Showing posts with label internet marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label internet marketing. Show all posts

Monday, 18 August 2014

4 Ways to Improve Your Pinterest Marketing With Analytics

social media how toDo you use Pinterest to market your business?
Do you use Pinterest analytics to help you market better?
Most brands on Pinterest aren’t tracking their metrics. The companies that do are finding optimized engagement.
In this article I’ll share four ways to improve your Pinterest marketing efforts.
Note: There are a number of third-party apps that track Pinterest analytics for you. This article focuses on how those metrics can help you market more successfully, not on the tools themselves.
4 ways to improve pinterest marketing
Find out how to monitor Pinterest analytics and improve your marketing.

#1: Invest Resources in the Right Boards

Pinterest is built on the Interest Graph, not the Social Graph. In other words, Pinterest aims to connect you with people who share your passions, not necessarily the people you know (as most other networks do).
Each Pinterest board you create is a way to organize your pins by topic so others who are interested in the same topic can engage with your pins. You may or may not know those users, but you connect because you share images and products they appreciate (via pins and repins).
Pins, repins, likes and comments reflect that connection. To keep that engagement coming,compare your boards’ stats side by side to see which topics are most interesting to your target Pinterest audience.
pinterest analytics repin tracking
In addition to Pinterest’s analytics, there are stand alone tools you can use to track repins from your boards.
Look at virality (the average number of repins per original pin) in particular. Higher virality scores are a good thing—they mean your content is reaching interested users who repin it to their own boards.
Keep adding to the boards that are performing successfully, and make new boards based on similar topics.
Tip: If one of your boards isn’t panning out, don’t delete it. Even though that board isn’t part of your main focus anymore, users may have liked or repinned items from the board or may have linked to it from their blog. If you delete the board, those links are broken.

#2: Publish During Prime Pinning Times

As a company, when you pin is important. Timing is everything. Like your other social profiles, scheduling updates (or pins in this case) helps you reach the right audience at the right time.
So how do you know the best times to pin? The simplest way to find out is to use a pin-scheduling tool that tracks and recommends optimal sharing times. Alternately, you could mine data yourself and find your own sweet spots through trial and error.
When you schedule your pins to post during prime pinning times, you’ll see an initial bump in repins. When you pin something, many of your followers repin it, and many of their followers repin it as well.
pinterest post time suggestions
Use an analytics tool to find the best times to publish your pins.
That initial bump means more impressions, more traffic and perhaps more revenue. The resulting wider reach may lead to additional downstream exposure in category feeds, search results and new Interest pages.
Scheduling also helps you avoid bombarding your audience with too many pins at once.
If you’re a general Pinterest user (not posting as a company), you’ve experienced that moment when you realize you’ve just been pinning for three hours and forgot to eat dinner. And all of those pins you were sharing? They’ve taken over your followers’ stream.
That’s bad enough for a general user, but if a business over-pins, that can be a real problem—users unfollow you if you’re in their stream too often. Flooding followers’ feeds in a short period of time makes it feel like you’re being too salesy, even if you don’t pin again for the next three days. Scheduling pins lets you spread out pinning sprees for your followers’ sake.
Tip: Even if your market is local, find out who else loves your product and is sharing it—they may be halfway around the world! Scheduling pins lets you share your products in the time zones that match your overall audience, not just your immediate audience.

#3: Identify Influential Pinners and Advocates

Most brands on Pinterest don’t have a very large following, and that’s OK—we all start out at zero, right? It takes consistent effort over time to build a valuable earned media channel on Pinterest. And you’re going to need help along the way.
Paying attention to your Pinterest analytics helps you find two critical types of users who contribute to your Pinterest growth: influential pinners and brand advocates.

Find and connect with influential pinners who share your content on Pinterest.
Influential pinners reliably generate a fantastic number of impressions and repins. By analyzing which of your followers already has substantial reach, you can find potential allies in your quest to grow on Pinterest. Invest in these relationships for the long-term.
Users who are already pinning directly from your website or repinning your pins are sending you a signal that they love your content, products or brand. Lean into that. These brand advocates help you grow your presence.

#4: Get Instant Product Feedback

Pinterest data takes the guesswork out of stocking the shelves or choosing which product or service to develop next. It’s like having an enormous online focus group without spending tens of thousands of dollars.
By posting images of potential new products on Pinterest, you can observe which products take off and which ones don’tAnalyze that data by geographic area, and then use that information to better predict which items will sell (and where) before you place an order.
social media examiner pin by cynthia sanchezproduct pin comparison
Analytics tools make it easier to track customer response to product pins.
Such predictive merchandising could become a sustainable competitive advantage in industries such as retail, ecommerce, automotive sales and more.
Wrapping Up
Analytics can be a double-edged sword for marketers. We know we should guide our tactics with data, but gathering the necessary metrics and figuring out how to apply insights is time-consuming, so we often stop at simple reporting.

Pinterest offers a wealth of marketing feedback. It’s worth setting aside some time to delve into the analytics to see what is or isn’t working. You’ll likely find trends you can use as an advantage over competitors.

Written by Daniel Maloney August 2014 to view original article Click Here

Friday, 15 August 2014

How important are digital communications in 2014?

If you need hard facts and charts for reports and presentations to convince others of the growing importance of digital communications and technologies in influencing the purchase decision today, the Ofcom Communications report is one of the most comprehensive sources available. That’s why we feature it at number 1 in our Top 10 Free Digital Marketing Statistics sources listing.

It’s published each August for the UK and includes an international digital media statistics benchmark in its December edition.
The latest update for the UK has just been published and in this post I have selected from the 61(! ) charts available to ask what I think are some of the of the most important questions about trends in digital communications which we hope could be useful for your next presentation.

Question 1. How many people have access to the Internet and digital media in 2014?

As expected, broadband access now accounts for nearly all access, but what is interesting in the latest data is the continued sharp growth of mobile Internet use which now accounts for over half of all access “Internet on mobile”.
4.17 household internet use

Question 2. How much time is spent online?

This is a surprise. Browsing time on desktop actually fell by 14.7% and the difference was not made up by the 2.5% growth in mobile Internet browsing.
4.21 Time spent browsing
I would speculate based on other data from Pew Internet that this would seem to reflect more time spent in messaging apps such as Whats App, Viber and Snap Chat.
Total browsing time per month at 31 hours 24 minutes is certainly significant at over a day per month, but leaves plenty of time for other activities, including consuming traditional media.

Question 3. Which digital devices are used to access the Internet?

The Ofcom research has a lot of detail on the type of device used to access the Internet in each household. As you will know multi screening and multiple digital device use is commonplace. This data shows that there are now multiple laptops, tablets and smartphones in each household
4.29 houselhold device usage
If we look at this from an individuals’ point of view of their primary access we can see that mobile (smartphone or tablet) is the primary Internet access device for over half of users 52%).
4.32 device usage

Question 4. Which activities is the Internet used for?

I have been covering this in my books for a long time now and the picture doesn’t change that greatly. What’s interesting though is frequency of active use.
Ofcom used to ask about using the Internet for different activities in the last 3 or 6 months, but now it’s interesting how frequent these activities are in the last week showing really active use:
  • 48% have used a social network in a last week
  • 44% have banked online in the last week
  • 35% made an online purchase in the last week
4.37 types of use

Question 5. Which search platforms are used?

We tend to think that Google accounts for the vast majority of searches, but this data reminds us that Bing and Yahoo! are still significant platforms to reach audiences online.
4.40 search usage sites
We also get a picture, courtesy of the comScore MMX data or the importance of mobile search. Mobile only use is still relatively low on Google at 12%, but up to 30% on Bing.
4.41 search website use

Question 6. How many people in different age group use social networks?

We’re often asked this question so it’s interesting to see this breakdown.
4.42 social network use
The popularity of social networks are broken down also. All the main social media networks continue to grow in the UK.
4.43 Social network use
A full breakdown by Gender isn’t available unless you subscribe to comScore or you can check out our Global WebIndex compilation of Social media use statistics.
Social network access via mobile dominates whether it’s app or browser.
4.47 App and browser use

Question 7. What is the expenditure on digital media?

Given the increasing Internet use we have seen in the other charts a final question looks at the overall importance of digital media.
4.3 Digital marketing statistics
This data via WARC shows that digital media are now the leading media, but with TV, press and direct mail still significant. I’m not sure I believe the prediction that 75% of media spend will be online within 5 years, since it’s a big shift in a short time, but the other charts certainly show increased investment is warranted.
To view the original blog Click Here