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When Does Rich Media Make Sense?

Meridith Oram Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

Rich Media is not a crucial part of your digital marketing mix. There, I’ve said it. After spending three years working at one of the best known and respected Rich Media providers in the world, six weeks back in the agency-world has re-taught me this.

Sure, Rich Media can increase brand awareness, get users to spend time with your brand, and give you a whole host of neat metrics, but there are many other cost-effective ways to achieve similar, if not better, results.

What is Rich Media Really?

There’s a reason why top brands are the main players in the Rich Media world—when you’re a huge, well-known brand it’s important to stay relevant and at the front of people’s mind.  But just as the number of brands utilizing TV as a medium is limited due to cost implications; the same is true for Rich Media. In a nut shell, Rich Media is cool but expensive.

I’ve always personified Rich Media as the popular kid in school that everyone wants to say they’re friends with. He gets by on charm and good looks (enticing creative), wears the hottest designer threads (latest technology), attends the best parties (top websites), wins football games but does poorly in school (measurable), turns heads as he walks down the hall (millions of impressions) but most people are too intimidated to talk to him (low interaction rates.) Flash forward to the five year reunion though, and is he still a big deal? Not likely. He needs the isolation of high school and his core group of buddies (PPC, Email, Social & Standard Flash) to support him and keep up the hype. In other words, on his own, Rich Media would probably fall flat on his face.

When Does Rich Media Make Sense?

Rich Media makes sense when you have a big budget and your main objectives are brand awareness and brand interaction time. Even with a strategic and highly targeted media buy, brand has to be a top priority or you’ll likely be disappointed by your COM. Yes, Rich Media ads can certainly have a direct marketing message with limitless possibilities on content—coupon downloads, e-commerce, store locators, sweepstakes entry forms, etc.—but if your goal is simply to get users to click through to your site, then Standard Flash and PPC are much more appropriate and cost-effective.

Does It Make Sense for You?

Before adding Rich Media to your marketing plan, you should ask yourself the following five yes-or-no questions:

  1. Am I using Standard Flash but feeling frustrated by the limited functionality and available metrics?
  2. Is my website user-friendly, and updated with the latest and most relevant content?
  3. Do I have an on-going PPC campaign for my brand, with smaller PPC campaigns sprinkled in throughout the year for promotions and products?
  4. Am I successfully engaging customers via social channels like Facebook and Twitter?
  5. Do I have a strategic email program in place?

If you answered ‘no’ to any of these questions, your budget will be better spent on growing and improving the other components of your marketing mix. If you answered ‘yes’ to these, then Rich Media may be for you.

Smartphones – App vs Mobile Sites

Jim DelPizzo Monday, November 15th, 2010

Most companies have realized the shift, the shift that smartphones are here to stay. More and more people are using their smart phones to surf the web, download apps, play games, and check email. The smartphone is taking over what people used to do on a laptop to some extent.

Here is some information on the increase of smartphones and the projections of 2011.

“65 percent of people 18 to 29 years old use their smartphone to access the Internet. Just under 50 percent of people 30 to 39 do the same. Expect those numbers to grow.”
- from the Pew Internet and American Life Project reported in July

There are over 60 million US smart phone users.

2011 smartphones will surpass featured phones by Q3.

Now that companies realize that and finally want to go mobile where do they start? Do they need a mobile website? An App?

Build Apps
Building apps for each device might be time consuming considering as of right now there are iPhones, Andriods, Blackberries, and soon to be released Windows. So you would need to build an application for each device. Though for each device you could use the rich hardware feature of your phone like GPS, maps, and the camera.

Mobile WebSites
Building a mobile web site would be less programming but you would lose out on the hardware features of the phone. Also the display across all the phones might be off, since there are high end smartphones like the iPhone, Andriod, and Blackberry and the low end smartphones that don’t have the display as the high end phones. With the introduction to HTML5 a lot of the mobile sites can act like mobile Apps.

Conclusion
The first thing a company should ask themselves is what are the reason they want a smartphone app or website. From the chart below we can see the breakdown of Apple’s App Store compared to mobile sites

If you are going to use Mobile apps do research on people who are currently using your site, questions to ask – are they iPhone User or Blackberry Users?

My suggestion would be to build a Mobile website first and then if you are in need of an App, you will know which smartphone most of the users of the mobile website use.

**UPDATE pretty cool video on mobile devices:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0aUQLIPdtg8&feature=player_embedded

Social Media 2011 Cover Story

Denise Zimmerman Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

I was asked recently by iMedia to write a Cover Story on Social Media Trends to Watch for 2011. And while I was the author the writing reflects our collective experience and work here at NetPlus as well as numerous others leading the way in our industry. Many seem to have found it a valuable read – and I hope you do too.

iMediaConnection Cover Story: Social Media Trends to Watch 2011

http://bit.ly/b4pfsX

Would love your feedback and thoughts….Denise

Shop.org Annual Summit: Grounded Euphoria

Denise Zimmerman Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

The mood at the recent shop.org Annual Summit in Dallas was grounded euphoria.  It was by far the most well attended and engaged summit in shop.org history. It also ranks as one of the most well-produced shows in content, event planning and overall value that I have had the pleasure of not only attending but participating in. I have been involved on and off with shop.org since it’s early beginnings… Currently I serve on the content committee and have been a speaker on social media/commerce for the past 3 years.  It is a group that I am distinctly proud to be a part of and contribute to.

I continue to be impressed with the level of dedication of all those involved and their keen sense as well as unrelenting focus on what is valuable to their membership. It always showed but it really shined this year. Close to 3400 attendees converged to discuss, debate and learn about critical issues and trends that directly impact their business. All in an outstanding setting and format conducive to digesting the robust content. And a party on the Cowboys stadium field wasn’t too shabby either.

If you missed the summit you can catch an overview on their site at: http://bit.ly/9MNaSg

If you are not a retailer, this is a unique and wired bunch. Retail alone is an intense, competitive business. When ecommerce was added to the mix oh so many years ago -the debates ran on – but today there is no debating the financial contribution and yes even the growth opportunities there are in ecommerce – with social commerce being a particularly hot topic.

If the mood here is any indication of the year to come; 2011 is going to kick some major ecommerce butt.

I had the distinct joy and privilege to lead a roundtable on “How Social Drives SEO” as well as serve as a “social media” Doctor for one on one sessions with retailers.

IMG_8996.JPG

It was outstanding. The shared dialogue, the voracious appetite for knowledge – oh joy!

There was tons of opportunities to learn more, validate what you “think you know”, connect, chat, visit and so forth – all that makes these sorts of events so worthwhile. The only complaint I have is – there wasn’t enough time to get it all in.

But I did pick up a pair of spectacular silver and white calfskin cowgirlboots. When in Texas — YeeHa!

SEO degeekified

Jody Pirrello Monday, July 19th, 2010

I’m sure you all know how important SEO (search engine optimization) is to the success and visibility of your site. SEO straddles technical implementation, content development and user behavior.  Today I’m going to focus on the technical side because that’s often the most mysterious to a non-technical person.

There are several factors to consider when designing a new site or making changes to an existing site. They can be categorized into two groups – factors that impact search engine results (does the site come up when a user searches for a certain phrase?), and factors that impact click through (even if the site comes up on a search results page, does it entice the user to click on it?).

Here’s a simple list of the top factors.  It’s in no way an exhaustive list but if your site does these correctly you’ll be well on your way to SEO-friendly pages.

Factor What Is It? SERP* CT**
Title tag Page title – shown in the browser’s title bar and as the “heading” of the page’s listing on the search results page.  See screen shot below. check check
Keyword tag Not shown on the web site.  Once used by most search engines but currently only used by Yahoo. check
Description tag Not shown on the web site.  Doesn’t impact search results. Shown below page title on search results page so it has great impact on click through.  See screen shot below. check
ALT tag Used as the words to describe an image.  Since search engines can’t read an image, they fall back onto ALT to describe the image.  Words in ALT are used by search engines to determine ranking. check
XML Sitemap I’m not talking about the user-friendly site map that’s often linked to in the footer of sites.  I’m talking about a file that search engines look for when indexing your site.  It’s a specially formatted listing of all pages on your site and an XML sitemap makes it easier for search engines to find those pages.  Motivating search engines is not unlike motivating people – make it easier for them to do their job for you and they’re more likely to do a good job while they’re at it. check

* SERP = Search Engine Results Page. Here’s an example of a SERP.
** CT = Click-through – when a user clicks on a link it’s called a click-through.  Make your hard work effective – entice users to click on links to your site.

Sample search results page

I’ve just touched on the elements of a page that impact SEO. There are dozens more but I’ll leave that to your tech team.  The items I outlined are the minimum – make sure your team is at least addressing them when creating or updating your web site.

Next time I’ll discuss something even more impactful – how other web sites can increase SEO for your site.

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