Online marketing & advertising illuminated via a visit to ad:tech SF
As discussed in this Tuesday’s New Media New Marketing report on TheTVNews.tv (video immediately below), I took advantage of a press pass last week to spend a day at the very alive and vibrant ad:tech SF online advertising conference. It was very stimulating as well as a bit overwhelming, as most good conferences are. (Note: Examples and references are linked below.)
Bottom line, the conference was healthy and online advertising in general appears to be growing at a robust rate. This was evidenced in an announcement unrelated to the conference, as I was getting ready to go, I learned that global package goods giant Reckitt Benckiser was doubling their annual online advertising budget to $40 million.
In addition, [added 4/30] eMarker’s CEO says Online Video Advertising to Increase 35 Precent in 2010 (video interview via Beet.tv).
One educational note was revealed as I first entered the press room. Their sign read, “Press, Bloggers & Twerps.” I commented that I had not seen twerps get press credentials previously. At this point, I was told apologetically that the sign was an error. It should have said, “Tweeps.” We are all learning. And, apparently there were only three tweeps deemed influential enough to get a press pass, but this was a “first” none the less.
A highlight for me was the keynote by French entrepreneur, Loic Le Meur, founder of Seesmic.com, who now lives in San Francisco. Loic accurately positioned social media as the third major wave of internet marketing. The first major wave, as he described it, was just having a website. The second wave was being savvy enough to be found on Google (search engine optimization or SEO). And, the third is now the ability to “earn” interactions via social media. He emphasized that social media is not about “campaigns.” It’s for listening and engaging.
Along these lines, I also appreciated comments by Larry Weintraub of word-of-mouth marketing agency, Fanscape, who explained that engaging in social media marketing has many more benefits than old world marketing. All with enormous value. Without embellishment, the four solid reasons to go social are:
- Marketing (another speaker said that “advertising” is now morphing into “marketing”)
- Market Research
- Customer Service
- Public Relations
In my opinion, none of these benefits should be under-rated.
You can watch Loic’s keynote via this link. The Hitler video which Loic included (amongst the dozens of other Hitler parodies based on the Constantin Films movie that I mention in the video above) can be viewed here, if it’s still up. It’s very funny if you are geeky enough to imagine Hitler expressing Steve Jobs displeasure over the loss of that famous iPhone G4 prototype.
Here are other examples of advertisers’ money moving to online video, as well as other links mentioned in my video report above:
- Discovery Channel’s Sarah Palin fiasco FYI, this is an activist link against the show. More details via HuffPo’s report.
- P&G’s LetHerJump.com socially-fueled, women-oriented campaign for Secret deodorant in support of women’s ski jumping in the 2014 Winter Olympics resolves to a Facebook page.
- GE Healthymagination which includes a Howcast.com YouTube channel of how-tos and an iPhone app. Learn more about this campaign and other successful viral videos via the TechCrunch’s revelatory How to Use Hot Chicks to Spread Your Brand Message on YouTube.
BONUS #1: TWITTER ADVERTISING
Amongst the MANY smaller businesses exhibiting at ad:tech SF, I was interested to learn that Twitter is now not only being used for social media engagement; but beyond Twitter’s own advertising expansion (the potential of which Andrew Goodman calls “huge”), there is also now a Twitter-specific “contextual, targeted” independently-run Twitter advertising platform called 140 Proof.
BONUS #2: BRANDS AS PUBLISHERS a.k.a. Content Marketing
Here’s a link to a great set of links that further illuminate the “brand-led online video” trend which is also called “Brands as Publishers” by this page’s author, thought-leader, publisher, John Battelle, and “Content Marketing” by others. Checkout It’s All About Publishing, a.k.a. it’s all about content. 😉
And, as I’m sure you know, there’s “more to come.” Including an inside track on branded YouTube channels that I’ll be covering in a new blog post and video report soon. I met with Google/YouTube at ad:tech and an announcement regarding this development is expected in, roughly, mid-May.
(Request: If you watch the video above on YouTube or Facebook, please comment etc. And while you’re here, I would appreciate any comments and/or feedback that you may have. I’d love to hear from you.)
Thanks for reading!
Sounds like a great conference. I attended Pubcon a few weeks back and enjoyed the focus on SEO and SEM. I’ll try to get myself to the next Ad-Tech.
Nice to hear from you Tron. I have enjoyed several PubCon’s myself in the past. The culture of these shows is quite different. Ad-Tech tends to be more bigger brand stuff i.e. “real” advertisers; and PubCon has this wonderful atmosphere of sharing and we’re all in it together. Ad-tech has perhaps higher value presenters, but not nearly as high quality schmoozing. It sure helped too, to get a press pass and that it was in the same city where I live. 🙂
you can see that there is a massive growth in online advertising these days, google paved the way on ppc ::~