Tuesday, June 28, 2016

4 Pieces of Sage Healthcare Marketing Advice from Healthcare Marketers

Healthcare-marketing-advice


Healthcare marketers are intensely aware of the changing industry landscape. From new regulations and technologies to the rise of consumerism, many find themselves retooling their strategies and looking for valuable advice along the way.


On Wednesday, June 29, 2016 TopRank Marketing and Medicom Health Interactive are partnering for a free webinar to offer that advice and help healthcare marketers navigate, adapt and thrive in the new environment.


The event will feature a deep dive into the four-must have components of an integrated digital marketing strategy outlined in our recent eBook: Patient-First Marketing: Understanding the Anatomy of a Successful Strategy.


To whet your appetite, we've tapped into the expertise of four awesome healthcare marketers (who also appeared in our recent eBook) to share their biggest piece of advice for other healthcare marketers.


Advice for Healthcare Marketers from Healthcare Marketers


Pamela Maas


Pamela-Maas


Chief of Business Development & Marketing Officer

Gundersen Health System

Find Pamela on LinkedIn


A Little About Pamela


Pamela has over 25 years experience in marketing and takes a very results-oriented and strategic approach to all aspects including, planning, marketing research, communication plans and more.


Pamela's Healthcare Marketing Tip


“Consumer behavior change is inevitable, but marketing involvement in digital solutions to engaging consumers in their health and wellness don't have to be overly complicated. Stretch beyond traditional and don't be leery of trying different approaches as there will not be one single, magic solution. Consumers needs will vary. Be thinking of building digital relationships to build loyalty, revenue will come later. And, be sure to establish measureable metrics to assess impact.”




Rob Birgfeld


Rob-Birgfeld---Inova


AVP, Chief Digital Marketing Officer

Inova Health System

Find Rob on Twitter


A Little About Rob


Rob started his career in marketing as a Communications Intern nearly 20 years ago. His expertise includes everything from business development, to brand management, content marketing, email marketing and social media.


Rob's Healthcare Marketing Tip


“The digital space is so fast moving, don't ever give yourself too much credit. There is always, always, always someone who knows more than you. A thirst for learning new technologies, new platforms, analytical approaches and exploration will keep you, your projects, your strategies relevant and honest.”




Adam Lee


Adam-Lee


Regional Web and Digital Marketing Manager

Adventist Health

Find Adam on Twitter


A Little About Adam


Adam is someone that has a passion for continuing to learn as much as he can about marketing and find opportunities to develop his professional skills as often as possible. Some of his expertise includes strategic website planning, marketing strategy, email marketing, social media and design.


Adam's Healthcare Marketing Tip


“So often, doing what's best for the patient is also the right marketing tactic. A little more intentional crossover between marketing and patient experience would be beneficial for both groups.”




Laura Boyd DeSmeth


Laura-Boyd-DeSmeth


Director of Digital Communications – North Texas Division

HCA

Find Laura on Twitter


A Little About Laura


Laura spent over 10 years as an Executive Producer before joining the world of healthcare marketing in 2009. Her expertise ranges from content marketing and social media engagement to creating integrated creative branding campaigns.


Laura's Healthcare Marketing Tip


“Understand your audience and whatever you do, think about how you can make life easier for them. Whether that means helping them book an online appointment or tailoring and sharing truly practical content, respect their time, don't waste it!”


Hungry for More Healthcare Marketing Advice?


We hope you enjoyed these healthcare marketing insights from our experts. If you're looking for more, then we urge you to join us on June 29, 2016 for our healthcare marketing webinar.  Not only will you leave with actionable advice and inspiration, but you'll also have the opportunity to get your most burning questions about healthcare marketing questions answered.


Patient-First Marketing Webinar




Email Newsletter
Gain a competitive advantage by subscribing to the
TopRank® Online Marketing Newsletter.


© Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®, 2016. |
4 Pieces of Sage Healthcare Marketing Advice from Healthcare Marketers | http://www.toprankblog.com

The post 4 Pieces of Sage Healthcare Marketing Advice from Healthcare Marketers appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.




The Poor Man's Marketing Stack: How to Hack Marketing Automation

There are over 2,000 marketing technology companies today.


Each one doing something a bit different, filling some unique yet critical need.


That means on a daily basis, marketers might choose from 100 different software programs to fulfill relatively basic tasks.


That inspired somebody, somewhere, to misappropriate the word 'stack' from the development world to describe how a particular company might be aligning all their pieces of a marketing and sales pie.


The result often becomes a head-bangingly frustrating process where you're piecing together several to deliver a single campaign.


Sure, you could opt for an all-in-one solution like HubSpot. But it's also F&*#@*G expensive.


What if you don't have that kind of loot?


Here's how you can use even the most basic, inexpensive or free pieces of software to replicate sophisticated marketing automation and business process hacks.


How to Eliminate Bottlenecks with App-Connecting Tools


Marketing automation, when implemented properly, has the power to increase leads by 451% and boost sales by 34%.


But… a shockingly high 85% of B2B marketers admit to not using it correctly.


The secret 'inbound marketing lie' that no-one wants to admit is how F-ing time consuming this stuff is.


Not to mention, if you don't have the right tool setup, it's nearly impossible to pull off.


HubSpot is amazing. I'm a super happy partner and advocate. It makes marketing automation relatively easy to implement at scale. But most can't (or won't) fork over the ~$10k a year. That's completely understandable.


When I started consulting, there was no way my clients or I could afford it either. (Although there is a compelling argument for making your money back relatively quickly if you're using any all-in-one, database driven tool properly.)


That led to an endless search for tools that played well natively. Existing integrations between key pieces of software, like hooking up Gravity Forms with MailChimp, can make your life 10X easier.


But it's difficult to construct an entire marketing funnel with only tools with native integrations. And it's not realistic, as other departments or teams within your organization will probably have their own tools that need to work seamlessly with yours.


Fortunately, tools like Zapier and IFTTT (If This Then That) began popping up to help solve this problem.


They're pretty basic once you get the hang of it. Simply connect two applications, create a 'trigger' (the thing that starts this process in motion) and an 'action' (what happens when the trigger is, well, triggered).


For example, Gravity Forms (an excellent WordPress plugin) can then automatically send new form submissions to your favorite CRM like Contactually – even though there's not native integration between these two applications.


contactually-gravity-forms


Best of all, with a little ingenuity, you can use them to re-create a marketing stack and begin automating your marketing.


We're going to walk through examples in a minute, but first the theory.


Get Started by Outlining Your Marketing Funnel Steps


In an ideal world, strangers find out who you are and develop interest and trust in your brand before agreeing to become a customer.


Digital marketing 101 talks about creating a seamless customer experience by creating tactics that align with each stage of the buyer's journey:


marketing-funnel-stages-brad-smith



  • Awareness: A stranger becomes aware of some problem in their life.

  • Information: They begin looking for ways to help solve said problem.

  • Evaluation: Recognizing a need, they begin actively searching for a solution between different alternatives.

  • Decision: They make the conscious decision to move forward with the alternative that best meets their criteria.


Sophisticated tools can help you hit all of these points without ever switching around. But that's gonna be tough with inexpensive software that typically specializes in one small area or another.


So instead, the goal is to recreate what these other platforms can do, moving people logically from one step to the next when they're ready. Ideally, in the most automated and simplistic fashion possible.


The goal is to recreate what HubSpot and other sophisticated (read: expensive) marketing automation software does, for a fraction of the price.


Sounds nice in theory, right?


But practically, how would that look?


funnel-steps-marketing-automation



  • Awareness: A new lead converts on a landing page, getting added to your email marketing software.

  • Information: As the lead begins searching for more information on your site and interacting with other resources, they should be added and removed from other automated marketing sequences to continue nurturing.

  • Evaluation: Once the lead begins getting serious about considering you as a solution, they need to be updated in your CRM system as such and qualified (if appropriate).

  • Purchase: If they decide to move forward with you, things need to be paid, they need to become a customer or client, and their project or account needs to be set-up immediately.


The important thing to note here isn't the tools themselves, but your process or workflow. Once that's defined, you can figure out which tools might be best to slot in each category. For example, even the free Google Contacts might be a good CRM choice (and it integrates easily with Zapier).


Enough small talk though.


Let's take a look at each stage of this funnel to see how you can use Zapier to recreate steps that typically only expensive marketing automation platforms deliver.


Awareness: Landing Page to Email Marketing


Rule #1 of Permission Marketing (which pre-dated Inbound Marketing by, oh, like a decade) is to get somebody to give you their info in exchange for something of value, allowing you to continue following up with that person over time.


This can be old school, like an email address. Or new school, like their Snapchat… um, err… I have no idea what these kids call it.


In any event, the process is the same.


We already spoke about Gravity Forms, which can be used to power basic eBook forms to collect submissions.


But how about something a little more complex, like a webinar?


Zapier integrates easily with GoToWebinar, allowing you to capture new registrations (and even new attendees).


triggers-searches-actions-zapier


This is perfect if you'd like to add these new registrations to an email list.


Even better, is if you create an automated workflow in for a specific email list for the upcoming webinar. That way, you can continually send out new messages to the contact to make sure that they attend the event (thereby boosting your Attendance Rate).


MailChimp is perfect for this. The pricing is very affordable, especially considering the beautiful templates, ease-of-use, and pretty decent automation options. Plus, that damn Chimp is so cute.


gotowebinar-zapier


Simply select the upcoming webinar, add the new registration to a specific list in MailChimp, and you're done.


Easy peasy.


But… what happens if people DO (or DON'T) show up? What happens if they DO (or DON'T) take you up on that customary end-of-webinar call-to-action?


You gotta update their status.


Information: Email Marketing Updates


Let's say that you're getting clever now, and that you'd like to create two different sets of messages based on if people did or didn't attend your webinar.


Obviously, getting this right is important because if somebody receives the wrong email it could damage your credibility.


There are a few ways to do this, but the most straightforward is to simply create two additional lists in your email marketing service – one for those who do show up, and one for those who don't.


THEN, you'll want to unsubscribe people from the initial list (like the original webinar registration one) and add them to one of the new lists you created based on their actions.


Most basic email marketing services don't have this feature already. However you can create a simple Zap to take care of it for you.


mailchimp-triggers-zapier


Another example where this comes in handy is if you offer a free trial or demo.


In that case, you don't want a new lead (or even customer) to continue receiving promotional messages. Fortunately this same simple little hack, creating different lists for different segments of people, being unsubscribed automatically when they join a new list, can take care of a lot of the headache.


mailchimp-zapier-remove-paying-customers


Evaluation: New Lead to CRM to Qualify (or Disqualify)


So far you've been nurturing this new lead with a few different campaigns or tactics. Everything's gone well so far and they're ready to get serious.


For product or software companies this is straightforward and easy: they download the discount or join the free trial and either purchase (or not).


However it's a little more complicated for service companies.


How do you know if the lead is any good? You can't just agree to speak with everyone nutjob who fills out your form (and there will be plenty, believe me).


You can start by filtering your results, setting up qualifying questions in your forms to make sure that you're tailoring your follow-up process accordingly.


For example, you can set-up different zaps between products based on how people answer a specific question.


set-up-zapier-only-continue-if


Now you can begin segmenting the people who ARE interested in your services, with the tire kickers who are primarily interested in wasting your time.


But you still have no idea if they're even a good lead or not.


To be on the safe side, let's automatically send an email to someone in your company to qualify each new prospect who's interested in your services.


Simple! Just use Gmail based on the form filtered submission you just set-up. You can even pre-craft the message, pulling in form data, along with helpful links for the person who's helping you to know exactly how you want them to be qualified (delegation FTW!).


marketing-process-email


You can send this email to an assistant, employee, or whomever, and at the same time create a new project management task to make sure they'll see it immediately as it comes in (along with a due date to make sure each lead is followed up with ASAP).


todo-list-project-management


With a few simple steps and some foresight, you've just set-up and delegated the first few steps of your sales process.


Congrats!


But you're still not quite done yet. What happens when those people decide to pay you money?


Decision: New Client to Point of Sale and Project Management


Again, product or software transactions are insanely straightforward.


When someone wants to become a customer, they whip out a credit card and it takes a few seconds. Then you can update your email or contact lists accordingly with the previous tips.


However what if this is a larger transaction?


First, you can automatically create a new Freshbooks invoice when someone fills out an appropriate form. You can even have someone fill this out internally while on the phone with a new client-in-waiting.


freshbooks-zapier


Freshbooks already integrates with both Stripe and PayPal (along with a few others), so you can even take this a step further by automating all of the tasks related to onboarding new clients too.


For example, let's create a new Dropbox folder for each client when a successful first payment is made.


dropbox-zapier<


Pretty helpful. But let's keep going.


Let's also create a new TEMPLATED project in your favorite project management tool (like Asana in this case).


dropbox-asana-zapier


Just like we did earlier with the email message to qualify a new lead, you can select a pre-built template for the new client to get everything set-up in seconds (rather than hours).


Best of all, there's no shortage of tips or tricks here. If you take notes during your Kick-Off Call with Evernote, a task can immediately be created in your PM tool to make sure these notes are added to the client's project accordingly.


todo-list-zapier-evernote


A Time-Saving Caveat


Tools like Zapier or IFTTT open up a brand new world of possibilities.


It's super interesting and you can geek out on this stuff for HOURS if you're not careful.


Just think about all of the possibilities you can accomplish if even the most basic software options like Gravity Forms and MailChimp can do this stuff.


But don't start with the tools.


Instead, start with the process. What exactly are you trying to accomplish? How should people move seamlessly through your own marketing funnel?


Begin by setting up the basic stuff and testing as you go. Once you've got the process down, it's easy to dive into the details and begin customizing each little aspect.


For example, just start by automating how each new lead is followed up with. Then you can get clever with implementing different marketing campaigns that funnel down to this step.


Not only with this approach save you tons of time on the front-end, but you'll drastically increase your odds of this system delivering better results too.


About the Author: Brad Smith is a founding partner at Codeless Interactive, a digital agency specializing in creating personalized customer experiences. Brad's blog also features more marketing thoughts, opinions and the occasional insight.




Why CMOs Need To Be Bullish On Programmatic Advertising

Before I get to my thoughts on why CMOs need to be bullish on programmatic advertising, let's first take a look at just what programmatic advertising is. 



We define it simply as “Automated advertising buying coupled with machine learning.” However, there are no shortages of definitions of the term programmatic advertising.



“Programmatic ad buying typically refers to the use of software to purchase digital advertising, as opposed to the traditional process that involves RFPs, human negotiations and manual insertion orders. It's using machines to buy ads, basically.” -Digiday



“Programmatic advertising helps automate the decision-making process of media buying by targeting specific audiences and demographics.” -Marketing Land



The first definition helps explain it in very simply terms whereas the second helps explain what it does. 



In terms of the different types of programmatic advertising, according to the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB)-which is an industry organization geared toward ensuring standards across the advertising ecosystem-there are two types of programmatic buying (the process in which you're buying advertising):



1. Programmatic Direct

Also known as Premium Programmatic Advertising, this is an automated technology-driven method used for buying, selling, or fulfilling advertising. It provides for an Automated Guarantee Systematic automation of sales process. No insertion order (IO) or master services agreement (MSA) covered within the partnership.



2. Programmatic Real Time Bidding (RTB)

Two types of RTBs are Open Auction (audience targeting) and Private Marketplace Deals-which require a private marketplace and allow for fixed pricing and data overlays. We are beginning to see more and more of this type of programmatic advertising being used every day. 



Why CMOs Need To Be Bullish On Programmatic Advertising 

The shift to programmatic tactics means a few things for marketers and the industry as a whole. In essence, it has validated and delivered against the need for data-driven, and accountable ROI-based media delivery. Additionally, it has enabled an efficient method for publishers to monetize core inventory. 



In a nutshell, programmatic advertising aligns media with brand lift metrics for real ROI and only spends money where it will be effective. 



And it would appear that many of your fellow CMOs are planning on being bullish as eMarketer predicts that in 2016 programmatic TV spending will climb 127.8% to $710 million and by 2018 will account for 6% of all TV ad spending.





The New Currency of Advertising



Digital delivery and content is the new currency of advertising. Brands must find a way to connect while measuring returns on more than recall or click through rate (CTR). Only programmatic platforms can deliver that value.



Download The Programmatic Guide for Modern Marketers, Publishers, and Media Planners to learn how to deliver advertising that enhances the customer experience and a lot more. 





How Agency RevUnit Used Unbounce to Turn Up Conversions for School of Rock

How Agency RevUnit Turned Up Conversions

Digital Marketing Agency RevUnit rocked the house for their client by turning a deceptively simple idea into a 400% lift in PPC conversions.

When I first met Seth Waite over a Google Hangout a few weeks ago, he mentioned that his agency, RevUnit, had done some “pretty fun things with Unbounce” for clients.


It took a little while for me to understand what Seth really meant by “fun;” he meant innovative, experimental digital marketing that actually moves the needle on results. I'll admit, fun isn't the first word I'd use to describe Seth's story.


It's genius.


It's also deceptively simple.


Based out of Las Vegas, Seth is the CMO at RevUnit, a full-scale digital agency that takes pride in their ability to “Build Small. Learn Fast. Iterate Often.”


This is the story of how Seth's team at RevUnit used Unbounce to iterate a PPC strategy - and it all started with a simple audit.


A little bit of background


RevUnit's newest client, School of Rock, had a little bit of an Adwords addiction. Their PPC spending was on overdrive. But the ROI? Well, there was room for improvement.


School of Rock is a music school with more than 160 franchise locations worldwide. They came to RevUnit after experiencing poor-performing Adwords campaigns with a specialized PPC agency. Lead acquisition via PPC for new enrolments was slow and lagging.


School of Rock's main goal was to drive new student enrolment to individual franchises.  In other words, they needed to get more students signed up for music classes at one of the more than 160 locations worldwide.


The question was, how could they increase enrollments and lower the cost of acquisition at the same time?


It all started with a simple audit


Before digging in and building new campaigns from scratch, RevUnit performed a full audit of School of Rock's Adwords account concentrating on keywords, ads and landing pages.


The AdWords account consisted of 160+ campaigns, 800,000+ keywords and 160+ landing pages. It's important to note that each campaign represents a franchise location (for instance, “School of Rock Scottsdale” is a single campaign) and each of those franchises locations had their own dedicated landing page.


During the audit Seth's team found some pretty common mistakes, particularly with the landing pages associated with each campaign. Here's what they were working with in the beginning:


Problems with the “before” landing pages:



  • Pages were very slow to load. Search engines like Google see this as a poor experience for users, and as a result, penalize pages with a lower quality score.

  • The lead forms embedded into each landing page were pretty long. Too many form fields can cause visitors friction, meaning they're less likely to complete the form (and more likely to bounce).

  • There were some general design and copy issues, the biggest being that content was not designed for easy reading. While there was a lot of information on the pages, they didn't tell a compelling story.

  • The pages did not mirror their upstream ads. Without a strong message match, visitors are more likely to bounce, again resulting in a lower quality score from Google.

  • Campaigns weren't enabled with click-to-call tracking so it was impossible to measure how many phone calls were generated from Adwords activities.


Seth's team hypothesized that if they tackled each of the problems above, School of Rock would yield better results from their AdWords campaigns.


But (and this was a pretty big 'but'), they couldn't really afford to tackle 160 different landing pages without knowing for sure.


Here's the good part


Instead of jumping in willy nilly, Seth's team decided to use Unbounce to create a template for just one of the franchise locations. Basically, he created a single landing page to test out his hypothesis. The idea was that if the template actually increased enrollment for one of the franchise locations it could be replicated for others.


Sidnee Schaefer, RevUnit's Senior Marketing Strategist, then went to the whiteboard with Seth and other members of the team to design the new strategic landing pages. After creating a mockup of the new page's layout, Sidnee jumped into the Unbounce builder to implement the design.


The newly designed landing page template aimed to follow a story that is easy-to-digest and comprehend while presenting a clean and well-structured format. The page was built to create the shortest path to conversion without sacrificing need-to-know information.


According to Seth,


Every brand has a very different story and we knew how important it was to tell the story of how School of Rock is different than the average music school. We designed the page to reflect this brand positioning.


For the new School of Rock landing pages, content was strategically placed into sections covering who, what, where and why (including reviews). “We kept the copy clear and strong to avoid burdening people with too much information,” says Seth.


RevUnit also used Zapier to bridge a connection between Unbounce and School of Rock's CRM system, so new leads go directly to franchises once submitted.


The result of RevUnit's pilot was pretty convincing: a 75% increase in average weekly conversions and a 50% decrease in cost per conversion. And, all these new leads were acquired using half the budget.


Whew.


But that's not all.


Seth didn't stop with “good enough” – that's just not his kind of fun.


Here's the even *better* good part


The cherry on top of this masterminded plan is how RevUnit implemented Dynamic Text Replacement (DTR) to really match Google search queries with the landing page's headline.


DTR is an Unbounce feature that lets you tailor the text on your landing page to match keyboard parameters, pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns, and other sources, using external variables you can attach to the URL.


DTR automatically updates specified content on your page (like a word in your headline) based on a visitor's search query. RevUnit used DTR on their client's landing page to ensure each visitor was served up the most relevant copy possible.


Seth explains:

DTR_!


We used dynamic content on the landing page which allowed us to show personalized content to different site visitors based on keywords and locations from the ads. This helped us match the perfect ad with the perfect landing page.


In other words, when a searcher types in “drum lessons, Scottsdale, AZ” dynamic text replacement (DTR) is used to match the landing page headline with the Google search query. As a result, when the visitor clicks through to the School of Rock landing page, the headline would look something like this, “Scottsdale Drum Lessons.”


A strong message match between the traffic source (PPC ad, social media, dedicated email or otherwise) and the landing page headline helps visitors understand that they are in the right place (and prompts thoughts like “yes, this is exactly what I was looking for!”).


According to Seth, here's why DTR was a game changer for this campaign, “because our PPC keyword strategy was very focused on instrument lessons (guitar, piano, etc), we'd need five landing pages (a different landing page for each instrument type) for each franchise location.”


This would have normally been a painful and timely undertaking but, as Seth put it, “Unbounce had a solution.”


Here's how they used DTR:


We strategically designed the pages with DTR in mind, so that instrument keywords could be placed throughout the page. Instead of having to create 750+ landing pages, we only had to create one for each franchise location.


The results


After the pilot's stellar performance, Seth knew with confidence that it was time to roll it out to the rest of the 160+ School of Rock franchise locations.


Again, the results were incredible:


The number of monthly conversions improved 5x, by 250%, and the cost per conversion decreased by 82%. School of Rock has seen a huge improvement to their ROI on AdWords and their lead volume is stabilized.



What did the mean for School of Rock? Well, according to Seth, the “average value of improvements made based on customer lifetime value is potentially a 400% increase in yearly revenue based on new leads.”


The numbers are impressive but the best part of this story is that it's easy for data-driven marketers to replicate. Start with a guess – a hunch, a hypothesis, an idea – and test it out. In other words, “Build Small. Learn Fast. Iterate Often.


Beware of shady link schemes from black-hat SEOs

Have you received an offer for a link that seems too good to be true? According to columnist Tony Edward, it probably is.



Please visit Marketing Land for the full article.


Monday, June 27, 2016

Report: TV time holds but digital channels dominate for 18 – 49 year olds

In a totally fragmented media environment marketers need to carefully test channels to determine which ones can effectively reach desired audiences.



Please visit Marketing Land for the full article.


3 Creative Highlights From Cannes Lions

For those of you not familiar, the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity is a global event for those working in the creative communications, advertising and related fields. Based on feedback from two of the Oracle contingent who were attended the festival, one of the themes that emerged can be summed up in word: MadTech. 



“It was clearly evident at Cannes '16 that the days of 'madtech' (martech + adtech) have arrived," says Nick Bell, Senior Director of Corporate Marketing for Oracle Marketing Cloud. "Agencies realize data is the advantage to solidify brand relationships and add new value." 



"Vendors like Oracle Data Cloud and Oracle Marketing Cloud are quickly becoming as visible and expected as the vendors on the creative and media sides of the house," he adds. "Just ask any of the many people turned away at the Oracle rooftop party where supply couldn't meet demand.”



Meanwhile Angela Wells, Senior Director of Oracle Social Cloud - who was attending her first Cannes said that while it was cool to check out all the virtual reality (VR) stuff the real value for was in learning just how much marketers are leveraging data to make better decisions. "When I started in marketing it was a running joke that marketers didn't have to do math. Now we have to dive into numbers, understand what they mean, and adapt to target customers with the highest potential." 



Here's 3 highlights from Cannes that speak to this theme of the coming together of martech and adtech. 



1. Vogue in Vogue



Vogue editor Anna Wintour, who also oversees some of Conde Nast's other publications Vanity Fair, The New Yorker, Glamour and GQ - said she's tired of hearing the same lament from advertisers and marketers "Everything is too fast, everything is too precarious, we have more access than ever to the people we are trying to reach thanks to social media and mobile technology, and more information than we know what to do with … How to address this, how to engage audiences while still keeping our work relevant and original is the part of the puzzle we are all trying to solve."



She went on to say all these questions have the same answer. "finding your way doesn't mean surviving, just as pleasing an audience doesn't mean twisting your editorial around search engine optimization and Facebook algorithms. For one thing, everybody is doing that, it's unimaginative, it's old hat. For us, creativity means thinking about the lives of our audience and how to connect with them.”



And clearly to do just that, engage with them means understanding and utilizing data... the right data. 



2. The Fresh Prince Says Keep It Real



Hollywood A-List actor Will Smith had a very direct and clear message to share: "Smoke and mirrors in marketing and sales is over." Smith, who considers himself a marketer, believes people are going to know really quickly and globally whether a product keeps its promises adding "the power has gone away from the marketers."



In other words, the consumer is in full control. 



The onus is clearly on marketers and advertisers to work together and listen - yes listen to what consumers are telling them both literally via social media for example and figuratively via their actions AKA their data. If they constantly click and buy one type of product chances are they like said product - so stop offering something they don't click on buy. 



3. Millennials Are People, Too



It seems as if far too many marketers have decided that the much sought-after millennial demographic fits into the proverbial one-size-fits-all and at least one Cannes attendee has had enough. His name is David “Shingy” Shing and he's AOL's digital prophet.



“The truth is that everyone is trying to captivate them in terms of their behaviours, and I get that,” he says in a video pitch to have the term removed from the pages of The Drum forever. “But they're young adults… so let's call them what they are.” 



He made these comments while filming the video below, which is part of a series in which marketers, agencies and media folk at Cannes Lions were asked nominate their top hated phrases, jargon and buzzwords that should be banished from The Drum forever. 





Translation: With data readily available on millennials - just as it is for every other demographic, there's absolutely no reason why marketers should be lumping them all together and ostensibly delivering the same content, same sales messages and so on. 



It's a New Age



Without sounding hyperbolic, it truly is a new age we're living and working in. The need for marketers and advertisers to work closely together has never been greater. It's why you need to download The Age of Brand, Agency & Customer Collaboration, a new eBook from Oracle Marketing Cloud and Forbes Insights. 





3 SEO-Changing RankBrain Tips Marketers Can't Ignore

SEO-RankBrain-Tips


The way that marketers think about, talk about and implement SEO is constantly evolving. Blackhat SEO tactics that once were incredibly successful, no longer garner the results that they once did. Both search engines and online audiences have become much more sophisticated, forcing marketers to ditch the slimy SEO tactics and focus instead on providing real value.


According to TNW News, 47% of digital marketers name SEO as one of their most effective tactics, but 39% also identify it as one of the most difficult.


To help ease the pain, I attended a presentation last week by WordStream's Larry Kim that shone a light on why the traditional workflow of which includes inserting keywords in the “right” places needs to change. The presentation included what Google's RankBrain actually is and why it matters, but the bulk of the talk dug into how to change focus in the face of algorithm changes like RankBrain and why exact term usage needs to be less of a focus moving forward. Read on to get 3 tips on where to focus your SEO efforts instead.


What is RankBrain?


Larry stated that “it doesn't matter if RankBrain is an addition to the algorithm or an alteration. What matters is whether the change effects what content ranks”. In the case of RankBrain, this change certainly does matter.


RankBrain enables the interpretation of meaning. The interpretation of the meaning behind keyword searches and the interpretation of the meaning behind language used in meta, on-page, and site-wide. Beyond this, RankBrain learns about what content (and what types of content) appeals to specific search audiences in order to provide more useful, relevant search results.


Why Does it Matter?


Google being able to interpret the meaning of language used online makes a big difference. It means it's easier to get your content indexed for relevant keywords, as long as that content is relevant to the search intent behind the keyword. It means inserting keywords isn't a priority anymore – exact keyword usage does not make it easier to become indexed.


So, if we're already indexed for the keywords we want to rank for, how do we rank? Here's 3 tips from Larry Kim on how to switch focus away from keyword usage and indexation, and toward tactics that take advantage of the sophisticated qualities of RankBrain and how it measures and scores content quality to determine rank position.


Tip #1: Stop Inserting Keywords into Your Meta Titles


There is a negative correlation between exact keyword inclusions and CTR. High performing meta titles (above the average click-through rate at the given position) actually tend to not include the exact keyword. This is because RankBrain enables interpretation of the meaning behind language: interpretation of both the language used in the keyword search, along with the language used on-page and in meta.


Don't Forget: align your meta message to speak to the intent of the search audience you're targeting in order to encourage searchers to click your result. Inserting keywords is not important, and can actually be a disadvantage.


Tip #2: Remember What Actually Impacts CTR


So, you might be wondering: if I'm not supposed to insert keywords into my meta title, what am I supposed to do what it? Great question, here is some:


Use Emotional Triggers


Write headlines to an emotional persona based on basic emotional triggers: anger, urgency, fear, sadness, etc. By appealing to the emotions of your audience in a unique, catchy way, you can encourage them to click on your meta title for more.


Test with Paid


The best way to test your meta click-ability is to use AdWords to test 10 different headlines for different emotional personas. It's a quick-and-easy 2 step process:



  • Step 1: Use broad match keywords to represent the variety of exact keywords that relate to the search audience you wish to reach

  • Step 2: Replace old headlines with the winner


Be Memorable, Become Familiar


Another important factor to consider is how “non-SEO” tactics actually make a huge impact on CTR from the SERP by creating a familiarity bias. Stated simply, this bias goes like this: if you're familiar with a brand before you search, you're more likely to click on their result. I'll break down his advice into 2 steps to create brand familiarity in order to dramatically improve organic CTR:



  • Step 1: create familiarity with the brand by drawing people in with memorable, useful content that doesn't try to sell anything.

  • Step 2: Ensure subsequent searches go your way by remarketing your most memorable content.


Tip #3: Focus on Engagement


Bounce Rate


Another highly impactful factor to rank is bounce rate. There are correlations that we see in nature that are non-causal, and there are correlations we see with algorithm inclusions. The correlation between bounce rate and rank looks very algorithmic. That being said, bounce rate is the #1 indicator that searchers aren't liking your content. Focusing on providing additional useful links to more content is a great way to reduce bounce rate and start sending positive signals to Google about the quality of your content.


Dwell Time (bounce + time spent)


The metrics Google uses to determine whether or not content is satisfying searchers are also important. Some of these metrics are not accessible to marketers with Google Analytics. An example of this is dwell time. This is the time between when searchers enter the page from the SERP and how long they dwell on the page before bouncing back to the SERP. The advice Larry gave for leveraging this information is to use the combination of time spent on page and bounce rate to determine how well the page is measuring up against Google's dwell time metric.


Conversion Rates


Conversion rate implies content appeal too, of course. Larry's tip: change your offer dramatically to increase conversion rate if you're not finding success. Honing your focus on conversion rate optimization isn't just great for appealing to your audience at the bottom of the funnel, it's great for attracting customers through search visibility across the entire funnel as well.


Poor Performing Content


If you can't fix it, delete it. If you have consistently poor performing content, you should “delete your bad neighborhoods”. This is because studies that look at the relevance of domain authority vs page authority for determining rank strong suggest a domain-level engagement “score”, as well as a page-level engagement “score”. If you have content that performs badly and doesn't provide value to users, this is content that will only negatively impact what your content quality looks like at the domain level.


Key Take-Away: New Rank Factors to Replace the Focus on Keyword Usage


Larry talked a lot about CTR from the SERP in his presentation. He brought up an important question: what came first, rank or CTR? The answer is they are reciprocal. Where top rank position impacts CTR, CTR also is measured and plays a part in determining rank position. But the reason he makes this point is to demonstrate that Google is measuring what implies searcher satisfaction. CTR is just one of these measurements. Once content is indexed, CTR is not the only thing that represents content quality. How searchers behave and engage with content after they enter a website from the SERP plays a huge role in the checks and balances of identifying truly useful content for searchers.


So if you're going to remember one thing about RankBrain: it's easy to get indexed, but make sure you're appealing to the search audience and their intent from SERP to site.




Email Newsletter
Gain a competitive advantage by subscribing to the
TopRank® Online Marketing Newsletter.


© Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®, 2016. |
3 SEO-Changing RankBrain Tips Marketers Can't Ignore | http://www.toprankblog.com

The post 3 SEO-Changing RankBrain Tips Marketers Can't Ignore appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.