Skip to content

Bradley Johnson Productions Posts

What’s the most useful list insight you’ve discovered this month?

https://conversionsciences.com/why-marketing-leads-dont-turn-into-sales-what-to-do-about-it/

Having trouble viewing the text? You can always read the original article here: Why Marketing Leads Don’t Turn into Sales and What to do About It

What stands in the way of converting marketing leads to sales and revenue? Sammy James has the data and a solution for marketing leads that seem to evaporate when sent to sales. Do you remember how we got movie times before the internet? For a large part of my audience, the answer might be “what […]

The post Why Marketing Leads Don’t Turn into Sales and What to do About It appeared first on Conversion Sciences.

How will you apply the tips from this post?

https://wordtothewise.com/2020/03/moment-of-zen/

Things are very unsettled right now. Completely and totally unsettled. Even for those of us who are well geared up for and used to working from home are struggling in our current situation.

We went for a walk down the canal on Tuesday, and it was very quiet, with almost no traffic on the street. There were various couples and families walking, but most were doing a good job at social distancing.

Stay safe. Wash your hands. Don’t touch your face.

2020 April PAD Challenge Countdown: T-minus 10

Welcome to the first ever April PAD Challenge Countdown, in which Robert Lee Brewer shares a prompt and a poem (to get things started) in the 10 days leading up to the 2020 April Poem-A-Day Challenge. Let the poeming begin!


Welcome to this first ever countdown to the April PAD Challenge! This was an idea suggested to me on Facebook by Mo Hurley, and well, it’s just a good idea with so many people locked indoors with little to do but read and write poems. So let’s get at it!

For today’s prompt, write a time poem. I don’t know about you, but I’ve felt in a time warp the past couple weeks—with a day feeling like a week (or even a month) and a week feeling much longer. So your poem can about that, or it can deal with time travel. Or write about being late, being early, or right on time. Heck, do a countdown. There’s no time like the present.

Remember: These prompts are just springboards; you have the freedom to jump in any direction you want.


Re-create Your Poetry!

Revision doesn’t have to be a chore–something that should be done after the excitement of composing the first draft. Rather, it’s an extension of the creation process!

In the 48-minute tutorial video Re-creating Poetry: How to Revise Poems, poets will be inspired with several ways to re-create their poems with the help of seven revision filters that they can turn to again and again.

Click to continue.


Here’s my attempt at a Time Poem:

“Present Tense”

I have a tendency to get worked up
about the future, to get choked up

about the past. But there’s no better
moment, in my mind, than this one,

in your arms, listening to the birds
breaking up the morning’s silence.

The post 2020 April PAD Challenge Countdown: T-minus 10 by Robert Lee Brewer appeared first on Writer's Digest.

What’s the most useful marketing tip you’ve found from this post?

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/zeqOuK37QIQ/

2020 March 20 MarketingCharts Chart

2020 March 20 MarketingCharts Chart

Some B2B Brands Are Falling Short On Personalization: Study
Some 42 percent of B2B marketers see their marketing efforts as not being fully personalized, despite 77 percent seeing personalized marketing as delivering better customer relationships — two of several insights relevant to digital marketers contained in recently-released study data. MediaPost

YouTube to automate more video reviews in light of staffing challenges caused by coronavirus
Caronavirus concerns have led YouTube and other social media platforms to turn partially to artificial intelligence (AI) for flagging troublesome content, as temporary in-house human staff shortages have arisen. The temporary measures include possible delays in appeals processes, and increased instances of falsely-flagged content, YouTube and other social networking firms have announced this week. Marketing Land

Facebook’s Testing a New Option to Cross-Post Facebook Stories to Instagram
Digital marketers may eventually be able to enjoy the type of easy brand message cross-posting from Facebook to Instagram that they have been able to do for some time in the opposite direction, as Facebook has begun testing the new cross-posting functionality, the social media giant recently announced. Social Media Today

2020 Budget Reductions Driven By Coronavirus Concerns Could Cost Media Around $3B In Ad Spend
As much as $3.1 billion in lost advertising media revenue could accumulate due to coronavirus concerns, with a minimum of around $1 billion in losses, according to newly-released forecast report data from Myers. MediaPost

New Report Looks at Social Platform Performance Benchmarks by Industry
Overall brand engagement rates on Instagram fell by 23 percent in 2019, according to recently-released RivalIQ report data of interest to digital marketers. The firm’s annual Social Media Industry Benchmark Report also showed that the median posting frequency across Instagram, Facebook and Twitter dropped for all industries by some five percent during 2019. Social Media Today


.

2020 March 20 Statistics Image

Most site content (69%) not seen by customers and prospects, study finds
Nearly 70 percent of the web’s content is not seen by consumers, according to recently-released report data examining nine verticals. The 2020 Digital Experience Benchmark report also shows that while organic activity accounts for the most traffic, a large majority of online content has remained unseen. Marketing Land

The Top Challenges Facing Creative Teams That Develop Content
Unhealthy working pace and too many work expectations top the list of challenges confronting creative marketing teams, according to recently-released content creation report data. The report also shows that 65 percent of creative projects are approved within three to five rounds of review.MarketingProfs

Facebook Begins User Testing of New ‘Horizon’ VR Social Platform
Facebook has been testing a virtual reality (VR) social networking app called Horizon, the social media giant has noted, with a recent beta test offering a glimpse of a future advertising platform that some marketers will eventually to target. Social Media Today

Can Revenue Operations Align B2B Professionals?
84 percent of B2B professionals see shared revenue responsibility resting with marketing and sales, and most want to boost interactivity between sales, marketing, and customer success teams, according to recently-released B2B revenue operations study data of interest to online marketers. MarketingCharts

ON THE LIGHTER SIDE:

2020 March 20 Marketoonist Comic

A lighthearted look at virtual collaboration by Marketoonist Tom Fishburne — Marketoonist

Employee Working From Home Frantically Trying To Finish Report By End Of Days — The Onion

TOPRANK MARKETING & CLIENTS IN THE NEWS:

  • Lee Odden — Round-up: CoronaVirus and Email Marketing — Only Influencers
  • Lee Odden — Bra att veta om B2B influencer marketing 2020 (infograf) [In Swedish] — Pontus Staunstrup

Do you have your own top B2B content marketing or digital advertising stories from the past week? Please let us know in the comments below.

Thanks for taking the time to join us, and we hope you’ll come back again next Friday for a new array of the most relevant B2B and digital marketing industry news. In the meantime, you can follow us at @toprank on Twitter for even more timely daily news. Also, don’t miss the full video summary on our TopRank Marketing TV YouTube Channel.

The post Digital Marketing News: B2B Brand Personalization & Revenue Alignment Studies, Coronavirus Ad Spend Impact, & Facebook’s New Horizon VR appeared first on Online Marketing Blog – TopRank®.

What’s the most helpful marketing tip you’ve uncovered from this post?

https://feeds.feedblitz.com/~/620022252/0/convinceandconvertconsulting/

How to Select the Best Media Monitoring Solution for Your Company

Media monitoring solutions are not one size fits all. There are dozens of providers and even more use cases, so start by figuring out what you want your media monitoring platform to do.  Are you looking to track traditional and social or are you looking for strategic insights? When it comes to monitoring, measurement and evaluation, listening for business intelligence is very different to monitoring for mentions, so know your priorities.

Before you start, ask the CEO or the CMO what success looks like. “The only way to start a measurement program is by being very clear on your objectives,” says Katie Paine, CEO of Paine Publishing. “Nine times out of 10 they’ll say your objective is protecting their reputation.”

Media Monitoring Measurement Objectives

To do that, at the very least you need to be able to capture and analyze what’s being said about your company, your competitors and the categories in which you compete so you can determine what the widespread beliefs are. It’s tough to interject your point of view into a conversation if you don’t know what people are talking about.

Manually reading traditional and social coverage is generally pretty easy for start-ups, cause there’s not as much being said. But for more established brands, the challenge is digesting and summarizing a large number of articles and online conversations in real time, and then analyzing them with algorithms that don’t understand the meaning of the keywords they’re tracking.

When defining your objectives, understand that if accuracy is mission critical, you’ll need to allocate sufficient resources to review your clips manually to determine widespread beliefs.

AI in Media Monitoring

Many media monitoring services claim they already have artificial intelligence capable of accurately analyzing news articles and social media posts for sentiment. They say their algorithms can automatically evaluate your reputation in real time.

But here’s the thing you need to know. It’s easy to count and score keywords in sentences for sentiment. When you consider the multiple ideas, concepts, topics and sub-topics that can be included in a single news article, accurately interpreting sentiment requires more than just natural language processing. What’s required is natural language understanding.

While AI can help process language in circumstances where the domain is narrow and the goal is concrete, when it comes to multi domain thinking, common-sense reasoning and natural language understanding, AI still falls short and according to most data scientists, it’ll probably be another 40–50 years until machines can process information at that level.

There’s also a very real chance we will never be able to build machines that can reason as well as humans can. According to Kai-Fu Lee, author of AI Superpowers, the risk of replacement for public relations specialists is among the lowest of all professions.

PR won’t be replaced by machines anytime soon. “It also cannot engage in cross domain thinking on creative tasks or ones requiring complex strategy, jobs whose inputs and outcomes aren’t easily quantified,” says Lee.

Get the Steak, Not the Sizzle 

Most services have access to the same traditional and social media news feeds, which is square one. Next, you apply Boolean keyword filters to hone in on the right information. At that, there is value to leveraging narrow AI to evaluate sentiment at the entity level, tag articles by concepts and detect geographical origin. And you can try out relevance and sentiment filters as well. But be prepared in step three to check the last two for accuracy.

Strategic insights are at the intersection of media intelligence and external data, which is why the ability to import stuff like call center transcripts and sales figures is so important, so you can spot patterns and figure out how media activity correlates to revenue.

When considering the different media monitoring platforms, rather than focus solely on breadth and depth of content or fancy AI filters, figure out if the platform has the features and capabilities you need to achieve your objectives.

“Do you really need broadcast? Because in my experience, everything winds up online anyway. Do you really need to spend an extra $24k a year, cause that’s how much it could cost. Who’s going to be doing set-up? Do you have a team of data scientists who can write Boolean or are you going to be relying on them to do it? What about reporting? Do you want automated reports or are you going to be doing that yourself? A lot of the automated reports are very pretty, but do they show value?,” asks Jonny Bentwood, Global Head of Data & Analytics at Golin.

Media Monitoring Interview Questions

To help you assess media monitoring platform providers, here’s a list of open ended questions you can use to stimulate exploratory discussions about services:

  • Does it get everything or just a snippet?
  • Does it get photos and graphics?
  • What outlets do we need and does it capture them?
  • If it doesn’t, can those outlets be added?
  • Does it do social, traditional and broadcast? What about podcasts?
  • How many KPIs are available to choose from on your platform?
  • How much historical data is accessible?
  • Can I bring in third-party data and run comparisons?
  • Can I bring in usage data from my social networking profiles?
  • Does it have language translation?
  • Does it have image recognition so you can search images and video for logos?
  • Does it measure KPIs around engagement?
  • Does it understand virality, can I set my own virality parameters and how is viral amplification presented/displayed?
  • Can I group the media outlets that matter most to me?
  • Are there advanced, rules-based alerts you can set up via email and text?
  • Instagram is notoriously difficult to monitor. To what extent can they get such data? If they say they can get all of Instagram’s data they’re either scraping it illegally or lying.
  • Have you looked at the artificial intelligence layer and evaluated specific articles for relevancy or sentiment scores?
  • Do they comply with copyright laws?
  • Do they indemnify clients against copyright violations on their part?

The other two things to ask about are onboarding and user support. The biggest cost of changing media monitoring platforms is the time required to train staff so ease of use matters a lot because it saves you money if people can figure out how to use the service themselves.

media monitoring solutionsBut even if the interface is intuitive, you’re still going to need support to leverage the full potential of the platform. Some platforms have dedicated customer success teams devoted to helping you get your service up and running properly so find out what kind of onboarding services and if structured, ongoing training is provided.

For a more comprehensive look at the state of media monitoring technology, download my new 2020 Media Monitoring Buyer’s Guide which includes a side-by-side features comparison grid of all the major providers, a user rating chart with my reviews and analysis.

The post How to Select the Best Media Monitoring Solution for Your Company appeared first on Content Marketing Consulting and Social Media Strategy.

How will you implement the tips from this post?

https://feeds.feedblitz.com/~/620022252/0/convinceandconvertconsulting/

How to Select the Best Media Monitoring Solution for Your Company

Media monitoring solutions are not one size fits all. There are dozens of providers and even more use cases, so start by figuring out what you want your media monitoring platform to do.  Are you looking to track traditional and social or are you looking for strategic insights? When it comes to monitoring, measurement and evaluation, listening for business intelligence is very different to monitoring for mentions, so know your priorities.

Before you start, ask the CEO or the CMO what success looks like. “The only way to start a measurement program is by being very clear on your objectives,” says Katie Paine, CEO of Paine Publishing. “Nine times out of 10 they’ll say your objective is protecting their reputation.”

Media Monitoring Measurement Objectives

To do that, at the very least you need to be able to capture and analyze what’s being said about your company, your competitors and the categories in which you compete so you can determine what the widespread beliefs are. It’s tough to interject your point of view into a conversation if you don’t know what people are talking about.

Manually reading traditional and social coverage is generally pretty easy for start-ups, cause there’s not as much being said. But for more established brands, the challenge is digesting and summarizing a large number of articles and online conversations in real time, and then analyzing them with algorithms that don’t understand the meaning of the keywords they’re tracking.

When defining your objectives, understand that if accuracy is mission critical, you’ll need to allocate sufficient resources to review your clips manually to determine widespread beliefs.

AI in Media Monitoring

Many media monitoring services claim they already have artificial intelligence capable of accurately analyzing news articles and social media posts for sentiment. They say their algorithms can automatically evaluate your reputation in real time.

But here’s the thing you need to know. It’s easy to count and score keywords in sentences for sentiment. When you consider the multiple ideas, concepts, topics and sub-topics that can be included in a single news article, accurately interpreting sentiment requires more than just natural language processing. What’s required is natural language understanding.

While AI can help process language in circumstances where the domain is narrow and the goal is concrete, when it comes to multi domain thinking, common-sense reasoning and natural language understanding, AI still falls short and according to most data scientists, it’ll probably be another 40–50 years until machines can process information at that level.

There’s also a very real chance we will never be able to build machines that can reason as well as humans can. According to Kai-Fu Lee, author of AI Superpowers, the risk of replacement for public relations specialists is among the lowest of all professions.

PR won’t be replaced by machines anytime soon. “It also cannot engage in cross domain thinking on creative tasks or ones requiring complex strategy, jobs whose inputs and outcomes aren’t easily quantified,” says Lee.

Get the Steak, Not the Sizzle 

Most services have access to the same traditional and social media news feeds, which is square one. Next, you apply Boolean keyword filters to hone in on the right information. At that, there is value to leveraging narrow AI to evaluate sentiment at the entity level, tag articles by concepts and detect geographical origin. And you can try out relevance and sentiment filters as well. But be prepared in step three to check the last two for accuracy.

Strategic insights are at the intersection of media intelligence and external data, which is why the ability to import stuff like call center transcripts and sales figures is so important, so you can spot patterns and figure out how media activity correlates to revenue.

When considering the different media monitoring platforms, rather than focus solely on breadth and depth of content or fancy AI filters, figure out if the platform has the features and capabilities you need to achieve your objectives.

“Do you really need broadcast? Because in my experience, everything winds up online anyway. Do you really need to spend an extra $24k a year, cause that’s how much it could cost. Who’s going to be doing set-up? Do you have a team of data scientists who can write Boolean or are you going to be relying on them to do it? What about reporting? Do you want automated reports or are you going to be doing that yourself? A lot of the automated reports are very pretty, but do they show value?,” asks Jonny Bentwood, Global Head of Data & Analytics at Golin.

Media Monitoring Interview Questions

To help you assess media monitoring platform providers, here’s a list of open ended questions you can use to stimulate exploratory discussions about services:

  • Does it get everything or just a snippet?
  • Does it get photos and graphics?
  • What outlets do we need and does it capture them?
  • If it doesn’t, can those outlets be added?
  • Does it do social, traditional and broadcast? What about podcasts?
  • How many KPIs are available to choose from on your platform?
  • How much historical data is accessible?
  • Can I bring in third-party data and run comparisons?
  • Can I bring in usage data from my social networking profiles?
  • Does it have language translation?
  • Does it have image recognition so you can search images and video for logos?
  • Does it measure KPIs around engagement?
  • Does it understand virality, can I set my own virality parameters and how is viral amplification presented/displayed?
  • Can I group the media outlets that matter most to me?
  • Are there advanced, rules-based alerts you can set up via email and text?
  • Instagram is notoriously difficult to monitor. To what extent can they get such data? If they say they can get all of Instagram’s data they’re either scraping it illegally or lying.
  • Have you looked at the artificial intelligence layer and evaluated specific articles for relevancy or sentiment scores?
  • Do they comply with copyright laws?
  • Do they indemnify clients against copyright violations on their part?

The other two things to ask about are onboarding and user support. The biggest cost of changing media monitoring platforms is the time required to train staff so ease of use matters a lot because it saves you money if people can figure out how to use the service themselves.

media monitoring solutionsBut even if the interface is intuitive, you’re still going to need support to leverage the full potential of the platform. Some platforms have dedicated customer success teams devoted to helping you get your service up and running properly so find out what kind of onboarding services and if structured, ongoing training is provided.

For a more comprehensive look at the state of media monitoring technology, download my new 2020 Media Monitoring Buyer’s Guide which includes a side-by-side features comparison grid of all the major providers, a user rating chart with my reviews and analysis.

The post How to Select the Best Media Monitoring Solution for Your Company appeared first on Content Marketing Consulting and Social Media Strategy.