Category Archives: News

Article: Top Content Marketing Blogs in 2011 – Online Marketing Blog

Nice list here of good content marketing blogs.

Top Content Marketing Blogs in 2011 – Online Marketing Blog
http://www.toprankblog.com/2011/01/top-content-marketing-blogs-to-start-2011/

1) Relevance to Content Marketing

2) How much the blog adds to the Content Marketing conversation

3) Google Page Rank

4) blog consistency

5) previous ranking

Here’s the full list of 42 Content Marketing Blogs. Congratulations to all and more so, thank you for your contributions.

1 TopRank’s Online Marketing Blog
2 PR 2.0 (Brian Solis)
3 Web Ink Now
4 Convince and Convert
5 Copyblogger
6 Social Media Examiner
7 Grow
8 Influential Marketing Blog
9 Inbound Internet Marketing Blog
10 Conversation Agent
11 Marketing Experiments
12 Jeff Korhan
13 Sparksheet
14 ReelSEO
15 ConverStations
16 Post Advertising
17 Conversation Marketing
18 Marketing Interactions
19 Mack Collier
20 FASTforward Blog
21 Ducttape Marketing
22 Logic+Emotion
23 B2B Ideas@Work Blog
24 The Search Agents
25 eMedia Vitals
26 Social Media Explorer
27 No man is an iland
28 B2B Bloggers
29 Freelance Copywriters Blog
30 Simple Marketing Blog
31 Straight Talk with Nigel Hollis
32 Digital Marketing Blog
33 Windmill Networking
34 big star content
35 Drew’s Marketing Minute
36 Campaign Monitor
37 Vertical Measures
38 Web Analytics World
39 White Paper Pundit
40 Vertical Leap
41 IdeaLaunch
42 Site Booster

Whoa. An Elegant [Media] Universe.

Gotta love this graphic courtesy of Nielsen.  Click on it to enlarge!

————

Factsheet: The U.S. Media Universe

January 5, 2011
From smartphones to 3D televisions, The Nielsen Company provides a view of the device usage and audiences in the U.S.

Fast Facts:

  • Average Number of TVs per U.S. Household: 2.5
  • Percentage of Americans with 4 or more TVs: 31%
  • Number of Mobile Phone Users (13+): 228M
  • Percentage of U.S. Mobile Subscribers with Smartphones: 31%
  • Number of mobile phone web users: 83.2M

For more, download Nielsen’s State of the Media – U.S. Audiences and Devices

media-universe-sm

 

Millennials Redefine the Alcohol Beverage Landscape | Nielsen Wire

Millennials Redefine the Alcohol Beverage Landscape | Nielsen Wire.

Courtesy of Nielsen:

Millennials Redefine the Alcohol Beverage Landscape

January 11, 2011

Danny Brager, Vice President and Group Client Director, Beverage Alcohol
Jim Greco, Vice President, Region Manager, Beverage Alcohol

Over the course of the next 10 years, “millennial” consumers (those currently aged 21-34) will make up 40 percent of American 21 and older. So how does this demographic approach their alcohol beverage purchases? Nielsen analyzed millennial consumer attitudes and preferences to understand the generation’s significant impact on the beverage alcohol industry.

Millennials are redefining the beverage alcohol landscape and will continue to do so in the years ahead. Without a doubt, millennials are a large and influential generation and alcohol beverage companies need to know their taste and buying preferences in order to take advantage of the trends that can greatly impact business.

Highlights of our findings:

  • Compared to the general population, millennials are more likely to trade back up to more expensive alcohol beverage brands as the economy improves.
  • Millennial consumers are more likely to equate product cost with quality.
  • Millennials are more likely to explore new and different alcohol beverage products and will be even more likely to buy a locally-made or produced product knowing it may help the local economy.
  • An added boost for marketers employing social or traditional media to influence behavior, millennials are slightly more likely to plan their purchases versus purchase on impulse in today’s down economy.
  • Millennials’ tendency to experiment and try new things will keep them versatile, skipping between a variety of alcoholic beverages. While the majority of millennials still prefer beer, they purchase relatively more wine and spirits than older generations did at a comparable age. Nielsen’s research shows that as consumers age, their lifestyle transitions typically result in a relative shift from beer to wine and spirits. Given that current millennial preferences between beer, wine and spirits diverge from prior generations, future consumption preferences also become less predictable.
  • By 2036, the majority of consumers age 21 and over will be multicultural. Hispanics, in particular, are swelling the ranks of these newer legal drinking age consumers and their tastes are influenced both by cultural factors, such as their degree of acculturation, as well as attitudes that include a willingness to try new things and openness to be influenced by other consumers’ suggestions.

Understanding how Millennials’ product preferences may change as they age, while at the same time recognizing the alcohol beverage buying habits of younger, ethnic consumers will be essential for alcohol beverage companies to future-proof their portfolios. Leveraging social media will be a critical marketing strategy for alcohol beverage companies to communicate with Millennial consumers and make their brands relevant with this generation.

About Nielsen’s Millennial Study
Nielsen’s analysis is based on a combination of qualitative and quantitative research examining dynamics such as consumer attitudes, behavior, lifestyle, media and retail preferences to gain insight into today’s alcohol beverage consumer. The research, conducted in Q2 2010, includes online survey responses from 7,500 millennial generation consumers of legal drinking age (21 – 34), geographically and demographically representative of the total U.S. population.

For more: Contact The Nielsen Company or read about our global practices.

5 New Paradigms for a Socially Engaged Company

The age of social media is not just changing our personal lives, but is increasingly affecting how business is conducted. No longer satisfied with strictly top-down models that view employees as cogs in a system, businesses are quickly adapting to a new paradigm that emphasizes connection, collaboration and innovation.

When people in companies and teams feel engaged, the benefits are significant. Towers Watson (formerly Towers Perrin), the global professional services firm, interviewed 90,000 employees in 18 countries, and found “companies with high employee engagement had a 19% increase in operating income and almost a 28% growth in earnings per share. Conversely, companies with low levels of engagement saw operating income drop more than 32% and earnings per share decline over 11%.”

Companies are realizing that it is not enough to get people to show up to…5 New Paradigms for a Socially Engaged Company

Sofa-Friendly iPad Reading Could Eat Into Primetime TV’s User Attention

From Fast Company:vintage family TV iPad

The iPad is changing how folks read stuff online–no surprise if you think how different a gizmo it is to a PC. But a new study shows it’s moving online reading into primetime TV hours, which is big news. Is evening reading coming back, just in a digital style?

The study comes from internal data acquired by ReadItLater, a web service that lets users bookmark web content for perusal at a different time. Though you may think this slightly colors the dataset, the way this service works gives the company unique access to time-coded data on how iPad users (and traditional computer users) read content online.

By looking at how traffic moves through their servers, normalized for global time differences, the ReadItLater team worked out how traditional PC users spread their online reading out during the day. As you may expect, given how deeply into our everyday lives the computer has penetrated, the curve of content consumption is pretty stable–not much happens in the wee small hours of the day, then as people wake and go to work there’s more traffic, with a small peak spread out around traditional lunch hours and another around 8PM after the evening meal.

When you look at iPhone and iPad user traffic, distinct from “normal” PCs, everything is suddenly very different. iPhone users have distinct peaks in their reading habits, timed to correspond with the morning routine of breakfast, then a commute to work, the end of the work day and homeward journey, and then last thing in the evening. This matches the iPhone’s status as a handy, portable, always-on Net browser that’s good for quick content consumption.

But it’s with the iPad that the statistics get very odd indeed: With minor usage spikes first thing in the morning, at lunchtime and then dinner time, the main bulk of iPad text content consumption is from 7PM to 11PM.

This is prime-time TV’s slot, and it seems that as well as settling back on the sofa to watch TV, people are taking their iPad with them too. The data doesn’t reveal if folk are multitasking (spending some time ogling their favorite shows, some looking data up on the Web) or are ignoring the TV altogether–but the data will still be of concern to TV execs who expect uninterrupted attention from TV watchers, in order to maximize ad revenues.

Plus it’s something of a return to a traditional leisure hour image: People settling down on the couch after the evening meal to read the paper or a book, possibly to listen to the radio at the same time. Remembering a study last year that showed how much time users devote to reading magazines on an iPad, we have to wonder is the iPad causing a renaissance in reading–just digitally, and with Web content as well as digital books content? If this is true, then Rupert Murdoch’s Daily iPad newspaper is arriving with pinpoint timing. And the hordes of Android tablets that have just arrived should accentuate the effect. This is thus something that PR and advertising executives need to pay careful attention to, because the attention focus of the average consumer may be switching away from the TV to their other (newer) powerful glowing screen–in their laps.

To read more news on this, and similar stuff, keep up with my updates by following me,Kit Eaton, on Twitter.

 

Twitter for Brands: 6 Winning Strategies to Learn From

Twitter can sometimes create a dilemma for brands. It’s a medium that focuses on people, so how should brand accounts work? Should you let your users know who is the voice behind your brand? Should key employees represent your brand instead of a brand account? There’s not a one-size-fits-all answer to this question, but you can learn from how these companies are handling it.

Get the rest of the article:

Twitter for Brands: 6 Winning Strategies to Learn From

Megan Berry is marketing manager for Klout, the standard for online influence. She also blogs at The Huffington Post and Brazen Careerist. You can follow her on Twitter at @meganberry.

HOW TO: Launch a Successful Twitter Contest

HOW TO: Launch a Successful Twitter Contest

twitter-bird-winner-300.jpg

Clay McDaniel is the principal and co-founder of social media marketing agency Spring Creek Group. Find him via @springcreekgrp on Twitter.

Everyone loves a good contest, and Twitter is a valuable platform on which to run one. If your followers already like your brand, they’ll typically be willing to enter a contest in exchange for the chance to win your products, recognition or prizes.

Launching, running and measuring a Twitter contest takes specific social media marketing skills. You’ll need a deep knowledge of contest laws in your state, as well as the right tools to measure participation, viral sharing, brand impact and bottom line sales resulting from the contest. A Twitter contest should not just be promotional, but should further the business goals of your entire social media program.

If you want to launch a Twitter contest that boosts sales and brand recognition and helps your company reach specific social media marketing goals, there are a few proven strategies you can implement. Here are five steps to launching one with high impact.

A Comprehensive Guide To All Mobile Ad Networks

A Comprehensive Guide To All Mobile Ad Networks

Here’s a comprehensive guide to the growing world of mobile advertising from Mark Fidelman at Seek Omega.

One thing to note in the graphic below: Omar Hamoui is no longer at Ad Mob. He’s working on some secret new startup.

Click on the picture below for a gigantic, hi res, version:

mobile ad networks

Join the conversation about this story »

See Also:

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Sent from my iPad

From Prada to Nada launches new Social Media Player

We designed a social media widget with True Anthem that has Twitter, Facebook links, a Youtube player, the trailer and more . . . all in one portable widget that easily hops from social media platform to platform.

What do you think?

From Prada To Nada Site Launched!

Hey, check out the awesome new site we launched. http://frompradatonadamovie.com. Sweet! Merry Christmas. http://ow.ly/3uSJg