Thursday 24 November 2011

Internet Advertising: Gone Offline : Excellent article by AFAQs

Many online players are stepping out to aggressively advertise on traditional media to get more business.

What is common to Flipkart, Olx, Quikr, Yebhi and Communitymatrimony apart from the fact that they are online brands? Well, they all share ad space with the Pepsis, the Cokes and the Airtels of the world on television. And are equally visible on print too.
According to industry estimates, in the last two years, online companies have increased their ad spends on TV by a staggering 445 per cent. In 2009, online companies together spent Rs 58.4 crore on television. That figure leapt to Rs 201 crore in 2010. This year, in just ten months (January to October) ad spends by online brands have raced way past the previous year's figure to Rs 315 crore. At this rate they could end up close to Rs 400 crore for 2011-more than six times that were spent two years ago.
The story is no different when it comes to advertising in print media. It's estimated that online brands occupied print ad space worth close to Rs 266 crore between January and October. Radio is smaller, but spends still went up from Rs 4.5 crore in 2009 to Rs 7.7 crore in 2010. This year (January-October), that figure has almost quadrupled to Rs 30 crore. These figures, however, do not include spends by media houses-or their associate companies-which use their own media, be it print, television or radio.
An example of the above would be the Times Group properties like Magicbricks or Indiatimes. The advertising spends against some of their names are so stupendous that only a media-linked or owned brand would have spent that kind of money. Naaptol (that had a private equity deal with the Times Group some time ago), for instance, consumed print media space worth Rs 555 crore this year. Leaving them out might be unfair but including their advertising spends would certainly distort the real picture.
What is it that is pulling so many new age companies to use traditional media to showcase themselves?
Inspired move
It was Naukri.com that started it all. Way back in 2004, it came up with its first TVC that had a painful, irritating boss at the centre of things. Two years after this came the unforgettable Hari Sadu TVC. After a hiatus, Hari Sadu made a comeback in 2010 and took the stage by storm again. Bharatmatrimony was another online pioneer that went the TV commercials way to spread its message.

Success stories like these sparked off an offline advertising rush among digital brands. For long, digital brands were quite happy about using the online medium to generate leads and invite potential customers on to their respective websites. As the search for new customers and brand building intensified, they moved to the traditional advertising route.
Today, most online companies spent 20-30 per cent of their total advertising and marketing budgets online. The rest goes into traditional media. Ravi Vohra, vice president (marketing), Flipkart, one of the largest advertisers on TV among online brands, says, "Traditional media helps create a feeling of reliability and authenticity amongst consumers." Is this trend the proverbial flash in the pan? No, believe industry experts. They opine that this trend is here to stay and will continue to grow together with the digital business.
It is easier now
Brands such as Naukri and Bharatmatrimony belong to the era of the dotcom boom, and they had their own set of challenges. Not every online brand could afford to advertise on mass media back then. It is different now.
According to Murugavel Janakiraman, founder and CEO, Consim Info (that owns properties such as Bharatmatrimony and Clickjobs), it took the company a long time before it launched its first campaign on television and other media because of a limited budget. He reminisces, "It was only after we got funding that we were able to launch our first campaign on television. The difference between then and now is that today it is easy to get funding, which in turns helps in building strong brands through offline advertising." True, but the pace has been quite surprising.
While things have moved fast in the last few years, the rate of acceleration has changed sharply in the last one year. According to VC Edge (a data service from VC Circle), between 2008 and 2011, online companies received investments of $691 million (Rs 3,455 crore). Interestingly, more than 50 per cent of this-$394 million (Rs 1,970 crore)-came in 2011 alone.
E-commerce businesses have hogged the bulk of all investments between 2008 and 2011. They accounted for 90 of the 115 deals in this while and attracted investment of $453 million (Rs 2,265 crore) of the total $691 million that flowed into online companies-or two thirds of the total. If you include travel sites as a form of e-commerce, throw in another 16 deals worth $149 million (Rs 745 crore). What explains this fascination with e-commerce companies?
Investor interest is fuelled by a number of factors. First, the Indian economy has been growing at 7-8 per cent per annum, and is expected to continue doing that for many years to come. Apart from the economic factors, this is being aided by a particular moment in the country's demographic history when the working Indians as a percentage of total population is at a happy high: in other words, dependents (both old and young) are relatively few. A high proportion of working people is a near-guarantee of continuous growth under the right circumstances.
Besides, statistical predictions show that online addicts will only grow exponentially. According to the latest reports from IAMAI, India is adding 5-7 million internet users every month, most of them in small towns and among the less-wealthy.
E-commerce companies are counting on the fact that the growth of media has created a desire to consume, which has spread beyond the metros into smaller town India. However, modern retail has not been able to keep pace with demand-in large part because of India's crazily expensive retail real estate rentals. In contrast, the internet, and especially mobile internet, is expected to record explosive growth (but with just 8 million users, mobile internet hasn't taken off). In conclusion, goes the investor logic, the e-commerce companies would be perfectly placed to capitalise on the boom in consumption, especially beyond the metros.
While heavy funding has allowed companies to advertise on mass media, a cynical explanation to this whole game of advertising and marketing is that it enables online brands impress their investors as well. This, in turn, helps them increase their valuation.
The last consumer
According to the latest report released by IAMAI, the number of Internet users is 112 million. As a statistic, that sounds quite impressive. However, the fact is that it is still less than 10 per cent of the country's overall population. Of the 112 million, 88 million come from urban cities and 24 million from the country's numerous villages and small towns.
Television plays a very important role in roping in consumers from the small towns since it offers the widest reach. A TV campaign that is further supported by print and radio (which still lags behind) is a combination that online brands are reluctant to let go of. They have also realised that in this blink-and-you-miss onslaught of ads, it pays to be on all media, though radio advertising doesn't seem to have caught their fancy as much as the first two.
Anita Nayyar, CEO (MPG India and South Asia), states that, with more and more online brands trying to grab the attention of the mass, the objective is to create an instant impact. She adds, "At the time of launch, an online brand can be seen everywhere be it television, print or radio. So, while TV and print provide the big reach, radio acts as a reminder medium, which is why the medium is used again and again."
Says Shashank Mehrotra, head-marketing, sales and strategic partnership, BigRock, a web services provider, "The awareness level for online companies is very low. Hence, traditional medium acts as a medium of evangelism. Moreover, the process of educating the customer also helps break the old mind-set and apprehension that a customer has while making any purchase online."
The need for educating the consumer is far more when it's a new category and the onus is always on the first mover. Akshay Mehrotra, chief marketing officer, PolicyBazaar.com, says, "Most e-businesses are first in the category. And, the first mover needs to spend heavily in building the category." Citing his own brand, he notes, "We were the first online insurance player to go on television. Our task was simpler-we only had to ask our audience to compare insurance models and then decide to buy."
Will online brands constantly keep hiking advertising spend as they go along? According to observers, in the first year of its launch, a major online brand would spend about Rs 30 crore, per annum. In the second, it is reduced to half of that.
Spends continue to drop in the subsequent years and will be driven by specific offers and reminders
There is a plan
Out of the Rs 300-odd crore that's spent by the online companies on television, 50 per cent comes from the online ecommerce players. As it happens, an e-commerce and deals site targets consumers between 18 and 45 years of age.
These brands not only need to be on television but also place themselves on general entertainment channels (GECs) - that's where the age spread is the most-although it pushes up spends as general entertainment channels turn out to be an expensive proposition.
As Pratik Mazumdar, head marketing and strategic relations, Yatra remarks, "At present, there are over 100 million internet users in the country. However, there is also a wide swathe of potential consumers between 25-45 years of age who remain untapped so far. That is the segment most brands are targetting Therefore, a mass-media campaign helps us in targeting the entire existing consumer base as well as help in getting new consumers on to the site."
Advertising online may be more effective because all it takes to bring a consumer to your site is a click on the link-and is much less expensive than advertising on television. 
Moreover, in the case of offline advertising, there is a danger that the target audience may forget about it all after the ad has been viewed. However, the surge in traditional advertising just goes to show that online brands are willing to sacrifice something to get a slice of the larger pie.
(Based on more interviews with Ajit Varghese, managing director- South Asia, Maxus and Motivator; Debraj Tripathy, managing director, Mediacom; Hitesh Oberoi, chief executive officer and managing director, Info Edge; Jiby Thomas, co-founder, Quikr; Kartik Iyer, managing director, Carat Media; Mohit Gupta, chief marketing offier, MakeMytrip, Naresh Gupta, chief strategy officer, iYogi, Sudha Natrajan, deputy CEO, Lintas Media; Roopam Garg, chief operating officer, ZenithOptimedia)

 

Wednesday 23 November 2011

How To Optimize YouTube Channel Videos


YouTube Optimizations

Youtube is the number one video sharing and uploading site, so it makes sense to use it wisely and optimize your Youtube channel effectively, making sure you recieve a good share of the traffic that is owed to you through your video creation efforts.
Optimizing your videos is just like a regular website, were you make sure certain aspects of your channels seo and meta data is accurately reflecting the content that you do upload and aspire to create, so the descriptions and titles of your videos have to be spot on to gain search engine traffic as you want most of your videos to engage in a viral nature, so that they spread as far and as wide as possible.
Video Titles
These are the number one priority for your video search ability, they provide a quick access for vistors to scan and simply read the title just to see if it is relevant for them, if it's not a good title they will more than likely pass on watching your video, the trick is to catch them with a good title that will either entice them with a question that you will provide the answer for in the video or you could promise exactly what they are looking for, if of course you do your research through googles keyword tool or other web based search analysis.
A title can be the top reason why people watch the video in the first place, it says exactly what it says on the tin or at least it should, try different combinations of video titles with the main keywords at the beginning of the title, how to videos work very well, but don't be limited to these all the time, a good mix of varying title structures can be seen as quality variety.
Video Descriptions
These are to compliment your videos titles and they describe and back up what the title says, so make it good and don't overuse your top keywords with keyword stuffing, there is a time and place for stuffing, so save it for your turkey!
A good description can be an extension of your title and can let slip a benefit of watching the video, it could be a problem solved or a solution to some technical detail, the key is a further encouragement to click play on the video and right at the start you could add a couple of web urls, so that they get noticed, because either before watching the video, but more than likely after they will click on them urls to see what you are all about, if they thought the video was useful or even entertaining.
Make the urls highly relevant so that they fit together really well and so that the title, the description and the links all work together in the case of the search engines and the web visitors, this is effective search engine optimization, so make it all count.
Video tags
The tags are the keywords and they must also be used to filter through all of the above points, so that they all case match and provide a high relevancy throughout the total videos meta data, an element of research goes along way to come up with the right keywords, so only the serious may advance at this stage, make sure your main keyword that you used in your title and throughout your meta description is present in the video tags, in fact the first ever tag should be this keyword and then a small handful of the other relating tags will do.
Whatever subject you know about, you should always undertake some form of keyword research, so that you can target your intended viewers, instead of missing the mark with unrelated keywords.
Channel Optimization
Your Youtube channel will have to be optimized too to really provide a focused area of videos that you've uploaded, a good rule of thumb is to do the same, but in a broader sense of keywords or even the same focused keywords if it's a tight niche, with a good title and related keywords again with your top website on your relevant subject, again all points have to be relevant, there's no use in promoting keywords, titles and descriptions to a link that goes to painting with acrylics if your meta data all points to something broad like art, it will need to be the similar keywords and relevancy of painting with acrylics.
An image in the background could also relate to your niche, aswell as your Youtube username, so think about this awhile, that's why a couple of accounts work best sometimes for different things. The photo can also be optimized by saving your photo file as a top keyword that will probably be tied to your username and this photo will accompany all of your videos on Youtube, you could use your own photo or something highly specific to your niche area, so long as you establish a brand or a consistency.
Sharing And Social Proofing
This is the ability to help your video viewers take your optimized videos to the next level and that is on a viral level, by sharing and commenting on your videos, all of this adds to your videos credibility, it shows to other viewers that the video may have been viewed alot or rated more times than other videos, if you leave all of this active then it will benefit your videos viral capacity.
I know for a fact that when I am viewing videos, I do look at how many times a video has been viewed and commented on and even rated to back up my decision to watch the video, a quick scan of the social proof lets me make that decision, never underestimate social proof, as in some cases it could triple your video views.
Video Annotations
These are like little sign posts on your videos,they help by pointing out certain things, like expanded notes and post its do on written work, they help to clarify and add a dimension to your videos if used properly, in some long videos like nearly 10 minutes they can help to break the uncertainty of seeing the video through, like if someone is talking but they seem to go off on a path of mundane dribble, then the annotations could possibly make the difference, although they are not the solution in some videos as they could be seen as a distraction.
Consider video annotations as subtitles and quick notes to extended thoughts and use them accordingly.
Sharing Your Videos
This should not be overlooked either, the mere fact of you uploading your videos and writing all of the meta data for your videos is just one step, because when it comes down to sharing your videos, others will share them in their own way, which of course helps, but you would want to share them too, on your website or blog and there is a certain way you would optimize, so that the information you went through on your Youtube account is not the same when you share your own videos.
The title, description and keywords would be slightly different in some aspects as you don't want to list something the same as you did on your Youtube channel, duplicate content filters and other algorythms are working against you in that way, so always try to be different in every linking scenario, it helps keep your linking strategy fresh and dynamic.

Tuesday 22 November 2011

Linked Marketing Strategy- 9 steps Guide


9 Steps to a Winning LinkedIn Strategy

Who Will You Connect With?

Who do you connect with beyond your coworkers, family and friends?

Start by asking yourself who you with to network with, what is your niche market and where do you find it? By answering these questions you will understand what types of contacts you need to seek out. Once you have made your initial connections, you can search your contact’s networks and request to be introduced.

Only add connections that are relevant to you and your business: perfect prospects, people you can learn from or those who can provide you with another connection or new business. Meaningless connections are just that, meaningless.

What Are Your Goals?

Figure out what your LinkedIn objectives are. Are you participating to gain business recognition? Are you participating to grow your network and build client list? Having a clear understanding as to why you have signed up for an account in the first place will help you achieve your ultimate goal.

Build a Great Profile

Your profile gives you credibility and should represent you and your business in a professional manner. Make sure to provide enough information to get noticed and differentiate you from the crowd.

Don’t forget to use SEO to your advantage. LinkedIn is a highly respected website by Google and LinkedIn profiles can rank high in SERPs. Attract further traffic by including key phrases Google users will be looking for.

Build Relationships

Social media is all about building relationships, creating trust and helping others. Get to know the people in your network. Don’t just accept connection requests. Reply to those invites and learn about this new person. Likewise, try to send a genuine request instead of the generic “I’d like to add you to my professional network” message when reaching out to new people. It will make you appear more human and less business-like.

Share great content, news and articles consistent with your brand. Use the “Network Status Update” feature often as a tool for sharing information, offering advice, posting company announcements, links to your recent blog articles etc.. The size of your network is valuable ONLY IF you’re communicating with that network on an ongoing basis.

Be a real person and let people know the real you. Being genuine opens many opportunities. Marketing jargon will surely close them.

Group Participation

LinkedIn groups can be very effective in building your brand, connecting with other professionals who share your interests and generating traffic to your website/blog. Once you join a relevant group you can participate in discussions and connect with its members. When you contribute to discussions and add your professional opinion you establish yourself as a professional and put yourself in front of potential clients.

Linkedin Groups have become very popular over the past six months – whatever your interests you’re sure to find at least one active group. There are industry-specific groups, trade and professional organization groups, college/alumni groups, location-specific groups, personal interest groups – find one relevant to your business and connect.

Request Recommendations

LinkedIn offers a great feature everyone should utilize – recommendations. This is a powerful feature because of the social proof that endorsements provide. You can request recommendations from past employers, co-workers, clients and of course the more, the better.

Answer questions

Another unique feature of LinkedIn you should be using is “Answers” (similar to Yahoo Answers). Answer questions posted there as often as you can this. This will help you establish yourself as an expert in your field and get yourself noticed by more people. Once you’re noticed by more people on LinkedIn, they’ll start connecting with you, eventually recommending you, and telling their connections about you, thereby growing your network.

Be Consistent

Stay active on an ongoing basis. Do a little something every day – 10 or 15 minutes, or at least several times a week. Consistent, frequent communication and activity keeps you “on the radar” screen of your network.

Backup Your Contacts

LinkedIn allows you to export your connection details to an Excel spreadsheet, a feature you should be using. If you don’t, you are at the mercy of LinkedIn – if they ban you or their business model changes you may loose access to this vital information instantly. To backup, simply click “export connection” link located on the bottom of your connections page.


Linkedin Action items- Initial level activities

Profile
X
ItemDescription
Basic ProfileComplete basic profile information including headline, summary, specialties, education, experience, associations, interests, honors & awards, and a headshot.
WebsitesInclude links to your company website, personal website, blog, Twitter page or other site that promotes you or your business.
Status UpdatesUpdate status updates several times per week to stay top of mind with your network.  Consider including links to blog posts, event invitations, videos, webinars, and podcasts in your status update.
Applications
X
ItemDescription
Blog Link / WordPressIf you have a blog, add the Blog Link application to display the latest posts directly on your profile.  If your blog is hosted through WordPress, consider using the WordPress Application instead of Blog Link.
SlideShareAdd the SlideShare application to your profile to display marketing collateral and presentations. Convert brochures or other marketing material into a presentation to use in this application.
Box.netIf you have marketing documents you’d like to make available for download, add Box.net to your profile.  Documents to share could include brochures, service/product sheets or forms.
Groups 
X
ActionDescription
Join GroupsSearch and join groups comprised of your target market or centers of influence.  Search for groups using specific search criteria such as professions, associations, geographical areas, or lifestyle interests.
Post NewsWhenever you publish a new article, blog post or newsletter to your website, share it with your groups.  Use the “submit a new article” function on the group’s News page to include a link to your article. Include the link on every group in which you belong.
Post DiscussionsShare information that does not apply to the News page with your groups by posting a discussion board message.  This can include links to videos, podcasts or event registration pages.
Respond to DiscussionsProvide answers to group discussion questions in order to spark conversation with a potential client or center of influence.
Events
X
ActionDescription
Post EventsPost online and offline events you are hosting to the LinkedIn Events page to promote your events.

Tracking Forums and Message Boards - A good free to use tool

Sometimes the most important conversations don’t happen on blogs. Forums and message boards can host conversations about your company and you’d never know about it. Don’t panic! Sites such as Boardtracker.com will keep an eye on popular forums for you and alert you by RSS if yourcompany is mentioned in a thread.



Thursday 17 November 2011

Excellent combination of ATL and Digital Advertising Mediums :Good ad by Reliance Mobile

Just saw this ad on the website www.afaqs.com . This Ad appears on television as well. Now they have leveraged Digital as a medium to integrate both the mediums viz : Above the line (ATL) and the Digital. I am sure you will like it. Please have a look...

The ad plays up when the website opens:

1: The lady appears on the right hand side of the screen



2.  Then, the lady appears on the left  hand side of the screen



3.  Finally the ad stops when she says 'Aur Aapka'



4. To see the AD again, you need to replay it using a replay button:


Wednesday 16 November 2011

SEO cheat sheet


(1) SEO-Friendly URL


(2) Old Dynamic URL

RewriteRule syntax explained

For a simple URL makeover:
RewriteRule ^oldstuff\.html$  newstuff.html
This checks to see if a page named oldstuff.html was what was requested.  If so, it transfers control to the file newstuff.html to generate the webpage and send it back to the client. The client (the bot or the browser) still thinks they're looking at a page called oldstuff.html.  No 301.




Other notes:  the ^ indicates the start of the page name, so that the rule will match oldstuff.html but notreallyoldstuff.html. The $ indicates the end of the filename, so that this rule will match oldstuff.html but notoldstuff.htmlly.  That slash in the middle?  Well, that 1st parameter is a regular expression (often referred to as regex), and in regular expressions, . is a wildcard that matches any single character.  Preceding it with a \ is called "escaping" the character, and indicates that we don't mean the wildcard character . but rather we actually mean a period.
Now, a 301:
RewriteRule ^oldstuff\.html$  newstuff.html [R=301,L]
This is a 301 redirect.  It's a redirect because we used the R flag inside the [].  It's a 301 because we put=301 after the R; if we'd left that out, it would be a 302 redirect, which indicates we just temporarily moved the page, and links to it wouldn't pass any link juice. 99% of the time you're going to want to use a 301, NOT a 302.


here are two parameters inside the [] brackets, separated by a comma.  That second parameter, the "L", stands for Last.  It says that if the regex pattern matches the page that was just requested, then after whatever processing is done (in this case, the 301 redirect to newstuff.html) then we can skip checking the page against any of the other rules in the .htaccess file.  99% of the time you'll want to use the L flag with your 301 redirects.

92% of the time you'll want to use the L flag with your non-301 rewrites.  Why not 99%?

Sometimes it's helpful to have multiple rewrite rules applied to an incoming URL.  Let's say you have a number of first-level folders which you want to rewrite, plus you have a number of subfolders you want to rewrite as well...each of which occurs in all of the 3 first-level folders.  You can do your main folder name substitution in one RewriteRule (preserving the next level folder as-is for now), then apply a secondRewriteRule that preserves the just-updated top folder while rewriting the next folder down.
Example:

Original URL:
  • /prods/metal1/necklace-11623.htm

RewriteRule #1 might substitute /jewelry-products/ for /prods/ so now you have:
  • /jewelry-products/metal17/necklace-11623.htm

RewriteRule #2 might substitute /gold/ for /metal17/ giving you:
  • /jewelry-products/gold/necklace-11623.htm

Now, for bonus points, let's say we have an entire catalog of jewelry pieces in their, each with a glorious photo named [product ID].jpg. How very convenient for our database and our programmer.  How terribly sucky for SEO for image search. Remember how I said that requests for images go through .htaccess as well? You can use RewriteRule to map the name of the image to something more friendly too, so that you can show Googlebot an image named something like:
  • /images/necklaces/gold/amethyst-11623.jpg

Instead of the real filename:
  • /images/prods/11623.jpg
Now, RewriteRule isn't the only way you can do a redirect or do an URL makeover. Next week I'll post about how to do this in your 404 error handler--there are some advantages to doing it there instead, including ease of debugging your translations, ability to translate from words in the URL to IDs by looking them up in your database, and performance benefits for large sites.