Twitter to Launch Subscription Service Super Follows, Aims to Double Revenue by 2023

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Social-media company detailed its goals at an event for analysts, its first in several years

By Sarah E. Needleman
Updated Feb. 25, 2021 3:32 pm ET

Twitter Inc. TWTR +3.87% plans to introduce a subscription service for content creators and said it would explore tipping, as it looks to double its annual revenue and accelerate user growth over the next few years.

The social-media company on Thursday said the subscription initiative, called Super Follows, will give people an opportunity to receive payments for their content. Twitter expects it to appeal to so-called influencers with large internet followings and plans to launch it this year.

Twitter executives didn’t say when it would roll out tipping or share details on how it will work. The company also didn’t disclose how much of a percentage it would take from sales for that feature or Super Follows.

Dantley Davis, Twitter’s head of design and research, said that “an audience-funded model where subscribers can directly fund the content that they value most is a durable incentive model that aligns interests of creators and consumers.”

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Great Recode Article on How Jeff Bezos Keeps Amazon Fresh, Nimble and Relevant

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This is the Jeff Bezos playbook for preventing Amazon’s demise

It’s Day 1 forever because Day 2 is death.

Original Article:  https://www.recode.net/2017/4/12/15274220/jeff-bezos-amazon-shareholders-letter-day-2-disagree-and-commit

The Evolving Digital Landscape

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Evolution of Digital

 

 

Image courtesy of Leanport Software Pvt Ltd

The Evolving Digital Landscape – 2016
by Steven Copertino

The Digital Landscape continues to evolve in both ways we could have predicted and ways we could never have imagined just several years ago. Below is a listing of things that strike me as particularly relevant and interesting. What are your thoughts?

Snapchat Dominates At SXSW In 2016

  • Snapchat did not have a presence at SXSW, nor did they do any advertising there
  • Snapchat generated 192 million impressions on Twitter from SXSW – more than any other brand (3/6 – 3/16)
  • It’s a messaging app created in 2009 by Students at Stanford University. By early 2016, users were sending      7 billion photos and videos PER DAY – more than tripling between June and Nov of 2015 alone. (FB 8 bill/day)
  • The messages self-destruct after 10 seconds – images, videos or text. You can create a story that lasts for 24 hours
  • Bought by Facebook for $20 billion in 2014 – Snahchat has over 100 million active users per day
  • Brands creating unique content for Snapchat – NatGeo, CNN, MTV, Buzz Feed, Comedy Central, WSJ, Food Network, ESPN, People, Cosmo, Mashable and many others…

“Desktop” Matters Less and Less

  • No secret that desktop users have been flocking to mobile in droves
  • But only this year did mobile traffic finally overtake desktop traffic
  • Growth hasn’t slowed. In fact, some companies are preparing for desktop to stop mattering altogether
  • That means it’s more important than ever to have a mobile component to your digital strategy

Video Is Becoming The New Normal

  • For a while, written content dominated the digital landscape, but videos are taking over – 20% of digital budget in 2016 vs 17.7% in 2015 (display, search and social higher but video is pulling $ from them)
  • Thanks to wider availability of lightning-fast internet (and smaller screens that favor video over text), video content is becoming preferred and more popular among publishers
  • Social platforms like Facebook and Twitter are auto-playing videos in news feeds and rewarding video contributors
  • Google is considering allowing video ads in its SERPs
  • If you don’t already have a video content strategy, it’s time to get one. (don’t forget imagery, data visualizations, illustrations as well)

Omni-channel Is More Important Than Ever

  • Studies show that 90% or more of consumers’ interactions with a brand employ more than one device/channel
  • For example, a customer might search for a business/product/service with a smartphone and then continue using a laptop or by calling or visiting in person
  • It’s very important for marketers to work collaboratively to study ALL channel interactions and customer behaviors and to adjust accordingly – data is key

The Humanization Of Digital

  • Social media started this trend years ago by showing brands they no longer control the conversation nor the definition of their brand
  • There is a movement towards more “human communication” – content with warmth and humor instead of corporate buzzwords, and making communication more authentic through humor, visuals and storytelling.
  • It’s the humanization of digital to make brands feel more real and differentiated
  • UGC is a great way to help warm up your digital presence – customer blog posts, customer ratings & reviews, etc. – search engines love UGC!  

 Digital Marketing Needs To Be Even More Data Driven

  • This is nothing new, but it is. The expectation is for real-time changes based on data and for a personalized experience
  • Digital marketing is both an art and a science
  • Successful marketing comes from collecting, analyzing and using data about when and where customers spend their time
  • In short, data is behavior. Learning from this behavior drives creative messaging and strategic campaigns
  • Tracking behavior and tapping into the emotional connection through messaging, ads, social, and design makes all the difference in the digital space
  • Content personalization is a consumer expectation

Social Engagement Is Key

  • There’s a lot to be learned from your audience online
  • You’ll get honest feedback on campaigns and messaging, for one
  • Incorporating your fans’ interpretation and opinion of your brand can get you both fresh content and loyal fans
  • Create incentive for fans to write, tweet, take photos, share videos, etc
  • Reward them for their participation and loyalty by giving them the spotlight in your campaign.
  • Think holistic strategy, rather than specific tactics. Each social channel, blog post, email, weblink must have a purpose and drive towards something
  • Never post simply to post
  • Without engagement or traffic, those posts are a waste of time and money

Social Is Starting To Mean Much More Than “Social

  • Social media apps change a little more every year, but for the most part, those changes have been made to introduce new kinds of social interactions or simplify old ones
  • Now, social apps are moving in non-social directions; for example, Pinterest is leading a new trend of social/e-commerce hybrid apps, which offer social functionality combined with purchasable items, and Facebook is developing its own digital assistant

Feel free to share your thoughts.

Ad Age’s Digital Predictions 2016

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From the Demise of Texting to the Next Phase of Facebook Messenger

Published on January 14, 2016.

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Facebook’s Messenger Opens for Business
Facebook’s chat app is poised to become the social network’s next big revenue stream. Originally an instant-messaging service, Messenger was spun off into its own app in 2014. And after a series of announcements, now it’s ready to start up its own business. Last year Messenger began testing ways for businesses to use the service as a customer support line and for people to use it as an artificially intelligent assistant that can do things like order an Uber car. As more people use Messenger to communicate with businesses, expect Facebook to find a way to charge companies for the privilege, as it’s done with its own social network. –Tim Peterson

The Death of Texting
Emojis ruled in 2015. But GIFs, those quick looping videos or animations, are the next messaging app trend. In Asia, GIFs have been huge on apps like WeChat and Line. The appeal is obvious: Why use a standard yellow smiley face when you could send someone a three-second cat video? The fancier, funnier cousins of emojis are familiar from sites like Tumblr, but they’re about to get much more mainstream in Western markets, since Facebook finally embraced them. Facebook Messenger integrated a GIF-finder, and some brands have been using them on Facebook too. Between emojis and GIFs, who really needs text anymore? –Angela Doland

Headhunters Look to China
Given the explosion of online shopping in China and how crucial that market is, more multinationals will tap executives with experience there to oversee their worldwide e-commerce strategy. Case in point: Mars recently promoted its China general manager, Clarence Mak, to chief customer officer and global e-commerce leader. Mondelez International’s Cindy Chen, global head of e-commerce, also has worked in China. –Angela Doland

Refined Virtual Reality
This year will deliver more sophisticated virtual reality experiences, refined storytelling and increased layers of interactivity, given the consumer arrival of the Oculus headset and a variety of big deals in the space. Oculus partnered with premier VR storytellers Felix & Paul Studios to develop long-form, narrative content. Disneymade a $65 million investment in Jaunt VR. And 20th Century Fox is diving in as well, unveiling “The Martian Experience,” based on the blockbuster movie, at its Fox Innovation Lab during the Consumer Electronics Show.–Ann-Christine Diaz

2016 Won’t Be 360-Degree Video’s Breakout Year
There are plenty of reasons to believe 2016 will be the year that 360-degree videos hit the mainstream. Two of the biggest digital video services, Google‘s YouTube and Facebook, already support the format that lets people swivel their viewpoint all the way around a scene. And Facebook’s Oculus VR has finally begun selling the long-awaited consumer version of its virtual-reality headset that, like Samsung‘s Gear VR and Google Cardboard that are already in the market, is more tailored to 360-degree video viewing than a smartphone.

But while the ways to watch 360-degree videos have grown, there’s still the question of what people will watch. The New York Times, Vice and Disney are among the content companies already producing 360-degree videos, but too many of the 360-degree videos currently available offer beautiful documentary-style landscape shots yet lack a clear story or characters that can entice mainstream audiences and offset the format’s learning curve. If people are to tune in to 360-degree videos consistently, those videos must survive the novelty of the form; their content needs to rival, if not surpass, what people could watch normally. And for that to happen, filmmakers need to experiment with the form. That will likely require more time than 2016 holds. –Tim Peterson

Read the Full Article:  http://adage.com/article/digital/ad-age-s-digital-predictions-2016/302095/

2015 Predictions for CMOs and Digital Marketing

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Gil Press Contributor

In 2015, digital marketing budgets will increase by 8%, according to a recent Gartner’s CMO Spend Report, a survey of 315 marketing decision makers representing organizations with more than $500 million in annual revenue.

Customer experience is the top innovation project for 2015, continuing its role as the top priority for marketing investment in 2014. The survey also found that

  • In 79% of companies, marketing has a budget for capital expenditures — primarily, for infrastructure and software
  • Marketers are managing a P&L and generating revenue from digital advertising, digital commerce and sale of data
  • 68% of organizations have a separate digital marketing budget — it averages a quarter of the total marketing budget
  • Two-thirds of companies are funding digital marketing via reinvestment of existing marketing budgets

Earlier this year, IBM found in its worldwide survey of CMOs that CEOs increasingly call on them for strategic input. Furthermore, the CMO now comes second only to the CFO in terms of the influence he or she exerts on the CEO. The survey also found, however, that very few CMOs have made much progress in building a robust digital marketing capability: Only 20%, for example, have set up social networks for the purpose of engaging with customers, and the percentage of CMOs who have integrated their company’s interactions with customers across different channels, installed analytical programs to mine customer data and created digitally enabled supply chains to respond rapidly to changes in customer demand is even smaller. Almost all CMOs, 82% of survey respondents, felt underprepared to deal with the explosion of data.

With this as a background, here’s a summary of what digital marketing and the CMO will look like in 2015, based on observations by Scott Brinker, a leading commentator on marketing technology, Forrester, TopRank online marketing blog, Wheelhouse Advisors, and Brian Solis.

CMOs will take charge of focusing their companies on the customer

CMOs and their marketing teams will become the primary driver behind customer-centric company growth. Leveraging their knowledge of the customer and the competitive landscape, CMOs will advise and council CEOs on how to win, serve, and retain customers to grow the business. They will also lead organizational changes and new collaboration initiatives aimed at unifying all customer engagement activities across the enterprise.

CMOs will poach IT staff to help them manage a rapidly expanding digital marketing landscape

The number of digital marketing tools will grow in 2015 with new startups and large, established tech companies confusing even more that CMO with their numerous offerings. To help manage this embarrassment of riches and move their companies further on their digital marketing journey, CMOs will be poaching IT staff looking for new challenges and better salaries.

CMOs should expect heavy rains from proliferating digital marketing clouds

Digital marketing tools will be increasingly offered as a cloud-based solution (“marketing-as-a-service”) rather than licensed software. Cloud-based solutions will continue to expand their ecosystems, with many small software developers adding apps to existing cloud-based digital marketing platforms.

CMOs will invest in new digital marketing hot areas

Content marketing and predictive analytics will continue to be hot areas of interest and investment for CMOs, but they will be joined in 2015 by sales enablement, post-sale customer marketing, marketing finance, marketing talent management, and new tools based on the Internet of Things, allowing for the integration of offline and online experiences.

CMOs will become brand publishers

CMOs in 2015 will act as heads of a publishing house, overseeing the entire spectrum of brand engagement, increasing the quality of their output, and improving the perceived value of digital interactions with customers and prospects.

Read The Complete Article & Related News on Forbes.com

Toms Founder: 3 Killer Advantages of Social Impact Businesses BY JILL KRASNY @JILLKRASNY

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blake mycoskie

Blake Mycoskie explains why giving back doesn’t just feel good–it’s really good for business.

If you told Blake Mycoskie 10 years ago he would become a world-famous entrepreneur known for selling and giving away shoes, he probably would have laughed in your face. But after a life-changing trip to Argentina, the Texan realized the value of helping others. When he went on to launch Toms Shoes out of his Venice, California, apartment, he knew he was doing it for the right reasons and not just for money. “Giving doesn’t just feel good,” Mycoskie told an audience of entrepreneurs at the World Business Forum on Wednesday, “it’s actually really good for business, and there’s nothing wrong with that.” Here are three reasons why.

Customers Become Marketers

“I recognized very early on that when you incorporate a purpose beyond profit in your business, your customers will become your biggest marketers,” said Mycoskie. Take the time he was in JFK airport and spotted a woman in Tabasco red Toms. He decided to perform a little experiment and asked what she was wearing. “Toms Shoes!” she exclaimed. This response was enough on its own, but what she said next was astounding. “No, I don’t think you understand,” she went on. “This is the most amazing company in the world. When I bought a pair, they gave a pair to a child. “Turns out, the woman had watched every video of Mycoskie giving away pairs of shoes on YouTube. “She wasn’t a customer,” he said, “she was an evangelist for what we were doing.”

You Attract–and Retain–Amazing Talent

“When you create a purpose that is something more than just profit, you will attract and retain amazing talent,” he added. “Plus, it is an incredible way to diffuse all the petty office politics that happen.” The reason? “People bring their gratitude into the office.” If there’s an argument, they’ll quickly realize both sides are working toward the same goal and drop it.

Others Want to Help

When you run a socially-minded business, others will want to help you out, McCoskie continued. “We had so many partners” over the years. When Toms was less than a year old, American fashion mogul Andrew Rosen allowed them to use his Theory store windows to tell the Toms story. And Ralph Lauren offered to design some pairs for his Rugby stores, which helped them break into fashion. “These people partner with us not because they love our business,” McCoskie said. “They see they can connect to their customers in a new way. More people want to help you out and be part of it.”

IMAGE: GETTY IMAGES
LAST UPDATED: OCT 8, 2014

JILL KRASNY | Staff Writer

Jill Krasny is a staff writer for Inc. magazine, where she covers the intersection of entertainment and startups. Prior to Inc., she was a writer for MTV and Esquire and an editor at TheStreet. She is a graduate of the University of Southern California with a degree in communication. She lives in New York City.

Google Follows Facebook and Twitter Into App-Installation Ads

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Adds Targeted App-Install Ads Within YouTube and Mobile Search

By . Published on April 22, 2014

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Google on Tuesday plans to introduce its latest updates to AdWords, its core search product, and allow app developers to buy ads promoting installed apps in paid mobile search and YouTube. In 2011, Google introduced app-install ads in mobile search. Consumers have been able to open pages within apps via organic search results on mobile since November, but now the company is offering the capability to paid search advertisers.

The news comes a weeks after Twitter started selling app install ads, following Facebook’s lead. Yahoo is floating the idea as well.

YouTube’s app install ads will run with TrueView, the in-stream service that allows users to skip through videos, the company said. It was added to mobile in August of 2012.

A mobile ad with the new capability of opening an installed app on a user’s phone.

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BlackBerry’s meltdown sparks start-up boom in Canada’s Silicon Valley

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Very interesting case study about how Blackberry’s implosion sparks a wave of new start-ups.

STORY BY SAYANTANI GHOSH, ASHUTOSH PANDEY AND EUAN ROCHA Wed Apr 16, 2014 2:42pm EDT

blackberry

(Reuters) – The troubles at BlackBerry Ltd, which fired more than half its staff and lost more than 90 percent of its market value as consumers shunned its smart phones, might have spelled disaster for the company’s hometown of Waterloo, Ontario. Instead, there are hot sports cars in the streets and new companies filling the refurbished office buildings.

 
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Forget the Selfie: Samsung Is Out-Innovating Apple in Marketing Samsung’s Agency May Be Exaggerating, But It Has Something To Brag About

What was the brand and advertising value for Samsung of the infamous “selfie” taken by Ellen DeGeneres at the Oscars? Do we really know?

It was the tweet heard around the world, but was it worth $1 billion?

That was the value Publicis Groupe CEO Maurice Levy put on the star-studded Oscar smartphone “selfie” during an interview in Cannes earlier this week. He also immodestly took credit for it, which is a stretch because while Publicisbuying arm Starcom Mediavest did broker Samsung‘s sponsorship of the Oscars, the tweet itself was spontaneous, according to two sources with knowledge of Samsung’s marketing.

Now, without that $20 million Oscars sponsorship, Ellen DeGeneres would likely have taken the shot with her preferred iPhone, so Mr. Levy can indeed take some credit for setting the stage (the Wall Street Journal reported the agency negotiated with ABC to integrate Galaxy phones into the show).

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Why the Trend of Global CMO Has Reached Its Tipping Point

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Hint: It’s Not Just About Having a Single Brand Image Worldwide. Digitization and Globalization of Media Are Now Driving the Shift

 

By: , Advertising Age

Published: June 13, 2011

Headshots
(from l.) Keith Weed, Marc Menesguen, Candace Matthews, Tony Palmer and Jim Farley

The year 2010 will be known for many things, but in the marketing world, it might be the tipping point of the global CMO.

Last September, L’Oreal tapped Marc Menesguen as its first global chief marketing officer, a month after Ford Motor Co. appointed Jim Farley group VP-global marketing. In December, General Motors Corp. broadened U.S. marketing chief Joel Ewanick’s responsibilities to global CMO. Last April, Estee Lauder anointed its first executives with global scope across all brands.

While global marketing has been a growing force for decades, chief marketers with truly global scope have only become the norm in the past few years among global players like Unilever, Nestle, Levi’s and Wal-Mart Stores.

It’s not just about making the most efficient use of resources or presenting a single brand image worldwide. Part of the rationale is speeding up the process of finding what works in one place, then making it work everywhere else.

“If you went back four years ago there was a huge disparity between markets where we had really good marketing and the markets in which we didn’t,” said Tony Palmer, who became chief marketing officer of Kimberly-Clark Corp. in 2007. “If you looked at the markets where we were renowned as a great marketing company, our margins were better and we had much better market positions. Basically we had the same brands, but the marketing and innovation was better in those countries.”

Those weren’t necessarily the big high-profile ones you might expect, but rather Australia, Israel, Brazil and South Korea. Mr. Palmer said K-C determined that if it raised marketing performance everywhere to the level of those four, it would produce a sales bump “in the billions of dollars.”

Another big reason Unilever and others are turning to global CMOs is, as Chief Marketing and Communications Officer Keith Weed puts it, “The twin-headed trends of digitization and globalization feed off each other and accelerate the combination.”

Facebook and YouTube either didn’t exist or had very limited impact in 2005, he noted, and their growth alone has made marketing more global. They’re among the stops that make his annual trip to Silicon Valley a necessity.

The globalization and digitization of media have made it both more possible and necessary to focus on the global Unilever brand, Mr. Weed said. “People are much more aware of the companies behind the product brands now.”

As Amway was about to turn 50 years old, it took a strategic look at what it needed to do to keep growing in the next 50, said Candace Matthews, who came on as the company’s first global CMO more than three years ago. “Part of that was really realizing we needed to become a global enterprise instead of independent affiliates rolled up in a holding company,” Ms. Matthews said.

What Amway found was that the company everywhere stood for “a business opportunity [for distributors] with great products.” Simply put, Ms. Matthews has been charged with tweaking that to be “a great business opportunity that also has great brands.”

The rise of the global CMO also reflects a rise of more globally oriented consumers and a much broader cadre of lower-ranking global marketers.

Georgia Garinois-Melenikiotou, senior VP-corporate marketing of Estee Lauder Cos., points out that she is not a CMO, but she does occupy the company’s new global marketing role in part because of growth in the number of cosmopolitan consumers who are the core of the company’s consumer base. By 2020, she said, “1.6 billion people will be global travelers living in megacities, and they will be my prime target.”

Beyond the C-suite, the population of global marketers is exploding, too. Marc de Swaan Arons, chairman of EffectiveBrands, noted in his book “The Global Brand CEO” last year that he estimates only about 25,000 marketers had the descriptor “global” in their titles in 1999. As of last year, per LinkedIn, more than 540,000 marketers had “global” in their titles.