How I Learned to Love Losing | DailyVee584

How I Learned to Love Losing | DailyVee584
Gary had a lot to talk about during his trips to Chattanooga and Atlanta. He held a very business-focused tactical 4Ds session around the importance of producing content (especially for LinkedIn) and then delivered an amazing keynote in Atlanta where he talked about learning to love losing. Be sure to check the timestamps in the comments for all the best moments… Enjoy!

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Gary Vaynerchuk is the chairman of VaynerX, a modern-day media and communications holding company and the active CEO of VaynerMedia, a full-service advertising agency servicing Fortune 100 clients across the globe. He’s a sought out public speaker, a 5-time New York Times bestselling author, and an angel investor in companies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Venmo, and Uber.

VaynerX, also includes Gallery Media Group, which houses women’s lifestyle brand PureWow and men’s lifestyle brand ONE37pm. In addition to running VaynerMedia, Gary also serves as a partner in the athlete representation agency VaynerSports, cannabis-focused branding and marketing agency Green Street and restaurant reservations app Resy. Gary is a board/advisory member of Ad Council and Pencils of Promise, and is a longtime Well Member of Charity: Water.

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How a digitally native clothing brand used marketing intelligence to identify its customers

 

Sustainable travel clothing company Paskho had a problem.

They had a great product — and an even more admirable mission statement — but all of that meant nothing if they didn’t know how to spread the word.

“I started this business out of my basement, and it was in some crazy way I thought I was going to be able to do all the creative, ship it at the beginning, and just have one other person work with me,” explains founder Patrick Robinson. “I didn’t know anything about e-commerce, digital marketing and how to connect with the consumer completely in just a digital space.”

Ironing out a solid e-commerce strategy is a necessity for brands of all sizes, but it’s especially crucial for independent, direct-to-consumer businesses, eking out both an identity and a consumer base in a crowded retail market.

However, if step one to solving this problem is admitting that you need help in the digital marketing space — something that Robinson and Paskho did readily — then step two is finding the perfect partner who can get your business on the right track.

Robinson got in touch with MiQ, a global marketing intelligence company, with the goal of measuring return on advertising investment. But then the team began to think outside of the analytics — focusing on who Paskho’s customer is and what makes them tick, instead of the anonymous data points that comprise them.

“The most exciting part about [what we do] speaks to the intelligence beyond the ad campaign,” says Gurman Hundal, co-founder and global CEO of MiQ. In particular, MiQ leverages data through a unique combination of human intelligence and technology — bringing a human touch to an oftentimes clinical, mechanical process.

“We educate brands and advertisers about who their consumers are, what’s going on with their competitors and what’s going on in the market they’re in,” explains Hundal.

This philosophy was no different when applied to Paskho. MiQ shifted focus to a more consumer-focused goal: figuring out the cost of individual customer acquisition, as well as how to best cater to their existing customers.

“The marketing campaign started because they are growing very fast in the space of travel clothing,” explains Amandeep Chhabra, senior data scientist at MiQ. “MiQ can enable [them] to do that even faster while also enabling them to understand their customers.”

Before coming to MiQ, Robinson admits that he hadn’t even heard of marketing intelligence before, but that hasn’t stopped him from learning alongside MiQ — as well as reaping the resulting benefits.

“I was very ignorant to the possibilities of what they could do,” says Robinson. “When they started explaining it in layman terms, I completely got it. But [at first], I did not know all the capabilities of digital marketing and digitally capturing an audience. They opened my eyes to a lot of it, and honestly — they’re still teaching me.”

After adapting marketing intelligence to better understand their customers, Paskho has said that their business grows “month over month”, along with a huge boost in revenue overall. But in addition to this success, Robinson considers his partner relationship with MiQ to be another huge win.

“I continuously challenge them in areas, and they challenge me back,” he explains. “We find a common ground to continuously grow — and it’s huge to be able to have that two-way relationship.”

The post How a digitally native clothing brand used marketing intelligence to identify its customers appeared first on Digiday.

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The ability to create events was finally added to LinkedIn with this week’s global debut of LinkedIn Events. The feature will be available worldwide over the next few days, starting with English-speaking markets. LinkedIn Events will enable members of the professional network to create and join events, invite connections, manage events, communicate with other attendees…

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Gartner’s Andrew Frank: ‘We Feel Betrayed Because Big Data Let Us Down’

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The post Gartner’s Andrew Frank: ‘We Feel Betrayed Because Big Data Let Us Down’ appeared first on AdExchanger.

Facebook Extends Its News Index for Media, Publisher Pages to India

Facebook is bringing its news index for media and publishers to India. The social network introduced the news index in September 2018 as a way to help determine which publishers should be included in its Ad Library for political and issue ads and content run by advertisers. Facebook said in a blog post that news…