As we naturally evolve, technology around us tends to evolve, too. As an advertiser, you probably notice it more than anyone, simply because you’ve probably had to make some changes with how you go about advertising. Advertising options these days are two-fold: independent advertising, which are the ads you have on your websites, outside of social platforms. Social advertising is the second type of advertising, consisting of social media ads that are integrated into social networks such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Why Social Media is more effective
By now it is obvious that social media has revolutionized advertising. The ubiquity of platforms such as Twitter, means that social media has become a basic aspect of brand communication. However, the central tenet is not to convey a brand message, but rather to understand your audience. In his Marketing Land article titled “Why Social Media Advertising Is Set To Explode In The Next 3 Years” Sonny Ganguly pointed this out:
Online advertising is a natural choice for modern businesses, but after the decline of the banner ad, businesses began searching for alternatives. Paid search is a great online advertising medium for driving visitors to your website based on user intent (i.e. their search query). But what if there are no identifiable (or affordable) keywords you can bid on to drive traffic? And what about those businesses that want to create brand awareness rather than capturing user intent?
Social media advertising helps businesses find new potential clients by using users’ own shared information to identify interest. Rather than reactively targeting users who search a certain term, social media advertising proactively targets relevant users before they even begin their search.
It seems as if the rate of change has only accelerated in 2015. Let’s explore options available on a couple of major social platforms:
Facebook has a total of 1.49 billion users, 4.5 billion likes generated on a daily basis as of May 2013, and 1.31 billion mobile active users. The average time spent on a Facebook page is 20 minutes, meaning that with the proper use of it, that’s 20 minutes of time that you could use to accumulate impressions. On Facebook business pages, there is an “insights” option, which allows you to see the analytics of engagement on your page. Additionally, many publishers have started to use their video ads, which allow you to tell a visual story by creating ads in the form of videos.
Snapchat
Snapchat is a photo-exchange platform that has 100 million active users, and boasts a whopping 8,796 photos exchanged per second. Fox Studios recently sponsored a “Sponsored Lens”, meaning that users who choose to activate the Lens feature while shooting a picture or video of themselves, will be able to use Peanuts characters in their selfies. This is a great marketing tool for Fox Studios to feature the Peanuts new film, and you could surely take advantage of the great advertising opportunities on Snapchat.
Twitter currently has a total of 320 million monthly active users worldwide. While it’s more popular in some areas than others, over 100 million of its users are active on a daily basis. Twitter can be especially helpful in the realm of business in that you can connect to other publishers or advertisers easily just by tagging or mentioning them in a tweet. It recently came out with a new native ad format called Promoted Moments. Promoted Moments appears as regular moments appear on Twitter, but it features a brand, and will be available in the Moments guide for 24 hours. It will even feature a promoted badge, so this is also a great way to utilize native advertising via social media.
Advertising trends on social media platforms
Social media is more cost effective
Social media websites are generally free, unless you opt for purchasing an ad service. Even if you do decide to pay in order to promote your Tweets or Facebook updates, the cost is insignificant when you compare it to the sky-high fees companies pay advertising agencies to produce campaigns, both digitally and printed. Clicks on these platforms generally run around $1-$5 per click, plus you can target a very specific audience on Twitter, making it more efficient. A campaign on TV can cost $100,000 to produce, weeks of work to create, and even more time in order to place it on the right programs. Social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube and other social networking sites are free to join, and can give you a lot of organic insight from your targeted audience.
Social media stays online
What happens on the Internet stays on the Internet, and cannot be reversed. If a prospective client trashes your email campaign, it can have a lasting impact. Customers are able to access online content years later, so anything you put into cyberspace can be pretty sticky, often stubbornly so (just look at the controversy surrounding the so-called “right to be forgotten”). Social campaigns are also powerful because they tell the whole story around a topic, rather than just a small aspect of it. References derive from, say, a blog posted packed with relevant links. Social media encourages storytelling, as well as information exchanges that don’t leave the web. Not only do stories develop and evolve, but the stories that social media in particular tells, can always be archived or found. In this sense, this makes social media a timeless phenomenon.
Social media spreads quickly
It’s not very difficult to get a blog post or a video to go viral. Sharing via social media is much easier than advertising on TV. In fact, lately, TV ads only go viral if they’re first shown on social media. This form of marketing by word-of-mouth gives your company worldwide exposure, as well as a tremendous amount of reach within a relatively short period of time. Viral campaigns are capable of reaching more people in less time, and happen to cost much less than independent forms of advertising.
Social media generates leads
It is very challenging to measure the reach of independent advertising. So many factors go into a company’s success, therefore, you can’t always attribute individual factors like an increase in sales to an advertising campaign. It’s also difficult to get the contact information of people who happen to pass a billboard. On the other hand, social advertising campaigns are based on detailed personal data and can more reliably measure a company’s progress and success. For example, you can use a UTM code with specific keywords to help you track leads and conversions, giving you access to which channels drive your campaign. Additionally, you can arrange your platform to receive contact information, and trace where a prospective client came from in order to have an accurate estimate of your reach and engagement. Below you can see which indicators on social media that can assist in lead generation:
Social media fosters relationships
Social media is a two-way communication street. This implies that social media gives you instant results and feedback, so you can see what the current situation is with your engagement in real time. Also, it gives you the chance to interact with prospective customers. Communication is the ultimate key in retention, so by using social media, you not only reach out to your clients, but also maintain a relationship with them. Your target audience could be thousands of people easily, rather than a focus group of 10 for independent advertising. Additionally, social media enables you to make contact with your audience, and you may continue growing relationships with them with the use of social media.
Limits of social media
As all things, social advertising does have some limitations. Social media ads are either limited to or strongly linked to social media platforms. This means that the use of Facebook or Twitter ads, for example, tend to be confined to specific audiences on those social networks and are too exclusive for ad campaigns that require a broader reach across platforms. This fact creates two other limitations:
- The public web extends far beyond social networks, so social advertising products don’t reach everywhere yet.
- Publishers who advertisers work with sometimes won’t have all their needs met by social advertising.
What independent advertisers can do to stay relevant
Thankfully, there are a number of solutions in order to help independent advertisers stay relevant.
Combine them
The most effective way for independent advertisers to stay relevant in the industry is to combine traditional ad techniques with social media. For example, for your next campaign, you could use an ad that was created by the advertising agency you normally use, but instead of posting it in public (i.e. on a billboard), you could post the ad on various social media platforms, like Facebook and Twitter, and keep track of the campaign’s success.
Geo targeting
Take a cue from social advertising’s targeting tools. Identify your niche target audiences and use programmatic advertising tools to present relevant and engaging ads to those users when they are most likely to be interested in those ads. Facebook uses its vast treasure trove of personal data to understand its users’ needs and present far more relevant ads. Check out this infographic:
Emulate Features
As you may have surmised, one of the most effective techniques you can use in your campaigns while staying relevant is use contextual ads, so that the users feel as though the content is relevant to them. imonomy offers a service that utilizes unique technology that scans the text from web pages, and automatically matches content-relevant and visually engaging in-image campaigns. As an advertiser, this can help you bring in more potential clients, all while keeping users engaged and wanting more of whatever content you’re displaying.
Despite the fact that times are changing, there are aspects of independent advertising that have very vital roles to play in the industry. With that said, newer concepts and tools, such as social media are constantly evolving in order to help make our lives a bit easier when advertising, or doing anything else for that matter. Therefore, it’s important to take into account a fusion of techniques in order to maximize your campaign’s and company’s potential.
What are you doing to combine both independent advertising and social media?