Corporate Eye Summary April 16, 2011

April 16, 2011

  • Addressing the Corporate Website
    Wouldn’t you want to keep all roads open to your website? I visit many corporate websites a week, and am frequently surprised when brought up short by an error message, or by ending up somewhere unexpected, requiring me to rethink my route to the website. Usually it’s a browser error message: Oops! We couldn’t find [...]

    small logo Corporate Eye Summary April 16, 2011

  • 4 Ways Content Builds Brands
    Content marketing works. I’ve seen it work first-hand for businesses and individuals. In fact, I wouldn’t have a successful business and 8 business books published by leading publishers (including the upcoming Content Marketing for Dummies) if content marketing didn’t work. But how do you actually use content to build a brand? Keep reading to learn [...]

    small logo Corporate Eye Summary April 16, 2011

  • Measurement without Telling Anyone – Germany | CSR Around the World
    / CC-BY-SA

    small logo Corporate Eye Summary April 16, 2011

  • Research Offers Tips for Better Facebook Brand Marketing Results
    Research from Buddy Media released this month and reported by eMarketer offers insight into how to increase engagement with Facebook users. The study provides interesting statistics for brand managers based on when, what and how to publish content on the most popular social networking site in the world. According to a small study, the highest [...]

    small logo Corporate Eye Summary April 16, 2011

  • Automated web reporting | Changing the nature of CSR
    So GRI 3.1 has been released.  I’ve been so excited by this development it’s taken me a couple of weeks to get around to actually looking at what the changes are.  Yep, that excited. Actually, it’s a bit more than that.  a) I was busy on other things, and b) there are other far more [...]

    small logo Corporate Eye Summary April 16, 2011

2010 Online Ad Revenues Jump to $26 Billion in the United States

April 16, 2011

If there was any question as to whether or not online advertising is doing well, a new report from the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) gives the answer. In 2010, online ad revenues in the United States grew by an impressive 15% to $26 billion. Clearly, online advertising is a key component of brand marketing plans that shows no signs of slowing down.

The biggest winner in the online advertising realm during 2010 was sponsorships, which according to the IAB and PWC report, grew 88% over 2009 and included an incredible 142% increase in just the fourth quarter of 2010. However, sponsorships make up a very small part of overall online ad revenue. Search advertising holds the top spot at over $12 billion for 2010 (a 12% increase over 2009). Display advertising (including banner ads, display ads, and rich media) takes the number two spot and grew 24% over 2009 to $10 billion in 2010. Digital video advertising jumped by 40% in 2010.

The 2009 and 2010 ad revenue by format data from the report is provided below:

iab pwc ad revenue 2010 2010 Online Ad Revenues Jump to $26 Billion in the United States

The IAB and PWC conduct this research semi-annually, and the 2010 data report marks the fifth year in a row that annual online advertising revenue has grown. The new report also includes mobile ad revenue in the United States for the first time. With 2010 mobile ad revenue estimated to be between $550 and $650 million, we can expect to see those numbers skyrocket in the 2011 report.

Another interesting finding in the IAB and PWC report relates to the increased focus on performance-based advertising, which made up 62% of online ad revenue in 2010 (up from 59% in 2009) versus impression-based advertising at just 33% (down from 37% in 2009) and hybrid at just 5% (up from 4% in 2009).

Online advertising is growing for a number of reasons. First, customers are spending more time online than ever before. Second, there is a lot of unsold display advertising inventory out there so pricing is attractive to advertisers. Third, there are a lot of opportunities available for advertisers to seize in the “less popular” ad formats such as digital video, sponsorships, and mobile. These advertising opportunities aren’t already taken, so there is still time to make your brand stand out from the crowd in mobile advertising or online video advertising.

What do you think about the current state and future of online advertising? Which online advertising formats do you plan on investing in to advertise your brand in 2011 and 2012? Leave a comment and share your opinion.

Addressing the Corporate Website

April 15, 2011

roadblock Addressing the Corporate WebsiteWouldn’t you want to keep all roads open to your website?

I visit many corporate websites a week, and am frequently surprised when brought up short by an error message, or by ending up somewhere unexpected, requiring me to rethink my route to the website.

Usually it’s a browser error message:

Oops! We couldn’t find companyname.com. Did you mean www.companyname.com?

Well, of course I did!

Sometimes it’s an unfriendly server message in bright red: Server Application Unavailable

Occasionally I see an unassuming text-only message saying ‘I am sorry – please call us on 01234 567890 if you keep seeing this message’. Unexpected enough to raise an eyebrow if it is a major listed company I’m trying to reach…

And I have seen a redirect to a completely different company. Now that is unnerving.

You might think this was a tiny problem, and not one that affected big companies: you’d be wrong. In a quick scan of FTSE 100 companies this morning, I ended up at a roadblock in over 15% of cases by not putting www. in front of the company domain name.

This matters because it is one more block in the road to your website, and these routes should be swept clean and made welcoming…

There’s one simple thing you can do to avoid putting this particular roadblock up for your visitors, and that is to make sure that whether they type www.yourcompanyname.com or simply yourcompanyname.com, they end up at the same place.

Go on, try it: type in your domain name without the www, and see what happens.

If you end up at your home page, that’s great. But if you end up somewhere unexpected, have a word with your web team: see if they can redirect all your traffic to the same place.

4 Ways Content Builds Brands

April 13, 2011

typing content 4 Ways Content Builds BrandsContent marketing works. I’ve seen it work first-hand for businesses and individuals. In fact, I wouldn’t have a successful business and 8 business books published by leading publishers (including the upcoming Content Marketing for Dummies) if content marketing didn’t work.

But how do you actually use content to build a brand? Keep reading to learn how content can help you build your brand and business.

Amazing content can do several things for a brand:

  1. Authority and Thought Leadership: Amazing content can establish your credibility and expertise, which subconsciously transfers to your brand.
  2. Word-of-mouth Marketing and Brand Buzz: Amazing content is often shared and discussed giving your brand more exposure.
  3. Search Engine Optimization: Amazing content is often linked to from other sites which boosts traffic to it and Google search rankings for it.
  4. Increased Business: Amazing content can help you build relationships with people that can lead to sales.

In a February 2011 survey of marketing professionals in the United States conducted by HiveFire, 42% said they are using content marketing. Of the 68% who were not currently using content marketing to build their brands and businesses, 85% of that group did admit to participating in content marketing activities without even realizing it.

The vast majority of businesses that use content marketing to build their brands do so primarily to increase brand awareness and word-of-mouth marketing. However, many businesses hit road blocks in content marketing simply because they don’t have the resources to create amazing original content as often as they need to in order to stay relevant in the fast moving online space. Whether that’s because they’re unwilling to pay an adequate rate to experienced freelance writers or they’re not looking outside their own walls for content support is not revealed in the study.

There are many “content mills” and content providers who offer content at rock-bottom prices, but you get what you pay for. If you’re ready to use content marketing to build your brand and business but you can’t create amazing content in-house, take the time to find a freelance writer who is qualified and experienced. Amazing content can help take your brand to new heights, but poor quality content can do more harm than good.

Measurement without Telling Anyone – Germany | CSR Around the World

April 13, 2011

Bundesarchiv Bild 183 1990  Measurement without Telling Anyone   Germany | CSR Around the WorldGermany is often cast as the spiritual home of the Green movement in Europe, if not the world.  This is because it’s where the term ‘Green’ first entered common parlance as the name of the West German political party founded in the late 1970s: Die Grünen.

The vast industrial behemoth that is Germany seems an unlikely birthplace for what is now a worldwide political and social movement.  Based on the country’s huge coal and iron deposits a massive manufacturing base has grown up.  Today its exports are worth over $800 billion, of which nearly 30% comes from vehicles and industrial and electrical equipment.

However, it’s precisely this manufacturing base which has ensured green issues became embedded into everyday German life.  Concerns about the management of waste has made Germany one of the foremost proponents of recycling and has led the field in Europe for some time ever since the EU’s Waste Directive was introduced in 1975.

To put this into context, in the UK the amount of household waste recycled has risen from 11% to just over 15% in the last 10 years.  In Germany it’s boomed, going from an already impressive 46% to over 75% in the same period.

Because of this ingrained green-ness you may think that Germany has a natural predilection for CSR, and you would be right.  Sort of. Read more

pixel Measurement without Telling Anyone   Germany | CSR Around the World

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