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Posts Tagged ‘qr codes’


How to Make the Most of Mobile Advertising

March 7th, 2012 ::

SmartphonesThe mobile industry is expanding around the globe, creating new opportunities for businesses to reach customers at the right time, exactly where they are. Recently I read a case study on smartphone use in advertising by Mediative, a digital marketing agency based in Canada. In this article, I will share some mobile advertising insights gleaned directly from this research.

Most digital marketers learned their trade based on the funnel conversion path, nudging customers toward a sale through the stages of Awareness, Interest, Desire and Action. Mobile marketing has turned this concept on its head; no longer is a click simply a click. Now, instead of measuring click-through-rates (CTRs), we’re measuring tap-through-rates (TTRs), and customers are scanning QR codes, checking in, and receiving push messages to unlock an interaction in stores, all on their mobile devices.

Real Life Clicks

Perhaps the biggest change brought on by mobile’s emergence is that marketers can design interactions other than simply clicking or tapping. Now we can convert customers physically in a store or virtually on computers – using the same marketing campaigns. The pros at Mediative call these mobile interactions “Real Life Clicks.”

These Real Life Clicks call for new forms of interactions not limited only to display or search. As the mobile industry continues to force the desktop model into the mobile world, mobile ad campaigns are being ignored by customers for a couple of reasons. First, while customers in general are increasingly busy and learning to ignore marketing messages, mobile customers are even busier and more likely to ignore messages that are not targeted and engaging. When you send advertising messages to customers’ smartphones, you are competing with everything around them for their attention. It is simply too easy to ignore a marketing message when customers are distracted by their busy, on-the-go lives.

The other reason mobile marketing messages have a hard time breaking through is that rich interactions can be costly to download and interact with when customers are not in their homes, with access to their own Wifi network. It is a rare customer who actually wants to pay to see an ad on their phone, so timing becomes very important when crafting a mobile campaign. The team at Mediative suggests scheduling heavy-duty interactive messages for evenings and weekends, when customers are likely to be home. The other textual-based messages can be used during the times when customers are out and about, as stand-alone messages, or as reminders of the richer messages sent during other times.

Strategy Tips

Based on Mediative’s case study, here are some tips to keep in mind as you create your mobile advertising strategy.

1.  Mobile advertising requires a highly contextual, personalized experience that uses the customer’s past behavior and current environment to inform its message. If you get these key areas correct, your offer will be too convenient for customers to pass up. Keep the convenience factor in mind as you craft your message; since timing is so important here, the offer must really jump out at them at the right moment.

2.  To reach out to new customers, offer them a compelling value proposition such as a coupon or other discount. Your goal is to intercept potential customers at the exact location where they can convert to buyers. Think of it as a point of purchase offer, but targeted especially for them.

3.  With mobile advertising, you need to consider the different types of networks as you create your strategy. Blind networks offer the cheapest option, but you won’t know exactly which placements your ads will be displayed on. However, since the number of eyeballs in the mobile advertising landscape is still very small, blind networks will offer you volume if that is what your campaign requires. In Mediative’s study, blind networks also offered the most clicks, even though they gave limited metrics.

For now, search and premium networks need more volume to factor into a strategic approach, as they simply can’t offer much visibility. According to Mediative, though, mobile’s fast growth means it is only a matter of time before these networks become viable options.

4.  Mobile advertisers need to pay attention to platforms, too. Some companies don’t allow an app/Web browsing option on employee’s devices, so keep this in mind when creating B2B campaigns for BlackBerry. However, with Android and Apple, whose platforms were built around apps and mobile Web access, the sky’s the limit with mobile advertising.

5.  Decide whether to use search or display in your campaign. On smartphones, display offers more visibility, traffic and presence than search, but a combination of both search and display works best for most businesses. Your marketing objectives and the reality of your product will factor in heavily when deciding how to combine search and display to reach mobile customers.

6.  After considerable study, Mediative recommends that mobile marketers use mainly text and keywords, as well as the 300×50 banner and the 320×50 banner ad formats. These formats work best on Android and the iPhone IOS. For other ad formats and platforms, you should measure your production and operational costs against the expected ROI, according to your segments, targets and business goals. Finally, Mediative found that animated banners are the worst performers in mobile campaigns.

How has your business used mobile marketing to reach customers at the right time? Share your success stories by leaving a comment below.

Image courtesy of TechnoBuzz.net

Small Business Social Media Trends

February 21st, 2012 ::

social media trends

When it comes to small businesses, Anita Campbell, author of Visual Marketing, knows a thing or two.  Recently, Michael Stelzner of Social Media Examiner interviewed Campbell for her insight on small business social media trends.  Here are some of the key takeaways:

Believe it or not, some small businesses won’t get much business from social media, no matter how hard they try.  For example, a small landscaping company that gets most of its business from local neighborhoods may not see an impact from Facebook or Twitter.  Campbell suggests businesses like this should stick to fliers, word of mouth marketing, and customer testimonials to get their message to the target market.

Campbell’s biggest tip for growing an online community sounds familiar, but it is worth repeating:  When it comes to social media communications, don’t just broadcast – engage!  Campbell believes in pulling information back in from your social networks and fostering back-and-forth conversation, rather than sending out tweets and posts that simply tell your audience what you’d like them to know.  Give them a chance to talk, too, and you’ll get a better return for your investment on social media.

And, what is the biggest mistake Campbell sees small businesses making online?  It’s neglected websites, and they’re really a turn-off for customers.  When your website is out of date, and you greet customers with 2-year-old information, you’re sending customers a bad message.  If you are neglecting your website – your online storefront to the world – how much attention do you give to your customers or to other parts of your business?

Campbell is constantly watching small business trends through her sites, BizSugar and Small Business Trends, and here is what she is seeing now:

  • Everyone is going mobile, including small businesses.  They are embracing mobile marketing with text messaging, location-based coupons and QR codes.
  • Many small businesses are getting really good at social media.  They’re out there testing different campaigns and communications tactics, and they’re getting big results.

Are you one of the small businesses embracing mobile and excelling at social media?  You can check out more small business marketing tips and trends from Anita Campbell on BizSugar and Small Business Trends.

Image courtesy of creative design agency Arrae

Are You Using QR Codes in Your Advertising?

February 10th, 2012 ::

By Rieva Lesonsky

What’s the deal with QR codes? The little black-and-white codes that users scan with smartphones to visit a Web page have been alternately praised and criticized by marketing experts in the past year. But one thing is for sure: QR codes are rapidly becoming ubiquitous in magazine advertising.

A survey by mobile marketing company Nellymoser of the top 100 U.S. magazines (based on circulation) found that the number of QR codes used in both advertisements and editorial content surged in 2011–from 352 uses in the first quarter issues to 1,899 in the fourth quarter.

The percentage of pages with codes climbed steadily, from 3.55 percent in March to 8.36 percent in December. And the average number of codes per issues rose from 2.3 in the first quarter to 6.5 by the fourth.

The bulk of QR codes in magazines were advertisement-based. The number of QR codes in ads outweighed those in editorial content by a ratio of 25:1 by September 2011.

So what are advertisers doing with their codes? When QR codes first came out, most companies were using them to drive customers to their websites. That has since been found to be less than effective. As social media use has increased, along with mobile phone and tablet use, the way QR codes are being used has changed, too. Today, most QR campaigns link to product demonstrations, social media tools, contests or sweepstakes, and m-commerce.

Here are some popular uses for QR codes:

  • 54 percent feature video to demonstrate products, provide a glimpse behind-the-scenes or explain how to do something.
  • 30 percent were used for list-building (i.e. capturing consumer information).
  • 23 percent allow users to share a video or product information with social media tools such as Facebook and Twitter.
  • 19 percent link to an e-commerce store.

The biggest users of QR codes, both in magazines and in retail store displays or windows, are beauty, home, fashion and electronics companies. QR codes are also predominantly targeting women; the top 10 magazines on the list, which accounted for 28 percent of all codes in 2011, primarily targeted women.

The way advertisers explain QR codes is also changing. In the second quarter of 2011, almost half of the codes had instructions for downloading a QR code reader. By the end of 2011, just 23 percent did—indicating that users are becoming comfortable with the technology and don’t need it explained to them anymore. Instead, by the end of 2011, 70 percent of codes were accompanied by information that explained what would happen when users scanned the code. Nellymoser says this type of call to action is a “best practice” for using QR codes.

Image by Flickr user Orangeadnan (Creative Commons)

 

2D or Not 2D: How to Use 2D Code Readers to Drive Business

March 14th, 2011 ::

By Rieva Lesonsky

Is your business using 2D codes yet? If you don’t even know what 2D codes are, don’t worry—you’re not alone. 2D codes are the little, square black-and-white images (kind of like a scrambled-up bar code) that you may have seen in stores or in magazines. You scan the codes using a smartphone to be taken to a website for additional information.

Many consumers have not used the codes yet, but with smartphones becoming more prevalent, businesses that want to be on the cutting edge should start learning about 2D codes now. Mashable.com recently took a look at some ways 2D codes can be used to drive business.

2D codes is a generic term for codes that are available from a range of providers including Datamatrix, EZ Code, Microsoft Tag, QR Code, SPARQCode and ScanLife. To get started using them as a marketing tool, you’ll need to help customers along by putting some text under the code that tells users where to get a 2D code reader (they need to install this on their phones) and how to scan the code.

Here are a few of the places Mashable suggests adding 2D codes:

▪    On your website: Put a 2D code on your Contact page and users can download your contact information to their phones.

▪    On your business cards: With a 2D code on your card, people can quickly download your contact information.

▪    In-store: Place signage with a 2D code that drives customers in your store to a special discount clerks can scan at the register.

▪    On your Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter page: Use 2D codes on your social media pages to position your business as cutting edge.

Of course, you’ll want to make sure the 2D code takes your users to something valuable. The best 2D campaigns, according to Mashable, are those that further drive engagement. In other words, don’t send users to a static page on your site—send them to a page where they can interact with your business by:

  • Downloading an app
  • Watching a video (Sports Illustrated magazine used 2D codes to drive users to bonus video of photo shoots from its swimsuit edition
  • Obtaining something special that’s not available to all visitors, such as a discount code
  • Getting more information about a product with a link to buy it instantly
  • Getting real-time data such as delivery time or order status

To get started with 2D codes, download a reader yourself and start using it to see what companies similar to yours are offering. Mashable recommends readers from BeeTagg.com, i-nigma.com and ScanLife.com, but you can also do an Internet search for 2D Code Reader to find other good sites.

Right now, 2D codes are being used primarily by bigger businesses, but there’s a lot you can learn from them. According to Mashable, 2D reader use quadrupled in the past year, so this tool isn’t going away anytime soon. It’s up to you to figure out how to make the most of it.

Image by Flickr user Ross (Creative Commons)