Advertisers are using Facebook’s news-feed revamp to get bigger media budgets

Advertisers have talked for years about going all-in on paid Facebook ads, and some believe they are closer than ever to securing larger budgets to do it, following the social network’s announcement that its news feed would prioritize what family and friends share over content from brands.

Prior to Facebook’s latest crackdown on organic branded content, trying to convince senior executives to give more money to the social network was a work in progress, marketers at Audi and Barclaycard said. Now, both brands are realizing they will have to spend more on Facebook ads to compete with treasured friends and family content, which requires creating ads that aren’t forgettable or cheap — and is leading advertisers to push for larger budgets.

“We’re really trying to get more people [within the wider organization] away from thinking that social media is free,” said Lauren Davey, head of social media and display at Barclaycard, at a We Are Social event on Jan. 31. She added that Facebook’s pruned news feed doesn’t change Barclaycard’s strategy so much as emphasize it.

Like Barclaycard’s social media marketers, Audi’s team spent much of 2017 arguing for scrapping an organic strategy for Facebook to focus on paid, targeted ads. Other departments learned that an organic post that reaches 2 to 4 percent of the brand’s organic followers isn’t a “good thing,” when it likely won’t be relevant to most who see it, said Rich Burgess, social media manager at Audi UK, at the same event. He said this has meant declining requests from other departments to post to Facebook at Audi. “Organic reach isn’t something we will be touching for the foreseeable future,” he said. “The [paid ads] that we are talking about doing more of don’t need to go to the masses all of the time.”

A revamped news feed has underscored why Barclaycard’s paid media plans were already leaning toward influencers and away from functional product-based posts in recent months. It’s meant more “inspirational stories” from the financial firm’s influencers, Davey said. Being part of a “big, bad bank” that people are “naturally skeptical about” has hindered Barclaycard’s efforts on Facebook to date, said Davey, who hopes moving away from prioritizing awareness and consideration in news feeds will yield better results. She added that Barclaycard sees Facebook as “full-funnel tool” that can function at different levels, from driving consideration to direct response, depending on what type of person is targeted. “A lot of what we’re doing is warming people up through the funnel,” she said. “From 12 months ago, there’s been a complete change in our mind as to what Facebook can do.”

By focusing on smaller audiences, Audi wants to use Facebook to target the right people more often so that by the time it is ready to serve them with a direct-response ad, it already knows they’re interested. Audi, like other car brands, is exploring how it can push people to purchase, and Facebook, given its scale, is a seen as a key platform for this. A shift of that magnitude is dependent not just on targeting from Audi, but also testing more versions of the same ads, better creative and using its customer data for lookalike modeling on Facebook.

Another change for the carmaker is sharper frequency capping. “Across all our platforms, the [threshold] for how often we should be targeting the audiences we buy is generally around three or four times, which is tipping people over the edge of the business metrics,” said Burgess. “People start to consider the brand, or they potentially recommend or want to buy a product from you. While paid media guarantees reach, it also gives us a better grip on it [those targeted audiences].”

The Co-op, one of the U.K.’s largest member-run organizations, has a similar mindset. Advertising budgets for the organization’s social media in 2018 will swell, as it takes a more “consistent approach” to promoting its brand and customer-relationship management on previously unused aspects of Facebook like Page Stories and Live, said Jordan McDowell, Co-op’s senior social media manager.

But unlike Audi and Barclaycard, the Co-op won’t stop chasing organic reach. The advertiser “considers our organic reach as our owned content,” which when paired with paid and earned efforts helps form a “holistic content distribution strategy,” McDowell said. “We benefit from some very highly engaged Facebook communities of Co-op members, colleagues and customers who willingly advocate our social content and communications, meaning organic reach remains comparatively good on key Facebook Pages.”

Agencies are already grappling with the effects of Facebook’s news-feed change. Organic reach for Tribal’s clients has dropped by about half to as low as 7 percent since the announcement, according to Alexei Edwards, head of social at Tribal Worldwide London. Brands need to “cut through the noise” while refraining from creating content that feels “cheap and nasty,” said Devran Karaca, co-founder of Kyra TV, which works with Adidas. “Your content will be competing in a stream of viral cat videos and eye-catching headlines from social publishers,” Karaca said. “It’s going to be hard to beat them at this game without playing it.”

The post Advertisers are using Facebook’s news-feed revamp to get bigger media budgets appeared first on Digiday.

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Inside Bud Light’s Super Bowl Snapchat strategy

Bud Light is hoping Snap will be the right accompaniment for its two television ads on Super Bowl Sunday.

The brand plans to run three types of Snap Ads, including a Snapchat game and two different types of Snapchat filters. The work is part of Bud Light’s largest Snapchat campaign ever.

During the game, Bud Light will rotate animated filters of “Dilly Dilly” signs and clinking Bud Light bottles. After the game, Bud Light will run geotargeted filters based on the winner’s home city: The winning city will get a “Friend of the Crown” filter, and the losing city will get a “Pit of Misery” filter.

Most of the Snap Ads preview one of Bud Light’s trilogy of “Dilly Dilly” spots, including the new spot that will air on Super Bowl Sunday. Users can swipe up in these ads to watch the full commercial.

One of these Snap Ads is a 45-second interactive game called “The Battle of Beer Run,” in which a knight runs through a battle to collect Bud Lights for his townspeople. Bud Light began running the game on Snapchat roughly two weeks before Super Bowl Sunday. As with the other Snap Ads, a user can swipe up into a “Dilly Dilly” commercial when they are done playing the game.

Bud Light declined to reveal its Snapchat spend for Super Bowl Sunday.

“We chose Snapchat, as it is the right platform for millennial consumers,” said Margot Weiss, senior digital brand manager at Bud Light. “Our core target consumer for Bud Light is 21- to 24-year-old men and women who want to engage with brands through their mobile phone.”

But Snapchat might seem like an odd choice for a beer brand aiming to reach an audience of drinkers.

Alcohol brands, including Heineken and Sailor Jerry, have told Digiday that they have been hesitant to spend on Snapchat because of concerns about the platform’s ability to verify that ads are only served to people 21 and older. The platform won’t reveal the percentage of its users that are 21 or older, but the largest demographic on the platform is users between 18 and 24, which makes up 36 percent of the overall audience. Alcohol brands are only allowed to buy ads on platforms where 72 percent of the audience is over 21.

For Super Bowl last year, Bud Light launched a Snapchat game that got an average watch time of 108 seconds, and users spent 4,700 hours playing the game, according to the company. In 2017, Snapchat said it saw an increase in brands running branded games, which average over a minute of engagement time.

 

 

Anheuser-Busch is also running Snapchat Super Bowl activations for its other brands, including a Snapchat Lens for Budweiser and filter for Michelob Ultra.

The post Inside Bud Light’s Super Bowl Snapchat strategy appeared first on Digiday.

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How The Vitamin Shoppe is adapting to Facebook’s algorithm changes

Facebook’s news-feed change didn’t catch The Vitamin Shoppe by surprise. The supplements chain was already at work on a new Facebook strategy that will see it adding more influencers to its roster and placing more focus on Facebook Live and groups.

So far, The Vitamin Shoppe, which has 1.3 million followers on Facebook, said it’s still seeing a “great deal” of engagement on the platform, but it’s taking additional steps to ensure its footing there in the future.

The Vitamin Shoppe sees enormous potential in Facebook Live, posting one Facebook Live video every week, but planning on doubling those efforts with the algorithm change, according to Lisa Chudnofsky, head of content and customer engagement. “We know Facebook has always favored Facebook Live from the get-go,” she said.

The main objective of Facebook Live for The Vitamin Shoppe, which has nearly 800 locations across the U.S., is to connect followers with employees at 20 redesigned stores that Chudnofsky describes as its stores of the future. These stores have communal areas where employees host workout sessions, health and wellness classes and taste tests, like with kombucha or protein pizza. These sessions are livestreamed on Facebook Live. It’s all part of the retailer’s strategy to be the authority on everything health and wellness, beyond nutritional products.

The Vitamin Shoppe will also involve more influencers in its Facebook posts. The idea is that since influencers maintain authentic relationships with their followers, content from or featuring them is less likely to get buried in the feed. On Jan. 1, The Vitamin Shoppe launched its largest influencer campaign to date called “Victory is Yours,” according to Chudnofsky.

The campaign features YouTube influencer Cassey Ho, who has 1.4 million Instagram followers and 1.2 million Facebook followers, and Noah Galloway, who lost his arm and leg while fighting in the Iraq War and has followings of 224,000 on Instagram and 137,000 on Facebook. These influencers appear in the retailer’s social posts and Facebook Live videos, which are designed to encourage dialogue in the comments section, according to Chudnofsky.

Chudnofsky said The Vitamin Shoppe is also building a health and fitness community of influencers it can use for future campaigns.

The Vitamin Shoppe is placing more emphasis on Facebook groups, developing between five and 10 groups around niche topics such as sports nutrition, healthy eating and bodybuilding, according to Chudnofsky. The retailer joins other brands that are creating groups because the algorithm that controls Facebook’s feed doesn’t apply to groups. At the same time, brands can serve more customized content in groups.

“Health and wellness is such a broad industry that if we can get it a little more granular, then we can offer specific videos, giveaways and exclusive coupons,” said Chudnofsky. “We all have different types of needs and goals.”

The post How The Vitamin Shoppe is adapting to Facebook’s algorithm changes appeared first on Digiday.

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Reality check: Why Facebook’s crypto ad ban won’t affect cryptocurrencies or ICOs

If you’re reading the headlines, the bitcoin bubble and crypto craze are having a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week.

On Tuesday Facebook announced it was going to ban ads for coin offerings and crypto couching it as a move to cut down on scams.

Within the 24 hours around the announcement, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission subpoenaed exchanges Bitfinex and Tether, the Securities and Exchange Commission halted an ICO by AriseBank, and South Korea said it found $600 million tied to crypto-related crime.

But at the same time, stock trading app Robinhood announced the launch of commission-free trading of 16 cryptocurrencies on its platform later this month and Square, which had recently made bitcoin buying and selling available to a select number of Square Cash users, expanded the service to its entire user base Wednesday.

The fact is that for anyone that’s serious about their crypto company or their proposed ICO, Facebook ads don’t really matter. The removal of advertising from Facebook will certainly do something to slow these schemes down but there are other ways they’ll be able to get their message out; through Telegram groups — some by invitation only — Internet chat rooms, Reddit. Facebook advertising is clearly just about getting mindshare, said Sid Kalla, co-founder of Turing Group.

“Less technically serious projects might raise less money and thats probably good for the space,” he said. New projects without strong technical merit are coming up and raising a lot of money.” At most, “this would affect regular people that want to invest in ICOs without doing their research. Bitcoin’s value in lieu of the advertising that goes with it has nothing to do with Facebook ads. That’s true of most established cryptocurrencies as well.”

Read the full story on tearsheet.co

The post Reality check: Why Facebook’s crypto ad ban won’t affect cryptocurrencies or ICOs appeared first on Digiday.

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One year in, New York magazine pivots membership program to exclusive events focus

New York magazine is refining its year-old membership program, New York by New York, with a bigger focus on food and drink events.

Launched in late 2016 as “insider access to extraordinary experiences,” New York by New York members got early access to sales at retailers, a newsletter with tips on how to thrive in the city and access to a private Instagram feed (which has since been made public).

There will still be special discount codes and early access to sales at retailers, but more emphasis on exclusive food and drink events, ideally hosted by editors of its Grub Street vertical. Earlier this week, for example, New York by New York members got together to eat an entire pig with food critic Adam Platt and Grub Street editor Alan Sytsma at Gramercy Italian restaurant Maialino.

New York is still selling the membership as a standalone product — it costs $99 for a year or $9.99 per month — but it’s now bundling memberships with other products. For example, it now offers a year of New York by New York plus an all-access subscription to New York magazine (which is being advertised now for $50) for $125.

These and other tweaks come as New York continues to grow its non-advertising revenue, particularly commerce. The magazine said the membership program was profitable in 2017, with just three full-time staffers devoting time to it, but it remains small. The magazine signed up “hundreds” of subscribers during a beta launch in late 2016, but wouldn’t say how many subscribers there are now.

The next challenge is figuring out how to market something New York’s readers are unfamiliar with.  “Honestly, this is the area where we’ve struggled the most,” said Camilla Cho, New York magazine’s director of business development. “I don’t think people are looking to New York by New York for discounts. Part of the goal [for 2018] is to actually learn as much as possible about what it takes to get a recurring revenue stream from your user base.”

During that first year, Cho and Alison Hutchison, an associate manager of business development, whipped up “around 160” offers for members, including VIP ticket packages to hit musical “Hamilton” and a private tour of The Richard Avedon Foundation led by New York’s design editor Wendy Goodman.

Cho will use the responses to those offers to make the program more structured. For example, food and drink events were a hit, so Hutchison is now responsible for putting together at least one exclusive food event per month.

The hope is that having recurring series will make it easier to communicate the program’s value to potential subscribers and include sales and marketing more. Last year, only one New York by New York event, a conversation between Goodman and the CEO of luxury designer Van Cleef & Arpels, secured a sponsorship, as part of a broader advertising buy across other parts of the organization.

The program’s team will now have regular meetings with editorial, sales and marketing to monetize and promote events. Some editors from New York’s verticals will have to participate in membership programs on a quarterly basis.

Along with the change in focus, the program also will get new marketing creative to reflect the focus on food events. Initial tests across a number of promotional channels, including Facebook, print ads in its magazine, newsletters and in-person promotion at events, haven’t yielded satisfactory results in sign-ups.

“What we need to do is refresh our market positioning, especially if we’re not getting the numbers we want,” Cho said.

The post One year in, New York magazine pivots membership program to exclusive events focus appeared first on Digiday.

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Paid and organic marketing: How to find and optimize your best combinations

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Facebook’s Profit Rises, but Users Spend Less Time on Network

Facebook’s dominance in digital advertising powered another surge in quarterly profit, though it said users were starting to shave back their time on its platform as it tries to address critics claims that the social network has harmful effects.

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Meredith Closes Time Inc. Deal, Forecasts $700 Million In Digital Revenue This Year

AdExchanger |

Meredith closed its acquisition of Time Inc. Wednesday to create a media company with 174 million digital US unique visitors – not far behind Google, Yahoo, Facebook, Microsoft and Amazon. Meredith will triple its digital revenue by acquiring Time Inc., with projected digital revenue this year of $700 million. Digital will contribute 30% to overallContinue reading »

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Microsoft Reports Gains in Cloud-Computing Business

Microsoft Corp. took a $13.8 billion charge related to the new U.S. tax law but reported significant growth in its cloud operations, the business fueling the company’s resurgence.

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Qualcomm Expands Licensing Deal With Samsung

Qualcomm Inc. entered into an expanded deal with one of its biggest customers and beat revenue estimates in its latest quarter even as it swung to a deep loss.

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