Blog Archives

June 19th, 2008 | Posted by: admin

Came across this holographic video presentation from Cisco the other day and it got my brain running in overtime!

The presentation demonstrates how holographic conferencing can work but, to me it opens a whole new doorway of customer interaction.

Here’s what I was thinking:

A customer goes onto a business website and, instead of navigating through the site everything is voice recognition; a hologram of a personal shopper appears in front of the user and answers any questions they have with auto generated responses, offering an amazing user experience.

There could also be an actual person on the other end to answer questions, such as a doctor or customer service manager.

These ideas may be a bit ‘out there’ but if a creative marketing person can’t be out there with their ideas then who can!

The marketing avenues this could potential open up to businesses is endless and really exciting.

June 18th, 2008 | Posted by: admin

Working in digital marketing you have to keep on top of the next big thing and mobile search, or advertising is expected to be huge!

Juniper Research expects mobile services will exceed £500 million by the end of 2008, rising to £3.8 billion by 2013. This growth is largely due to the increased capabilities and speeds of mobile devices, such as the Apple iPhone and also down to cheaper roaming tariffs on the network suppliers.

How can a business make the most of the mobile search market?

Stage 1 – A business has created a mobile version of their website.

This is quite common now, with a number of sites creating a simple site, with a lower resolution and much faster loading times. The site is very basic and offers the users only what they would expect to need whilst out on the go.

Ideally these are the sort of sites you would expect to rank very well in the search engines when users search using a mobile version of the engines, such as Google mobile, offering the company less competition as this is still within the early adaptor stage of the technology adaption lifecycle.

It is, therefore recommended that any business that feels a mobile strategy would benefit them begins to invest in a mobile website as soon as possible. To create such as site I would say you should invest largely in user experience, more so than website design, as a user on a small mobile device will need quick links and simple navigation, design is not particularly important.

Stage 2 – A paid search campaign is created

Paid search has the benefit of offering very quick results to the highest bidder. A mobile platform offers the added advantage of the ability to directly call the business. This could offer a service of cost per call or free calls or both. Potential the mobile paid results could link to the mobile site but also display a ‘call’ link. This link will allow your mobile phone to call the company directly. This could be offered as a free call service to the user, how this would be implemented is questionable but the option maybe available.

It makes sense to offer the user this ‘call’ option as navigating a mobile site can be difficult and time consuming, if the user is in a hurry, let’s say they need a train time table quickly, the mobile site may be difficult to navigate or slow to load. The call option offers the user a quicker option and an alternative to the phone directory services, moving the search engines into direct competition with these services.

Stage 3 – A local business result

The next step to paying for the traffic through paid results is to get it for free through natural search. However, from a user’s point of view they may be using their mobile phone to find a local business. The local business results in Google is a perfect example of how this works, the only difference being that the majority of new mobile phones have built in GPS, meaning Google already knows where you are.

I have Google Maps on my Nokia N95 and love it. I use it regularly for its directions and the built in GPS really helps. The next step is to include a search facility for local businesses. Google maps can then show local points that these businesses can be found, much like the online version allows on a computer. By clicking on one of these links it will show you the business details, (much like Google local). The business could then link to the mobile version of the site or have a phone number with a link that allows you to directly call the company from your mobile phone.

All these features are more or less already available. The mobile users want easy and efficiency, design isn’t that important due to the size of the screen. A mobile internet experience should be built around ease of use and, therefore, so should the business mobile site.

Mobile advertising is just around the corner and a mobile site strategy should be considered for the digital strategy of most businesses.

June 17th, 2008 | Posted by: admin

Something I’ve been thinking about a fair bit lately, who should write the overall marketing strategy for a company?

What I mean by this is most companies will have several different agencies working on a specific goal in achieving a company’s overall objectives, a search agency, (or digital agency), a web designer, a PR company, a advertising agency, a creative agency, the list could go on for a while but who decides on the overall integration of these agencies to achieve the client’s objectives?

It’s a tricky one really because each agency may offer the same services as the other agencies so there tends to be a lot of backstabbing to make the competitor look bad. The digital agency could be only looking (or know about) the online activity without the regard of how offline activity could benefit them.

Integrated marketing communications is more important today than ever, with online activity having a visible response across all marketing mediums. A television advertisement could have people blogging about it or talking on Facebook. Offline PR can have very real response online. So why do we not have overall marketing strategies?

An integrated marketing communications agency or consultancy or in-house manager is one of the most important role in any business’ marketing activity, in my opinion they will write the overall strategy for all disciplines and detailed plans of which agency does what and when. The implementation is then fed back to the individual agencies to do what they are best at and take this plan and implement it in a creative manor.

The integrated plan will enable all agencies to work towards a common goal on a specific timeframe, making objectives more specific and measurable. If the agency falls behind on these deliverables then they are held responsible.

The way the marketing landscape works today it requires an integrated marketing communications specialist, I would say they need to work very closely within the client’s organisation, the ideal way to do this is to hire a specialist consultant in this discipline who can write and manage the strategy throughout the life of the project. Once the project has been completed a new consultant should be brought in to replace them to keep the company developing at a fast rate of change, constantly with new ideas from new people.

June 5th, 2008 | Posted by: admin

I heard a while back that Google is able to manipulate form results so that the Google bot can index the information after a form has been completed.

I have just seen an instance of this has actually happening on Brand Republic and i wouldn’t think Brand Republic will be too happy about it!

I searched in Google for ‘ad agencies tables‘ the first result is from Brand Republic. Having clicked on this you can clearly see the agency table: Brand Republic agency table

However, if you go directly through the URL then the user needs to enter their log in details:

Brand Republic login

I have tried to crawl the site as a Google bot and see if this is something that Brand Republic want to happen but the login details are still displayed to the Google bot, meaning Brand Republic are losing out on loads of user data through Google automatically bypassing their forms.

To resolve this i would suggest that Brand Republic and anyone else with the same issue uses their robots.txt files to exclude the search engines from crawling past the form pages. If you are unsure of how to do this please leave me a comment below and i’ll detail it for you or have a look at this post by Google.