NBC Olympics Ratings Took a Tumble on Wednesday Night

NBC’s Pyeongchang Olympics prime time ratings took a bit of a tumble on Wednesday night. Per Nielsen live-plus-same-day data and digital data from Adobe Analytics, NBC Olympics’ Wednesday prime-time coverage posted a Total Audience Delivery of 19.2 million viewers, of which 17.2 million watched on NBC only. That means there was a 12 percent lift…

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Why Scannable Shelf Tags Could Improve the Retail Experience After Beacons Failed

Once upon a time, beacons–Bluetooth-powered devices that can push messages to smartphones–offered brands an opportunity to connect with consumers in physical retail locations and gather data about them. For brands, beacons promised an expanded and expansive conversation at the shelf. Companies spend a lot of money trying to get consumers to the store and in…

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Red Stripe Says That, Whatever the Cost, It Will Buy a New Bobsled for Jamaica

The Jamaican bobsled team has been a world-famous underdog since first appearing on the Olympic scene in 1988. The team’s unlikely path to the global stage was made famous in the 1993 movie Cool Runnings, but returning to the Olympics has been a challenge ever since, with financial support often in short supply. This year,…

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The 5-minute guide to buying sponsored content from publishers

By Jerrid Grimm, co-founder and ceo, Pressboard

Sponsored content is seeing a massive surge in popularity among advertisers, ad agencies, and PR teams alike — but just like any other growing industry, it can be a bit like the Wild West out there. I know from experience.

Before Pressboard, I worked at an ad agency, and it was clear that brands were falling in love with sponsored content, defined here as brand content that’s posted on publishers’ sites. However, the process of finding the right publishers, negotiating the deal, creating a story, and finally measuring the results was labor intensive and expensive.

That’s why we created this five-step guide based on our own experiences building a sponsored content platform. From ideation to execution, the information below will help take your sponsored content campaign from idea to reality.

  1. Picking a publisher

Publishers have spent years building trust with their audience, and that influence and authenticity can be leveraged by advertisers.

To choose the right publisher, make sure they align with your goals — consider content fit, location, audience demographics and social following.

Diana Walters, group director for digital media at OMD Canada, told me that she starts with the publishers’ social following. “I don’t just look at their numbers either. What do their followers look like? Unfortunately, I often have to do it (gather information) manually. It’s a resource intensive, time-consuming process.”

You can use tools like ComScore and SimilarWeb to help with your research, or you can easily discover and compare publishers and their sponsored content packages using Pressboard.

  1. Negotiating a rate

Sponsored content is about paying to align your brand with a publisher’s authority and audience. Since most audiences discover content on social media, we’ve found that the most effective sponsored content product is also the simplest: placement of your brand article or video on the publisher’s site along with a social share, all while disclosing your brand’s involvement.

Anna Fertel, associate director, The Media Kitchen explains, “You’re paying for the partnership and deserve to have maximum transparency around all elements of it — where/how your content will be distributed, how many people you can expect to see it, what metrics you’ll receive afterwards, etc. Know your dealbreakers — if the partnership isn’t right, don’t force it.”

  1. Creating the content

There are two ways to create sponsored content: by repurposing existing brand content, or by starting from scratch.

If you’re repurposing, analyze your content’s engagement levels. Consider your owned content as a testing ground for which stories might work well as sponsored content.

If you’re starting from scratch, there are a lot of free resources that can help you along the way with things like coming up with a story idea, crafting a headline, or creating a video.

Finding a balance between your brand’s messaging and the publisher’s tone is a blend of art and science. Resist overselling your brand too early or frequently in the story, because data shows that it negatively affects engagement.

  1. Promoting the content

Without a distribution plan, even the greatest sponsored content can languish unseen. It’s essential to understand the distribution options available and select what’s right for your content based on its format, your target audience, and your budget.

Distribution options fall under three categories: owned, earned and paid. Organic (owned) reach is dwindling with Facebook’s recently announced newsfeed changes, so you should always budget for paid promotion. While there are hundreds of display networks and recommendation widgets available, we’ve found that paid social distribution is by far the best way to get sponsored content in front of quality audiences.

  1. Monitoring your content

Measuring the success of your sponsored content is the final piece of the puzzle, but make sure you’re tracking the right metrics. Advertising metrics focus on impressions and clicks, but good content metrics highlight what happens after the click. To do a proper comparison between sponsored content placed on different publishers, use a standardized analytics tool that also accurately measures content metrics like Active Reading Time.

Here are a few of the metrics we track on every piece of sponsored content.

  • Active Reading Time
  • Average Scrolled
  • Completion Rate
  • Conversions

Even distilled into these five short sections, buying sponsored content is not a simple job. It takes media buyers and content marketers years of experience to perfect the art. That said, once you complete this journey, your sponsored content can change how people feel and think about your brand.

The post The 5-minute guide to buying sponsored content from publishers appeared first on Digiday.

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iProspect Shakes Up Leadership With New U.S. CMO and First Chief Tech Officer

iProspect has named Belle Lenz its U.S. chief marketing officer and Joel Grossman its first-ever chief technology officer. Lenz was formerly communications director of the Americas for the global digital marketing agency’s parent, Dentsu Aegis Network. Grossman hails from Leapfrog Online, the performance shop iProspect acquired last year, where he served in the same role….

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TripAdvisor Shares Take Off On Revenue Beat, Improved Online Attribution

AdExchanger |

TripAdvisor said on its quarterly earnings call Thursday that it is part way through a significant reduction of its online marketing and has stabilized its advertiser auction platform after some buyer exits in the second half of last year cratered prices. TripAdvisor is overhauling its advertising investments due to improved data and attribution, CEO SteveContinue reading »

The post TripAdvisor Shares Take Off On Revenue Beat, Improved Online Attribution appeared first on AdExchanger.

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How French Directors Megaforce Captured the Spirit of London in Nike’s Wild New Ad

Some Nike commercials are as memorable for their camerawork, and the way they’re shot, as for their celebrity stars or message of inspiration. Guy Ritchie’s stunning 2008 spot “Take It to the Next Level” immediately comes to mind. A decade later, the brand’s newest effort from Wieden + Kennedy London, titled “Nothing Beats a Londoner,”…

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Most immigrants arrested by ICE have prior criminal convictions, a big change from 2009

Immigrants with past criminal convictions accounted for 74% of all arrests made by ICE agents in fiscal 2017.

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The U.S. Army’s Marketing Chief Briefed Congressional Staff About Adweek’s Coverage of Ongoing Audit

Staffers at the U.S. Senate and House Armed Services Committees recently called on the new head of the U.S. Army’s in-house marketing division to brief them on the organization’s advertising efforts, an Army spokesperson confirmed today. The meeting was prompted, at least in part, by Adweek’s recent coverage of those efforts. Elizabeth F. Wilson, who…

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What Is Musicbed and Why Did It Create Hypertargeted Out-of-Home Posters Calling Out Creatives?

If you’re a creative director at an agency you might tune out ads more than the average person–even if the copy is incredibly clever. At least, that was the thinking behind Musicbed’s hypertargeted out-of-home campaign which uses billboards, subway posters and windows to send messages to top creatives like Barton F. Graf’s Gerry Graf, 360i…

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