Bezos, CEO of Amazon, bought Whole Foods his largest acquisition to date. Why? Most likely to add to a huge distribution channel and jump into the grocery sector with both feet. It that is the case, in a short period of time, he will change the face of retail grocery making easier and friendlier to the consumers while lowering costs.
The marketing model for the supermarket sector has remained the same for decades. The margin on food is low. Supermarkets charge consumer good companies for shelf placement and end caps. Near the register, near the deli, eye level, etc. That’s where they make their money. This is why in recent years, the size of the supermarkets has increased. The larger the space the more marketing money they get.
This is also why all the new stores look the same as the old stores. It’s the Olive Garden effect.
What’s wrong with this model? It doesn’t take into account the customer experience and it’s incredibly inefficient. If you’re under some illusion that Bezos isn’t aware of this limitation, you’re vastly underestimating the man who built Amazon.
“Sectors need to rethink how they interact with the consumer. Mobile marketing is only one of the many changes coming. Change now or you can be next Blockbuster.” Stated John Flynn, CEO of Copley Advertising.
What to do? At all costs, you must protect your 15-mile radius, where 90% of your customers live. First, stop mailing coupons and putting them in newspapers. Please. Second, create a geofence around each of your locations AND your competitor’s locations. Tag all smartphones. Put video ads in the tagged phones. “Hi, I’m Sam from Star Market. We have a new Coupon Club! Pay $5 a month and get $10 worth of coupons!” Device IDs will be captured from all devices that saw the ad (impressions). Users that clicked on the ad will have their IDs collected in our retargeting folder. The user will then be taken to a landing page where we place a Facebook pixel that will capture their Facebook ID. They will see the thirty-second commercial. “Hi, Sam again. Join our Coupon Army for $10 a month and we will send $25 worth of coupons each month! In fact, you can indicate which types of products you want and we will make sure that you receive coupons for those products if available!” There is an email capture for additional information, but by this point, we already have the impressions, retargeting and Facebook IDs.
We drive customers to sign-up for the one-month program. The supermarkets charge the consumer good company for the extra coupons, with $5 a month as profit. After one month the shopper must sign up for an additional six months or $60 up front because they are guaranteed $120 worth of coupons. You can now upsell them to the Gold Club, where they receive special offers only for Gold Club members (for only $10 per month extra, which is guaranteed in coupons with a one-year sign-up payment in advance). The Platinium Club is where they will have a chance to win tickets to a Patriots game and a FREE Thanksgiving dinner (for another $10 per month paid in advance). And the Super Platinium level gets all the benefits of the previous package and a chance to go to the Super Bowl and meet Tom Brady!! The price is only an extra $75 per month or $900 up front.
So there you have it. Up the ladder to $75 per month or $900 per customer per year paid up front. Oh by the way since you are giving them in-store coupons the amount they spend in your stores will be much greater. You are creating in-store promotions, engaging the consumer and receiving a tremendous amount of data. All because you used mobile marketing and a $5 coupon.
With the impression folder, you take the IDs and run them through the Facebook converter. The IDs run at a 30% conversion rate. Now you have converted the impression mobile IDs to Facebook IDs. With the Facebook ID’s you can make a look-alike model using 1% of the US population. This should give you about 2 million IDs. When you run a campaign you can drill down to your demographic even further.
Now you have a smart, almost zero cost way to engage your shopper and protect your 15-mile radius. Jeff Bezos may be riding into town, but you will be reading to protect your base.
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Off-Campus Housing properties need to fill beds. The competition is fierce. There seems to an insatiable appetite for newer and better. But if there was an ability to meet the short term goals of filling units and create a consist pool of would-be renters that would be an interesting model.
Mobile Marketing can deliver that model. Here are some key aspects that mobile marketing uses to create a campaign for off campus housing properties.
Video Ads – The rise of video ads continues. The price has dropped and video ads are more effective than banner ads. Another important aspect is that they tell a story. Marketing is all about telling a story. By delivering your commercial to the tagged smartphones you can bring your property to them before they visit you.
The first week can be an introduction video commercial the second week could be commercial inviting device users to an event at your property and so on. After the device owner clicks on the video they are brought to your landing page to see the conclusion of the presentation. Copley Advertising is offering a video commercial in each tagged smartphone on campus. All user data (engaged IDs) is stored for future retargeting.
Geo-Conquesting – Your best demographic is students living in other off-campus housing. Even if the property is not in the targeted demographic the results we have seen is that the click rate is still between 2x to 6x higher than the average campaign. Plus delivering those impressions that engaged to the retargeting pool is key.
Data – Many mobile platforms ignore the data. Copley Advertising helps clients see that each target location has subtle differences. Drilling down to operation systems (Android or iOS), app placement (which apps are overperforming and which apps are underperforming) and creative A/B testing. This information changes from college to college. It’s extremely important that the information from the data guide the campaign. This will increase effectiveness and efficiency.
Mobile marketing is not about just geofencing. Copley Advertising has the tools and experience to put together a complete marketing program that will reach off-campus housing’s short term and long term needs.
Questions? info@copleyadvertising or (617) 651-2249.
]]>He’s right.
Right now Facebook is an incredible value. $6 CPM is a steal based on the platform’s capabilities. Every month Facebook rolls out new features and updates. It’s an embarrassment of riches. Here are the top five features that make Facebook’s Mobile DSP Platform a great fit for B to B mobile advertising.
Self-Optimizing – I am a big fan of granular reporting. Most of the time I like to get my hands dirty and pick which apps are performing, tracking operating system click rate, creative A/B testing and many other benchmarks. Facebook’s self-optimization will choose which demographic features (age, sex, placement) is working and move your impressions to ensure a lower cost per click. And Facebook does a very good job. They will even notify you if they think a change in targeting is needed to further optimize your program.
Video Ads – You can upload your video ads to the Facebook platform in seconds and begin your video campaign. I use my YouTube videos and never had an issue. When the campaign starts Facebook will log in views, how long the views are and the price per view which is usually pennies. Why is Facebook doing this? YouTube. Facebook wants YouTube out and is replacing it with its own video platform. The engagement rate using video ads is huge. Video ads are taking over mobile. It’s another differentiator from other advertising. The fact that Facebook recognizes this and makes life easy is huge.
Dark Posts – One of my favorite phrases in media…Facebook Dark Posts. In reality, it’s easy to do. The point of dark posts is that the ad is not posted to your “page” when published. An example is my business page is Copley Advertising. I use my platform to post ads for clients all the time. I don’t want every client’s ad on my newsfeed. Dark Posts helps solves the problem. Plus it seems the click rate is very good on average.
Targeting – Facebook has great targeting. You can target by street address, hobbies, last time you traveled, what newspaper your demo likes, job title, company employed by, Facebook groups, pages you follow, income and on and on. Pretty impressive. Plus setting up different Ad Sets for each test is easy. With Split Testing you can increase your optimization and Facebook will reward you with a cheaper CPM.
Ease of Use – Facebook has made the platform very easy to set up with little or no knowledge of code. The ad manager is great for the majority and the Power Editor allows the user to take a deeper look at the campaign and offers more tools to play with. There is no reason why you can’t have your first Facebook ad up in minutes.
So why is Facebook doing this? Easy. Money. They are proving that they are a serious B to B DSP mobile platform. They are looking to attract big companies and agencies to hop on the program. Facebook is a great mobile platform for B to B advertising. Use it now because late 2017 it is going to cost you a lot more.
]]>Have a Clear Call to Action
Location based advertising feeds impulsive decisions. Your geofencing ads should, therefore, have a clear call to action. Someone who enters your chosen geofence and sees your ad should, for instance, be prompted to utilize a discount coupon at your booth. It’s about getting the user to make a clear decision related to your brand in the moment.
Don’t Bombard Users
Geofencing is location based. However, avoiding the temptation to bombard potential customers with redundant messages is crucial. For instance, someone who has already entered the geofenced area shouldn’t constantly receive the same message every time he or she reenters the area. Using routing algorithms to help people who have seen your ad find the fastest route to your booth is your safest bet.
Use the Data
A myriad of consumer behaviors is captured by geofencing. Some of this data includes: where consumers spend the most time at the trade show, the aspects of your booth that generate the most interest, and the amount of foot traffic you’re actually getting. Using this data wisely helps you make informed decisions.
Trade shows are often expensive investments. Geofencing is one strategy that you can use to maximize your ROI at trade shows. Having a clear call to action, avoiding redundancy, and using the data you receive wisely can help you make the best use of your geofencing campaign. Copley Advertising has a team of geofencing experts who can help you create the best geofencing campaign for your next trade show appearance. Email us at [email protected]
]]>Now life is better. Granular data reporting shows the client a wide range of trackable parameters. Why is granular reporting so important?
Optimization – granular data will the show the DSP the areas where the bid amount or even blacklisting can dramatically increase click rate. As of late Copley Advertising has seen Android outperforming iOS click rate. If there’s a 20% differential between the Android and iOS click rate (after a significant amount of traffic) Copley Advertising will clone the original campaign and start an Android only campaign. If the Android only campaign is outperforming the original campaign we would start lowering the impressions per day restriction on the original campaign. You can do this with creative, network (Smaato, Mopub, Rubicon, and others), placement and other trackable breakouts. Not only can the campaign be optimized (higher click rate with lower cost) but you are now sitting on a ton of valuable data. Besides optimizing the campaign, tweaking the art and setting up clone campaigns what are you going to do with all that data?
Offline Marketing – You share it with the client! First clients love the data. I have not had a client yet not love to listen to me talk about interpreting the data from their campaign. Granular data is a great value add to the campaign. Second, it’s information that you can help the client decide on where to spend their offline marketing. Help them spend advertising money somewhere else? Yes. If you are running campaigns in Tampa, Miami and Orlando and Tampa is getting twice the click rate it’s a good bet that your client should be spending more of their offline budget in Tampa. This type of information makes the mobile geofencing campaign a great tool for targeting key demographics in a set time and place but also works as a guide to help the client decide where to spend their marketing dollars.
A campaign with a client needs to be a partnership. It’s your job to have your client’s back. Do whatever you can to make them look good. Once the client knows that you are a partner and not just a vendor your relationship will deepen and it will beneficial for both of you.
But….back to the point. In summary, it’s the data stupid…..collect it, interpret it and share it. It will separate you from the pack.
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