Posts Tagged ‘social media’

Features-in-action: Social media integration

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

Fuse online advertising and social media.

That’s the advice WebAdvantage.net president Hollis Thomases gives brands who want to target moms.

While Thomases’ ClickZ article focuses on moms, the specific fusing strategies she recommends seem relevant for most audiences.

For example, Thomases suggests:

  • Including special offers and discounts in ads that your audience can easily share through their social media accounts.
  • Bringing branded social media efforts alive in ads.
  • Providing direct calls to action that encourage your audience to connect with your brand.

As the following examples illustrate, with dynamic online video advertising, it’s easy to integrate social media into the overall ad experience in all of the ways that Hollis Thomases recommends.

Include special offers that are easy to share

If an ad includes a good enough deal, viewers will want to share the ad with their friends. But, whether or not they act depends upon how easy it is to actually share.

Expanding display ad

Special offer that's easy to share

Play the expanding display ad represented by the thumbnail. At the end of the ad, click the Share icon to easily embed the VideoAd in your Facebook News feed or include a link to the ad in a tweet.

Bring branded social media alive in ads

It doesn’t get any more alive than a real-time Twitter feed.

Video ad with live Twitter feed

VideoAd with live Twitter feed

Play the tune-in VideoAd represented by the thumbnail to see a live Twitter feed of eyewitness news weather alerts.

Provide direct calls to action that encourage brand connection

These days, one of the most direct and ubiquitous calls to action is a Facebook Like button.

It’s exceptionally easy to incorporate a Like button into a dynamic VideoAd and customize the Like button link.

For example, to keep a running tally of how many viewers Like a VideoAd, associate the ad’s landing page link with the Like button. Viewers who click the button not only Like the ad. They also automatically embed the ad into their Walls.

Advertisers who want to encourage viewers to Like their Facebook pages can associate the page URL with the VideoAd Like button. When viewers click the button, their Likes are added to the tally for the page and they become eligible for special offers available only to the advertiser’s Likers.

Video ad with Like button

VideoAd with Facebook Like button

Play the VideoAd represented by the thumbnail to experience a Like button associated with the ad’s landing page.

Three ways to add social octane to video ads

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011
Social media landscape

Make the most of social media integration*

The lines between social media and online marketing are blurring.

It doesn’t take an article like Blurry Lines in 2011: Social + Search + Media to tell us that. We see the blurring everywhere in the form of Facebook Like buttons, Twitter feeds, and other icons.

But article author Harry Gold’s point goes beyond awareness. The founder/CEO of Overdrive Interactive urges marketers to “add octane” to their online advertising by making the most of social media integration.

How do advertisers benefit from effective integration? Through the multiplier effect. An advertiser’s messages get distributed further with no additional media costs, and they reach more of the advertiser’s target demographic.

The dynamic social media features included in the Mixpo platform make it easy for advertisers to add social octane to their video ads.

Using these features, advertisers can:

Send viewers to social media sites

In the Mixpo stock media library, you have access to a collection of pre-made icons for commonly used social media services, including Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and Digg.

This means that adding and customizing a social media icon so it links viewers to an advertiser’s social media sites takes less than a minute.

In the stock library, you can also find pre-designed Twitter feed widgets. In a live Xspot, the widget automatically displays the latest tweets from the advertiser’s Twitter account.

Features-in-action

Watch an ABC 7 Eyewitness News tune in Xspot: At the end of the Xspot, click the customized Facebook and SMS icons. See live weather-related Twitter updates in the widget.

Encourage viral sharing

The power of social media is not just in social connections but also in social sharing. That’s why it’s important to make it as easy as possible for viewers to share an advertiser’s Xspot with friends and followers.

By adding a Share action to an overlay or a Share icon to the INFO menu, a tweet or Facebook post is just a couple of clicks away.

Feature-in-action

Watch a Phoenix Raceway expanding display ad: Expand the display ad, and then click the share-enabled custom Facebook overlay.

Earn more Likes

Earn more Likes for advertisers and their products by including a Like button in an Xspot’s INFO menu.

When viewers click the Like button, another Like is recorded on the advertiser’s Facebook page. In addition, an entry is added to the viewer’s Wall, and advertiser posts begin appearing in the viewer’s News feed.

Feature-in-action

Watch a Mixpo Xspot: Place your cursor on the playing ad. Pause over MENU to expand the INFO menu. Click the Like button. Replay the ad. The button changes to a display of the total number of Likes, preventing a single viewer from recording multiple Likes.

While you’re watching the ad, click the overlays to see other dynamic features, such as a survey and map directions, in action.

Follow Gold’s advice. Take advantage of Mixpo’s dynamic features and make the most of social media integration.

More Information

New to Mixpo? Explore our website today to learn more about dynamic video advertising.

Mixpo customer? Learn more now about social media integration by signing in to your account, opening the Client Resources home page, and then searching for “social media.”

*Image credit: fredcavazza on flickr.

Listening with video ads: Four effective techniques

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
Horse ears demonstrating active listening

Active listening*

Chief Listener. Listening Czar. Insight Manager. These roles are becoming increasingly common as corporations realize that information has to flow both ways. While brands want to get their messages out, in the age of social media, mining data related to what customers are saying plays a pivotal role in shaping products and strategic directions.

To harness customer input, more brand campaigns include active social media components. A recent example is the Buick Regal Moment of Truth page. Along with Buick’s promotional information about the new model, visitors can access customer comments via live Twitter and Facebook feeds, as well as articles and reviews by industry experts.

While there are debates about how much and how actively brands should listen, no one questions the need to let consumers have their say.

Heidi Cohen, president of interactive marketing consultancy, Riverside Marketing Strategies, says that social media is about conversation not promotion. When participating on social media platforms, she recommends that brands stick to “a 12:1 ratio of conversational messages versus promotional ones.”

With the advent of dynamic video advertising, brands can now integrate conversational tools into messages that have traditionally been promotional. While the main goal of video ads is unquestionably to promote, here are four effective listening techniques that brands can use to complement their social media initiatives:

Forms

Including customizable forms in video ads has typically been about lead capture. Get a viewer to respond to an offer and you’ve added a name and email address to your list. But advertisers can also use forms to solicit consumer comments and suggestions. For example:

  • In a product-related video ad, a retailer might ask for suggestions about how the product could be improved.
  • A packaged goods business might invite viewers to send service or product complaints or compliments.

Surveys

One of the most effective ways to gather data on consumer preferences is to give consumers the opportunity to actively weigh in. By incorporating surveys into video ads, advertisers can gather useful product- and service-related data, while winning points for their openness to consumer input. For example:

  • A politician might poll voters about the issues that concern them the most.
  • An auto dealer might poll consumers about what features matter most when purchasing a new car.

Decision tree video viewing

Presenting consumers with options and tracking their choices provides advertisers with invaluable information about what’s working in the marketplace. In high level dynamic video ads, advertisers can include video decision trees that enable viewers to access more information without leaving the original player. For example:

  • In a general video ad about its brand, a retailer might present viewers with a choice of three product videos. The video most consumers watch can provide the retailer with valuable feedback about future product development.
  • A politician might give voters the option of learning more about the candidate’s position on four hot button issues. The issue that draws the most views can help the candidate shape future campaign platforms and strategies.

Real-time feeds

To provide customer input along with promotional messages, an advertiser can include live Twitter feeds in video ads. For example:

  • Buick might include a live Twitter feed in a companion video ad to its Moment of Truth page to incorporate consumer feedback.
  • To keep voters informed about a candidate’s actions and activities, a political campaign might include live Twitter feeds from the candidate in its video ads.

When it comes to conversations, social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter can be enormously powerful tools to gauge marketplace sentiments. But as dynamic video ads continue to evolve, they offer savvy advertisers a number of effective and complimentary ways to invite consumer participation.

More information

New to dynamic video advertising? Learn more.

*Photo from the collection of fauxto_dkp on Flickr.

Be realtime relevant with dynamic video ads

Monday, May 3rd, 2010
Grungy social media icons from webtreats.com

Grungy social media icons from WebTreats etc.

Kimbal Musk, CEO of OneRiot, claims that brands or websites that want to connect with users in a social or realtime environment need to advertise in realtime.

According to Musk, realtime ads are ads that “are created as they become relevant across the realtime web. Realtime ads” he says, “can be Tweets, search ads or display ads that contain content that is relevant right now.”

Indeed, one of the keys to the success of the Scott Brown for U.S. Senate campaign was the campaign’s ability to immediately capitalize on audience reaction to the final Brown-Coakley debate.

Immediately after the debate, without retrafficking any ad tags, the campaign replaced the creative in a video ad running on BostonHerald.com with “Momentum” creative that stoked the building enthusiasm.

Voters chose to watch Brown’s video ad nearly twice as often as the industry average for video ads. They engaged twice as often as viewers engage with video ads overall. The campaign’s click through rate exceeded the industry standard for display ads by almost double.

Read a case study about the Scott Brown campaign.

Learn more about the realtime power of dynamic video advertising.

Turn an Xspot into a social media tool

Monday, March 8th, 2010

In an article about how an effective online strategy helped elect underdog Scott Brown in Massachusetts, Kyle Trygstad and Mike Memoli quote Justin Hart, director of new media for the Chuck DeVore Senate campaign. “Immediacy,” says Hart, “is one of the incredible values that Twitter brings to the table. And immediacy in campaigns is sometimes life and death.”

By taking advantage of the new social media package, political strategists can leverage Mixpo Xspots to contribute to the immediacy of the campaigns they manage.

As this demo Scott Brown Xspot demonstrates, viewers of social media Xspots can easily share the Xspot with friends, sign up to follow the candidate’s Tweets, become a Facebook fan, link to a candidate’s blog, and more.

Note This Xspot is a demo only and never ran in this exact form during the Scott Brown campaign.

Contact us today to discover how easy it is to run a social media Xspot campaign.

Learn more now about dynamic video advertising for politics.