Archive for the ‘ROI’ Category

Every Impression Counts: Part One

CEO, Dick Reed, explores the advantages of Just Media, Inc’s ”Every Impression Counts” philosophy and some of the key ramifications on planning and measurement when this approach is applied to advertising campaigns.

The first part of this two part white paper is available now on Just Media, Inc’s website by following this link: http://justmedia.com/blog/signup/ or by sending an email directly to CEO@justmedia.com.

As always, any feedback and thoughts on the paper and it’s topic are very much appreciated and welcomed.

Be ready for the next evolution in online buying!

Have you heard of Online Trading Desks or DSP? If you are not deep in the online industry, then chances are you have not. It is the next evolution in online media buying and if you or your agency have not begun to test this new method, then you are already lagging behind the marketplace in access to critically important inventory. 

 

So, what is it? Basically, a DSP is a method for gaining access to the high volumes of remnant or unsold inventory that almost every site has in abundance. The difference is that rather than being sold on a commodity basis via a network, it’s purchased on a bidding model enabling every impression on sale to be priced at the true value rather than an artificially created one.

 

At Just Media, Inc., we have recently started testing a trading desk for small portions of media buys. Initially, we have principally been using it for retargeting, but now we are also using the desk for audience specific segments and the results have been fascinating. CPM’s are being drastically reduced, but most importantly, minimum buys are eliminated; allowing quick testing of different filters. It’s fast, efficient and driven by data. It learns too… dynamically optimizing buys to the key call to actions our campaigns require.

 

This technology might not change every media buy we do, but it has the potential to impact on many  strategies and make targeting the long tail of media even more productive and controllable. Yes, it’s one more vehicle that you should expect your agency to employ, but one very worthy of testing and refining right now.

 

For more information on how a trading desk might be right for your campaigns or simply to learn more do not hesitate to reach out.

 

Dick Reed, CEO

Just Media, Inc.

ceo@justmedia.com

Are your campaigns becoming one dimensional?

With the recent announcement from Ziff Davis Enterprise that they will be closing their remaining print titles (including eWeek and CIO Insight), the IT tech industry will again lose vital print life-blood in its media support system.

On the face of it, it really should not matter. IT professionals exist across hundreds of websites and can be reached through a plethora of different media channels. With the introduction of new social networks and media devices like iPads and Android smart phones, those channels increase every day.

But the reality is much more serious for marketers. Only a few years ago an IT professional was almost guaranteed to see your advertising if you placed it in a few key publications. Reach numbers were in the 80%+ range simply because an advert in a magazine had the potential to reach every single reader. In addition, it would continue to perform when that magazine was passed around the department. One ad reached hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of individuals.

Now if an advertisement runs on a website, typical share of voice numbers are minimal at best. Even when share of voice is high, with highly targeted media buys, the result is very few individual eyeballs and pretty much zero chance for passes on to others. Don’t believe me? Try and find your ad on a site. You either end up looking on just a few key site pages (home page, section page; so no depth to your reach) or you have to hit refresh a dozen or more times.

With this in mind what do we suggest for our clients? Firstly, don’t consider the web as the sole avenue to the audience. Recent studies of business professionals by Readex Research once again confirms the high reliance on print by the audience. With this in mind, find ways to carve out a slice of your budget to add depth to the media plan by including a mix of old and new media. Mix print at one end with web in the middle and a sprinkling of mobile at the other… mix it up a bit and be daring (by going old school!).

This multi-dimensional campaign strategy works. Our own campaign performance research proves that a business or an IT audience that sees a campaign across multiple media formats is more influenced by it, has better recall of it and will have a greater understanding of the message which it contains; and yes, eventually mobile content will continue to be a more viable delivery platform for your message. Just don’t think that the print workhorse is ready to be put out to pasture… because if you do you might just wish you had worked it that little bit harder while it was still there.

Dick Reed, CEO, Just Media, Inc.

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

Analyzing 2010 Tech Marketing Spending Patterns

If, like me, you enjoy trying to get under the hood of the ad campaigns that we see from other technology marketers, then I am sure you will find this latest Just Media, Inc. report, 2010 Technology Advertising Spending, fascinating. In it we take a look at a sample of the ad spend numbers from 2010 for some of the industry’s leading advertisers. The numbers are enlightening in many ways – not least because we can see how different companies mix their media spend and get an insight into both general communications strategy and some specific tactics. They also provide an insight into the relation between revenues and advertising spend; always a useful comparison for internal discussions regarding budgets.

These numbers are obviously for the major vendors, but if you have an interest in your nearest competitor’s spending patterns then please let us know. We will be happy to see what we can research and offer our own insight into what they might be doing and why (and how you can best counter that with your own smart media investments).

If you do want to take advantage of this free opportunity, just email me with your company name and that of your three nearest competitors. If we find anything interesting in the current data you know we will be in touch immediately!

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

Outdoor Media – Integrating New Media technologies to change the way that an audience interacts with traditional media.

Traditional media such as broadcast (radio & TV), print and outdoor is still very much alive and ranks high in ad-recall studies though lacks the type of campaign performance data found with New media. New Media (such as the Internet) brings with it a variety of new ways to advertise and track the performance of your campaign with relevant interaction numbers instead of educated guesstimates that are the only numbers currently available with traditional media. Outdoor media, in this case the posters or billboards you are used to seeing along roadways, bus stops and airports etc., are slowly evolving and are also embracing new technologies.

The ability to see campaign performance with new media campaigns rightly sparked marketers to ask how to better track traditional media – and we are just now seeing some tools that may help marketers answer that question effectively.

I ran across an article in The Wall Street Journal regarding outdoor media and specifically the use of wireless routers within bus shelters that allows users to download apps, ringtones, etc., while waiting for their ride to arrive.

What’s interesting is that the ad space is being augmented not by the outdoor vendors themselves (CBS / clearchannel, etc., who you would imagine would be able to develop technologies to better serve their customers) but instead by other companies that re-sell this space and charge on a per-action basis. This means we are going to start seeing tracking reports for outdoor media in the future, which should provide a much clearer idea of the interaction and impact of a campaign executed through traditional media formats.

We’ll have to see what catches on. The technology is still new and there are a variety of elements that may skew results such as malfunctioning hardware (such as wireless routers), an audience that may need to have smart phones rather than “dumb” phones as well as other variables.

If you’re interested to read about the company heavily trenched in this outdoor technology, check out Amobee, who are headquartered in Redwood City, CA.

Christian Castro
Just Media, Inc.

Germany issues new guidelines for data protection

Being German myself, I am always interested in what’s going on in my home country. Especially when it comes to cookies (and I’m not talking about the delicious Holiday cookies I had when I visited in November last year) and online metrics. I found this article last week that talks about the issues Google Analytics is running into in the German market. Looks like the end user might get in trouble when using it…

Germans have very high standards when it comes to privacy and they have a healthy suspicion about giving away information about themselves. But that’s not enough. Apparently data protection companies are helping with securing privacy in their own way. Under the new guidelines, not only will Google get in trouble, but the company who uses it might be in difficulty too. Click here for the article

I could imagine that a lot of companies were actually excited about using Google Analytics as it gives smaller companies the ability to quickly analyze what’s going on with their web site. I happen to love the tool. It’s not rocket science, it tells you what you are looking for fairly quickly and if set up correctly it is able to give you amazing insight about how the visitor behaves on your site. But looking at campaign data from BOTH ends – our ad serving reporting and the web analytics tool on the site that hosts the landing page – shows us the full picture. It’s a common mistake that clients believe they can see everything about a campaign through their web analytics tool only. This is only half the picture. We optimize campaigns based on several metrics, including Cost per Click, Cost per Landing, Click to Landing Ratio and view-through data. We still glance at the Click-through-rate but that’s just the first check point. From this set of metrics, only one can be compared to a number of the web analytics program: the landings should be close to the number of visitors to that page through the campaign. Everything else, especially the view-through data, can only be captured through our ad serving program. Here often lies the true success of a campaign. How often do we really click on a banner? I find myself searching for the banner content more often than clicking and that’s exactly what will be captured: users that were exposed to the banner, didn’t click, but came to the page later on. Most likely through a Search.

Dick Reed actually wrote an interesting and detailed whitepaper about tech metrics a while ago (Tech Marketing Analytics 101 Part 1- ROI). Check it out here:

Happy trafficking!
Frauke Cast

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