Archive for the ‘agencies’ Category

A View from The Top: Past, Present, Future. ‘Live!’

To celebrate Just Media’s 15 years of successful business in California, we recently hosted a day of thought leadership and discussion: A View From The Top – Past, Present, Future; featuring key CEO’s, decision makers and industry leaders, who discussed their thoughts on the evolution of media and the ever changing and challenging world of IT marketing.

Video of the four sessions is now available through our technology partner BrightTALK™ and by clicking the following links you will be able to access the full sessions from the live event.

A VIEW FROM THE TOP – PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE
Senior executives from agencies, media organizations and clients came together for a stimulating morning of discussion focusing on the ever changing and challenging world of IT marketing.

Session 1: Looking Back And Looking Forward
Steve Weitzner, CEO, Ziff Davis Enterprise
Dick Reed, CEO, Just Media, Inc.

Dick and Steve discuss how the IT media publisher and agency have had to adapt and evolve over the years to address the changes in the media landscape and continue to best service both the IT audience and tech marketing client.

Session 2: Leveraging Brand Value
Josh Kahn, VP, Private Cloud Marketing, EMC
Marlene Williamson, VP, Global Marketing, Hitachi Global Storage Technologies
David Appelbaum, CMO, Act-On Software

Josh, Marlene and David discuss the challenges and opportunities that exist for tech companies to really leverage maximum value from their brand.

Session 3: Content Is King, But Distribution Is Key
Tony Uphoff, CEO, UBM TechWeb
Val-Pierre Genton, VP, Business Development, BrightTALK™

Tony and Val discuss the importance of generating great content and the issues and challenges with getting that content to the audience, given the ever more distributed communications channels.

Session 4: Social Media And The IT Professional
Matt Sweeney, CRO, Geeknet
Roger Warner, MD, Content & Motion
Sarah du Heaume, Founder, Just Media, Inc.

Sarah, Matt and Roger explore what it takes to build and manage successful social media environments specifically created for IT professionals.

You will need to register with BrightTALK™ in order to view the content.

We hope you enjoy the video discussion and find it stimulating and relevant. Please don’t hesitate to contact Just Media with any comments or questions or if you would like to learn more about Just Media and our services. As always, we welcome your feedback.

Just Media, Inc’s Award for Innovation in Media

Just Media, Inc’s Juniper Pulse Campaign has been named a Silver Award winner at the Internationalist Awards for Innovation in Media in the ‘Global Campaign Running in Multiple Regions’ category.

The Just Media team of Dick Reed (CEO), Alan May (Media Director) and Dale Viger (Media Planner) worked with Juniper and the John McNeill Studio to create a broad announcement campaign to drive awareness and understanding of the new Junos Pulse launch, targeting enterprise size companies, service providers and consumers. The need to announce the benefits of the Junos Pulse Mobile Security Suite to all these audiences, across categories, within a limited timeframe and limited financial resources was quite a challenge.

The full award detail can be found here:http://www.internationalist-awards.com/inter-media-2010/juniper.html

For more information regarding the campaign, please contact dick@justmedia.com or alanmay@justmedia.com. Follow @justmediaus

Mediaplex Spring Newsletter

Our partners at Mediaplex have just released their Spring ‘MOJO News’, spotlighting how Just Media, Inc., realized efficiencies after implementing Mediaplex’s MOJO Adserver, significantly freeing up time to focus on the business of analyzing and optimizing the marketing programs for their clients.

The full article can be found here http://img-cdn.mediaplex.com/0/586/127850/JustMedia_v1.pdf

Join Us For a Live Webcast on Online Display Advertising

Measuring the true value of online display media value has always been a unique challenge. There is now some fascinating new data that should be of tremendous value to any online marketing advocate. Presented initially last week, at the Direct Marketing Association luncheon, alongside CBS Interactive (Techrepublic, CNET and ZDnet brands), this data will open your eyes to new ways of thinking about the true impact of your online media spend. If you were unable to attend the live panel launch in person, CBSi will be hosting a Webcast discussion on April 14 to review the research. The details are below. I certainly hope you can register for this event. It’s fascinating stuff.

Live Webcast: Online Display Advertising: Its Quantified Effect on Organic Down Funnel Activity
Join us for this LIVE Event on:
Thursday, April 14, 2011
4:00 PM ET / 1:00 PM PT / 8:00 PM GMT

One of the long-standing challenges with online display advertising is the ability to quantify its direct impact, not only brand awareness, but also further down the funnel where it matters most. Fortunately, recent research reveals compelling and quantifiable evidence that demonstrates the overall effectiveness of online display media for awareness, consideration and engagement as well as sales. The key is understanding what it means and how to take advantage.

Join this live and interactive Webcast, featuring CBS Interactive Vice President and Group Publisher for B2B, Wayne Silverman, CBS Interactive Business Intelligence expert Matthew Sweer, and a special introduction with Just Media, Inc., CEO Dick Reed, to learn more about the groundbreaking results of this research and what it means to your business.
• Hear about real-world examples and proprietary insights from business intelligence experts
• See quantifiable analysis of the effectiveness of online display media on the sales funnel
• Discover the up-funnel targeting impact on down-funnel behavior and sales
Online display advertising works and now there’s quantifiable evidence to prove it. Don’t miss this exclusive Webcast from CBS Interactive.

Please click here to register for this live webcast:
Register for this event today

Dick Reed, CEO

Direct Marketing Association of Northern California Luncheon

Our CEO, Dick Reed, will be the guest speaker at the DMA’s luncheon on March 31st, 2011, introducing CBSi’s white paper: B2B Online Display Advertising – Exclusive Research on Improving Measurement.

B2B ONLINE DISPLAY ADVERTISING:
Exclusive Research on Improving Measurement

Presented by CBS Interactive (CNET, ZDNet, TechRepublic)

Speakers:
Ladan Nafissi ‒ Director Business Intelligence ‒ CBS Interactive
Wayne Silverman ‒ VP Sales & Group Publisher ‒ CBS Interactive
Dick Reed ‒ CEO ‒ Just Media

What is the best way to measure productivity of B2B online display advertising when 95% of buyers do not click on display ads and 95% of those who click do not buy? Perhaps the wrong things are being measured.

Join us Thursday, March 31, 2011 for a luncheon presentation on exclusive research conducted by CBS Interactive (CNET, ZDNet, TechRepublic) to measure exposure levels of online display advertising and resulting sales funnel behavior regardless of immediate click behavior. We will talk about challenges associated with measuring productivity of b2b online display advertising, and how to quantify sales lift.

WHAT YOU WILL LEARN:
•How advertising exposure correlates with sales funnel behavior
•Number of exposures that optimizes sales funnel behavior
•Quantitative verification of advertising exposure and sales lift

Register for this luncheon today

Social media in tech – where are we now…??

There continues to be lots of debate about social media and the role it should take within the marketing mix. It’s something I have spent many hours agonizing over, not least because I continue to wrestle with the role our agency should be playing in this space. At this time I’m still convinced this is primarily a client side component to the marketing mix and that the focus in tech marketing departments should be focused internally on resources before reaching out to the all too willing grabbing hands of the agency world!

Several recent conversations certainly seem to be confirming that this is the key direction in which clients need to be moving. These come from very respectable sources and combine to confirm where we are right now – aligned with thinking within some of the biggest brands:

Firstly at the recent panel discussion at the IDG Tech Marketing Dinner in SF (where I was thrilled to invited to join Pat McGoverns top table!) Rich Vancil of IDC declared that social media is not yet a fully fledged function of marketing – link here for more details of his excellent opinions. Thinking this was a controversial statement to kick things off I was pleasantly amazed to see the entire panel agree. Of particular interest were the panelists from Cisco, and Avaya, Paul Dunay - both clearly experts in the space and advocates for internalized solutions.

Secondly through a conversation at EMC World with John Conway, who manages the EMC social website strategy, I was delighted to hear him also say that the key issue with corporations is the need for them to be able trust the employees to actively represent the company. This is so true. Clearly advice must be given to employees about appropriate activity – particularly in such a very public environment – but at the end of the day we all have to trust our employees to positively and truthfully talk about the company they work for.

Finally this story  that appeared in Advertising Age which not only brought a smile to my face but I think offers a little insight into how this is handled by many of my competitors right now….

For more good information from peers I recommend the following link at B2B magazine where you can find some video content from a variety of vendor CMO’s.

Back with blog and whitepaper

Hello to all – it’s been almost six months since the last blog and much has happened – new site, whitepaper content, huge changes within the company and across our industry as a whole.

First up I hope you like the new site and the whitepapers. Please let me know by leaving comments here.

I’ll now start to try and blog more regularly and hope that the spammers don’t drown out the good content (when did spam start getting posted in blog content?) That’s an interesting development in social media I’ll comment about later for sure…

So welcome to blog and please do send me an email if you want to be kept informed on any new whitepapers we have.

Warmest regards Dick

Wow what a ride!

I was staggered to see that my last blog post was back in May. In some ways that reflects the internal shift in focus required by all during what was some massive upheavals within both the media industry and our own company. It’s nice to finally come up for air.

I guess everyone who works in this industry has felt the effects. Layoffs have been abundant in media companies and across the board we have witnessed adjusted business models, pricing structures, staff skill sets and services. Ultimately organizations have been forced to reflect upon their own best practices. Change has been the most common theme over the last 6 months.

Just Media was no different. We lost two key staff members – long term employees who we miss greatly. But when client spends drop – in some cases by 90%, any organization needs to adjust to survive. Thankfully we are now back hiring again and able to take advantage of some great talent to boost our teams expertise. Adding new blood is a fantastic way to re-energize – new ideas, different experiences and fresh thinking – challenging the conventional thinking and creating new angles to attack and deliver upon existing client goals.

Client wise it’s also been a roller coaster ride. Early signs in 2009 showed big budget cuts and the inevitable shift of dollars to ROI and lead gen – almost to the exclusion of all other media activity. That’s tough for all. Small budgets as we all know don’t take less time to manage. I lost count of projects that got planned only to get cut at the last minute when quarterly figures didn’t match expectations. That frustrates everyone – clients and agency – everyone feels like they are stuck in the mud with wheels spinning.

However in the last few months things have changed. We have picked up some major wins – Hitachi Data Systems, Trinet HR services, Juniper Networks, Webroot and Stephens Bank – and whats interesting is that ALL are asking for assistance to develop strategies, plan and run branding and awareness campaigns. A return to true marketing perhaps?

So as analysts predict an end to the recession, companies appear now to be rushing to claim market and mind share from competitors. All realize the window for this is short and anyone who is sleeping now will miss one of those rare post recession openings to win and win big….

Maybe the real ride is only just beginning – buckle up….

Does the industry have the courage to say no?

If the report in the recent Advertising Age is true then the media and advertising industry needs to take a good hard look at itself. And frankly it’s going to need to get itself a set of “chicken nuggets” large enough to avoid being held to ransom.

In case you have not heard, some of the biggest advertisers in the market including GM and Budweiser owners Anheuser-Busch are insisting they be given 70 or even 120 days to pay bills related to advertising activities.

In an industry that is already reeling from reduced spending levels, such an attitude is effectively blackmailing any supplier who might be in the unfortunate position to have to rely on this business to survive. It’s a shifting of credit from banks (who know better than to subsidize these giants) to the small companies across the industry. It’s classic corporate bullying of the very worst kind.

This will result in only one thing – faster and more complete destruction of the industry. No agency can survive on 70 days credit – especially since that’s almost never the reality and payments almost always arrive later than the stipulated time. Even large media owners will suffer severe cash flow issues if enough giant advertisers pull the same stunt.

Obviously there are ways to reduce exposure to this. Firstly it is a refusal to accept these terms. If you have succeeded in being viewed as more than just another commodity, then many client contacts will fight tooth and nail to get you supported, as we oursleves have seen in many contract negotiations. Secondly it is possible to insist that the advertiser takes responsibility for paying media invoices directly (thus enabling the media owners to say no to the business or accept floating the campaign themselves). Thirdly it is to walk away from the business and look for more sustainable accounts elsewhere.

As someone who runs a small business and strives everyday to be honest with suppliers and staff, there’s something inherently despicable about companies that advertize brand attributes about positive behaviour, play on the heart strings of the American spirit and portray themselves as bringing positive influence into peoples lives when behind the scenes they are prepared to screw an entire segment of small companies. Survival at the expense of others should not be acceptable and they should be called on it (well done to Ad Age for publicizing this).

As you can see I’m not buying it…