Digital Marketing Strategies for the Busy âWeb Masterâ by Sarah Parmenter
Itâs time for the second talk at An Event Apart Seattle (Special Edition). Sarah is talking about Digital Marketing Strategies for the Busy âWeb Masterâ. These are the notes I made during the talkâ¦
Recently Sarah was asked for her job title recently and she found it really stressful. She wasnât comfortable with âArt Directorâ. And, even though it would probably be accurate, âSocial Media Expertâ feels icky. A more fitting title would be âSocial Media Designerâ but thatâs not a thing. Ironically the term âWeb Masterâ probably fits us better than it did back in the â90s.
We have a bit of a defeatist attitude towards social media at the moment. It feels like that space has been claimed and so thereâs no point in even starting. But weâre still in the first 10,000 days in the web. There is no social media, Gary Vee says. Itâs a slang term for a collection of apps and websites that now dominate attention in our society.
Sarah likes the term âconsensual hallucinationâ (that I borrowed from William Gibson to describe how we did web design for years). It applies to social media.
Once upon a time we had to sell the benefits of just being online to our clients. Our businesses now need to get into the mindset of âHow can I help you?â and âWhat can I do for you?â Weâre moving away from being sales-y and getting down to being more honest. Weâre no longer saying âLook at what Iâve got.â
The average time spent on social media per day is 1 hour and 48 minutes. The average time spent on the kind of sites we make is 15 seconds.
Quarterly design reviews are a good idea â strategically designing your social media campaigns, reviewing successes and failures.
The first thing to mention is vanity metrics. You might need to sit down and have âthe talkâ with your boss or client about this. Itâs no different to having hit counters on our sites back in the â90s. While weâre chasing these vanity metrics, weâre not asking what people really want.
Google brought a roadshow to Sarahâs hometown of Leigh-on-Sea a while back. There was a really irritating know-it-all chap in the audience who put his hand up when other people were asking about how to get followers on social media. âYou need to post three times a day to all social media channelsâ, he said. âAnd you need to use the follow-unfollow method with a bot.â Sarahâs eyes were rolling at this point. Donât beg for likes and follows â youâre skewing your metrics.
âWhat about this Snapchat thing?â people asked. Irritating guy said, âDonât worry about â young people use it to send rude pictures to each other.â Sarah was face-palming at this point.
But this event was a good wake-up call for Sarah. We need to check our personal bias. She had to check her own personal bias against LinkedIn.
What we can do is look for emerging social networks. Find social networks that arenât yet clogged. People still fixate on displayed numbers instead of the actual connection with people.
We all have a tendency to think of the more successful social networks as something that is coming. Like Snapchat. But if youâre in this space, thereâs no time to waste. Sarah has been interviewing for social media people and itâs fascinating to see how misunderstood Snapchat is. One big misconception is that itâs only for youngsters. The numbers might be lower than Facebook, but thereâs a lot of video on there. Snapchatâs weakness is âthe oldsâ â the non-intuitive interface makes it cool with young people who have time to invest in learning it; the learning curve keeps the parents out. Because the moment that mums and grandmums appear on a social network, the younger folks get out. And actually, when it comes to putting ads on Snapchat, the interface is very good.
What can we do in 2018?
- By 2019, video will account for 80% of all consumer internet traffic. If youâre not planning for this, youâre missing out.
- Move to HTTPS.
- Make your website mobile ready.
Letâs ban the pop-up. Overlays. Permission dialogs. Theyâre all terrible. Google has started to penalise websites âwhere content is not easily accessible.â
Pop-ups are a lazy fix for a complex engagement problem (similar to carousels). Itâs a terrible user experience. Do we thing this is adding value? Is this the best way to get someoneâs email address? Theyâre like the chuggers of the web.
Hereâs an interesting issue: there are discount codes available on the web. We inform people of this through pop-ups. Then it when it comes to check-out, they know that a discount is possible and so they Google for discount codes. You might as well have a page on your own website to list your own discount codes instead of people going elsewhere for them.
Thereâs a long tail of conversions, particularly with more expensive products and services. Virgin Holidays has a great example. For an expensive holiday, they ask for just a small deposit up front.
Letâs talk about some specific social networks.
Facebook Pixel should be on your website, says Sarah. It collects data about your customers. (Needless to say, I disagree with this suggestion. Stand up for your customersâ dignity.)
Facebook is a very cheap way to publish video. Organic Facebook engagement is highest on posts with videos. (I think I threw up in my mouth a little just typing the words âorganicâ, âFacebookâ, and âengagementâ all in a row.) Facebook Live videos have six times the engagement of regular videos.
Sarah just said the word synergy. Twice. Unironically.
Facebook changed its algorithm last year. Youâre going to see less posts from business and more posts from people.
Facebook advertising does work, but if it doesnât work for you, the problem is probably down to your creative. (Weâre using the word âcreativeâ as a noun rather than an adjective, apparently.)
With Ad Words, measure success by conversions rather than impressions. You might get thousands of eyeballs looking at a form, but only a handful filling it out. You need to know that second number to understand how much youâre really paying per customer.
trends.google.com is useful for finding keywords that arenât yet saturated.
Google My Business is under-used, especially if you have a bricksânâmortar store. It can make a massive difference to small businesses. Itâs worth keeping it up to date and keeping it updated.
700 million active users (double Twitter, and three times WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger). A lot of people are complaining about the changed algorithm. Social networks change their algorithms to deal with the âproblems of success.â Instagram needs to help people with the discoverability of posts, says Sarah (again, I strongly disagree â it disempowers the user; I find Instagramâs we-know-best algorithm to be insultingly patronising).
Hashtags are the plumbing of the social media ecosystem. Theyâre not there for users to read. Theyâre for discoverability. Eleven hashtags are optimal.
Instagram Stories are a funny one. People are trying to use them to get around the algorithm, posting screenshots of photos to a story.
Archiving is a handy feature of Instagram. For time-sensitive content (like being closed during a snowstorm), itâs very useful to be able to archive those posts after the fact.
Planoly is a great website for managing your Instagram campaign. You can visually plan your feed. Only recently did Instagram start allowing scheduled posts (as long as theyâre square, for some reason).
Influencer marketing is a thing. People trust peer recommendations more than advertising. You can buy micro-influencers quite cheaply.
(Side note: I think Iâve seen this episode of Black Mirror.)
How much do influencers cost? Not as much as you think. The average sponsored post rate is $180.
Case study
We need to have a âDesign once. Use Everywhere.â mindset. Others weâll go crazy. Away is doing this well. They sell a suitcase with built-in USB chargers.
The brands dominating social media are those with the most agile teams with exceptional storytelling skills. Away are very brave with their marketing. Theyâve identified what their market has in common â travel â and theyâre aiming at the level above that. Theyâre playing the long game, bringing the value back to the user. Itâs all about âHow can I help you?â rather than âLook at what Iâve gone.â Awayâs creative is compelling, quirky, and fun. They work with influencers who are known to create beautiful imagery. Those influencers were given free suitcases. The cost of giving away those bags was much less than a traditional marketing campaign.
Their product is not front and centre in their campaigns. Travel is front and centre. They also collaborate with other brands. Their Google Ads are very striking. That also translates to physical advertising, like ads on airport security trays.
On Facebook, and on all of the social networks, everything is very polished and art-directed. Theyâre building a story. The content is about travel, but the through-line is about their suitcases.
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âTo finish, a semi-amusing story. Cath Kidston did a collaboration with Disneyâs Peter Pan. Sarah had a hunch that it might go wrong. On paper, the social campaigns seemed fine. A slow build-up to the Peter Pan product launch. Lots of lovely teasers. They were seeding Instagram with beautiful imagery the day before launch. There was a real excitement building. Then the coveted email campaign with the coveted password.
On the site, people put in their password and then they had to wait. It was a deliberately gated experience. Twenty minutes of waiting. Then you finally get to the store â¦and thereâs no âadd to cartâ button. Yup, they had left out the most important bit of the interface.
Sarah looked at what people were saying on Twitter. Lots of people assumed the problem was with their computer (after all, the web team wouldnât be so silly as to leave off the âadd to cartâ button, right?). People blamed themselves. Cath Kidston scrambled to fix the problem â¦and threw people back into the 20 minute queue. Finally, the button appeared. So Sarah looked at a few bits ad pieces, and when she hit âadd to cartâ â¦she was thrown back to the 20 minute queue.
Sarah reached out to try to talk to someone on the web team. No one wanted to talk about it. If you ever find someone who was on that team, put them in touch.
Anyway, to wrap upâ¦
Ensure the networks you are pursuing make sense for your brand.
Find your story for social media longevity.
See also:
This was originally posted on my own site.