Growing up in Chicago, Isabelle Kyrk loved eating fruitcake during the holidays. Her family would order one from the Trappist monks at Gethsemani Abbey, who’d bake a cake of mixed fruit and raisins and nuts, dunk it in Kentucky bourbon and ship it off. Kyrk and her five siblings savored every bite. “It was delicious,”…
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Tips for Livestreaming Social Media Content
Over the past year or two, you may have noticed that most of the major social media sites, like Facebook and Twitter, have been promoting new features and products that revolve around livestreaming. This is a good way for the social media companies to drive revenue and engage more with users, and there’s now more…
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DigitasLBi Shines A Light On Puerto Rico's Lingering Darkness
The Publicis Groupe agency will donate the money saved by closing its six offices and shutting down its social-media channels for one week to Light Up Puerto Rico to help restore power across the
island.
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Bud Light Is Bringing ‘Dilly Dilly’ to the Super Bowl With Trilogy of New Ads Starting Today
To the surprise of no one, Bud Light is extending its popular “Dilly Dilly” ads into a Super Bowl campaign with what it’s calling a “trilogy” of new commercials, beginning with one called “Wizard” that Adweek can reveal exclusively today. The “Dilly Dilly” catchphrase, introduced as a kind of toast in an amusing, medieval-themed Wieden…
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How to Collect Marketing Data Using Social Media at Live Events
There are many benefits to marketing your products in-person, including face-to-face interactions with customers, tours and live events. But historically, the internet has had one big benefit over in-person experiences. Online, customer behaviors can be easily tracked using a variety of software. Fortunately, technology has begun to connect the online and offline worlds. But while…
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The Top Story In The TV Business In 2017? Take A Guess
Determining the top story in the TV business this year was a simple exercise: It was sex harassment.
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Chris Paul, James Harden Sing Along to the Backstreet Boys for State Farm
Like a good neighbor, Chris Paul is there … in Houston! This State Farm ad finds the NBA superstar exploring his new city, where he runs into a pair of his big-time baller friends. Naturally, they wind up driving around and singing along to the Backstreet Boys. Doesn’t that sound like fun? For the 2017-18…
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AKQA’s Holiday App Lets You Place an AR Christmas Tree Anywhere You Like
Haven’t gotten your Christmas tree yet? AKQA can help with that. Just download its new festive Tree of Lights app, and you’ll be able to place an interactive, 360-degree augmented reality tree anywhere you please. Once you download the app, you point your camera where you’d like the tree to appear. You can play around…
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5 things to know this week: Ad buyers’ struggles with Amazon, Facebook Watch show terms and more
This week’s things to know include problems ad buyers face when working with Amazon, Facebook’s changing terms for Watch shows and more.
Ad buyers struggle to advertise through Amazon
Ad buyers are having issues building relationships with Amazon, with it sometimes taking more than a year to secure an Amazon rep and then start the process of advertising through Amazon’s suite of ad offerings.
“It’s at a level where you can only develop a relationship with Amazon if you know someone,” said one ad buyer at a large agency.
Even with Amazon reps, ad buyers don’t necessarily get answers they need. “The teams have really focused expertise, so when you ask a question about another ad product or product road map, it tends to get lost in translation, and you have to be directed to another product team,” said Price Glomski, evp of digital strategy at digital agency PMG.
And ad buyers that have worked with Amazon find its ad infrastructure underdeveloped compared to Google’s and Facebook’s. They believe Amazon Marketing Services — a self-serve paid search marketing tool that is supposed to help advertisers efficiently run search campaigns on Amazon — requires lots of manual work, has inefficient reporting and is not as handy as expected.
As Nich Weinheimer, marketing director for Amazon consultancy Buy Box Experts, put it: “[Amazon] is playing catch-up in advertising to become an equal player to Google and Facebook.”
Ad tech grapples with Safari’s ad-tracking change
Three months after Apple updated its Safari browser to prevent third parties from tracking users more than 24 hours after a user visits a website, ad tech is feeling the effects. Retargeting firm Criteo revealed the update harmed its business more than expected, causing its shares to drop 26 percent within hours.
Criteo is the poster child for how Safari’s change affects ad tech because retargeting drives its business, and it’s the most recognizable vendor in that category.
“Apple doesn’t rely on an ad business, so they are prioritizing user experience,” independent tech consultant Matt Rosenberg said. “The fact that it is a choice between ad tech and user experience doesn’t speak well for what ad tech has been doing.”
Facebook is adjusting terms for Watch shows
Facebook increasingly wants bigger-budget shows it can buy outright for Watch, which one Watch partner said Facebook calls “hero” shows.
Characteristics of hero shows:
- Episodes of 15-plus minutes
- Potential budgets into the six figures, per Watch partners
- Producers would make the 10 to 15 percent profit margin that entertainment studios get for making TV shows.
The first Watch partner said for 2018, Facebook is offering back-end percentages, additional money the producer makes if a show’s revenue exceeds the production cost. But the producer usually only gets 1 or 2 percent of the profit in those arrangements.
The upshot: Publishers might only be able to rely on the production margin to make money from Watch shows.
Brand safety remains a big concern for advertisers
Video ad platform Teads surveyed 100 chief marketing officers and vps at large brands in November and found that almost 80 percent of them are more concerned about brand safety than ever before.
To address these worries, nearly 60 percent of respondents boosted spending on brand-safe sites, half reviewed their agency and vendor contracts over the past year, and more than one-third boosted third-party measurement on their campaigns.
The impact of Instagram’s new features
Instagram has added the ability for users to follow hashtags, which surfaces hashtag-focused posts, and a “Recommended for you” section that shows three to five posts that a user’s friends have liked after the user has viewed all their new posts.
How the changes affect organic reach:
- Increased clutter: Users must scroll through more content to reach all organic content, so posts not backed by a robust paid Instagram strategy will likely end up more buried.
- Improved discoverability: The option to follow hashtags lets marketers capitalize on trending conversations, could boost influencers and encourages publishers to form communities related to their own hashtags for audiences.
- Hashtag abuse: Marketers will probably add more trending hashtags to posts and Instagram Stories. “The real challenge on all of us [is] determining which hashtags are actually relevant and can add value to conversations,” said Amanda Peters, group strategy director at Wunderman.
Bonus research
At the Digiday Marketing Summit earlier this month, we found that only 15 percent of 30 marketing executives we surveyed use artificial intelligence for marketing to date, while 46 percent wish their companies had an AI strategy. Subscribe to Digiday+ risk-free for your first 30 days to get access to more research like this.
Pokemon Go Receives 20 New Pokemon, Festive Hat Pikachu and More
Niantic kicked off its holiday celebrations in Pokemon Go. For a limited time, players have the chance to capture special Pikachu wearing festive hats. These are the same festive Pikachu that were first released in 2016, and when evolved into Raichu, they will keep their hats. Next, from Dec. 22 at 1 p.m. PST through…
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