Oct 16

The following is a terrific article penned by Datran Media’s Chairman & CEO, Patrick Vogt…

With the new season of Mad Men in full swing, it’s a good time to reflect upon how far the advertising agency business has come since the early 1960s. From the dysfunctional inhabitants of Mad Men, to the sardonic and witty tales from James Othmer’s recent book Adland, agency life is portrayed in the media as a high-octane, creative profession with a pathological dark side. In other words, it’s fun to watch. At the fictional Sterling Cooper agency, viewers are subjected to excessive smoking, drinking, sexism, self-loathing and self-destructive behavior on a weekly basis. Yet there is something about the place that makes you really want to work there. Advertising, after all, is where the magic happens.

As Don Draper once put it,Advertising is about one thing and one thing only, happiness.

So what has changed in advertising over the last 50 years? Surprisingly, the basic DNA of ad agencies is largely the same. Madison Avenue is still trying to sell happiness to consumers who long for it. Brands are still trying to make us feel hopeful and happy so that we continue to consume. Advertising success is predicated on igniting creative sparks that flare into an increased share of voice within today’s fragmented audience.

In a more profound sense, however, the world around the advertising industry has changed absolutely. Agencies are facing shrinking budgets, widespread adoption of social media and new disruptive technologies. The lines between companies and customers are beginning to blur, as brands question the value of agencies as intermediaries. As advertising budgets are slashed, campaign return on investment is scrutinized through new audience measurement and ad performance technologies.

Metrics & Accountability Matter

I know that half of my advertising is wasted, I just don’t know which half.” John Wanamaker

With performance data widely available, clients are now looking for revenue-based results. Brands have begun to explore alternative compensation models for their agency partners, signaling a potential shift in the traditional hourly pay model. While only about 10% of today’s advertising compensation agreements are value-based, that may increase as brands leverage more tools to measure advertising effectiveness.

Some media critics today estimate that up to 80% of ad dollars are wasted as a result of three factors; inflated media prices, a decline in the effectiveness of traditional advertising, and poor decision making. That is a bitter pill for brands to swallow considering how many billions of dollars are spent on advertising each year. Brand management can also be ambivalent about the important role that advertising plays in their business. A recent survey conducted by the Marketing Management Analytics (MMA) and the Association of National Advertisers (ANA) showed that 39% of senior brand management viewed marketing as an expense, while 43% viewed it as an investment in brand equity.

At the same time, leaders on the agency side of the equation struggle with the current business model as well. Advertising and media are complicated businesses that take years to master, and agencies don’t appreciate having to validate their contributions every few months. To make matters worse, navigating the new social media channels for clients can be challenging and time consuming. While social media can be a force for good when users champion a brand, it can also be destructive if users decide to wage war. Agencies have had to develop a new level of expertise in this area.

Another aggravating factor for agencies is that they are often required to spend considerable time and money developing full blown creative concepts for which they are never reimbursed. What’s more, clients often try to renegotiate fees after the work is already done. This creates tension in the business relationship as well. Roger Sterling of Mad Men puts it this way,Being with a client is like being in a marriage. Sometimes you get into it for the wrong reasons, and eventually they hit you in the face.

The Tipping Point in the Advertising Model

While assigning a value to advertising initiatives is difficult, finding new and better ways to reward agencies for their work can be even more challenging. We now appear to be at tipping point that could transform the role of advertising agencies going forward.

Some large advertising brands like Coca-Cola have recently adopted a value based compensation plan for their U.S. ad agencies. The company says that the objective is not to cut costs but to inspire creativity and efficiency (http://tiny.cc/wEgdV). Coca-Cola’s plan will cover all agency costs, plus provide a bonus of up to 30% based on sales performance metrics. Consumer-goods giant Procter & Gamble has also stated that they may abandon hourly fees in favor of a performance related fees for their agency partners. Other global brands like Unilever have recently adopted a performance-based model as well.

A few forward thinking advertising agencies have proactively moved towards a new business relationship where both the agency and client agree to certain key performance indicators (KPIs). Once met, these KPIs ensure that the agency is well compensated and rewarded for meeting specific corporate objectives.
Leo Burnett’s India Chairman and CEO Arvind Sharma, recently said that brands sometimes provide them with compensation incentives linked to sales. Mr. Sharma stated, “We love this model. Since 90-95 per cent of our projects exceed success parameters, the model benefits us. (http://tiny.cc/6ELgQ). Similarly, the chief executive of Crispin Porter + Bogusky Jeff Hicks has said that a value-based approach has helped his agency work more closely with clients by aligning the agency’s compensation with the advertiser’s profitability (http://tiny.cc/wEgdV). This kind of progressive thinking may allow advertising agencies to get into the driver’s seat to initiate real change throughout the industry.
The New Normal

As time goes on, the economy will no doubt rebound, and social media, blogging and micro blogging will all be seamlessly integrated into strategic marketing plans. Meanwhile, the demand for hard data and ROI metrics will continue until reaching critical mass, at which point full accountability for advertising will be expected as the new normal. That is when the truly creative agencies will find ways to reinvent themselves in order to take advantage of the new advertising paradigm.

Great agencies are in the business of creating real and lasting value for their clients, and I believe they will become the designers of the new agency model. Their contributions run much deeper than simply increasing brand awareness to drive sales. An agency’s work enhances a brand’s reputation, and creates a deeper emotional connection between brands and their customers. An excellent advertising agency partnership is about so much more than the cost of a billable hour. It is about the true value of collaboration and the strategy, positioning, targeting and business intelligence that helps companies to grow and thrive. At the end of the day, we still want advertising to be about the magic.

Sep 22

Not surprisingly, marketers are making customer acquisition and retention top priorities for 2010. According to a survey released by Unisfair, six out of 10 marketers said acquiring new customers would be critical in 2010, while 48 percent will focus on retaining current customers—a particularly important effort in the recession and a topic we recently explored in a very informative webinar.

Of the marketing channels available to them, social media was the top marketing tactic with 75 percent of respondents planning to increase use of the emerging channel as a way to acquire and retain customers. Search (51 percent) and email (48 percent) were right behind, while only 3 percent planned to increase spending on print advertising.

While search and email have proven to be excellent channels for driving customer acquisition and retention, it is still too early to understand what kind of impact social media will have on a marketer’s bottom line. With close to 300 million users on Facebook alone, there is no questioning the reach social media offers marketers, but will it deliver meaningful results? Like email, if done right, I believe social media will be effective. There are many parallels between social media and the email channel when it first became popular. The main thing to understand is that they are not exactly exclusive. Yes, consumers are communicating in social media, but that does not mean they have given up on email, and neither should marketers. Datran Media’s Nicholas Einstein penned a great article on this topic almost a year ago that I believe is still a relevant read today.

Jul 09

The number of online and email newsletters jumped from 1,053 to 6,055 over the last five years, an increase of 475%.
Meanwhile, print-only newsletters decreased 43% from 7,395 to 4,180, and those in both print and electronic formats remained about the same (4,859 vs. 4,949), according to Mediafinder.com and reported by Marketing Vox.

With consumers continuing to abandon print in favor of digital publications, it has never been a better time to explore monetization opportunities. Now, more than ever, your online inventory is extremely valuable.

Join Datran Media and publishing executives from Fox Digital Media and Examiner.com for a complimentary webinar: Generating Value from your Online Ad Inventory Part II: How Publishers Can Survive & Thrive in an Ad Recession.
In part 2 of this ongoing webinar series, Datran Media will again address digital monetization techniques with other publishers and advertisers.

Join us to hear directly from publishing experts facing the same unique challenges and learn how they are reaching targeted consumer segments and maximizing their monetization efforts. The 50-minute panel will close with a 10 minute Q&A opportunity. Register today and discover the secrets to media monetization.

You Will Learn to:

•Leverage email in your monetization efforts
•Use audience targeting to increase value
•Utilize co-reg offers
•Integrate social media
•Employ the use of integrated placements

Tuesday, July 28
2:30 PM EST / 11:30 AM PST
Duration: 60 Minutes

Register now

Jun 24

Advertisers and marketers have long searched, with mixed results, for proof that their campaigns are effective. For the interactive industry, integrity in audience measurement is a fundamental necessity. After all, accurate reporting and transparency is critical when planning future media buys, segmenting audiences, and optimizing marketing mixes. However, the methodologies that most media is measured by are seventy years old!

Understanding that advertisers need deeper insights than simply learning ‘how many’ consumers they have reached, Datran Media’s Senior Vice President of Display and GM of the Aperture Product Group, Scott Knoll, recently participated in an educational Webcast that explores today’s measurement landscape across demographics, psychographics, intent to purchase and purchase history.

Saving Agencies Time & Money with Audience Measurement

This informative Webcast presented in conjunction with the Advertising Research Foundation addressed:

-Strategies and solutions focused on campaign optimization and monetization
-Network segmentation and how to avoiding wasted impressions
-Audience validation at the campaign level
-Illustrated case study

This valuable Webcast in now available to view at your leisure and is sure to help you answer questions you have around today’s digital measurement methodologies and what works best for you.

Download the full Aperture presentation with audio.

Download the PDF of the Aperture presentation.

May 04

Datran Media’s deliverability consulting team wants to make sure email marekters are aware of common spam traps, and how sending to a trap address can have an adverse effect on your email deliverability.

A spam trap is an email address that ISPs and other organizations use to monitor unsolicited email messages. In other words, a spam trap address captures all outside email communications that the address never subscribed to; hence the term “spam trap.”

Senders can prevent mailing to spam trap addresses by isolating inactive recipients from their mailing lists. For example, you can create a simple query that targets recipients that subscribed to your mailing list over 6 months ago, and that have never opened a message. In addition, implementing a double opt-in subscription method can help ensure that your mailing lists contains only active recipients and not addresses refurbished by the ISPs for spam trap purposes.

Don’t fall into the spam trap! If you’d like to learn more about spam trap addresses and spam trap prevention, please contact Datran Media’s deliverability consulting team.

Apr 03

Delivery to the inbox for most Internet service providers (ISPs) is primarily based on user feedback and your reputation as a sender. ISPs attempt to deliver messages their members want and reject those their members don’t want – if they do a poor job of either, members stop using their service. This task becomes increasingly difficult for ISPs when considering mail from senders from which they have never seen email traffic. A common example of this is when a client is switching IPs or starting a new program using new IPs. Even though you may have established a positive reputation based on the previous sending IPs, the new IPs from the perspective of an ISP have no established sending history. It then becomes the sender’s responsibility to build a positive reputation.

Almost all ISPs determine acceptance of a message and place in the inbox or bulk folder based on what their members tell them about messages from a specific sender. Typically, feedback or complaints about a message are received by the ISPs by a “report spam” button or submission of a message directly to the ISP’s postmaster team. This feedback is used to establish a sender reputation on an IP basis and sometimes on a domain basis, as well. The key to consistent delivery is to create a relationship with members using regular messaging to all members while keeping complaint rates low so that a positive sender reputation can be created. There are many best practices recommended to enjoy consistent deliverability. For more information about your delivarbility, contact us today.

Mar 25

NBC wants its customers to stay tuned to what they are doing and are using email to spread that message. By following Datran Media’s guidelines for creating engaging email messages that follow industry best practices, NBC is ensuring their messages are reaching the inbox with clear and informative content and not being tuned out. Passing it forward, NBC is also sharing the guidelines with their sales teams and prospective advertisers – making something not widely understood (email creation and deliverability best practices) easy to adopt and allowing advertisers to focus on the needs of their audience instead of worrying about whether or not their messages are rendering correctly.

“Internally, Datran Media’s HTML content creation and delivery best practices helped us to optimize NBC’s marketing communications for maximum reach and response,” said NBC’s Rajan Arora. “We also shared Datran Media’s best practices with our sales teams and prospective advertisers. This allowed us to streamline monetization of our advertising inventory by making it simple for our advertisers to conform to standards in support of their reach and conversion goals.”

If you are currently sending your own email messages with HTML markup there are three major concerns to bear in mind:
· Rendering problems – markup and images rendering improperly
· Content Filtering – bulk or spam filtering based on copy or markup characteristics
· Email file size or image file size – poor results based on slow load time for recipients

If you’d like to learn more, Datran Media has penned a very helpful whitepaper full of common HTML Best Practices.

Mar 23

There’s really no breaking news here. Traditional newspapers are in a world of hurt these days, and it is something that started way before the economic downturn. Online media including Web sites, blogs, and social media have all but rendered the print newspaper irrelevant. However, this doesn’t mean the content is insignificant, it just means the form it’s in is no longer applicable in the modern world; at least for people with super fast Internet connections and smart phones – a number that is growing every day. Why worry about ink smudges on your fingers when you can read everything with a quick click of your finger?

Several newspapers have been unable to rely on an online counterpart and have unfortunately witnessed their demise after decades and sometimes centuries in print. This is happening at such an alarming rate that it is today’s featured story on CNN.com (another example of getting your news online). In the article, Paul Gillin, a social media consultant, said such losses are to be expected for an industry that has failed to adapt to the influx of online publishing tools and social networking sites.

Speaking of online publishing, one of the biggest opportunities newspaper publishers can leverage in the digital world is email. This increasingly popular marketing channel offers an enormous number of benefits not available in print and allows advertisers to pick put a very fine segment of the audience and target them precisely. Datran Media’s chief revenue officer Sean O’Neal discusses this topic with two publishers who understand how to leverage digital media. Both New York Magazine and MediaNews Group discuss their daily challenges with DM News, a must read for any publisher.

Mar 12

I like to think that I am hip and stay in touch with the current fads. I know about facebook, iPods, and texting. I may not know who Lil’ Wayne (?) is but I think I can relate to today’s youth. However, I was unaware of how more receptive this younger generation is about receiving advertising. According to a new study from the Participatory Marketing Network (PMN), Generation Y consumers – also known as Millennials and those between the ages of 18-24 – say they would potentially welcome direct brand interactions through email, but wants more ability to control, organize and manage the interactions. When I was at that age, and filled with piss and vinegar – and a full head of hair, I thought it was socially acceptable to rebel against the corporate world and look down at what was being advertised to me. Apparently this is no longer the case.

Thanks to the rise of social media, young people have so much more input and say into what advertisers are doing and are willing to interact with advertisers if the message makes a connection. Brands now have the opportunity to reach this sought-after audience if they are able to speak to them on a personal level, and email is a great way to start.

However, according to the report only 28% of those between ages 18 and 24 say the email they currently get from companies is relevant to them. Advertisers need to think differently about the way they engage their younger audience and understand that if they introduce fresh, innovative ways to build a relationship, they will reap the benefits down the road.

You can read the full results of the study on MarketingVOX.

Mar 10

Did you know acquiring a new customer can cost 6 to 7 times more than retaining an existing one? All too often, companies fail to recognize their strongest assets – their existing customers. With the battle to attract new customers fiercer than ever, there has never been a better time to reengage your company’s current email subscriber database and reactivate dormant users. A well-executed reactivation campaign will re-energize your list and help you justify the time and effort you spent acquiring those names throughout the years.

Datran Media recently worked with a global retailer to re-engage their dormant customers with highly relevant and timely email messages. The results proved to be a big win. Leveraging a strategic approach to communicating with this audience, the world-renowned retailer successfully employed a win-back campaign that intended to reactivate a database of 3.5 million dormant users.

This was quite a momentous challenge as the file consisted of names of users that did not open or click for over 13 months. These users were not only dead, they were totally buried. However, Datran Media was able to uncover them by leveraging its database of over 175 million email addresses. Datran Media matched names from the retailer’s dormant list to names in our database and identified unique characteristics that each user displayed.

In partnership with the retailer, Datran Media employed a creative and delivery-time optimized program to reach this formerly active customer list by tailoring messages based on behavioral responses like when they open, what kind of offers they usually respond to, and other distinctive activation points to generate a Winback. What’s more, the retailer avoided paying high CPMs often associated with these types of campaigns and only paid when members of their list performed a measurable action such as an open, click or purchase – and the results were phenomenal.

· Overall, 12.5 percent of the initial database was reactivated – nearly 450,000 names

· The client saved an estimated $120,000 in wasted costs by not mailing ineffective offers through their existing ESP

If you are interested in learning more about this campaign, please send me an email or call 888-494-4ROI.

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