Showing posts with label targeting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label targeting. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Ecommerce Merchants Should Not Ignore Older Shoppers

via Practical Ecommerce http://ift.tt/1cLNCKJ

Conventional wisdom suggests that when seeking customers, ecommerce merchants should pursue teens and people in their twenties. These are the people who own the most electronic devices, are the most comfortable with technology, and do the most online buying. However, you may be overlooking a large and neglected segment of the U.S. population that is eager to spend money online — people over 50.
Advertisers ignore them, concentrating mainly on the 18 to 34 age group. Nielsen, the research firm, estimates that only about 5 percent of advertising dollars are directed at seniors. Merchants too tend to offer products that appeal only to younger shoppers. Marketing efforts are directed mainly at this group.
Myths about seniors abound. Among them are that most seniors are poor, they don’t shop online, and they only buy necessities. Yet statistics show that this overlooked segment of our society has money to spend. Ecommerce vendors that can reach out to older Americans can be richly rewarded.

Why Target People Over 50?

Quite simply there are a lot of them and they have money. Nevertheless, brands focus on the under 50 age group. Yet the almost 78 million Baby Boomers in the U.S. — those born between 1946 and 1964 — are fairly affluent, well educated, comfortable with technology, and willing to try new products. They were raised in a spending-driven economy, unlike their parents who grew up during the Depression.
Yet the almost 78 million Baby Boomers in the U.S. — those born between 1946 and 1964 — are fairly affluent, well educated, comfortable with technology, and willing to try new products
Indeed, according to Nielsen, Boomers’ online habits are similar to those of the 18 to 34 age cohort. Boomers represent 38.5 percent of all consumer packaged goods expenditures. Research firm Ipsos, in cooperation with Google, conducted interviews with 5,100 Boomers and seniors in April 2013 and found that while the most common reason to use the Internet was to find out about the news and weather, 57 percent shopped online in the prior month and 45 percent looked for coupons or daily deals.
As a society, we tend to stereotype seniors. The only advertising directed at them emphasizes physical infirmity. But older people do buy things other than pharmaceuticals, adult diapers, and scooters. Even those who are retired have disposable income. According to the U.S. Census Bureau and Bankrate, a financial services company, Americans over 50 account for 77 percent of all financial assets, and 54 percent of total consumer demand. They comprise 47 percent of all car sales and 80 percent of luxury travel purchases. They also buy toys, games and electronics for their grandchildren.
According to the 2010 Census, there are 51.6 million Americans aged 60 to 84 comprising 16.6 percent of the population and 41.9 million between 50 and 59 years of age. Statistics from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics show that approximately 18.5 percent of Americans age 65 and over were working in 2012. This percentage will likely increase in future because of erosion in traditional pension plans, a decrease in the value of financial assets, and the uncertainty of 401K plans. Working people need clothing, cars, and electronics.
The results of the 2012 Pew Internet & American Life Project Survey showed that over half of those 65 and older are online and 70 percent use the Internet on a daily basis. However, persons over 75 do not use the Internet very much. But the age group right behind them is comfortable with the Internet and when they reach 75 they will likely continue to use the Internet for email, research, and shopping.
Thirty-four percent of those over 65 visit social networking sites, while 86 percent use email.

Is Millennial Purchasing Power Overestimated?

Merchants who target people in their teens and 20s may be overestimating the purchasing power of this segment of the population. A substantial number of them are living with their parents, are underemployed or unemployed and don’t have a great deal of discretionary income. In 2012, 36 percent of the country’s young adults ages 18 to 31— the Millennial generation — were living in their parents’ home, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data. Of those still living with parents, only 29 percent were employed. Millennials may actually have considerably less purchasing power than Baby Boomers and seniors.

What do Older Shoppers Look For Online

U.K. research firm Shoppercentric advises that seniors look for quality and value over bargains when shopping. However, they do tend to use coupons and discounts.
Seniors have the inclination and time to perform extensive research before making a purchase decision. Be sure to provide detailed information about your products and services. Visuals are helpful too. Seniors like to do online research on hobbies, vacation destinations, auto, and appliance purchases. They also rely on the Internet for health information.
Seniors are receptive to email marketing. They are more likely to respond to that than other online forms of communication.
In most cases, it’s not necessary to change your website or your product offerings to attract seniors. It is simply a matter of letting them know that you are interested in their business. Many online businesses find that partnering with organizations such as AARP and offering a discount is a good first step in attracting older customers.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Facebook Wants ‘High Quality’ Content; 8 Tips for Merchants

via Practical Ecommerce http://www.practicalecommerce.com/articles/61881-Facebook-Wants-High-Quality-Content-8-Tips-for-Merchants

Views from organic Facebook Page posts have been declining. A recent announcement from Facebook explains why.
“On a given day, when someone visits News Feed, there are an average of 1,500 possible stories we can show,” says Facebook. “Because the content in News Feed is always changing, and we’re seeing more people sharing more content, Pages will likely see changes in distribution.”
To provide a better, more relevant user experience, Facebook has altered its algorithm to focus on “higher quality” content, which will appear more prominently in user’s News Feeds.
The algorithmic change is based on the following four factors:
  • How often users interact with the Page;
  • The number of Likes, shares, and comments a post receives at large and from fans in particular;
  • How much a user has interacted with this type of post in the past;
  • Whether or not users across Facebook are hiding or reporting a given post.

What This Means for Merchants

Facebook has been reluctant to admit that advertising is the best way to get Page content noticed. However, a recent Facebook document entitled Generating business results on Facebook (PDF) leaves little room for doubt that organic placement is no longer sufficient to grow a fan base or gain visibility in News Feed.
Generating business results on Facebook
Facebook now says advertising is the only way to guarantee News Feed visibility.
“[W]e expect organic distribution of an individual Page’s posts to gradually decline over time as we continually work to make sure people have a meaningful experience on the site,” the document said.
Facebook’s solution to this problem: advertise.
“To maximize delivery of your message in News Feed, your brand should consider using paid distribution, as it enables you to reach people beyond your fan base and move beyond the organic competition,” stated the document.

8 Tips for Merchants

Based on Facebook’s own words, to get content seen by the most people, Page owners will have to advertise. Because people spend more than 50 percent of their time on the News Feed, ads that appear there stand a much better chance of garnering attention. According to Facebook, ads in the News Feed get a 96 percent greater return on ad spend than those in the right-hand column.
Aside from that, here are eight tips for merchants to maximize the value of organic posts.
  1. Make posts timely and relevant. The more relevant the content, the more likely people are to engage with it. Before posting, ask yourself, “Would people share this with their friends or recommend it to others?”
  2. Add value to your readers. Give readers behind-the-scenes insights into your business, share interesting tips on using your products, and post relevant third-party content such as links to interesting articles or customer testimonials.
  3. Include the use of photos. Kissmetrics, an analytics platform, reports that posts containing photos get 53 percent more Likes, 104 percent more comments, and 84 percent more clicks than those that do not. So, when possible use photos. Videos also work well.
  4. Use simple, short copy. This helps ensure fans read the entire message. Kissmetrics says that posts with less than 80 characters get 66 percent more engagement.
  5. Create content that targets specific audience segments. This helps to ensure content has relevance and speaks to the interests of those targeted.
  6. Pay attention to Page statistics. Insights, the analytics component tied to Pages, can help you see which posts are driving the most engagement, views, and reach. With this knowledge you can post more of the same. Also, pay attention to the day of the week, time of day, and frequency of posts, as this will help you optimize posting activity.
  7. Encourage engagement. Ask questions, use polls and “fill in the blank” posts to stimulate engagement from fans. End posts with a call to action asking them to comment, Like, and share.
  8. Interact with fans and others. Reply to people who comment on posts with a comment of your own, and thank those who Like or share your content. This lets them know you are paying attention.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Digital Marketing And Analytics: Two Ladders For Magnificent Success

via Occam's Razor by Avinash Kaushik http://www.kaushik.net/avinash/digital-marketing-analytics-ladder-step-by-step-success/

The most common mistakes digital practitioners and leaders make is to either do things in the wrong order, or to try and do too much at one time.
Progress in digital marketing and analytics in either scenario becomes painful (the organization / systems / thinking is simply not in the optimal position). People become frustrated (you hire smart people, they run off to build you the Taj Mahal, meanwhile you don't have a functioning toilet). Business results suffer.
There is something in humans that makes us want to do the hard things, to shoot for the most complex right away, to want to be challenged to infinity. In many cases, it is a tendency we have to learn to restrain.
More often than not, magnificent success results from executing a business plan that is rooted in a strong understanding of the landscape of possibilities, and a deep self-awareness of business capabilities. These business plans will contain a structured approach, do this, then do this2, then make sure we are really good at this3, then this 4 and so on and so forth.
In other words: Evolution. It works.
Said another way, digital revolutions more often than not fail. One day your leadership realizes you stink at digital (all of it or just Facebook or search and display or mobile or whatever). They find the closest industry leader (L'Oreal, Booking, Zyrtec, Innocent Drinks, CSC Consulting). They say: "Do whatever we need to in order to get there in 90 days. Go!!"
If you hear that, run. Else you'll be standing in a place where a flaming crater will appear in the near future.
I'll be the first to admit that selling evolution is hard. Revolutions just sound so darn sexy! Still, reality is reality.
In this post I want to arm you with the evolution you should undertake in your companies when it comes to marketing and analytics. Additionally, I'll make the hard tough difficult painful choices on your behalf and order things to deliver the highest possible impact, so you'll know exactly what to do and what you will get from it all.
In other words: Two inspiring ladders of awesomeness for you! One for digital marketing and one for digital analytics.
Your ladder might look a little different, but I hope the process I follow will help you make the hard choices most relevant for your company and the evolutionary position it finds itself in.
Ready?
Digital Marketing: Ladder of Awesomeness/Sustainable Success.
My current title is Digital Marketing Evangelist so you can just imagine how absolutely excited I am about all the digital possibilities. Owning audiences, instead of just renting them. Earning time, instead of just buying it on TV. Creating persistent relationships, instead of just transient ones. Not letting budgets limit our creativity. And so much more. I'm like a kid in a candy store. I want to do everything right away. I want to go from single cell life to fully formed homo sepians in seven days.
I've also discovered that that is the easiest path to failure. : )
So, based on my spectacular successes and painful failures around the world, I've developed a ladder of sustainable success. Here is what it looks like:
digital marketing ladder of magnificient success 1
Let's look at each step on the ladder in some detail.
The very first thing you want to do is create an acceptable website. One that reflects the customer expectations of 2013. A good example, for e-commerce and non-ecommerce sites, is http://www.csc.com/. Look at the colors. Look at the icons. Look at the way the text is laid out, how video is incorporated, the structure of the site and everything else. Your first job is to beat them at everything. During this stage you should also invest a lot in Search Engine Optimization. You will have great content, in a good experience, and focus on getting free traffic.
[To learn more about the Do in stage one please review my See-Think-Do-Coddle framework for content, marketing and measurement.]
Second, create the world's greatest mobile experience. Yes. Don't do paid search. Don't run to buy display ads. Definitely do not start Tweeting or embarrassing your brand on Facebook (we'll do that in a bit). Focus on the mobile experience. Because of this lovely graph from Business Insider and it's representation platforms people use to visit top destinations….
business insider mobile visits behavior
Scary, right? Exciting, right? Focus on mobile like crazy, tablets in particular. Beat CSC's experience. BeatMotrin. Beat Beneful. Don't be like IBM's tablet experience (old, substantially brand negative). Or Ford (it is amazing that in 2013, for such an expensive product, it looks so…. 2005).
Now that you have build a decent foundation and are getting a decent amount of free traffic you know what is working and what is not, you are ready to move to step three. Start investing in your email marketing strategyfor extending relationships, and your paid search strategy for brand terms. Email allows you to start building aowned audience that you can (if you don't stink) start relying on (rather than constantly having to rent them from TV or Google). People typing a million variations phrases with your brand terms are looking for you, make sure you show up and capture the traffic you deserve.
Step four is focusing on expanding your reach to new relevant audiences. The cool part about display advertising is that we can build our brands cost effectively, introduce our products to a new audience, and create demand based on a number of intent signals (this last part is often missing from offline media). Based on what people read, what sites they've visited, their demographic and psychographic signals and so much more. Don't go all crazy with display ads, just focus on your brand, products and services. Learn, get better, try some more.
The site is now working well across platforms, we are starting to get a lot of free and some paid traffic, we are optimizing for conversions and task completion rate, time to move to step five in the ladder and focus on creating micro-outcomes on our website. Here is what it looks like for the Venetian hotel and casino in Macao:
macro micro outcomes venetian macao
In orange is the macro-outcome (number of casino room reservations), in purple are the micro-outcomes. All clustered into See-Think-Do. Less than two percent of people on your website will complete the macro-outcome (conversion). Having a robust cluster of micro-outcomes allows you to deliver something of value to the other 98% and establish a relationship with them (and get some economic value in exchange!). The smartest companies in the world are very good at this, step five. It does require working with your CMO, VPs, Directors, IT, Offline Sales, UX, IT, and more people than you could ever imagine. It is worth it.
Time to start kicking things up a notch in step six. Start investing in creating the world's most beautiful, functional, brand-enhancing, customer joy inducing website! You have content, you have traffic, you have micro-outcomes, you are making loads of money. Invest in the site experience now to differentiate yourself from the competition, and create irrational loyalty. Beat Bonobos (I. Love. Them!). Beat L'Oreal (except for their irritating 40 question survey in a single long window, they are nearly flawless). Beat Palms casino (try booking, try the menu, try anything, pretty awesome all around).
You are a big company and you can do two big things at one time. Now is also the right time to start investing in Facebook and YouTube. These two social platforms (eschew others at this point) allow you to learn how to earn attention in two different form factors. In both cases you'll learn quickly that pimping is the best way to fail. Expressed by me on behalf of all humans on earth: The world's greatest social media strategy: 1. Entertain Me 2. Inform Me. 3. Provide Utility. Nothing else works. Learn that in step six.
Now that your earned, owned and paid media strategies are in full swing, and you are the proud owner of the world's greatest desktop and mobile website, let's focus on enhancing your ability to get a massive audience.(Cartoon by Hugh MacLeod)
long tail orgasm1
Step seven is to to build out an incredible category/industry/ecosystem targeting Search and Display strategy. This will result in you getting magnificent at brand marketing, at the See and Think stages. The result will be an even larger owned audience, less getting into dog-eat-dog Do stage fights. You'll have complete spectrum of coverage, being there from understanding customer intent at the earliest stages and converting that into demand for what you have to offer.
From step five on you were likely already delivering some multi-channel value for your company. Some of your micro-outcomes were likely already connected to your offline existence (maps, phone calls, offer redemptions, etc.). Now in step eight, we really kick things up multiple notches when it comes to creating a truly fantastic multi-channel (or the flavor of the month, omni-channel) execution engine.
multichannel marketing value analysis framework
The picture above is from my first book, Web Analytics: An Hour A Day, from page 235. It is a part of multi-channel analytics chapter.
There is a lot of difficult work to be done (systems, processes, integrations, optimizations) in order to ensure that your digital existence is driving nonline value. Now is the time to undertake that work. Not in step three. Definitely not in step one. Now. Step eight (after you've gotten the first seven things done).
The last step before nirvana, step nine, is to focus on getting better at loyalty marketing. (Cartoon by Tom Fishburne)
brand loyalty
My definition of loyalty marketing, from the Coddle-stage, is to create unique content and to execute targeted marketing for those people/business entities, who have purchased from you two times or more. I have a higher standard for who our customer is. Not the person/business entity who's purchased from us once (they might not have had a choice), but the entity that's purchased from us twice at least (because the second time they made a choice to do business with us). Have a completely separate and focused set of people and work to deliver joy and delight to these entities. It is the only recipe for long term sustainable success.
Now you know the nine steps to nirvana. And you know exactly the order in which you should consider prioritizing your efforts. If you do step five before two, you can. But your success will be much more limited.
Understand the choices that resulted in what you are supposed to do in each step, then customize this, using the choices above, to create your own step ladder to deliver amazing digital marketing success to your company.
The cool thing about the web is that you don't have to do all of the above based on faith, you have a BFF in data! Let's go there.
Digital Analytics: Ladder of Awesomeness/Sustainable Success.
If you open your copy of Google/Adobe Analytics or CoreMetrics or Webtrekk you'll notice that every single report has a gigantic number of metrics in it. And…. they have many reports!
So on day one, as soon as we get access to the digital analytics tool, we go all crazy. Not only do we puke out a lot of data to every breathing human up and down the chain of command, we treat every bit of data with equal importance. The first part is frustrating, the second part is deadly.
Regardless of if you are a B2B or B2C or A2Z company, regardless of if you are big or small, regardless of how great you think you are, I believe you can benefit from taking one step at a time when it comes to ensuring that data analysis drives business value. It might seem sacrilegious to suggest that you should worry about Visits first and not Profitability, but that is exactly what I'm going suggest because when we overshoot our capabilities, we fail to hit even our local maxima (forget about ever hitting the global maxima !).
My assumption is that everyone on this blog is smart enough to balance for focus and ensuring the company stays a viable entity as it climbs each step in the ladder of success. Hence none of you will mis-understand that recommending a focus on CPA in stage four means you run the company to the ground because you ignore business fundamentals!
[A tiny hidden agenda I have in this post is to share how to make hard choices. You can imagine how difficult it is to say focus on page depth, don't focus on conversion rate, or don't worry about any content metric, focus on clicks. It seems crazy. But a big part of being successful is being able to understand business reality and have the skill to make these hard choices. I hope you'll pick up a couple of tips about making those choices.]
Ready to read something outrageously controversial? ; )
digital analytics ladder of magnificient success
Focus on Visits and Click-thru Rates first. Don't do anything else. Nothing. Just Visits and CTRs. Focus your analysis on looking at dimensions that help you understand where your precious visitors are coming from, if you are doing any kind of inbound marketing (in the digital marketing ladder I recommend SEO in stage one) then what is getting more clicks and what is not. Optimize for Visits and CTRs will help you focus your precious energy on certain geographies, certain referring sources, certain keywords, certain digital activities and optimize to get higher clicks. A very good thing in stage one.
Now that people are showing up, we are ready to see what content they are consuming and how well/badly our welcome pages are doing. Focus on Bounce Rates ("I came, I puked, I left!") to help you optimize your landing pages and the sources driving traffic to those pages. Calls to action, text, graphics, offers, bids, ad text, targeting and more. Your job is to get in front of the right person, get them to the right page, and entice them to stay.
page depth analysis1
In stage two also focus on Pages per Visit, or Page Depth, (don't use time on site, it is problematic) as in the sample table above. This will help you optimize both for mobile and desktop experiences.
It is time to make some money in stage three. (See what I mean by making tough choices? Obsessing about making money first will cause your company to make the wrong choices initially. Just make sure you are not losing money, then obsess about it only in stage three.) For B2B companies Macro Outcome Rate is related to lead generation, for B2C it is often the e-commerce Conversion Rate. Additionally in stage three focus on Page Value, with it you are not only optimizing for content consumption (stage two) you are also optimizing for which content most creates revenue. Then zero in on that content and people/teams inside the company that create that content.
Your business is now humming on all three of the initial key things you need to do for acquisition, behaviorand outcome. In stage four become an insane fanatic about extracting the highest possible value you can from every dollar you are spending on marketing and advertising. Focus on optimizing your Cost per Acquisition (CPA).
cost per acquisition 31
This will not only reduce cost, if you do it right, it will force your company to invest more in activities that improve shareholder value and kill the shiny objects that our management teams chase due to advice from "marketing gurus." This effort is so important that I want you to focus on it singularly (unlike all other stages).
Stage five, as in the case of our digital marketing ladder of success, calls for stepping up our level of sophistication. Focus on cart and checkout abandonment rate (don't combine the two). Go buy a simple A/B testing tool (Visual Website OptimizerOptimizely), go crazy optimizing every little thing to take money from the people who want to give it to you! It is also time to become more sophisticated about identifying the value of your marketing spend, focus on the Assisted Conversions metric (you'll find it in the Multi-Channel Funnels report). Make decisions based on last click conversions delivered AND the assisted conversions. Don't worry about attribution modeling yet. Just focus on the last column in that report, then optimize your campaign targeting, content and success measures.
We've nailed down what we are doing on our owned platforms, time to focus on our rented platforms. You are working very hard by this stage on Facebook, YouTube etc, stay away from awful metrics like Views, Likes, etc. So, in stage six, obsess about Conversation Rate and Amplification, two of my four best social media metrics ever.
dashboard best social media metrics11
The above metrics will force your company to use social for what social is really good at. Force them to execute my recommendation for greatest social media strategy: 1. Entertain Me 2. Inform Me. 3. Provide Utility.
Stage seven where you start to focus on the metric that differentiates losers from winners: Economic Value. We focus on all 100% of our visitors (not just the one or two percent that will convert), we will focus on all of the See-Think-Do-Coddle audience consideration stages. The surest way to do that is if we identify the micro-outcomes and the economic value each outcome adds to our business. This is so amazing because it will force your company to focus on what makes money now, what will make money 90 days from now and 9 months from now!
None of the above was really hard. Stage eight is hard! We are going to obsess about Profitability. Not just the fake "ROI" number in many digital analytics tool, but true profitability. At the very minimum, for a dimension you care about like campaign… Profitability = Revenue generated – campaign cost – cost of goods sold. You can add other costs if you have access to them.
Profitability is one of the main reasons I'm so excited about cost data upload into Google Analytics. Now you can measure what the actual amount of money each campaign/activity delivers to your business. You can do it for Bing, email, AOL ads, social, even SEO! You can finally see that the Conversion rate for Yahoo! ads is 10%, the Average Order Value is $200, compare it to Google ads conversion rate of 4% and Average Order Value of $100, and notice that the Profit per Order from Yahoo! is -$15 and for Google it is $163. #omg
Stage eight also includes improving the sophistication of analyzing the offline impact of our online activities.Multi-channel measurement and optimization. It is a long hard slog, but by the time you get to stage eight, you are ready, your company is ready, you are going to get so rich!
The last stage, stage nine, is also the most strategic and deadly awesome: Optimizing for customer lifetime value.
life time value lifetime net profit 11
Asking you to wait until stage nine for LTV is like saying don't believe in Jesus until time x. It seems silly. It seems insane. The sad reality is that it takes a lot (from a data, people, process perspective) to be ready to optimize for LTV. But by this stage you've put all your ducks in the proper order, you've done your multi-channel optimization (and more critically data integrations required between your online and offline sources), you have moved away from considering cookies to be customers to changing your entire Google Analytics existence to focus on people (across devices, channels, online and offline). Now you are ready for LTV. And you are going to do it without frustration and with a huge fast impact on your business. [For more guidance see the LTV post and download the lifetime value model.]
Bish. Bam. Boom! You are there. You've achieved nirvana! : )
Closing Thoughts.
It is hard to have the discipline to systematically get good at one thing at a time. But evolution works spectacularly well. That is what we need.
It seems crazy that you are a large company with tons of people and money. Gosh, you have 25 people just in your digital analytics team and a two million dollar a year adobe analytics contract. Still, for all those people prioritize one stage at a time (while other things can happen, they just won't be a corporate priority), and move your company forward one stage at a time.
It is hard to get nine women to make a baby in one month.
I wish you all the best in climbing the digital ladder of amazing success.
As always, it is your turn now.
Do you agree with the step-by-step approach? Would you change any stage in the digital marketing ladder? Perhaps do Email before SEO, or Social as stage one? How about the analytics ladder? Would you make different choices in the order of the metrics? Is there a metric I'm over-valuing or completely missing from the ladder? If you've been successful getting your company to be good at many things all at one time, what's your secret?
Please share your perspectives, critique, life lessons, and insights via comments below.
Thank you.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Content Curation’s Business Benefits, and 12 Tech Solutions to Consider


By ROBERT ROSE published NOVEMBER 13, 2013
How should I use content curation in my content marketing strategy?
content curation-cmi titleThis is a question we began hearing at Content Marketing Institute (CMI) five years ago, as content marketing started to get traction as a process within businesses. To this day, the term “content curation” continues to promote debate — even among content curation companies themselves.

What is content curation?

In our second, and newest, Content Marketing Technology Landscape Report, Content Curation & Conversation Tools, we spoke with a dozen content curation companies. After gathering their input, we’ve cooked up our own point of view on how curating content feeds the content marketing approach. In short: content curation is a means by which we either supplement or promote our brand’s point of view to our specific audiences within the context of how the “world” is talking about that particular topic. We see it as a spectrum of activities that evolve from one point to the next:
  • Simple aggregation and collection of content (with or without a distinct point of view)
  • Active curation and promotion of a point of view using that collection as a source
  • Aggregation and curation of user-generated content and social conversation around reported events or news in order to build an engaged community
  • Active real-time coverage of events and “newsroom” coverage of events around trending topics

content management workflow chart

The benefits of curation

If you want to use curation but are not sure how it could fit into your content marketing strategy, consider these four business benefits. These observations come from our consultations with more than 70 Fortune 1000 companies on the process of content marketing. We have found that the enterprises that are successfully using content curation as a marketing strategy are, in most cases, deploying solutions that focus on one or more of these four business benefits: 
  1. “Taming the firehose of content”
Many content marketers still struggle with “feeding the beast” of content (although, we’d argue, the beast should go on a diet in many instances) and look to content aggregation tools to help them filter — and provide topical relevance to — content they may want to deploy for any of the approaches mentioned above. Additionally, some brands now need to curate their own content — i.e., the content they are producing in-house. This is a problem that will only grow, as brands start to produce more and more content across different channels. With the use of multiple web content management systems (WCMS), blogging tools, social media content, etc., becoming the status quo in managing content marketing, the need for multiple departments to curate content across a large enterprise is a huge challenge that content curation tools can help solve.
  1. Faster, more agile content marketing
With regard to real-time conversation with consumers, any tool that helps a brand monitor and aggregate what’s going on in its industry can be beneficial to the content marketing team. For the members of that team, understanding what’s “hot” and “trending” can mean the difference between a successful approach and one that’s constantly operating behind the curve. Beyond social listening tools, content curation and aggregation tools (especially those that also pull in conversations) can help a brand be “in tune” with what’s happening in real time.
  1. Adding points of view and distinct experiences
Producing original content certainly can be part of the curation process — and adding distinct points of view to curated content can be a huge benefit to the content marketing strategy. This is especially appropriate when a brand may want to “bundle” three, four, 12, etc.,  articles in a package and then, perhaps, write a short post contextualizing these articles with an opinion. Or, the brand may want to provide a complete “event” as a bundle and package it as a microsite.
Many content curation tools approach the curation idea from this perspective — where the content marketer has not only the capability to aggregate the content in a “portal” type of interface, but also to organize and add new content, and package it all in a way that may create an entirely new type of experience. This might include publishing microsites, adding bundles into email newsletters, or simply adding to existing social or web content channels.
  1. Empowering and engaging target audiences
Jeff Ernst, Vice President of Marketing at Forrester Research, has been quoted as saying, “Consumers don’t buy your product or service, they buy your approach to solving their problem.” This is certainly a core tenet of content marketing, and the idea of giving audiences both the incentive and the power to aggregate around a branded approach to a particular topic is an attractive one. For example, some content curation tools enable brands to create live online events, where they can aggregate influencers, resources, and audiences — all of which can interact and share with one another. These types of tools leverage the power of consumers to act as journalists for the brand at events, which helps feed the aforementioned “content beast.” Options here also include gamification, which is another strategy to promote further engagement with a brand. Similarly, other tools are enabling brands to create centralized online destinations where consumers can gather and interact with the brand in order to “unlock” some benefit (e.g., a discount or extra feature).
Finally, marketers with consumer product companies also can look to content aggregation tools to help them curate the overwhelming amount of content that may be appearing from users all over the web as part of their experience with the brand. For example, marketers can create “product walls,” where pictures, video, and other user-generated content is gathered around a particular product, sourced from every channel imaginable.

Evaluating content curation solutions

The content curation space has extraordinary diversity in differentiating technology. While some are, quite literally, just using basic web searches to aggregate content based on themes, other solutions have incredibly sophisticated semantic and indexing technologies that could ultimately provide true differentiating value to the business — or an acquiring company.
Additionally, these companies tend to take varied and niche approaches to their solutions. Some are purely focused on aggregating thematic content in some kind of easy-to-use interface for teams to more efficiently manage a process (e.g., “taming the firehose”). Others are providing everything from the ability to set up promotions and contests across social channels to managing content in mini “content management” systems, and even creating microsites, in some cases.
As such, it’s difficult to get an apples-to-apples comparison in this space. Content marketers looking to add curation and conversation management to their approach will do well to truly understand what they are trying to achieve before going shopping. Certainly, the “shiny object syndrome” holds true here. As many of these vendors do vastly different things, it is easy for a buyer to be distracted by the first “sexy” demo and then (unfortunately) compare every subsequent demonstration to the shiny object that captured their initial attention.
Thus, we recommend developing (either internally or through consultation) a more thorough evaluation of the benefits a curation and conversation management process should achieve for your business. Then, consider the vendors that can solve that particular process most effectively. Based on the four key benefits above, here are some questions you may want to ask:
  • What sources can the tool curate content from? RSS feeds? Twitter? LinkedIn? Facebook?
  • How can the tool help me filter the best info?
  • Can it curate content that’s created in-house across different channels?
  • Can it help me understand what is “hot” and “trending”? (Side benefit: Even if you do not publish this content, it can help with editorial planning.)
  • Does it allow me to add my own point of view to the content I’ve curated?
  • Can I “bundle” several articles that I can use as the basis for a post?
  • Can I create a microsite from curated content?
  • Can I use the curated content to produce an email newsletter?
  • Can I use the tool to create a live online event?
  • Can I create a centralized online destination or “hub,” similar to a community, where consumers can gather and interact with my brand?
  • Can I use the platform for gamification or in other ways to promote engagement — for example, to encourage consumers to “play along” in order to unlock some type of benefit (e.g., a discount or extra feature)?

Looking forward

From a marketplace standpoint, this space is moving extraordinarily quickly. We expect that, within the next year (very much like the content collaboration space), most of these vendors will have been more fully funded by venture capital, or that one or more of the “large” enterprises focused on the full marketing stack (e.g., Oracle, Adobe, Microsoft, or Salesforce.com) will acquire one or more of these solutions.
The space is moving quickly from the technology buyers’ perspective, as well. As internal teams begin to de-silo within organizations, and as content becomes more central to the marketing approach, we expect there to be opportunity for the space to consolidate quickly. Web content management and marketing automation solutions may potentially become an optimal sweet spot for this aspect of the process (as illustrated by LiveFyre’s September 2013 acquisition of Storify).
One thing is certain: Many of these companies are doing very interesting and powerful things when it comes to some of the most fundamental concepts around content. These technologies are searching, indexing, categorizing, analyzing, and optimizing huge amounts of content — this is no small task, and these teams are bright and eager.

Learn more

If you are using content curation or thinking about implementing this strategy, I encourage you to download our latest technology report, Content Curation & Conversation Tools, which covers the following technology solutions:
  • Atomic Reach
  • Categorical
  • Curata
  • FeedMagnet
  • Flashissue
  • Mass Relevance
  • NextWorks
  • Percolate
  • PublishThis
  • Scoop.it
  • ScribbleLive
  • Spundge
Access is still available for our first report from this Content Marketing Landscape Report series, Content Collaboration Tools.
via Content Marketing Institute http://contentmarketinginstitute.com/2013/11/content-curation-solutions/