MARKETING
How Social Walls are Changing the Narrative of Marketing in 2023
As we enter the year 2023, the landscape of marketing is constantly evolving. With the rise of social media, it has become increasingly important for businesses to have a strong online presence.
One of the latest trends in social media marketing is the use of social walls. In this blog, we will explore how social walls are changing the narrative of marketing and why they are essential in today’s digital landscape.
Social Walls – An Overview
For those who may not be familiar with social walls, they are online displays that showcase user-generated content (UGC) from various social media platforms such as Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. Social walls can be displayed on websites, event screens, or digital signage.
The purpose of social wall is to increase engagement and interaction between businesses and their audiences.
They allow businesses to harness the power of UGC to build brand awareness, improve customer loyalty, and drive sales.
How Social Walls Are Changing The Marketing Landscape
Putting The Focus Back On Customers
One of the main ways in which social walls are changing the narrative of marketing is by putting the focus back on the customer.
In traditional marketing, the focus was on the brand and its message. However, social walls allow businesses to showcase their customers’ experiences with their brand.
By doing so, businesses can create a more authentic and relatable message that resonates with their audience.
Providing User-Generated Content
Another way social walls are changing the narrative of marketing is by providing businesses with a wealth of user-generated content.
UGC is any content created by users that promotes a brand or its products. This can include photos, videos, reviews, and social media posts.
Social walls allow businesses to collect and curate UGC from various social media platforms and display it on their website or event screen.
This not only provides businesses with a constant stream of fresh content, but it also allows them to showcase their customers’ experiences with their brand.
Changing The Ways How Businesses Measure Success
Social walls are also changing the way businesses measure the success of their marketing efforts.
Traditionally, businesses would measure success by metrics such as website traffic and sales.
However, social walls allow businesses to measure success based on engagement and interaction.
By tracking the number of social media posts, likes, and shares generated by their social wall, businesses can get a better understanding of how their customers are interacting with their brand.
This information can then be used to make informed decisions about future marketing strategies.
Changing The Approach To Marketing Strategies
In addition to providing businesses with a new way to measure success, social walls are also changing the way businesses approach their marketing strategies.
With social walls, businesses can now incorporate UGC into their marketing efforts in a more intentional way.
This can include creating campaigns that encourage customers to share their experiences with the brand, or creating social media contests that incentivize customers to create UGC.
By doing so, businesses can create a more engaging and interactive marketing strategy that resonates with their audience.
Improving Customer Engagement & Loyalty
Another way social walls are changing the narrative of marketing is by improving customer engagement and loyalty.
By showcasing UGC on social walls, businesses can create a more personal and authentic connection with their customers.
This not only improves customer engagement, but it also improves customer loyalty.
When customers see their content featured on a social wall, they are more likely to feel a sense of pride and loyalty towards the brand.
Offering A New Look To Events & Experiential Marketing
Finally, social media wall is changing the way businesses approach events and experiential marketing.
With social walls, businesses can now create a more immersive and engaging experience for event attendees.
By displaying social media posts from attendees on event screens, businesses can create a sense of community and excitement around the event.
This not only improves the overall event experience, but it also helps to increase brand awareness and drive sales.
Providing Social Proof
One of the significant benefits of social walls is their ability to provide social proof to potential customers.
User-generated content on social walls can demonstrate how real customers are using and enjoying a product or service.
This type of content is more trustworthy than traditional advertising and can help to build brand credibility and increase conversion rates.
Wrapping Up
In conclusion, social walls are transforming marketing by putting the customer at the center of the conversation.
Instead of solely relying on traditional marketing methods, social walls provide businesses with a new way to interact with their audience and foster a sense of community.
The abundance of user-generated content on social walls also offers businesses a wealth of information to better understand their audience’s preferences and behavior.
By prioritizing customer engagement, social walls are changing the way businesses approach their marketing strategies and measure success in 2023.
MARKETING
YouTube Ad Specs, Sizes, and Examples [2024 Update]
Introduction
With billions of users each month, YouTube is the world’s second largest search engine and top website for video content. This makes it a great place for advertising. To succeed, advertisers need to follow the correct YouTube ad specifications. These rules help your ad reach more viewers, increasing the chance of gaining new customers and boosting brand awareness.
Types of YouTube Ads
Video Ads
- Description: These play before, during, or after a YouTube video on computers or mobile devices.
- Types:
- In-stream ads: Can be skippable or non-skippable.
- Bumper ads: Non-skippable, short ads that play before, during, or after a video.
Display Ads
- Description: These appear in different spots on YouTube and usually use text or static images.
- Note: YouTube does not support display image ads directly on its app, but these can be targeted to YouTube.com through Google Display Network (GDN).
Companion Banners
- Description: Appears to the right of the YouTube player on desktop.
- Requirement: Must be purchased alongside In-stream ads, Bumper ads, or In-feed ads.
In-feed Ads
- Description: Resemble videos with images, headlines, and text. They link to a public or unlisted YouTube video.
Outstream Ads
- Description: Mobile-only video ads that play outside of YouTube, on websites and apps within the Google video partner network.
Masthead Ads
- Description: Premium, high-visibility banner ads displayed at the top of the YouTube homepage for both desktop and mobile users.
YouTube Ad Specs by Type
Skippable In-stream Video Ads
- Placement: Before, during, or after a YouTube video.
- Resolution:
- Horizontal: 1920 x 1080px
- Vertical: 1080 x 1920px
- Square: 1080 x 1080px
- Aspect Ratio:
- Horizontal: 16:9
- Vertical: 9:16
- Square: 1:1
- Length:
- Awareness: 15-20 seconds
- Consideration: 2-3 minutes
- Action: 15-20 seconds
Non-skippable In-stream Video Ads
- Description: Must be watched completely before the main video.
- Length: 15 seconds (or 20 seconds in certain markets).
- Resolution:
- Horizontal: 1920 x 1080px
- Vertical: 1080 x 1920px
- Square: 1080 x 1080px
- Aspect Ratio:
- Horizontal: 16:9
- Vertical: 9:16
- Square: 1:1
Bumper Ads
- Length: Maximum 6 seconds.
- File Format: MP4, Quicktime, AVI, ASF, Windows Media, or MPEG.
- Resolution:
- Horizontal: 640 x 360px
- Vertical: 480 x 360px
In-feed Ads
- Description: Show alongside YouTube content, like search results or the Home feed.
- Resolution:
- Horizontal: 1920 x 1080px
- Vertical: 1080 x 1920px
- Square: 1080 x 1080px
- Aspect Ratio:
- Horizontal: 16:9
- Square: 1:1
- Length:
- Awareness: 15-20 seconds
- Consideration: 2-3 minutes
- Headline/Description:
- Headline: Up to 2 lines, 40 characters per line
- Description: Up to 2 lines, 35 characters per line
Display Ads
- Description: Static images or animated media that appear on YouTube next to video suggestions, in search results, or on the homepage.
- Image Size: 300×60 pixels.
- File Type: GIF, JPG, PNG.
- File Size: Max 150KB.
- Max Animation Length: 30 seconds.
Outstream Ads
- Description: Mobile-only video ads that appear on websites and apps within the Google video partner network, not on YouTube itself.
- Logo Specs:
- Square: 1:1 (200 x 200px).
- File Type: JPG, GIF, PNG.
- Max Size: 200KB.
Masthead Ads
- Description: High-visibility ads at the top of the YouTube homepage.
- Resolution: 1920 x 1080 or higher.
- File Type: JPG or PNG (without transparency).
Conclusion
YouTube offers a variety of ad formats to reach audiences effectively in 2024. Whether you want to build brand awareness, drive conversions, or target specific demographics, YouTube provides a dynamic platform for your advertising needs. Always follow Google’s advertising policies and the technical ad specs to ensure your ads perform their best. Ready to start using YouTube ads? Contact us today to get started!
MARKETING
Why We Are Always ‘Clicking to Buy’, According to Psychologists
Amazon pillows.
MARKETING
A deeper dive into data, personalization and Copilots
Salesforce launched a collection of new, generative AI-related products at Connections in Chicago this week. They included new Einstein Copilots for marketers and merchants and Einstein Personalization.
To better understand, not only the potential impact of the new products, but the evolving Salesforce architecture, we sat down with Bobby Jania, CMO, Marketing Cloud.
Dig deeper: Salesforce piles on the Einstein Copilots
Salesforce’s evolving architecture
It’s hard to deny that Salesforce likes coming up with new names for platforms and products (what happened to Customer 360?) and this can sometimes make the observer wonder if something is brand new, or old but with a brand new name. In particular, what exactly is Einstein 1 and how is it related to Salesforce Data Cloud?
“Data Cloud is built on the Einstein 1 platform,” Jania explained. “The Einstein 1 platform is our entire Salesforce platform and that includes products like Sales Cloud, Service Cloud — that it includes the original idea of Salesforce not just being in the cloud, but being multi-tenancy.”
Data Cloud — not an acquisition, of course — was built natively on that platform. It was the first product built on Hyperforce, Salesforce’s new cloud infrastructure architecture. “Since Data Cloud was on what we now call the Einstein 1 platform from Day One, it has always natively connected to, and been able to read anything in Sales Cloud, Service Cloud [and so on]. On top of that, we can now bring in, not only structured but unstructured data.”
That’s a significant progression from the position, several years ago, when Salesforce had stitched together a platform around various acquisitions (ExactTarget, for example) that didn’t necessarily talk to each other.
“At times, what we would do is have a kind of behind-the-scenes flow where data from one product could be moved into another product,” said Jania, “but in many of those cases the data would then be in both, whereas now the data is in Data Cloud. Tableau will run natively off Data Cloud; Commerce Cloud, Service Cloud, Marketing Cloud — they’re all going to the same operational customer profile.” They’re not copying the data from Data Cloud, Jania confirmed.
Another thing to know is tit’s possible for Salesforce customers to import their own datasets into Data Cloud. “We wanted to create a federated data model,” said Jania. “If you’re using Snowflake, for example, we more or less virtually sit on your data lake. The value we add is that we will look at all your data and help you form these operational customer profiles.”
Let’s learn more about Einstein Copilot
“Copilot means that I have an assistant with me in the tool where I need to be working that contextually knows what I am trying to do and helps me at every step of the process,” Jania said.
For marketers, this might begin with a campaign brief developed with Copilot’s assistance, the identification of an audience based on the brief, and then the development of email or other content. “What’s really cool is the idea of Einstein Studio where our customers will create actions [for Copilot] that we hadn’t even thought about.”
Here’s a key insight (back to nomenclature). We reported on Copilot for markets, Copilot for merchants, Copilot for shoppers. It turns out, however, that there is just one Copilot, Einstein Copilot, and these are use cases. “There’s just one Copilot, we just add these for a little clarity; we’re going to talk about marketing use cases, about shoppers’ use cases. These are actions for the marketing use cases we built out of the box; you can build your own.”
It’s surely going to take a little time for marketers to learn to work easily with Copilot. “There’s always time for adoption,” Jania agreed. “What is directly connected with this is, this is my ninth Connections and this one has the most hands-on training that I’ve seen since 2014 — and a lot of that is getting people using Data Cloud, using these tools rather than just being given a demo.”
What’s new about Einstein Personalization
Salesforce Einstein has been around since 2016 and many of the use cases seem to have involved personalization in various forms. What’s new?
“Einstein Personalization is a real-time decision engine and it’s going to choose next-best-action, next-best-offer. What is new is that it’s a service now that runs natively on top of Data Cloud.” A lot of real-time decision engines need their own set of data that might actually be a subset of data. “Einstein Personalization is going to look holistically at a customer and recommend a next-best-action that could be natively surfaced in Service Cloud, Sales Cloud or Marketing Cloud.”
Finally, trust
One feature of the presentations at Connections was the reassurance that, although public LLMs like ChatGPT could be selected for application to customer data, none of that data would be retained by the LLMs. Is this just a matter of written agreements? No, not just that, said Jania.
“In the Einstein Trust Layer, all of the data, when it connects to an LLM, runs through our gateway. If there was a prompt that had personally identifiable information — a credit card number, an email address — at a mimum, all that is stripped out. The LLMs do not store the output; we store the output for auditing back in Salesforce. Any output that comes back through our gateway is logged in our system; it runs through a toxicity model; and only at the end do we put PII data back into the answer. There are real pieces beyond a handshake that this data is safe.”
-
SEARCHENGINES7 days ago
Daily Search Forum Recap: September 27, 2024
-
SEO7 days ago
How to Estimate It and Source Data
-
SEO5 days ago
6 Things You Can Do to Compete With Big Sites
-
SEO5 days ago
Yoast Co-Founder Suggests A WordPress Contributor Board
-
SEO7 days ago
9 Successful PR Campaign Examples, According to the Data
-
SEARCHENGINES6 days ago
Google’s 26th Birthday Doodle Is Missing
-
SEARCHENGINES4 days ago
Daily Search Forum Recap: September 30, 2024
-
WORDPRESS2 days ago
WordPress biz Automattic details WP Engine deal demands • The Register