Monday, 31 July 2017

Why Your Ads Should Look 100 Years Old

Think ‘lead magnet’ ads are new-age?

Think again.

Free opt-in ad campaigns like that have been around for almost a century.

Everyone’s looking for the hot new thing. A watch that counts your steps, takes notes, answers your calls, and oh yeah, also tells time. An iPhone that has a new update every time you turn it on. A car that is so smart it can drive itself.

But there’s something to be said for sticking with what works. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

Even better, if it works well, no need to reinvent the wheel.

Here’s how today’s ad pros are still using copywriting techniques from old-school campaigns that ran decades ago.

What the 1960’s Taught Motorola About Influencer Marketing

When it was time for Motorola to promote its new line of smartphones and features, it took its campaign to YouTube.

The phones were marketed for a younger audience, and with 54% of 18-34 years olds using YouTube at least once a day, Motorola knew it was the place to be.

They used 13 influencers to each create create “partnership announcements” and “hero” videos to show them using the new Moto Mods, that allowed users to customize their phones just the way they wanted. One user strapped the phone to a rocket and launched in 16,000 feet in the air.

No joke.

The result? 11.6 million video views and more than 38 million social media impressions. Even more? 80,000 clicks to motomods.com from first time users.

This shouldn’t be surprising. Buyers are 92% more likely to trust the reviews and opinions of friends and peers over standard advertisements.

A recent Tomoson study found that this kind of influencer marketing is “the fastest-growing online customer acquisition channel, beating organic search, paid search, and email marketing.”

But as hip and cool and successful as this turned out to be for Motorola, it wasn’t a new idea.

In fact, it was decades — even hundreds — of years old.

Companies have been using celebrities, real users, and even beloved, made-up characters for years to sell their products.

Remember how much Santa loved Coca Cola? This one’s from ‘64:

old coca cola ad

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And what about Babe Ruth and his love for Pinch-Hit?

babe ruth tobacco advertisement
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Yes, that’s Babe Ruth as spokesperson for a tobacco company. The same Babe Ruth who later died of cancer at the age of 53. Next level brand partnership, right there.

You see, this stuff is nothing new. It’s not that new and fancy and innovative and cutting edge.

It’s the same old playbook, just dusted off and revised with a new edition. One that takes into account how our constantly evolving consumer preferences keep shifting.

Here’s a few more ideas for how tried but true methods are still relevant today.

Start by Grabbing Their Attention

Remember when Old Spice used to literally mean old.

As in, the only people who wore it were your grandparents?

That all changed a few years ago with a little sex appeal and humor:

Sales jumped 107% in just one month. Old Spice became the number one body wash and deodorant brand in both sales and volume.

And they reached new demographics of people (which is important when yours historically is about to drop dead).

But even that ad campaign, now nearly seven years old, is just a first-cousin of marketing techniques from long ago.

David Ogilvy’s 1958 Rolls Royce ad uses the same shock and awe tactic by grabbing the reader’s attention with what’s essentially a one-word headline:

old rolls royce ad

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$13,550 for a car in 1958 was a lot of money, and Ogilvy was hoping to hook customers with mystery, intrigue, and a little high-end appeal.

He also updated their tag line a bit, which was a simple and direct, “The Best Car in the World,” that now reads, “What makes Rolls-Royce the best card in the world?”.

By turning that statement into a question, and then answering it, he was able to produce their highest-performing marketing campaign to date.

Unsurprisingly, there’s data from today that backs this up.

For example, MarketingExperiments.com ran two basic AdWords headlines against each other. The Control was a question, while the Treatment was simple and straightforward. Can you guess which one won?

ab testing ad

You got it. The question-based headline.

Last second copy changes in order to test headline variations ain’t new, either.

Even Ogilvy’s testing back in the ‘60s wasn’t a groundbreaking notion. Good ol Hopkins was doing that long before around 1900:

“Hopkins outlines an advertising approach based on testing and measuring. In this way losses from unsuccessful ads are kept to a safe level while gains from profitable ads are multiplied. Or, as Hopkins wrote, the advertiser is ‘playing on the safe side of a hundred to one shot’.”

Today we use content marketing to grab top of the funnel attention. Turns out that’s nothing new. Because storytelling is one of the best ways to develop the interest and intrigue required to keep people reading long enough to make a decision.

Storytelling Piques their Interest to Draw People Near

Today, marketers face unprecedented hurdles to get their name out there.

A New York Times article from a decade ago claimed the number of ads we saw each day was around 5,000. Keep in mind this was early for Facebook, YouTube, et. al. They hadn’t even hit critical mass yet.

Fast forward and nearly 200 million people worldwide are using ad-blocking software in order to take back control over their (albeit, limited) attention. A recent study found that only 14% of respondents could recall the banner ad on the page they just visited.

Couldn’t remember the company. Couldn’t remember the product.

All of this spells disaster for marketers when our prospects lack the attention span of a goldfish.

That’s where storytelling comes in.

Nike has been leading the pack for years.

Back in 1999, they put together a one minute spot for the retirement of Michael Jordan. Clips and photos of his career, telling the story of his journey and successes. They didn’t even put up the Nike logo until the very end. For a good reason.

“It understood that what would really make a lasting impression, and what would help build the brand and allow the company to sell more products in the long-term, was an authentic story,” said Sujan Patel.

Ross Jeffries told a story, albeit a slightly more seedy version, in 1998.

“The Amazing Seduction Secrets of a Skinny, Ugly, 6 Foot Geek from Culver City California That Could Get You All the Girls You Want.”

seduction secrets skinny guy ad

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(Yes. This actually happened.)

Nerdy guy trying to get the girl is a tale as old as time. Now every non-skinny, ugly, 6 foot geek from Culver City California is gonna be hooked to read more of this. (And trust me, there’s a lot of them.)

Taking a familiar story or something that a consumer can relate to helps them understand just how perfect your product is for them. Why they need it. The emotional aspect that tugs at our heart strings or appeals to our vanity.

Ad copywriting formulas, like AIDA, help us touch on all of these critical pressure points. And once again, AIDA wasn’t just invented by some growth hacking millennial. It’s been around the block a few times since the nineteenth century.

Ad exec Joseph Addison Richards was talking about it way back in 1893:

“How to attract attention to what is said in your advertisement; how to hold it until the news is told; how to inspire confidence in the truth of what you are saying; how to whet the appetite for further information; how to make that information reinforce the first impression and lead to a purchase; how to do all these, – Ah, that’s telling, business news telling, and that’s my business.”

Now Get Them to Take the Next Step

Nobody knows why they need anything.

I didn’t even know I needed a special bag just for my french bread until you showed me how lacking my life was before I bought one.

But this information sharing takes a little time and finesse. You have to walk the customer through their journey. Too much, too soon, and it backfires.

That’s the chief difference between running PPC ads on Facebook vs. Google AdWords. (And why the former doesn’t work like the latter.)

There’s not much seduction required when people type something into Google. They’re already at the end of their journey. But successful advertising on basically any other medium requires you to lay the groundwork (that we’ve already discussed).

Once again, classic ad copywriting formulas help you better explain why people need what you’re selling when they don’t always yet realize they need it.

Even the U.S. Military has gotten in on the PAS (Problem, Agitate, Solution) game. Here’s an ad from 1967:

lost his chance to make a choice advertisement

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This guy waited too long to sign up (problem). Now he can’t pick which branch he wants. That could happen to you, too (agitate). Fill out this form and we’ll get you what you want before it’s too late (solution).

Or what about this example from 1990 for a book to help readers with their grammar?

Image Source

Look around and you’ll see PAS ev-ry-where. Here’s a slightly modified version from Dollar Shave Club Australia. No commitment? Everyone’s trying it? Only a couple of dollars?

Sold.

Long, long ago (like more than a century), advertising pro Claude Hopkins encouraged advertisers to create work that essentially sold itself.

According to the most factual source on the internet*, Wikipedia, Hopkins: “Insisted copywriters research their clients’ products and produce ‘reason-why’ copy. He believed that a good product and the atmosphere around it was often its own best salesperson.”

(*Not true.)

In other words? The purchase (or more accurately, decision to purchase) should be an absolute no-brainer. The value should far exceed the mental, emotional, or physical costs.

But that action-step that happens once the solution is presented often takes place with a simple click-through or from an online ad.

How exactly? Tripwires.

Here’s info-marketing guru Ryan Deiss with a too-good-too-be-true offer for his latest book:

invisible selling machine book scam advertisement

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The offer here is low-friction. It doesn’t require a lot of steps or a big commitment, and the customer gets a good return on their time and money. And, you get to sift out the people who really have some interest from those who are just stopping by.

But, once again, not a new concept. Here’s one from over fifty years ago in 1965.

investment aids advertisement

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Conclusion

The latest shiny tactics are always fun.

But sometimes even what seems fresh and new has been around the block a time or two. Decades old marketing tricks and tactics still work today.

And more importantly, can still produce more consistent results, too.

A/B testing works some of the time. But storytelling, copywriting formulas, tripwires? They’ve been working for years and years and years and years.

The next time you’re stuck on an ad campaign or looking for inspiration, don’t just look at what’s hitting the top of Growth Hackers.

Because history tends to repeat itself. And that’s a good thing for bottom lines.

About the Author: Brad Smith is the founder of Codeless, a B2B content creation company. Frequent contributor to Kissmetrics, Unbounce, WordStream, AdEspresso, Search Engine Journal, Autopilot, and more.



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The Customer Is Always Right: Email Marketing Spam Edition

As a member of the Deliverability Operations team, I can tell you that we spend a lot of time discussing the importance of list hygiene and good mailing practices with our senders.

Typically, this covers everything from ensuring recommended customer acquisition practices are in place, engagement-based segmentation is utilized to monitor for inactivity, and that customers are appropriately removed from mailing lists as activity lapses or unsubscribe requests are received.

The purpose behind these conversations is always the same: to highlight the importance of maintaining brand reputation in the eyes of ISPs, and ensuring that messages continue to get delivered to the inbox. A key component to achieving this is making sure customers themselves do not perceive the messages they receive as spam.

While there are official regulations such as the CAN-SPAM Act in place that make clear determinations when it comes to spam, it is also important for senders to keep in mind that “spam” is increasingly in the eye of email recipients themselves. And as far as an ISP is concerned, the recipient is always right.

So What Counts As "Spam"?

If a customer receives emails that they feel do not apply to them, that they were not expecting to receive in the first place, or even that they simply do not wish to receive any more (regardless of being properly opted in), they may mark the message as “spam” in their inbox.

This triggers a spam complaint to the ISP hosting their mailbox, and can impact reputation to that entire network—even in very small values. This is yet another reason why maintaining best practices is critical to avoid negative customer engagements and maintain inbox placement.

How Do ISPs Use This Data?

Even more critical however, is that ISPs themselves use customer evaluations of the communications they receive to inform their own filtering mechanisms. Recently, Microsoft detailed this strategy within their own Spam Fighters program. For the uninitiated, Spam Fighters essentially works by surveying a randomly selected portion of Outlook users.

In order for Microsoft’s filters to work successfully, they need to identify both good, and bad mail. What better way to inform their machine learning than by asking their users themselves? The question placed to the selected users who volunteer to participate is simple:

Is this spam? Or non-spam?

This binary statement highlights the importance of customer perception to senders. While there are other factors that contribute to a message ultimately being flagged as spam (authentication, attachments, sending IP, etc.), how the message comes across in the inbox cannot be underestimated. So put yourself in the recipient’s shoes.

A positive customer experience with relevant content going only to engaged users is the best way to ensure you don’t become another example in the “spam” category.

While we're on the subject of email marketing, how confident are you that your emails are contributing to a positive customer experience on mobile? If your subscribers are dealing with poor formatting, long load times, and unresponsive links, you're losing their attention. Download our Mobile Email Guide to learn how to fix and prevent these problems. 

Mobile Email Guide

Photo credit: Skley via Foter.com / CC BY-ND


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[Infographic] The In-Flight Guide to Content Marketing

Marketers who plan appropriately significantly increase their likelihood of success. Seems like a novel concept right?

You’d think so, but unfortunately the day-to-day grind can cause many marketers to lose sight of what’s important and essential for content marketing success. In today’s competitive landscape, everything from your strategy to the actual content experience and the way that you amplify content that is created (or co-created) are key factors in the success of your content program.

To help you take your content to new heights, we have topped into some of the top B2B and B2C marketing minds that will be speaking at this year’s Content Marketing World conference in September. Over the past months we have published a series of eBooks that take a deep dive into the content skills and tactics necessary to meet the needs of the modern customer.

We have also pulled some of the top insights from each of these eBooks into the infographic below for you to keep on hand as a guide for content marketing success. Let this handy in-flight content guide serve as a visual reminder of just what it takes to succeed in content marketing today.

Part 1: Prepping for Your Content Marketing Expedition


Figure out what makes you, your team, and your customers unique. @jayacunzo
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You have a story YOU want to tell, but does your audience care to hear it? @buyerpersona
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Adapt and be fluid with your content scheduling. @amandatodo
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Don’t be so wedded to a content schedule that you miss opportunities in your industry. @markwschaefer
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People are hesitant to contribute content is because they don’t know what to write about. @timwasher
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Part 2: Creating a Memorable Content Experience


Build content based on what they want rather than what you think they want! @IanCleary
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Make the audience the hero of the story you’re telling. @ardath421
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A great content experience starts with a story! @BrennerMichael
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Be Useful. Address the why, the what’s in it for me? for your reader. @JillianHillard
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Develop next-level, pathological empathy for your audience. @MarketingProfs
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Part 3: Making the Most of Your Content Journey


Paid social can help marketers greatly improve their reach and engagement. @justinlevy
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For great distribution, co-creation with influencers is the solution. @leeodden
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Content that is engaging and optimizes the user’s experience is key. Zerlina Jackson
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Work with top experts to co-create content to increase amplification & engagement. @AmishaGandhi
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Better work inherently drives deeper engagement. @Robert_Rose
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Hungry for More Content Marketing Insights?

Below are some additional snackable statistics pulled from Content Marketing Institute and MarketingProfs’ 2017 B2B and B2C Content Marketing reports:

Snackable B2B Stats

  • 28% of B2B companies are in the sophisticated/mature phase of content marketing
  • 55% B2B of companies have small content marketing teams serving the entire organization
  • 42% B2B of companies have experienced management changes that have had a positive impact on the organization’s content marketing
  • 89% of B2B Marketers use content marketing
  • 55% of B2B companies have a small (or one-person) marketing/content marketing team that serves the entire organization
  • 63% of B2B companies are extremely or very committed to content marketing
  • 62% of B2B companies are much more or somewhat more successful with content marketing than they were one year ago
  • 30% of B2B Marketers say it is not clear what an effective or successful content marketing program looks like

Snackable B2B Stats

  • 30% of B2C companies are in the sophisticated/mature phase of content marketing maturity
  • 49% of B2C companies have a small content marketing team serving the entire organization
  • 86% of B2C Marketers are using content marketing
  • 49% of B2C companies have a small (or one-person) marketing/content marketing team that serves the entire organization
  • 60% of B2C companies are extremely or very committed to content marketing
  • 25% of B2C companies are extremely or very successful with their overall approach to content marketing
  • 33% of B2C companies are not clear on what effective or successful content marketing programs look like

To gain access to insights from all 41 Content Marketing World speakers, be sure to download the full series!


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Saturday, 29 July 2017

Weekend Favs July 29

Weekend Favs July 29 written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

My weekend blog post routine includes posting links to a handful of tools or great content I ran across during the week.

I don’t go into depth about the finds, but encourage you to check them out if they sound interesting. The photo in the post is a favorite for the week from an online source or one that I took out there on the road.

  • Slidebean – Create stunning, professional presentations in minutes, not hours.
  • Infogram – Make infographics and charts that people love.
  • Scripted – Scripted has thousands of expert writers ready to supercharge your inbound traffic with outstanding blogs, stellar white papers, and more.

These are my weekend favs, I would love to hear about some of yours – Tweet me @ducttape



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Friday, 28 July 2017

Sono Motors Introduces The SION Solar Powered Car

The fantasy of having the capacity to drive to work in a solar-powered car is at last turning into a reality. Sono Motors simply uncovered the SION solar-powered electric car gives you the ability to travel up to 18 miles utilizing only energy from the sun. Best of all, the SION isn’t only for the whealthy, since it just costs 16,000 Euros (around $18,600) in addition to the cost of the battery, and it is pressed with unbelievable components like built-in moss filtration, bi-directional charging and integrated solar panels.

Sono Motors Sion Solar Powered Car

A year ago, Sono Motors, a German startup raised over $200,000 create the SION. Utilizing 300 photovoltaic panels, the SION can store enough energy from the sun to give you the ability to travel up to 18 miles, however in the event that you have to travel further, the SION can likewise be energized utilizing a standard outlet, similar to a regular electric auto. Depending on the amount you want to spend, you can rent the battery month to month, or buy outright.



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9 Smart Apps to Stay Connected with Your Team and Coworkers

9 Smart Apps to Stay Connected with Your Team and Coworkers written by Guest Post read more at Duct Tape Marketing

Do you want to make communication among your team members easier and better?

If you want to work together with your team successfully, you need to communicate effectively.

“Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much.” – Helen Keller

According to a survey, 84% of respondents said they use instant messaging platforms to interact with coworkers.

If you don’t communicate, how do you resolve problems and achieve your goals?

In this article, you’ll find 9 smart platforms to stay in touch with your team, no matter where they are.

1. HipChat

HipChat

HipChat is an online communication tool which allows you to collaborate with your team. It provides features like group chat, video chat, and screen sharing with your team members.

The best part?

You can integrate it with other tools you are using. No matter where you are you can share your work, files, and ideas with your team.

HipChat is offering a basic FREE plan in which you’ll get features like group chat, instant messaging, and file sharing. Hooray!

Start using this smart app and stay in touch with your coworkers.

2. Slack

Slack

Slack is one of the best apps for communication and collaboration. As their tagline says: Where Work Happens.

You can create a private channel for a particular project or team, as well as public channel. It also allows you to send message to a group (or a particular person). It also supports voice and video calls.

You can share your files, images, folders, and documents with anyone at anytime from anywhere.

Slack come up with three plans, called – Free, standard, and plus.

Try Slack to make communication easy and improve your team productivity.

3. Asana

Asana

Asana is one of the best collaboration and productivity apps. It has a great and clear interface, easy to understand, and functions are simple.

It allows you to create a team, track the team, and manage your important projects. You can see the status of any ongoing project without pushing the team or sending an email.

You can easily create tasks and assign one to a team. You can use their Free basic version. With Free account, you’ll get basic dashboard where you can add up to 15 team members, create unlimited tasks, projects, and conversations

Try Asana. You’ll love its simplicity and quick response.

4. Yammer

Yammer

Yammer will help you to connect with people and teams across your company. It’s a private social network that only allows people of your company sign into the network.

It allows to create public groups and private groups. Share ideas, files, videos, and start a conversation.

Try Yammer and create a social space within your organization.

5. Office Chat

Office Chat

Office Chat is a simple and secure instant messaging application for teams. It allows you to share messages, files, docs, audios. and videos with your coworkers and team in real time.

It allows you to create a group for a topic, a team, and a project – and every member of this group can view the status of any task in real time.

Are you sharing any confidential information? Messages can be set to auto-destroy when they are read by the recipients.

Office Chat is offering two plans – Business plan ($2/user/month) and Enterprise plan ($3/user/month) – both plans come up with 15-days Free trial.

6. Skype

Skype

You must be familiar with Skype. It’s one of the most popular video calling platform which you can use both personal and professional purposes.

It makes you able to connect with your team and clients over voice and video calls (as well group video call) from anywhere in the world. You can share your files, images, documents, and screen with your contacts.

You can instantly share messages with your team. Your coworker or a client isn’t online?

Skype also allows you to make a call on their mobiles and landlines.

Skype is easy-to-use and setup, even your grandma can use it.

7. Redbooth

Redbooth

Are you a busy team?

Redbooth can help you in managing teams and important projects. It will make it easy to track project status and add notes.

It will help you to prioritize your tasks, schedule online meetings, screen-sharing, start conversation, and stay focused.

You can easily track who’s working on which task (or project) and assign the task to one. It also allows you to integrate your favorite apps and tools.

Try Redbooth and it will keep your team organized.

8. Voxer

Voxer

Voxer provides a real-time communication with your team. You can share text messages, videos, location, listen messages, create large group chats, voice to text transcription of an audio message.

Voxer is offering PRO plans ($3.99/user/month) for easy team collaboration. It available in all app stores.

9. Basecamp

Basecamp

Basecamp is a leading online app which helps you to organize your projects and teams in one place.

It allows you to break a project into many portions and assign to your team members. It provides 6 core tools:

  • Campfire: start a quick chat (or group chat) with your team.
  • Message Boards: Post important announcements, updates, and ideas.
  • To-dos: Make a list of work or tasks and track it.
  • Schedule: For posting deadlines and milestones.
  • Automatic check-ins: Get insights from your team on a regular basis.
  • Docs & files: Team members can access the files, documents, and folders.

Basecamp offers a Free account for verified teachers and students. $100 per month for businesses. They are also offering 30-days Free trial!

Try Basecamp and organize a large group of teams and clients.

Thank You for reading this post!

Now it’s your turn – which one is your favorite app? how do you communicate with your team?


Pawan KumarAbout the Author

Pawan Kumar is an Inbound Marketer and Content Creator at Sarv.com, an award-winning company which provides Email Marketing and Cloud Telephony solutions for SMEs. He is a storyteller and movie geek who loves writing.



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