Top 2020 Marketing Strategies That Will Put You on the Map | RD Summit 2019

Top 2020 Marketing Strategies That Will Put You on the Map | RD Summit 2019
In this keynote from November 2019 in Brazil, Gary talks about a lot of the new and emerging marketings tactics that he is starting to see work that nobody is doing. He stresses the importance of getting on these trends early before there are real “results” because by that point you will feel like it’s “too late” and you missed the opportunity. People often fall into the trap of not doing because there are no results for a new trend or it’s “too late” because the tactic is too saturated. Gary also covers a bunch of other topics including; judgment, patience, B2B tactics and more. He also does a great Q&A with the audience where he answers a lot of great contextual questions. Be sure to check the comments for the timestamps of all moments… Enjoy!

Text me here https://garyvee.com/Community-yt

Your comments are my oxygen, please take a second and say ‘Hi’ in the comments and let me and my team know what you thought of the video … p.s. It would mean the world to me if you hit the subscribe button đŸ˜‰

My DTC winery, Empathy Wines: https://garyvee.com/EmpathyWinesYT
My K-Swiss sneaker: https://garyvee.com/GV005

Gary Vaynerchuk is a serial entrepreneur and the Chairman of VaynerX, a modern day communications parent company, as well as the CEO and Co-Founder of VaynerMedia, a full-service digital agency servicing Fortune 500 clients across the company’s 4 locations.
Gary is a venture capitalist, 5-time New York Times bestselling author, and an early investor in companies such as Twitter, Tumblr, Venmo and Uber. He is currently the subject of DailyVee, an online documentary series highlighting what it’s like to be a CEO and public figure in today’s digital world. He is also the host of #AskGaryVee, a business and advice Q&A show online.

Second Channel: https://garyvee.com/GVTV
Instagram: http://garyvee.com/Instagram
Podcast: http://garyvee.com/audioexperience
TikTok: http://garyvee.com/TikTok
LinkedIn: http://garyvee.com/LinkedIn
Twitter: https://garyvee.com/Twitter
Facebook: http://garyvee.com/GaryVeeFacebook
Snapchat: http://garyvee.com/Snapchat
Website: http://garyvaynerchuk.com
Weekly playlist: http://garyvee.com/m2mall
GaryVee 365 Alexa skill: http://garyvee.com/garyvee365

Subscribe to my VIP newsletter for updates and giveaways: http://garyvee.com/GARYVIP

Twitter Acquires Chroma Labs and Welcomes Its Team

Twitter acquired Chroma Labs, a San Mateo, Calif.-based developer of tools for short-form video and photo creation. The social network said the team from Chroma Labs will join its product, design and engineering teams and help develop more expressive ways for people to express themselves during Twitter conversations. Twitter added that the acquisition fits its…

Hitwise Shuts Down Less Than A Month After Jumpshot Closes Shop

It’s a rough time to be in the clickstream data analytics biz. On Tuesday, Connexity-owned Hitwise announced that it would cease US operations. The closure is “due to events outside of our control,” Hitwise said on its homepage. “This is a very sad time for us at Hitwise after 20 years of operations providing first-to-marketContinue reading »

The post Hitwise Shuts Down Less Than A Month After Jumpshot Closes Shop appeared first on AdExchanger.

Workplace From Facebook Adds an Insights Panel

Workplace From Facebook, the social network’s enterprise solution, added an insights section to its administrator panel. Admins now have access to five tabs containing information that will help them learn how employees are using Workplace across their organizations: People: Admins can track how active their organization is on the platform, including how many invited employees…

Nike Announces 3 Internal Senior Leadership Changes

Today, Nike announced a series of new internal leadership appointments, naming Heidi O’Neill as president of consumer and marketplace, Andy Campion as COO and Matthew Friend as CFO. These changes to Nike’s executive leadership are happening under the multinational athletic accessories and apparel retailer’s new president and CEO, John Donahoe, who recently stepped into the…

How Domino’s Digitally Blended Itself With Cheers for Its New Ad

When Norm Peterson walks into an establishment, he expects a certain level of recognition. But unlike at his beloved watering hole, Cheers, he finds himself struggling with anonymity when he enters a Domino’s. There’s a perfectly good reason for that, at least in the pizza chain’s new ad from agency CPB. Norm hasn’t used Domino’s…

Olympics-size emotions are fueling brand–consumer connections

By Oliver Smith, evp sales, US, Unruly 

For the highly charged competitive landscape that is the world of sporting events and advertising, 2020 has been a high-stakes year, and there’s no sign of letup in the months to come. Super Bowl LIV took place this month in front of a US audience of 102 million fans; this spring, record audiences are expected for soccer’s Euro 2020; the summer will bring the Olympic and Paralympic Games in Tokyo and the Ryder Cup for golf.

With all these events expected to fuel a six percent increase in global ad spend, the rivalries won’t be limited to the running track or football fields, either. Brands will once again compete for audiences’ hard-won attention.

With so many brands striving to piggyback on these events, and with the mounting pressure that advertisers and agencies face in trying to achieve brand and business metrics, marketers must be wary of the fallout that results from bombarding consumers with continuous advertising.

Chasing quick wins is part of most advertisers’ strategies, but a lack of balance when it comes to targeting and frequency can damage the consumer experience. Too much of the same, plus poor contextual alignment, can take a toll. Consumers are creeped out by ads that follow them around the web, especially when irrelevant to their interests, and the data held by DMPs on consumers can be wildly inaccurate. As P&G’s Marc Pritchard says, “We targeted too much and went too narrow.”

It’s time to bid farewell to the days of short-term payoffs and instead look to the long-term. When it comes to sports audiences like the ones advertisers will seek this year, the emotions associated with athletes and their accomplishments may well take center field.

Sporting emotions drive competitive advertisers
Unruly CEO Norm Johnston says the Summer Olympic Games, along with 2020’s other tentpole sporting events, will provide a strong platform for putting a long-term insights-driven plan into action.

“The demise of the cookie and mounting pressure to increase levels of transparency, creativity and emotion provide the injection of magic that is needed to reinvigorate programmatic advertising,” Johnston says. “Furthermore, creative innovation spurs marketers to look beyond direct response metrics and grasp the brand-building opportunity programmatic offers that is so often overlooked.”

A study from The Institute of Practitioners in Advertising (IPA) and renowned marketing expert Peter Field, shows that positive emotions in advertising are highly effective at long-term brand building. Within every sporting event, audiences are almost certain to feel some positive emotional charge — whether it’s about a record-breaking high jump or a tournament hole-in-one. The question becomes, what positive emotions best help brands connect with the audiences that gather for sports?

We looked at our own data to see how it correlates with the study. Employing emotional targeting and testing tools, we highlighted amazement and exhilaration as having the strongest links to long-term effectiveness across the board, and certainly when it comes to sporting events.

Amazement and exhilaration are already commonly found in sports advertising — especially within Olympics campaigns — and opportunities to leverage these marketing insights arise again as the Tokyo Games approach.

To better envision how advertisers can bring emotions into the Olympics mix, they can turn to the Super Bowl for examples.

This year, for instance, Google’s heartfelt “Loretta” commercial was the most effective spot of all the Super Bowl ads we tested. The ad was almost twice as likely to make people smile, almost four times more heart-warming and 12 times sadder than the average US ad.

And in 2019, Microsoft’s Super Bowl spot, “We All Win,” scored highest for feelings of Amazement and the NFL’s “100 Year Game” scored the highest for exhilaration. In our ranking, both of these ads came out on top as the most emotionally effective spots, with Microsoft at number one and the NFL ad at number two.

To further see these emotionally-charged techniques in action, consider the success Nike has enjoyed in long-term brand building with its “Dream Crazy” campaign. The campaign’s first spot, featuring Colin Kapernick, sparked a range of top emotional notes: inspiration (20 percent), warmth (11 percent), pride (10 percent), amazement (nine percent ) and happiness (seven percent). By using a mix of positive emotions in the ad, Nike scored above the emotional norm across all key metrics including purchase intent (plus four percent ) and shareability (plus seven percent).

Nike’s follow-up spot, “Dream Crazier”, focusing on inspirational female athletes, did even better. The campaign replicated the same emotional mix, putting even more emphasis on positivity, and scored higher across each of the five top emotions; inspiration (31 percent), pride (22 percent), happiness (17 percent ), amazement (16 percent) and warmth (12 percent). As a result, they scored even higher compared to the norm across all their key metrics, including purchase intent (plus eight percent) and shareability (plus 16 percent).

These examples highlight how a deep focus on contextually aligned emotions can create positive outcomes, especially when it comes to sports-adjacent advertising. Brands using 2020’s sporting events as a testing ground for strategies and approaches that bring emotion to audiences’ screens will have a post-season of analysis to discover what the right emotion in the right ad does for campaign results.

The post Olympics-size emotions are fueling brand–consumer connections appeared first on Digiday.

Pierry Becomes the Latest Agency to Integrate Into Wunderman Thompson

Salesforce partner and digital marketing agency Pierry is integrating within WPP’s Wunderman Thompson. The San Francisco-based agency, which was acquired by WPP in 2017, will rebrand as part of Wunderman Thompson while continuing to operate out of its current office. “The strategy of connecting our communications to the right audiences–and the audience of Salesforce–is critical,”…

Yelp: Here’s How to Stop Users From Seeing Your Bookmarks

Did you know that Yelp allows you to control whether or not other users can see your bookmarks on your profile? Our guide will show you how this is done. Note: These screenshots were captured in the Yelp application on iOS. Step 1: Tap “More” in the bottom-right corner of the screen. Step 2: Scroll…