the next five years panning out. Changes in your industry, your goals, dreams, etc.

I’ll pick two comments at random and the authors will receive a free copy of the Influence Marketing book (I’ll email you for shipping address). Additionally, everyone that leaves a comment will receive a free copy of The Parables of Business (this will be emailed to you).

I’ll leave this open until midnight EST on Wednesday October 2, and then update this post with the winners as well as contacting you directly.

Thanks again for being here, and here’s to the next five years and beyond!

UPDATE OCTOBER 03: Congratulations to Graham Phillips and Aya Joumaa, whose names were picked for the Influence Marketing book – I will be emailing you for shipping addresses soon. And everyone will receive an email with a download link for The Parables of Business ebook. Thanks again!

image: Axel Taferner

The Sunday Share: How to Create Devoted Customers

Devotion

Devotion

As a business resource,?Slideshare?stands pretty much head and shoulders above most other content platforms.

From presentations to educational content and more, you can find information and curated media on pretty much any topic you have an interest in.

As a research solution, Slideshare offers analysis from some of the smartest minds on the web across all verticals.

These include standard presentations, videos, multimedia and more.

Which brings us to this week?s Sunday Share.

Every week, I?ll be sharing a presentation that catches my eye and where I feel you might be interested in the information inside. These will range from business to content to social media to marketing and more.

This week, a well-designed and informative presentation from Valerie Felice of the Cooperative Insurance System of the Philippines.

We all know the value of offering a great customer experience, both from a churn level and that of building loyalty. But how do you go beyond a great experience and build true customer devotion? This presentation offers you the answers.

Enjoy.

image: anandham

Why MyPeerIndex is a Major Step Forward for Social Scoring

MyPeerIndex

MyPeerIndex

When we were writing?Influence Marketing, both?Sam Fiorella?and I spoke to several tech vendors in the social scoring and influence marketing space. This included?Ferenc Huszar, lead data scientist at?PeerIndex.

When asked about the future of social scoring and where it sits within the bigger influence marketing picture, Ferenc advised,

Currently, influence platforms calculate their scores and metrics based largely on social media interactions simply due to the fact that this data is most widely available. [However], I agree that one of the main goals of influence marketing should be to close the gap between social influence and actual sales figures or profit. This is certainly the long-term vision, and we have already taken steps to deliver on this vision.

PeerIndex?s recent unveiling of?MyPeerIndex?not only shows what these steps are, but opens up social scoring to be far more transparent to the consumer side of measurement.

What is MyPeerIndex and Why Does It Matter?

The biggest criticisms both Sam and I have had when it comes to social scoring as a real measure of influence can be boiled down to two main reservations:

  • Social influence has less authority because of the lack of transparency in how scores are measured (previously it was only?Kred?that publicly shared data on this);
  • Social influence was ego-centric versus customer-centric, because of their use of public scoring systems, leading to gaming of the algorithms and changing natural conversations on social platforms.

With the release of MyPeerIndex, PeerIndex has removed both of these barriers, leading to an easier understanding of scoring for both consumers and brands alike. From?the PeerIndex blog announcing the release,

As a data provider we feel that the most responsible way to handle our business is to be transparent with social media users. We strongly believe in the power of data to make your interactions with brands more helpful and relevant, but at the same time, we are firmly of the opinion that you, the customer, has to have the final say in whether brands get to see your data or not.

MyPeerIndex.com?is our new consumer transparency page where every user can see, download and remove the data we hold on them and provide to our partners through?our API?and?audience insights tool PiQ.

It?s that last sentence that stands out ? now it?s not only the clients using PeerIndex to gather data on consumers and social media users that can see what information is held, but also the consumers themselves.

MyPeerIndex JSON data

This is a huge announcement and leaves Klout as the only platform of the ?Big Three? ? Klout, Kred and PeerIndex ? that keeps their algorithm secret.

MyPeerIndex and Earning the Trust of Social Media Users

From a personal point of view, my biggest gripe with social influence platforms has been the Opt-Out mentality they employ ? they create a viewable profile of you if you have a public Twitter account, whether you know about their platform(s) or not.

This has led to various invasion of privacy concerns, as well as impacting professional lives (prospective job candidates have been turned down based on their previously unaware of scores).

While MyPeerIndex still creates a profile of you, it now allows you much more control of, and access to, that data.

Access to your information

When you access your own MyPeerIndex, you have the option of downloading a JSON file of the data PeerIndex provides to brands about you. This simple addition will let you see exactly why you?re being profiled and, in the longer run, help you protect your privacy better.

Removal of data, as opposed to deleting your profile

While social scoring platforms allow you to delete your account, there have been instances where people have still been tracked or appear to have not been fully removed. MyPeerIndex counters this by allowing you to remove you data.

Remove PeerIndex data

Removing the Search option

As mentioned earlier, publicly available scores have led to the bastardization of influence as people try and grow their scores, compete with friends, and attract brands to receive freebies. MyPeerIndex removes the ability to look at anyone else?s score, thus removing the ego-centric use by savvy consumers.

Why MyPeerindex Is a Smart Move

By both opening up their platform data to consumers, and moving away from ego-based influence to more contextual topic influence, MyPeerIndex is moving towards what brands really need from influence marketing solutions ? real data, real people, real results.

Additionally, being transparent about what data they use enhances the trust factor already enjoyed by Kred, who have always been open about how their algorithm works.

It?s a major step in removing the criticisms of scoring platforms in general, and leaves Klout increasingly marginalized when it comes to their data, especially given?the problems Klout is currently experiencing.

Kudos to PeerIndex for this step ? here?s to the continued maturation of the influence marketing space.

This post originally appeared on the Influence Marketing book blog.

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