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Interview with Jessica Hawthorne-Castro, CEO and Chairman, Hawthorne

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Jessica Hawthorne-Castro
Interview with Jessica Hawthorne-Castro, CEO & Chairman, Hawthorne

Jessica Hawthorne-Castro
CEO and Chairman, Hawthorne

[easy-profiles profile_twitter=”https://twitter.com/hawthornecastro” profile_linkedin=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessicahawthornecastro/”]
[mnky_testimonial_slider][mnky_testimonial name=”” author_dec=”” position=”Designer”]“Although engagement can be measured across screens and devices, there are still limitations on the transactional conversion to a sale.”[/mnky_testimonial][/mnky_testimonial_slider]

On Marketing Technology

MTS: Tell us about your role and how you got here? What inspired you to join a marketing analytics company?
I started my career on the client side as an agent for the talent agency William Morris Endeavor, and when I made the transition over to Hawthorne, I very quickly saw the huge opportunity in attribution systems, advanced data analytics and accountability in the advertising industry.

From the very beginning, over 30 years ago, Hawthorne was determining each campaign’s ROI by developing some of the first attribution systems in advertising. We’d air something on TV and be able to track the response and orders, usually with a direct 800 number associated with the campaign and continuity tracking to calculate the media efficiency ratio of client product sales per media airing. It was a simple form of tracking back then, but it helped determine the exact ROI for every dollar of media being invested on our clients’ behalf. Hawthorne was unique in ROI tracking for advertising, and when I joined the agency over 10 years ago, this became a passion of mine.

MTS: Given the changing dynamic of online engagement with customers, how do you see marketing attribution models evolving by 2020?
Touchpoints with consumers are becoming more and more specific and customized. That’s the natural progression and it’s not new. With that customization, every other piece of the engagement puzzle feels the impact of a tenfold increase as well. So that means your creative becomes more specific and targeted to the consumers, which means an increased investment in creative and resources as well. You can’t just create one campaign for the entire brand. You must create multiple creative and digital elements for a specific type of person customized for how they want to interact with the brand. Your creative has to be on steroids and you have to have multiple versions and iterations of it.

Those touchpoints are impacting the media as well. Virtually gone are the days of “adults 18-35” market segmentation and hyper segmentation is in place. You’re just not going to hit everyone in that bracket anymore. Content is customized across each platform and you have to be coming at it from every angle. For example, if your target customers consume content on any type of video platform, that can include traditional TV and video viewing on over-the-top devices or video-on-demand, and that could be through a physical television or a computer or a smartphone. By 2020, consumers will be tuning in to content across all platforms and channels on connected TVs allowing options on Huffington Post as easily as ABC.   People are still consuming a lot of content, so it’s not that content is going away, it’s just more dispersed based on consumer choice now.

From a marketing perspective, everyone is working harder because the consumer is demanding that they work harder. Consumers aren’t as interested in a brand as they used to be. A recent article in Ad Age about the “millennial dilemma” basically said millennials don’t care about your brand. That’s true. It is the “Me” generation so that’s how you have to go about it. It does mean more of an investment either from the agency or the brand side, and it may mean smaller margins for people who were used to making more, but you can’t fight it. That’s the way the world is going, and it’s why you have to think a little bit smarter and incorporate things like advanced analytics for targeting and automation to get some economies of scale in terms of the investment.

One thing with analytics is that very smart teams of data scientists are working hard at constantly improving it, but at the end of the day the next big iteration will be artificial intelligence (AI). An automated analytics program that “learns” and naturally becomes smarter and smarter will be the next big shift for data analytics. We’re not quite there yet, and there are a lot of conversations among some of the top scientists in the world about the meaning of AI to humans right now. It’s important that we set the ground rules now so we’re not acting out a real-life Terminator movie in the future. So, AI is not here yet, but it’s certainly on the horizon.

MTS: How does Hawthorne extend the benefits of audience attention and conversion analytics to businesses for maximum ROI in media and creative?
Because of the multi-platform reach that’s necessary for today’s advertisers, analytics need to be more robust. This means the investment on the R&D side with data and analytics is very heavy. Analytics have to continually become smarter and smarter to keep up, so R&D investment is vital for us here at Hawthorne and for our clients.

Hawthorne has a long history of accountability and we invest our R&D to build more advanced attribution systems and proprietary analytics. When we’re building an advertising campaign, we’re building a company and a brand as well. All types of advertising demand beautifully-branded campaigns, but they also should demand accountability. That accountability is what drives revenue; after all, the client should make money on their campaign.

If a company sees direct financial growth from their campaign, it makes sense to keep investing in it. I’m a straightforward Midwesterner, and this seemed very simple to me: If you advertise you should make money on that advertising and your company should grow. That’s what we do for our clients, and today we can track data from a number of sources to make clear connections to the campaign’s ROI. From web data, to POS data, to where their leads are coming in, everything is tied into our system so we can see the exact ROI for every dollar of media investment. It’s pretty exciting stuff.

MTS: How should CMOs leverage customer intelligence and intent data to deliver better omnichannel personalization and customer experiences?
A CMO’s job is to create a personalized interaction for their brand with the audience which should ultimately drive both engagement and revenue growth for the brand. And it’s the agency’s job to put forth a strategic creative and media plan for engagement that covers all of the touch points and interactions to facilitate that personalized interaction for the CMO.

MTS: What’s the biggest challenge that cross-screen attribution models fail to address in measuring media trends and buying behaviors? How does Hawthorne help overcome these challenges?
There is still a feeling that the ultimate “holy grail” of attribution models has not been created yet. That’s partly because mobile data is not accessible. The cell phone companies own that, so there’s a gap in being able to bring in that piece. Let’s say a spot runs on an offline platform and you search for that product on your phone or computer. We can attribute that individual situation now, but there’s no formal way to do it on a mass scale yet. Although engagement can be measured across screens and devices, there are still limitations on the transactional conversion to a sale.

Hawthorne has very advanced analytics and attribution with our existing tools today that covers an extensive amount of data attribution. Right now, we take web and digital information, such as every time someone is logging on to the brand site, and we can track it from beginning to end, from the initial touch point to where they go on the screen, to when they sign out. We have heat-mapping and we can see where they are hovering their mouse. We take all of that input, the media data, demographic data for the media, spend, all of the POS data, any of the data we can identify, and we run it through our attribution systems to pinpoint that type of person. We can also do it by IP address. We pinpoint that type of person, identify what creative is working and what’s not, and alter a campaign if needed. That’s today’s recipe for advanced analytics and attribution. We’re seeing, quite literally, how much money a client is making on their media investment by evaluating all of those inputs and breaking it down with advanced analytics.

MTS: Could you quote a few examples from the industry?
The very basic challenge is that people are trying to fight advertising, so advertisers must adapt, become more creative and give consumers the information they’re looking for.

Today, in order to see content, you often have to sit through some type of ad or message that a company is paying for, like with YouTube. Netflix is an anomaly in that model, but you’re seeing some of the big companies like Disney stripping their content away from Netflix and still focusing on making money through advertising or ticket sales in the theaters where the consumer is paying for the content. Netflix has started creating their own content to fill that gap, and Hulu+ has a blend of this model with some ads incorporated and some not for primarily mainstream network shows.

Content is not going away. People want it. And in order to support the high production values consumers are looking for, someone must pay for it. The other option is cheap production value like YouTube through user-generated content. At the end of the day though, everything is still being paid for by the brand. Even on YouTube, the video game walkthroughs that are so popular today are often sponsored by the video game companies.

MTS: What startups are you watching/keen on right now?
The automotive industry is very disruptive right now. With options like Tesla’s self-piloting cars on the horizon and the rise of Uber, my son will probably never drive a car. People who own self-driving cars will be able to send their cars out to work every day, renting them out as yet another transportation option while making some extra cash on the side.

Extend the automation to trucks moving across the country, and consider drone delivery as a replacement for localized truck transport. The way transportation is going to change across all of those platforms is going to be huge. Moving products and people will be a completely new and different landscape than it is today, and it will have an immense impact on business and consumer behaviors. I don’t even think it’s that far out. I think that three-to-five years from now things will look completely different.

MTS: What tools does your marketing stack consist of in 2017?
Data scientists and tech experts are the new rock stars of the age right now. And on the physical platform, you can never have enough servers, automation, programming, etc. Those are things you can’t live without and that we need on a day-to-day basis.

At Hawthorne, we build it all in-house. There are no vendors that we use. If anything, it’s just the relationships with our media partners, those who we buy media from, across all digital platforms, traditional stations, any OTT providers and then obviously the brands. So, our relationships are with people more than with outside technology elements. We joke that even though we have all these advanced analytics, it’s still people that are programming all of these things. And we’re not at that artificial intelligence place yet so it’s still very focused on people and relations.

From an operational perspective, we use collaboration platforms, a program like Jira for example, helps track all of your initiatives. You need employee platforms for them to collaborate and work when not face-to-face. And people are a huge part of this too. These platforms are only as good as the people using them, and if they’re not used properly, they won’t work for you.

MTS: Would you tell us about a standout digital campaign? Who was your target audience and how did you measure success?
Our client Equifax wanted to diversify its B2B model with a direct-to-consumer monthly monitoring service designed to prevent credit fraud and identify theft. But there was a challenge. Equifax needed the right messaging, delivered at the right time, to compel consumers to take action.

We developed 22 videos promoting the product. The creative spots opened with gripping facts about identity theft and credit monitoring and relied heavily on customer testimonials. We also created two different narrative-only spots with an educational-based approach.

To target the ads, we used insights gathered during the testimonials to determine the right creative message to deliver to the right device and channel, resulting in a robust digital video plan. The plan used both post-view and multi-touch attribution (MTA) reporting, so we could track and attribute consumer touchpoints along the entire path-to-purchase. This made it possible for us to optimize the plan on a daily basis and further refine the video campaign.

The campaign was a huge success. Cost-per-sale conversions more than doubled within 90 days of launch, and when we used multi-touch attribution to view the results, the cost-per-sale was halved, and the client decided to ramp up its media budget and run a much larger second flight—which contributed substantially to the overall success of this marketing initiative.

MTS: How do you prepare for an AI-centric world as a business leader?
Don’t deny it’s coming. Try to be involved in the conversation in knowing what the rules of engagement of AI will be. That’s why I network and attend things like TED conferences and thought leader events so I’m involved with what’s happening.

Work is becoming more and more about what people are demanding, so AI is necessary. Otherwise doing everything manually that people want or are demanding as individually would become impossible and nobody would make any money because it’s so labor-intensive.

That said, the personal touch is still important. Developers haven’t figured out how to touch humans with deep emotion through AI, so connecting with people deeply and having creative that can do that alongside AI programming is a critical step.

This Is How I Work

MTS: One word that best describes how you work.
I work hard. I’m efficient, I’m forward-thinking, and I’m always looking three-to-five years out.

MTS: What apps/software/tools can’t you live without?
My phone is vital, as is the case for many today. Everything is on there, from social media platforms and applications to all of my consolidated email accounts in one spot. I use search apps on my phone to find best-rated resources in an area, an app for my son’s school communications, and Google search and maps. Collaboration tools in the workplace are also key.

MTS: What’s your smartest work-related shortcut or productivity hack?
I use a free note-taking application called WorkFlowy that I love. It uses bullet point organization and you can expand, condense, move things around, store things and tag items for quick search later. It’s very simple so that’s how I take general notes across all points of my work and personal life.

Also, I get through all of my emails and tasks every day, so I get my inbox down to 30 or so emails that are critical things that I’m in the middle of dealing with. I have to start every day completely fresh without any leftover tasks from the prior day bogging me down, otherwise, I can’t work as efficiently and effectively. That’s not really a hack, but rather it’s discipline about being extremely organized.

MTS: What are you currently reading? (What do you read, and how do you consume information?)
I’m reading a book called Traction, by Gino Wickman. It covers a methodology of how executive management teams can work together in the most simple and effective way and essentially quickly gain traction. I’m also reading The Big Leap by Gay Hendricks, which is focused on the topic of going beyond your internal self-limiting beliefs to live your authentic greatness.

MTS: What’s the best advice you’ve ever received?
That advice concerned problem-solving, and it was actually back in my agent days. The advice was that there will always be problems that you encounter, and nothing will ever be perfect, but it’s not about how the problem inhibits you emotionally or bogs you down in the moment, it’s about how you move on and quickly find solutions. This carries through to my management style today. I always tell my team “don’t come to me with a list of problems without coming with a list of solutions.”

MTS: Tag the one person whose answers to these questions you would love to read:
Elon Musk
. He looks at things in the world and says, “what are the things that are going to make an impact in the world?” And that’s what he pursues. You’ve got to have these big ideas to get to the next place, and Elon Musk and other brilliant, big thinkers like him, use their companies as a vehicle to accomplish the big things they’re trying to achieve for humanity.

MTS: Thank you Jessica! That was fun and hope to see you back on MarTech Series soon.

[vc_tta_tabs][vc_tta_section title=”About Jessica” tab_id=”1501785390157-b58e162d-0ae25a4b-c27aca64-108e4eab-9332″]

Jessica Hawthorne-Castro is the CEO of Hawthorne, an award winning technology-based advertising agency specializing in analytics and accountable brand campaigns for over 30-years. Hawthorne has a legacy of ad industry leadership by being a visionary in combining the art of right-brain creativity with the science of left-brain data analytics and neuroscience. Jessica’s role principally involves fostering long-standing client relationships with the company’s expansive base of Fortune 500 brands to develop highly strategic and measurable advertising campaigns, designed to ignite immediate consumer response. From strategy, creative and production to media and analytics, Jessica is committed to premium quality and innovation throughout all agency disciplines.

[/vc_tta_section][vc_tta_section title=”About Hawthorne” tab_id=”1501785390320-2d44fa50-740c5a4b-c27aca64-108e4eab-9332″]

Hawthorne

Hawthorne, a creative, analytics and technology-driven advertising agency, specializes in strategic planning, creative development, production, media planning, buying and analytics, and campaign management for integrated marketing campaigns. With over 30 years of proven excellence, the agency combines persuasive brand messaging with best-in-class analytic systems to create accountable, high performance advertising campaigns. Hawthorne helps brands efficiently target their consumers, improve cost per acquisition, optimize the lifetime value of a brand’s customers, and even drive consumer response to key retail outlets or corporate locations.

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[mnky_heading title=”MarTech Interview Series” link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fmartechseries-67ee47.ingress-bonde.easywp.com%2Fcategory%2Fmts-insights%2Finterviews%2F|||”]

The MTS Martech Interview Series is a fun Q&A style chat which we really enjoy doing with martech leaders. With inspiration from Lifehacker’s How I work interviews, the MarTech Series Interviews follows a two part format On Marketing Technology, and This Is How I Work. The format was chosen because when we decided to start an interview series with the biggest and brightest minds in martech – we wanted to get insight into two areas … one – their ideas on marketing tech and two – insights into the philosophy and methods that make these leaders tick.

Clarity Insights Names Neil Huse As President

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clarityinsights

Huse To Lead Data Analytics Consulting Company Through Next Major Phase Of Growth

Clarity Insights, a preeminent ‘big data’ consultancy that was recently named a leader in customer analytics by Forrester Research, announced that its board of directors has named Neil Huse as the company’s president.

Huse has been a member of the Clarity team for more than five years, most recently serving as Managing Partner overseeing the company’s highly successful healthcare practice. He has a strong track record of innovation and business success in the data and analytics space with a number of leading firms. As president, Huse will report to the company’s board of directors and will direct all facets of the business, with a focus on helping clients accelerate their data and analytics transformations. Clarity Insights’ area of expertise includes data engineering keeping a company’s long-term goals in mind and then converting data to action.

John Papadia
John Papadia

“Having worked with Neil in the consulting sector since 1994, I am completely confident that he has the experience and expertise to lead the company’s next phase of growth. Neil brings a wonderful hands-on approach to mentoring colleagues and a deep expertise in providing exceptional delivery and measurable results to clients,” John Papadia, Co-founder, Clarity Insights said.

Neil Huse
Neil Huse

Prior to joining Clarity Insights in 2012, Neil Huse was a Managing Principal at RCG Global Services and also worked at PricewaterhouseCoopers and IBM. “Analysts have recognized Clarity as an industry leader because of our ability to deliver measurable improvements in customer satisfaction, revenue, and profitability for clients. As importantly, the solutions we develop use leading edge analytics and technology platforms, are deployed in the cloud, and are developed using agile methods. Looking ahead, our team is going to help drive those results at more clients across the vertical industries where we have deep business expertise, including healthcare, financial services, consumer products, retail, technology, and insurance,” said Huse.

Black Friday 2017 Shopping Report: Consumer Sentiment is Riding High

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periscope-solutions

Research from Periscope By McKinsey says 44% Of US, And 81% Of UK Shoppers Plan To Go Bargain Hunting Online And In Stores On Black Friday 2017

Periscope® By McKinsey, a suite of solutions focusing on price, promotion, assortment, sales and marketing optimization to achieve sustainable revenue growth, announced the findings of research that it carried out during October 2017 on consumer sentiment towards Black Friday 2017, the categories they will shop in, and how.

As the findings of Black Friday 2017 Shopping Report: Consumer sentiment is riding high reveal, consumers have great expectations for this year’s event. Almost half (44%) of US consumers confirmed they will be shopping this Black Friday – compared to just 26% in 2016 and 23% who were undecided. The jump is much higher in the UK with an impressive 81% of stating they intend to shop this Black Friday – compared to just 22% who anticipated getting involved last year and 30% who were on the fence. Previous skepticism about Black Friday being a marketing trick also seems to be falling with 37% of UK shoppers and 25% in the US saying they’ve grown to like it more.

The top motivating factor for shopping this Black Friday is getting enticing offers not available at other times of the year according to 37% of US shoppers, and 36% in the UK. This was followed by steep discounting which was 36% for the US, and 48% in the UK.

Consumers are demonstrating their omni-channel credentials

In recent years, Black Friday has been viewed as an increasingly digital shopping event. However, the 2017 research reveals that 36% (US) and 31% (UK) consumers are planning to conduct their Black Friday shopping activities both in-store and online. That’s a big jump from last year, when just 18% and 11% respectively said they would divide shopping activities between digital and physical channels.

Looking at online behavior, the desktop computer remains the device most likely to be used when making Black Friday purchases at 35% (US) and 45% (UK), but is declining compared to 2016 when 60% and 54% planned to shop this way.

Shoppers are also planning to use smartphones more this year. Almost one-third of UK respondents (30%) and over a quarter of US (26%) plan to use them to make Black Friday purchases – up from 16.5% (UK) and 20.5% (US) last year.

However, the excitement of the physical store experience still retains a strong appeal for many Black Friday bargain hunters – that’s especially true for the 28% of US shoppers who say they only or mostly plan to shop in-store (compared to 17% of UK shoppers) this shopping holiday.

Consumers plan to spend more online in wider categories

When questioned if the way they shop will be different this year, UK (48%) and US (33%) respondents say they are planning to shop across more product categories when making online purchases – furthermore, 36% of UK and 27% of US respondents say they have a higher budget to spend this year.

Asked to identify which product categories they plan to shop this Black Friday, there were some interesting variations observed between US and UK consumer predilections:

  • Consumer electronics topped the list for both US (58%) and UK (52%) shoppers, with Clothing coming a close second (54% in the US; 52% in the UK)
  • Shopping for Movies, Books and Music is the #3 priority for 33% of US consumers, while Beauty and Fragrances stole the third spot with 42% of UK shoppers
  • With Christmas looming, it’s probably no surprise that Toys holds a strong appeal for both US (32%) and UK (35%) consumers
  • Interestingly, 20% of UK consumers and around 10% of US consumers also anticipate shopping for offers in categories like Grocery and Beverages.
Brian Elliott
Brian Elliott

Commenting on the findings, Brian Elliott, Managing Partner, Periscope By McKinsey, said, “Consumer appetite for Black Friday in the US and UK has surged this year, with more planning to shop, in more categories, with more disposable budget. There is a clear opportunity for those retailers that understand how their customers shop in an omnichannel setting and therefore focus on creating shopping experiences that tie their online and physical channels together. We know from the research that consumers have a shopping list and are researching online already now, that means they are giving you clues about what they want. Retailers that can use that information to create personalized promotions and offers, stand a much higher chance of securing sales, and making Black Friday 2017 their biggest ever.”

Nevion Showcases Latest Virtuoso UHD/4K Features at NAB Show New York

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Nevion Showcases latest Virtuoso UHD/4K Features at NAB Show New York

Virtuoso is designed to meet the challenges of IP-based live production environments

Nevion,  the award-winning provider of virtualized media production solutions, will be showcasing the latest update of its software-defined media node, Virtuoso, at NAB Show New York, with a particular focus on UHD/4K.

First launched at IBC2016, Nevion’s Virtuoso is designed to meet all the challenges associated with IP-based live production environments, in which the distinction between local area networks (LANs used in the facilities) and wide area networks (WANs used in contribution, remote production and distribution) is becoming blurred.

The most recent release of the Virtuoso software consolidates the platform’s capabilities in IP contribution and adds functionality for IP in the facilities.

Marketing Technology News: Khoros Launches New Data Hosting Location in Sydney, Australia

In the contribution space, the latest Virtuoso software update offers bi-directional JPEG2000 encoding/decoding support for 4K/UHD (broadcast), 2K/4K (cinema), slow-mo and stereoscopic 3D for HD and UHD. It also includes an alarm-based input-switching capability, that allows the automatic switching between multiple SDI and SMPTE 2022-6 sources based on the detection of specific conditions such black frame, freeze frame or audio silence.

For the facilities, the most recent Virtuoso software update adds SMPTE 2110-30 audio embedding/de-embedding, with audio shuffling and delay handling.

Marketing Technology News: Sky Partners with TVSquared to Show True Picture of TV Effectiveness

Mike Root, Nevion’s Senior VP of Sales, Americas, says: “Nevion Virtuoso will feature prominently on our booth at the NAB show New York. In particular, we will be demoing its 4K/UHD JPEG2000 capabilities, which are receiving a lot of traction in the North American market right now.”

Marketing Technology News: QU-in Helps Higher Education Campuses Reopen Safely

onQ Secures $7M Funding In Early Stage Financing Round

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engageonq

Financing Will Be Used To Drive Product Development For The Video Conversation Engine

onQ, developer of a ground-breaking solution for interactive group communications and learning, announced the closing of an early stage equity financing round totaling $7 million, led by a diverse group of seasoned private investors. The highly successful funding round received an overwhelmingly strong response from investors. The financing will be used to drive product development for the onQ solution, which brings existing multimedia content to life, turning static, one-way content into an energized and interactive group experience, where participants contribute, share and learn together.

Jack Alexander
Jack Alexander

“onQ was founded with a vision of making digital content, communications, and learning more communal ― and in the process, more engaging, open and authentic, enabling organizations to better ‘listen’ to their audiences. Our vision is now being realized, as we are experiencing strong global interest across a range of business sectors, from both U.S. and international markets,” Jack Alexander, founder and Chairman, onQ said.

The onQ solution brings any existing content to life, transforming video or presentation media into an interactive group experience, and turning monologues and static viewing into active, engaged conversations. Resulting interactions and reactions feed in-the-moment behavioral data, uncovering deep, actionable insights into how users and groups engage with content and influence each other.

onQ’s measurable engagement capabilities include:

  • Scoring and machine learning models for engagement, influence, sentiment, facilitation, and overall outcomes
  • Analytics based on peer-reviewed science linked to learning best practices
  • Scientific testing and validating of scoring models and product features via research partnership with the University of South Florida
Jim Marshall
Jim Marshall

“This equity financing sets the stage for an exceptional 2017 for onQ, which has seen a rapidly growing roster of clients, key executive appointments, and research partnerships. It is a significant validation of the solution that we are building and reflects excitement for our next phase of growth,” Jim Marshall, CEO, onQ said.

Lionbridge to Present Best Practices for Global Customer Engagement at Sitecore Symposium 2017

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lionbridge

Lionbridge And Its Clients Offer Insights On Managing Multilingual Content At Scale

 Lionbridge Technologies, Inc, one of the most trusted global digital communications companies, announced it will present best practices for global customer engagement at the Sitecore Symposium 2017 in Las Vegas. Lionbridge’s Senior Director of Global Offerings Arnie Koh will deliver a presentation entitled ‘Driving Global Customer Experiences Through Language’ on October 17 starting at 2:40 pm. PT. Lionbridge is a platinum sponsor of the event.

Hosted by Sitecore, a global leader in experience management software, the event offers insights, education and peer perspectives on how organizations can better activate the power of data, create more personalized brand experiences, optimize marketing technology and increase customer lifetime value.

“Today’s customer experience crosses multiple channels and diverse geographies. We empower our customers to own their digital marketing experiences by delivering personalized interactions that delight audiences and build loyalty. Through our integration with Lionbridge’s translation solutions, we’re able to offer a seamless experience across any channel or location by delivering meaningful messages in languages native to our clients,” Ryan Donovan, EVP of Product Management, Sitecore said.

Lionbridge client, Alpha Assembly Solutions, a part of the MacDermid Performance Solutions group of businesses, will also present at Sitecore Symposium 2017 in a session taking place on October 17 on how to ‘Globalize Your Message with Localization’. During this session, Alpha’s Global Digital Marketing Manager Meena Verma will discuss how her company has successfully leveraged Lionbridge’s translation solutions to build lasting relationships with its global customers.

“In today’s highly connected world, brands must ensure they are communicating consistent messages that are clear and impactful across all customer regions and cultural boundaries. By uniting Lionbridge’s expertise in translation and Sitecore’s contextual marketing with our performance business solutions, clients can deliver personalized content, better customer engagement and relevant site traffic across platforms, markets and regions,” said Verma.

“At a time when global reach is just a swipe or click away, language must remain a priority for any successful digital customer experience strategy. Sitecore Symposium provides a unique opportunity to connect with partners and peers to reflect on how the world’s largest brands are using translation solutions to go global. Our collaboration with Sitecore continues to help solve brands’ multilingual content challenges by making it quicker and more cost effective to manage multilingual experiences,” said Koh.

OpenText Named As A Leader In Gartner Magic Quadrant For Content Services Platforms

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opentext

OpenText’s Position In The Leaders Quadrant Follows Twelve Consecutive Years As A Leader In The Gartner Magic Quadrant For Enterprise Content Management

OpenText, a global leader in Enterprise Information Management (EIM),  announced that it has been positioned as a leader in Gartner’s 2017 Magic Quadrant for Content Services Platforms.*

Mark Barrenechea
Mark Barrenechea

“Information is at the heart of all digital processes. The evolution of Enterprise Content Management (ECM) to Content Services, as a way to manage and integrate this information, is paramount to a successful digital transformation strategy. OpenText has made significant investments across our Content Services during the past year. By adding leading platforms such as Documentum to our portfolio, and embedding Content Services in our applications, OpenText continues to innovate, evolve and grow with the market,” Mark Barrenechea, Vice-Chairman, CEO & CTO, OpenText said.

According to the Gartner report, ‘Cloud, social collaboration, mobile and analytics technologies have transformed demands and expectations for content in digital business. The variety and volume of content continue to grow. So does its importance: increasingly, IT and business leaders use content to complement or even drive digital business processes.’

The report also notes, ‘Content Services Platform (CSP) vendors are recasting ECM in terms of a service-oriented architecture … A CSP has the flexibility to support existing and emerging content use cases. It has its own repository but should also be able to integrate external repositories through connectors, APIs or packaged integrations. Today, many CSPs can be deployed on-premises, in the cloud or in hybrid architectures.’

Part of the OpenText EIM platform, OpenText™ Content Services help organizations connect content to their Digital Business and transform process productivity, personal productivity, and control. Additionally, OpenText Content Services adhere to the Content Management Interoperability Services (CMIS) standard and support a broad range of operating systems, databases, application servers, and enterprise applications.

MediaVillage Hires New Head of Client Partnerships

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MediaVillage

Darius Myers Joins To Expand Strategic Industry Partnerships During Period Of Significant Growth For MediaVillage

Darius Myers
Darius Myers

MediaVillage, the industry’s leading trade research, and marketing communications platform, has named Darius Myers, former SVP of Sales at TSN Advertising, as Head of Client Partnerships. Darius brings nearly 30 years of media, advertising, and marketing experience to MediaVillage. He will report to John McMenamin, President and Chief Operating Officer. Myers will develop and oversee new strategic partnerships with media, advertising, entertainment, and marketing companies that benefit from MediaVillage’s perception management platform and relationship capital solutions.

MediaVillage has reinvented B-to-B marketing and built a first-of-its-kind online community and trade marketing activation platform at MediaVillage.com. The MediaVillage Perceptions Engine, since its launch in 2015, has become the media community’s leading destination for thought-leadership, knowledge, analysis, and insights that set the market agenda and frame engagement around key issues.

Myers brings an expertise in establishing both traditional and digital media partnerships and collaborations to MediaVillage. Prior to TSN Advertising, Myers worked at Off Radar Media Group where he was the Global Head of Sales. He has previously worked in sales and marketing roles at Urban Media Network, Fortune, USA Today and The New York Post.

“Darius’ extensive background will help accelerate our growth through new partnerships that will expand the total network, reach and value of MediaVillage for our communit. His background in media and advertising is perfectly matched with the strategic direction of MediaVillage and the solutions we offer to our clients,” said McMenamin.

“I’m thrilled to join the MediaVillage team as they continue to reinvent business-to-business marketing. I’m excited to be joining a team that is leading the media and advertising industry through the most disruptive period in its history. I’m eager to introduce the innovative MediaVillage platform to companies that recognize the importance of understanding and managing how they are perceived in a constantly changing marketplace, and helping them maintain and enhance their client relationships,” Myers said.

Currently, MediaVillage is the industry’s leading trade research and marketing communications platform dedicated to helping media and advertising companies enhance their brand equity through strategic perceptions management. Through unique marketplace intelligence, strategic counsel, and an exclusive content creation and distribution platform, MediaVillage shapes the perceptions that influence key decision makers in the media buying, planning and selling process.

MediaVillage was founded by Jack Myers, a media expert, author and leading business analyst with decades of experience in the media and advertising industries. MediaVillage’s mission is to strategically improve the perceptions of its client’s organization, products, services, and executives.

enosiX Launches SAP Real-Time Business Process Integrator App On The Salesforce AppExchange

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enosiX’s New App Promises to Deliver A Disruptive Approach To How Enterprises Provide SAP Data And Bi-Directional Business Processes To Salesforce Users

enosiX, a leading zero-code SAP integration accelerator firm, launched the SAP Real-Time Business Process Integrator app on the Salesforce AppExchange. The enosiX app’s genius is in its powerful enterprise-grade business process integration into Salesforce.

Built to enhance sales productivity, customer service and to simplify Salesforce Admin tasks, the enosiX SAP-certified add-on is currently available on the Salesforce AppExchange.

The ZERO-code approach enables rapid install to immediately increase selling time. Once installed, enosiX provides drag and drop capability to add live SAP data to the Salesforce experience. Salesforce Admins can select what SAP data to display with a click – no SAP expertise required. 15-plus pre-built display templates enable real-time integration from Salesforce to SAP. No middleware or additional infrastructure is required, drastically reducing risk and required resources. The Enterprise Edition for enosiX adds an additional 25-plus pre-built scenarios between SAP and Salesforce.

Gerald Schlechter, CEO, enosiX calls it an ‘SAP integration trailblazer’. “Typical integration approaches require deep ERP understanding and complex front-end building by the developer, take six to twelve months, introduce too much risk and inhibit innovation. Through our existing enterprise offering, we are already providing organizations with a true 360-degree view of their customers. Now, with our new SAP Real-Time Business Process Integrator app for Salesforce, we provide even faster, easier and more cost-efficient real-time access to critical SAP data. We offer zero implementation costs if you download our app before 12/31/2017,” he said.

enosiX is a software development firm focused on accelerating SAP integration. enosiX provides a SAP integration platform to quickly and easily provide real-time, business process-based integration between Salesforce and SAP. Much more than just data & display, enosiX takes the complexity of SAP and simplifies it in an intelligent, SAP-certified solution requiring no middleware or additional infrastructure.

Marketo Delivers New AI-Powered Personalization To Fuel Marketing And Sales Success

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New Solutions Provide Marketers And Sellers With The Insights To Effectively Engage With Customers Across Channels

Marketo, Inc, the leading provider of engagement marketing software and solutions, unveiled a suite of new and enhanced solutions that give marketers and sellers cross-channel personalization, enhanced email analytics, and account-based insights to engage more effectively with their customers. This latest product release reinforces the company’s commitment to delivering the best solutions for marketers and sellers to win in the Engagement Economy.

“Marketers are inundated with disparate solutions that claim to be cure-alls for delivering a seamless customer experience. In Marketo’s recent study, marketers reported that finding the best tools to help them engage with their customers is their number one challenge. Our latest release addresses this need by providing marketers with a wide range of enhanced analytics and personalization solutions to help them engage with their customers across all touchpoints and at every step of their journey,” Manoj Goyal, Chief Product Officer, Marketo said.

Analytics and Insights
The right analytics are critical for customer engagement, with 46% of marketers across the United StatesUnited KingdomGermany, and France of the belief that analytics and reporting have a significant impact on their ability to engage with their customers. Marketo’s new analytics and insights offerings include the following:

  • Account Insight is designed to strengthen the partnership between sales and marketing teams around account-based marketing (ABM) strategies by focusing sellers on the best accounts to target and giving them real-time insights into how and when a prospect is engaging with their brand in order to tailor follow-up interactions.
  • Email Insights Enhancements allow marketers to drive greater value from Marketo’s Email Insights solution through new ways to prepare, analyze, and share email campaign performance with marketing leaders.
  • Integration with Facebook Offline Conversions Enhancements allows marketers to map additional Marketo customer journey stages to Facebook offline conversion stages, so marketers can further optimize their ad spend based on more meaningful actions and insights into the customer journey.

Personalization
Today’s customers expect brands to interact with them in personalized ways across all channels. In The State of Engagement, 72% of marketers reported that personalized messages have a significant impact on customer engagement. Marketers can now take advantage of many personalization solutions delivered by Marketo to effectively engage with customers, such as:

  • ContentAI™ is the only solution that makes content personalization scalable for marketers by auto-discovering and cataloging website assets and using AI to determine the best content to display to each audience. Marketers can personalize their websites, mobile experiences, and email with ease through drag-and-drop content placement, while maintaining control over what is delivered through each channel.
  • Web Personalization Enhancements that give marketers new ways to create experiences based on visitor behaviors. For example, trigger Widget Campaigns from the top, bottom or side of the screen based on scrolling past a specific point or a certain amount of time passing. New ‘Call-to-Action’ labels let visitors see whether the offer is for content, a survey, an event and more before they expand the widget.

Sales and Marketing Partnership
The relationship between sales and marketing teams have evolved from alignment to genuine partnership. To support this collaboration, Marketo has delivered solutions that empower teams to create and standardize content to help them effectively engage with their customers:

  • ToutApp Templates is one of the recent products born out of Marketo’s strategic acquisition of ToutApp, the leading sales engagement company, earlier this year. ToutApp Templates enables marketers to categorize and share marketing-generated content with their sales colleagues to ensure consistent messaging and tailored engagement throughout the customer journey.
  • Sales Insight Enhancements include locked templates so that marketing and sales teams can standardize customer communications and companies in regulated industries have greater control of messaging through approved marketing-prepared templates.

Brandwatch’s Quick Search Brings Speed To Mass Social Data Analysis

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The New Offering Is The First Enterprise Social Intelligence Solution To Instantly Segment All Of Your Social Data

The world’s leading social intelligence company, Brandwatch, has unveiled Quick Search, the first enterprise social intelligence solution to instantly segment all of your social data. Revealing Quick Search at Now You Know™ Europe, the feature allows marketers to search through millions of online conversations in an instant, with no need for spreadsheets, formulas or boolean operators.

Available to all Brandwatch users, Quick Search is the fastest and easiest way for clients to find insights in their data. The feature is available to all Brandwatch Analytics customers at no extra cost. Whether you want to find the positive and negative sentiment behind Adidas’ products or the major trends at Google’s I/O conference, all you need is Quick Search.

“We looked at our customers and discovered something. You wouldn’t search the web without a search engine, so why should you analyze the web without a search engine. That’s why we’ve built Quick Search. To make difficult social data analysis search-bar simple,” Brandwatch CEO Giles Palmer said at the company’s NYK conference.

Delta, a Brandwatch customer, received early access to Quick Search and said this about the feature: “Being able to quickly segment conversations without creating new queries or dashboards is just excellent.”

Earlier last month, Brandwatch unveiled its Social Intelligence Maturity Model (SIMM), offering a way to measure the value of a business’s social strategy and guide its growth into the future.

Brandwatch is the world’s leading social intelligence group offering marketers a portfolio of social and content marketing technologies. The company’s flagship products, Brandwatch Analytics and the Vizia platform, fuel smarter decision making around the world. With the addition of BuzzSumo’s content marketing and influencer identification platform in October 2017, the company is positioned as a leading provider of insight-surfacing technologies across the enterprise as well as for SMB customers.

DAM Through the Ages – What’s Next?

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DAM Through the Ages – What's Next?

WidenWhere does one begin when exploring the past four “eras” of technology? So much has changed! With digital asset management (DAM), it’s much easier to take a walk down memory lane.

DAM addresses an ancient problem: If we store information outside our brains, how do we make it useful? Cave walls were an answer. Libraries were another answer. With the advent of digital expression, DAM became the most compelling way.

Central Library Era

It all began in 1992 when Canto Software launched Cumulus. Organizations were accumulating digital files and needed somewhere to organize them. A digital library was a more elegant solution than shared drives and floppy discs.

After Cumulus debuted, consumer web browsers emerged. Mosaic appeared in 1993, and Netscape Navigator arrived in 1994. Dial-up modems were painfully slow. Nonetheless, some DAM contenders (including Widen) placed bets on web-based DAM.

Social-Mobile-Cloud Era

By 2006, web-based DAM had won, and so began the second era. I started at Widen in 2004, and I remember when our CEO, Matthew Gonnering, returned from his first Salesforce.com conference in 2007. He was raving about the “cloud” (Huh? What?). People seem crazy when they see the future that clearly!

Central libraries were becoming silos because it was easy to add content but difficult to deploy it. The cloud, by becoming the de facto destination for content, changed everything.

In 1999, there were only 23 blogs on the internet, reported the staff at Webdesigner Depot. By 2006, there were 50 million. Meanwhile, the rise of Friendster (2002), MySpace (2003), and Facebook (2004) sent a message: Publishing was becoming democratized. DAMs needed to get content from rest to work more efficiently.

However, the web changed with the introduction of the iPhone in 2007. DAM had to convert and adapt images for a dizzying combination of devices, channels, and operating systems. It was like cooking for several hundred picky eaters.

By 2012, marketing technology (a.k.a. ‘martech’) had triggered an arms race among companies. The web was poised to eclipse every other marketing medium (if it hadn’t already). The audience was enormous, but the influx of content and competition made it difficult to win attention. Companies needed combinations of martech to reach people, but most systems didn’t play nice.

Integration Era
DAM vendors spotted this limitation during the Social-Mobile-Cloud Era and began to address it aggressively during the integration era.

DAM vendors realized they’d become second fiddle to other martechs unless they could serve as a ‘central source of truth’ for all content-based platforms. These other platforms (e.g. content management systems) came with lightweight libraries that, while less powerful than a DAM, offered the basic functionality. In response, DAM vendors created dozens of ready-made integrations. APIs facilitated sophisticated martech stacks like those showcased in Scott Brinker’s Stackies & Hackies Awards.

We’re still in the Integration Era, but not for long.

Machine Learning and AI Era

The fourth era of DAM involves machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI). DAM consultant Mark Davey expects DAM to play a central role in the semantic web, where new metadata schemas will enable computers to ‘read’ websites.

AI-powered image recognition and metadata tagging have arrived. However, the current iterations are underwhelming. We are still in a ‘hype’ phase.

Next-generation DAM will not minimize the importance of people. Rather, people will need to be sharper in their DAM strategy because AI scales mistakes as efficiently as it scales good ideas.

DAM is an ongoing chapter in the story of how we organize information outside our brains. The ‘manual’ work will get easier with AI, but DAM will require more mindfulness. The price and reward of ease is deeper thinking.

5 Ways to Create a Compelling Landing Page

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sigstrPicture this: A top prospect opens your latest email, clicks on the content campaign in your email signature, gets taken to a landing page, and…what happens next? The answer to that question determines the success of your entire email signature marketing strategy. Not only that, it determines the success of every marketing initiative you manage that has a source (Adwords, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn) and corresponding landing page.

Whether you’re using a landing page to generate leads, drive event registrations, or collect data, ensuring a high conversion rate is key. A marketing campaign is only as effective as the landing page it directs to, whether you’re using HubSpot, Pardot, Marketo, Act-On, or another provider. As such, it’s your duty to ensure your landing pages are the best they can be. To give you a head start, I’ve pinpointed the five key factors to an effective landing page:

Headline
The landing page headline is the first thing a visitor sees after he or she clicks on an email signature campaign, Facebook ad, etc. As such, it must be easy to read, straightforward, and intriguing. Once a visitor arrives to your landing page, it’s your headline’s job to hold the visitor’s attention and reassure him or her that they’ve come to the right place. Otherwise, the person might leave before completing the task at hand, also known as the conversion goal.

To establish continuity, you should also ensure that your landing page headline closely matches the headline in your source campaign. The same can be said for your call-to-action. If your marketing campaign promotes an upcoming conference or webinar, your landing page headline should do the same.

Page Design
If the headline is what holds a visitor’s attention, it’s the page design that focuses the visitor on the action you want he or she to take. Every design element on an effective landing page should be aligned to a conversion goal. For that reason, it is important to use minimal patterns, contrasting colors, and a prominently placed form field. Remember to be clear and concise. Clarity is often lost when marketers try to make the landing page design ultra cool or edgy.

When designing your landing page, another thing to remember is that you need to establish trust. How well does the initial above-the-fold landing page experience deliver on the promise made in the marketing campaign? The color palette, patterns, fonts, and general vibe of the landing page need to align to the design of the source campaign. You don’t want to surprise the visitor or make him or her think they’ve come to the wrong place. On the contrary, if the campaign and landing page compliment each other, the visitor is much more likely to stick around.

Form Fill
There are a number of strategies you can use with a form fill. Both short and long forms have been shown to perform quite well. The method you choose depends on whether you want to generate a high number of low quality form submissions, or a smaller number of higher quality submissions. Whichever strategy you choose, consider leaving form boxes unchecked. Otherwise, you’ll risk adding a lot of low quality subscribers to your contact base, which can hurt your business.

When creating a form fill, make sure every action you request of your audience leads naturally to the next step. This is especially relevant in multi-step form fills which visitors have a tendency to abandon mid-way through. If you’re implementing a multi-step form fill, consider adding a status bar so that visitors have a general idea of the form length.

Supporting Content

With supporting content, it’s important to make sure your most important information comes first and clearly presents the value you’re offering. A source campaign can only offer a limited amount of information in the banner/ad. That means that the corresponding landing page has to make up for missing context. It should compliment the copy from your ad, but also expand upon it and continue to persuade.

And speaking of persuasion, all supporting content should align to your conversion goal. You may have 10-20 goals for your homepage, but an effective landing page aligns to a single action. If you’re trying to get a prospect to download an ebook, every piece of content on your landing page should be steering the visitor toward the download.

For that reason, it may be a good idea to remove outside links and social share buttons. They divert visitors from accomplishing the main goal. The same thing can be said for testimonials, sub-headers, and bullets. They can be great tools to establish trust and credibility, but if they do not aid in persuasion or conversion, they are not appropriate.

The last thing to consider with supporting content is SEO. The added benefit of supporting content is that it gives the page an SEO boost because search engines have more content to crawl. Use the same SEO best practices you would apply to your company blog or website to your landing pages.

Imagery
It’s probably not surprising to hear that the images you use on a landing page have a huge impact on your conversion rate. After all, a picture is worth a thousand words. With that said, don’t just use images that you know garner an emotional response (i.e. cute babies). Images on an effective landing page align to the company’s brand, campaign and conversion goal. You have to strike a perfect balance between eye catching and distracting. If images are too bold then they could pull attention away from your main call-to-action which is the last thing you want. Instead, choose images that complement or even emphasize your main objective.

Another thing to keep in mind is that including people in your images can be a powerful influencer. As human beings, we have a tendency to look at faces. Not only that, if the people in an image are looking in a specific direction, our eyes have a tendency to follow. Use this kind of directional cue to your advantage when choosing a landing page image and direct your visitors attention to your call-to-action.

When creating a compelling landing page, it all comes down to outcome optimization. A great source campaign strategy means nothing if your landing page does not deliver. Use these five prominent factors to your advantage and watch conversion rates go through the roof.

TechBytes with Dave Myron, VP Product Marketing, Seismic Software

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Dave Myron
TechBytes with Dave Myron, Vice President Product Marketing, Seismic Software

Dave Myron
VP Product Marketing, Seismic Software

Rated among the top sales enablement solutions, Seismic enables sales reps to build an effective, fast-paced engagement lifecycle using personalized content. “Designed for sales, approved by marketers” – the right content for sales enablement makes sales processes shorter and improves performance. We chatted with Dave Myron, Vice President Product Marketing at Seismic, to get an insight into their Actionable Insights and LiveDoc technology.

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MTS: Tell us about your role at Seismic Software and how you arrived at this position?
Dave Myron: I’m the vice president of product marketing and management here at Seismic, helping lead both the product roadmap and messaging around functionality and features. I’ve been with Seismic since 2015, previously having held similar positions at large tech companies such as Xilinx and Intel.

It was actually at those companies where I noticed major alignment issues between sales and marketing, along with content management and delivery processes that were actually slowing sales cycles as opposed to helping them. When I first saw the Seismic product, I immediately saw the incredible benefits it could bring to large companies and the teams I had worked on in the past, and I jumped at the opportunity to join.

MTS: How deep is Seismic into AI/ML technologies when it comes to Intuitive Content Management?
Dave: Seismic is deeply invested in artificial intelligence and machine learning innovation across the entire platform, and we see it as a core component of our product roadmap going forward. In fact, late last year we acquired a machine learning company to help further drive how we think about and approach AI at Seismic.

When it comes to sales and marketing enablement, the potential of AI is huge. It will help uncover insights into which pieces of content work and when, that are not detectable to humans; it will assist in onboarding new sales reps by providing them with a blueprint on how to interact with prospects in any situation; it will be a boon to content tagging and categorization.

Ultimately, when it comes to ensuring that sales reps are prepared for every interaction and are given the tools they need to succeed in them, the combination of man and machine will result in great gains for each and every sales rep, and each and every marketer whose job it is to support them.

MTS: Other than Sharepoint and Salesforce CRM, what are the other marketing/engagement platforms that support LiveDocs technology?  What would the next version look like and how soon?
Dave: LiveDocs technology is a fundamental capability within the Seismic platform that allows for the dynamic assembly of content by sales reps based on rules put in place by the marketing team. This gives confidence and assurance to marketers that all collateral being used by sales is on-brand and compliant while also allowing sales reps to personalize the content based on their intimate knowledge of the prospect. In terms of facilitating personalized sales content at scale and producing quality content at a breakneck pace, there is really no tool like it on the market. We have seen customers save upwards of 98 percent on time spent creating sales content because of LiveDocs technology.

While LiveDocs technology exists everywhere the Seismic platform exists, such as through CRM integrations and mobile apps, Seismic’s integration capabilities run the gamut across the spectrum of sales and marketing technologies. Customers use our LiveSend analytics functionality in lead generation campaigns through our marketing automation integrations. They serve up training and preparation materials alongside Seismic content through our integrations with sales readiness tools. Deep integrations with CRMs means that opportunity data is used to suggest the perfect piece of content in any interaction, and integrations with email clients such as Outlook mean that reps never have to leave the tools they’re most comfortable with to harness the full powers of Seismic. And this doesn’t even touch upon the fact that Seismic can integrate with virtually any content repository or data source, meaning that Seismic can raise the content management and data integration quality within any existing enterprise technology stack.

We’re constantly improving both LiveDocs technology and the entire Seismic platform, with major product releases going out multiple times per month. One-third of our 300-person company is on the product side of the company, giving us a huge edge when it comes to product innovation.

MTS: How do Content Engagement analytics differ for various omnichannel marketing campaigns? How does Seismic’s Actionable Insights help in creating a ubiquitous customer persona for web and social campaigns?
Dave: Content serves different purposes at different points in the buyer’s journey. Content created for top-of-funnel campaigns needs to speak to large audiences. When it comes to content used in sales interactions, it needs to speak to a prospect on an individual level, which is why a tool like Seismic and our analytics capabilities is so powerful. Sales reps can see exactly which pieces of content a prospect engaged with and for how long, down to the individual page level, making follow-up conversations much more productive and effective. Taken in aggregate, content creators such as product marketing can see which pieces of content are most effective and which sales reps are using them, allowing for intelligent adjustments and improvements, ultimately ensuring that they are doing their part to assist in sales cycle acceleration and closed deals.

When integrated with a marketing automation platform, Seismic provides a more complete picture of the customer journey, from start to finish. For the first time, marketing and sales teams can see which pieces of content work and don’t work for different prospects at every stage of the buyer’s journey, helping paint much more precise and accurate customer personas and vastly improve lead quality.

MTS: How often should sales teams evaluate their content assets for effective engagement, personalization, and success with their leads? Does Seismic provide a timeline for sales reps to filter their obsolete/ineffective content?
Dave: The great thing about Seismic’s LiveInsights analytics capabilities is that they allow for assessments and iteration of sales content at a near-constant cadence. Content creators have a real-time look into what content is being used by sales reps, which pieces of content are being engaged with by prospects, and which content creators are producing the highest quality content. So instead of regular, say annual or bi-annual content audits, teams can adjust on the fly.

That being said, we always recommend that there are formal processes and regular updates in place to ensure that teams take the time to view their current stockpile of content and make the necessary, holistic and large-scale changes as well. Ultimately, the more focus and attention is paid to content upkeep, the more effective content strategy will be.

MTS: Thanks for chatting with us, Dave.
Stay tuned for more insights on marketing technologies. To participate in our Tech Bytes program, email us at news@martechseries-67ee47.ingress-bonde.easywp.com

Interview with Judd Marcello, EVP, Global Marketing, Cheetah Digital

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Judd Marcello
Interview with Judd Marcello, EVP, Global Marketing, Cheetah Digital

Judd Marcello
EVP, Global Marketing, Cheetah Digital

[easy-profiles profile_twitter=”https://twitter.com/JuddMarcello” profile_linkedin=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/juddmarcello/”]
[mnky_testimonial_slider][mnky_testimonial name=”” author_dec=”” position=”Designer”]“Technology is important, but customer engagement starts and ends with marketing data. Those marketers that have complete command of their marketing data can make winning decisions on how to create and deliver highly-personalized messages that drive customer engagement.”[/mnky_testimonial][/mnky_testimonial_slider]

On Marketing Technology

MTS: Tell us about your role and how you got here. (what inspired you to be a part of a technology innovation company).
I have always been a marketer at heart. My career has been filled with various marketing roles in both B2C and B2B marketing, spanning 23+ years and in four international markets. In 2007 I was living in Sydney, Australia working in B2C marketing for a global consumer electronics company as a brand manager. This was right about the time that the iPhone came out and digital channels were becoming shiny new objects for marketers to play with. I jumped right in.

In 2009, I moved to London where I was inspired to make the switch to B2B marketing, specifically in the marketing technology industry. I ran marketing in the EMEA region for ExactTarget, the leading marketing SaaS Company in the industry at that time. The opportunity to market to marketers was something that excited me then and still does.

I am still marketing to marketers to this day. Earlier this year I was brought in to lead a complete re-brand, repositioning and relaunch of my current company, Cheetah Digital. As the marketing leader I oversee a global team that is responsible for Cheetah Digital’s brand, GTM strategy, demand generation, marketing operations, digital, marketing communications, public and analyst relations, sales development and events.

My role as the marketing leader is to set the vision and remove barriers so that my team is successful in bringing that vision to life. As much as I love marketing, I truly enjoy positioning my team members for success and seeing them grow in their roles and careers.

MTS: Given the changing dynamic of customer engagement, how do you see the marketing technology landscape evolving in the coming years?
Technology is important, but customer engagement starts and ends with marketing data. Those marketers that have complete command of their marketing data can make winning decisions on how to create and deliver highly-personalized messages that drive customer engagement. Truly, it is all about the messages that marketers send. “Messaging over channels,” is what we like to say. In order to deliver hyper-personalized, unified messaging across all channels you have to know how to activate marketing data to create compelling messaging that shapes the customer experience for your personas.

MTS: What’s the biggest challenge that CMOs need to tackle to make their marketing decisions work?
There are three that stand out for me:

  1. Adapting to the changing expectations of the CMO role and the marketing organization to evolve from a lead generation focused organization to a revenue driven organization.
  2. How to build an integrated tech stack and calibrate it to create a more efficient, competitive and performance focused process.
  3. How to design the modern marketing organization to meet the changing expectations of the CMO. Ultimately, CMOs need to hire a team of marketers with a passion for using data and analytics in decision making, as well as the ability to incorporate creativity and innovation in all stages of the marketing process.

MTS: What startups are you watching/keen on right now?
I was part of the NYC start-up scene for a few years and there are a few startups I keep my eye on: Smartling (SaaS based global content translation platform), CB Insights (tech market intelligence platform) and Yext (location based knowledge management).

MTS: What tools does your marketing stack consist of in 2017?

  • Content experience
  • ABM Targeting & Advertising
  • Lead Capture
  • Data Management
  • Account Sourcing & List Building
  • Account Scoring & Predictive
  • Lead Routing
  • Lead Nurture / Marketing Automation
  • Sales Cadence
  • Budget & Planning
  • Customer advocacy
  • Translation management software

MTS: How do you prepare for an AI-centric world as a marketing leader?
With open eyes and ears. AI is evolving fast. What I would love to see is AI helps marketers spend less time on campaign design and more time on strategy and using real-time engagement data to improve the customer experience.

This Is How I Work

MTS: One word that best describes how you work.
Passionate.

MTS: What apps/software/tools can’t you live without?
At work it’s Trello, Evernote, Slack and assorted Google products; I am big user of productivity apps- maybe an obsessive user of productivity apps.

For personal use its Spotify (huge music fan), Instapaper, Feedly, iOS News App, Kindle, Audible. I’ll flip through Twitter and Instagram while waiting for the subway.

MTS: What’s your smartest work related shortcut or productivity hack?
I block out time on my calendar so that I can prioritize work that has to get done. It’s hard to stay true to those time blocks, but I do everything possible to do so.

I use a standing desk all day long. It’s a productivity hack because it keeps me active physically and mentally and focused on the task at hand.

MTS: What are you currently reading? (What do you read, and how do you consume information?)
I’m deep into two books right now: Petty , a Tom Petty biography and, Sweet Soul Music,by Peter Guralnick. I am listening to the Petty bio on audible and reading Guralinick’s book on the Kindle app. If you call yourself a music fan, Sweet Soul Music is a must read.

I am always reading the WSJ, HBR, Techmeme, Forbes CMO Network and a long list of other marketing related sites. And, I use Twitter and LinkedIn as news sources.

MTS: What’s the best advice you’ve ever received?
“The truth is easier.” That is actually a quote from Hunter S. Thompson, not advice that I was given. That said, it is sage advice and I refer to it all the time.

MTS: Something you do better than others – the secret of your success?
I don’t know or care if I am better at any one thing than anyone else. I just try to be better at what I do everyday. What I aspire to do, to the best of my abilities, is to have a positive lasting impact on others that inspires them to be better.

MTS: Tag the one person in the industry whose answers to these questions you would love to read:
Kyle Lacy, VP Marketing at Lessonly.

MTS: Thank you Judd! That was fun and hope to see you back on MarTech Series soon.

[vc_tta_tabs][vc_tta_section title=”About Judd” tab_id=”1501785390157-b58e162d-0ae25a4b-c27aca64-108e7ff2-6dd4″]

Senior executive with 20+ years of delivering high-impact B2C and B2B marketing leadership in the software, consumer packaged goods, consumer electronics and food and beverage industries across the United Kingdom, Americas, Australian and European markets.

[/vc_tta_section][vc_tta_section title=”About Cheetah Digital” tab_id=”1501785390320-2d44fa50-740c5a4b-c27aca64-108e7ff2-6dd4″]

Cheetah Digital
Cheetah Digital is the only independent, enterprise cross-channel marketing solutions provider dedicated to the marketer. Our unique combination of data, software and trusted industry experts helps marketers build meaningful customer relationships and create profitable brand outcomes. We provide marketing leadership for the world’s best brands, including Williams-Sonoma, Delta Airlines and Hilton. Cheetah Digital is a global company with 1,600 employees worldwide, operating in 17 countries, with headquarters in New York City. .

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The MTS Martech Interview Series is a fun Q&A style chat which we really enjoy doing with martech leaders. With inspiration from Lifehacker’s How I work interviews, the MarTech Series Interviews follows a two part format On Marketing Technology, and This Is How I Work. The format was chosen because when we decided to start an interview series with the biggest and brightest minds in martech – we wanted to get insight into two areas … one – their ideas on marketing tech and two – insights into the philosophy and methods that make these leaders tick.

BMC Announces Cognitive Service Management with AI, Machine Learning, and Predictive Capabilities

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BMC to Acquire Compuware

New Offering Built With IBM Watson Technology Optimizes Service Management Experience In Multi-Cloud Environments For Employees, Agents, And Developers

BMC announced a partnership to seamlessly integrate AI technologies from IBM Watson, a leading AI platform for business, into BMC’s leading IT Service Management solutions for the digital enterprise. IBM Watson Conversation and Discovery capabilities enable service management teams to deliver a better service experience to employees across multi-cloud environments, using chatbots to simplify and enhance employee self-service. Watson technology also delivers speed and increases the accuracy of ticket classification and resolution, enabling agents to spend less time on repetitive tasks so they are more productive, while also driving down the cost of service delivery.

Nayaki Nayyar
Nayaki Nayyar

“Traditional ITSM solutions face immense challenges and heightened expectations when delivering service in today’s multi-cloud environments. BMC addresses these complexities by combining the power of IBM Watson with our Cognitive Service Management solutions to deliver intelligent, conversational, and predictive service management experiences for the enterprise,” Nayaki Nayyar, President, Digital Service Management, BMC said.

Beth Smith
Beth Smith

“The combination of BMC Cognitive Service Management and IBM Watson technology can help enable enterprises to transform their service management capabilities and add value to existing systems. This is yet another example of how organizations are enhancing business processes by infusing them with AI,” Beth Smith, General Manager, IBM Watson Platform said.

The BMC Cognitive Service Management approach enables IT to better manage today’s multi-cloud, multi-device, and omni-channel realities by:

  • Embedding cognitive capabilities into Remedy Service Management Suite to automate classification, assignment, and routing of incidents, and transform the way services are delivered by agents.
  • Using virtual agents and chatbots to create a self-service experience with BMC Digital Workplace that employees want to consume and engage with, and help enterprises scale beyond traditional channels.
  • Enabling developers and enterprises to embed predictive intelligence into applications during development, leveraging AI and machine learning capabilities from IBM Watson through a cognitive micro-service delivered on BMC Innovation Suite.

Cognitive Service Management is available on BMC Innovation Suite, with updates planned for BMC Digital Workplace and Remedy Service Management Suite this quarter.

Also Read: Pressing Engagement: The Art of Social Selling

Is 2018 the Year for Personalization?

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Year for Personalization
Is 2018 the Year for Personalization

Your website is the culmination of years of experiments trying to maximize web visitor engagement. It has been optimized for design, messaging, positioning, layout, imagery and yet there is one fundamental flaw preventing you from a giant leap in engagement: relevance

Webster’s dictionary defines relevance as the ability to retrieve material that satisfies the needs of the user

Unless your website content dynamically changes based on the user/visitor, you are missing out on true relevance. SiriusDecisions cites end-to-end conversation rates of 1.42% as best in class. This means for every 100 inquiries, we roughly win one, just one! What happens to the remaining 99%? When did it become acceptable to win just 1% of our customers?

Relevance is the only way to increase your end-to-end customer conversion and personalization answers this call.

“Smart personalization engines used to recognize customer intent will enable digital businesses to increase their profits by up to 15%” – Gartner

Marketing Technology News: Paysafe Announces YouTube Partnership

Marketers have always wanted to personalize, but until recently technological limits have prevented mass adoption.The underlying components of personalization are now in place:

  • Readily available data sources to decipher known and unknown web visitors
  • Audience insights to understand your web audience
  • Technology to dynamically change the website experience in real-time
  • Marketing personnel to optimize ongoing campaigns

As we turn the chapter on 2017 and look towards our 2018, can your revenue goals wait for personalization?
If you’re a B2B marketer, I don’t have to tell you that B2B marketing is hard. Prospects are getting harder to engage with, buying groups are growing in complexity, and marketers struggle to find the right data to understand and resonate with buyers.

Marketing Technology News: Mono Solutions Joins Bauer Media Group to Strengthen SME Marketing Services Across the Globe

To address this issue head-on, we will be sitting down with Terry Flaherty, Senior Research Director Demand Creation Strategies at SiriusDecisions and Nina LoCicero, Manager of Global Demand Generation and Analytics at Rockwell Automation to offer expert views on successful demand marketing strategies. Terry and Nina will share their perspectives on opportunities the new Demand Unit waterfall create – for marketers like you to identify and engage your active buyers systematically. We will also discuss a few interesting personalization plays Rockwell has successfully run to help them engage prospects more effectively.

Join us for this informative webinar on October 18th at 1:00pm CT, detailing personalization plays revenue marketers are using to fill their demand waterfalls!  After the 18th, the webinar will be available on demand as well.

During this webinar, you will learn how to:

  • Align your web personalization strategy to the new Demand Unit Waterfall
  • Identify the personas of your anonymous web traffic
  • Leverage industry and role data to engage prospects better
  • Deliver relevant messages to your target personas

Marketing Technology News: Gartner Survey Shows Inside Sales Organizations Risk Losing 24% of Employees This Year

Save my Seat!

Baby Boomers are Being Ignored and Not Just by Their Kids

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social media advertisers
Baby Boomers are Being Ignored — and Not Just by Their Kids

strike logoWe get it: Millennials are a shiny object to social media advertisers. With younger folks’ dedication to keeping their Snap streak alive (and the intrigue of advertisers to what makes this generation tick), 18- to 34-year-olds are an obvious choice. But while millennials shouldn’t be ignored, older generations aren’t getting the attention they deserve — and brands are missing revenue because of it.

YouTube is particularly popular with millennials, who tune into it more than any cable news network. Further, 39 percent of millennials regularly visit the platform, compared to 37 percent of Gen Xers (35- to 54-year-olds) and 24 percent of baby boomers (those 55+). Yet despite high levels of YouTube traffic across generations, advertisers spend a disproportionate amount of their budget (156 percent more) on targeting millennials.

In fact, baby boomers have a 10 percent higher view rate and are the most likely to engage with YouTube ads, according to Strike Social’s “Generational Divide” data report. While the focus of brands has been on younger generations, advertisers would do well to spend their time — and ad dollars — on boomers. Below are three things advertisers should look at when defining their social media advertising strategy.

Look at the platform and industry targeting trends

Baby boomers are engaging with and watching longer video ads on YouTube. They also account for 24 percent of U.S. traffic on the platform. But targeting this older generation shouldn’t be applied to YouTube alone.

Perhaps not surprisingly, Facebook is the most popular social network among boomers. On top of that, most social networks’ ad targeting can go up to 65 years old, enabling advertisers to target more niche groups. In contrast, Snapchat only has the capabilities to target up to age 35. We know millennials and centennials (aka Gen Z) are the main audiences targeted on this platform, and given its current ad capabilities, advertisers wouldn’t be wise to put a lot of budget there to reach boomers.

Something else to consider when targeting social media users is interest affinities by generation. Looking at YouTube affinity audiences, 32 percent of boomers are movie lovers, and 31.7 percent are art and theater aficionados. On the other hand, millennials and Gen X are approximately 29 percent foodies and 28.5 percent fast-food cravers, proving that the content used to target different generations is just as important as the platform itself.

That said, every brand’s audience is different. Advertisers should analyze if there is a known older presence on a platform, because then advertisers can go back and look at their own data to see what resonates with their audiences, including baby boomers. We know baby boomers are on YouTube and engaging with more content and longer videos, but advertisers should always be a step ahead of the consumer in how their interests change.

Target the right audience on the right device

While no device reigns supreme in targeting all generations, desktop computers see the ad highest view rate across devices for YouTube ads, at 31 percent, compared to almost 28 percent for phone and tablet.

Among boomers, desktops are still the most popular, with this group watching a full third of YouTube ads on computers. Millennials have a 30 percent YouTube ad view rate on desktop, which is still higher than phone or tablet for this generation too. What’s interesting is that despite their stereotype for being less tech savvy, boomers hold the top spot for watching ads on their phones and tablets as well, with view rates of 29 percent and 30 percent, respectively.

Understand why you are targeting a generation

Keep in mind that baby boomers are the parents of millennials and centennials — and many are adopting tech trends (including social media platforms) that their children have already taken up. Advertisers can help bridge the gap. When a boomer decides to work a social platform into his or her daily routine, or even try it for the first time, advertisers should provide compelling content that keeps mom and dad coming back for more.

What’s more, advertisers should note that baby boomers have significantly more purchasing power. True, millennials may be ubiquitous across social platforms, but they also have less money to spend. Boomers, on the other hand, represent nearly half of consumer expenditures in the U.S. This older generation’s high engagement, along with some rather deep pockets, should give advertisers a pretty strong incentive to test the waters.

Baby boomers and their affiliated older generations hold more power, wealth and influence than their teens (and clearly advertisers) think they do. With their desire to watch longer video ads, engagement with brands on social and increased spending capabilities, boomers should not be ignored. While most brands want to focus on the newest trends and targeting millennials, boomers are more concerned with quality content and ads that are helpful to their daily lives and interests. This is something for marketers to keep in mind as we see brands start to rethink their targeting strategy, one piece of content, video ad and boomer at a time.

Meet Accenture Interactive’s New Commerce and Intelligent Marketing Leaders

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accenture interactive

Brian Walker To Lead Global Strategy For Commerce, Nikki Mendonça Joins As President Of Intelligent Marketing Operations

The new battleground for brands today is Customer Experience. Winning in an experience-led market means being hyper-focused on the customer and agile enough to offer new, connected experiences that flex to accommodate individual client needs.

Accenture Interactive is focused on curating customer experience and stands as the world’s largest digital agency by revenue according to a Bloomberg report. They offer brands connected offerings in design, marketing, content, and commerce.

The fact that they are a subsidiary of one of the largest management consultancy – Accenture – means easy access to IT solutions and top management. Accenture Interactive brought in $4.4 billion last year, roughly 13% of its parent company’s total revenue. Their projected revenue for 2017 stands at $6 billion and top leadership is coming in place to hit these targets.

Brian Walker

The company recently added Brian Walker and Nikki Mendonça to their cadre. Walker joins as Managing Director, Global Strategy Lead for Commerce and Mendonça takes up the position of President, Intelligent Marketing Operations.

Walker’s previous work experience includes being the Chief Strategy Officer at SAP Hybris and Vice President at Forrester Research. In his new role, he will be helping clients curate experiences for customers that span the entire commerce platform, bringing together marketing, sales and service to deliver a seamless, omnichannel solution. His role includes growing the commerce practice in North America, and managing leading edge partnerships and strategic relationships globally.

Nikki Mendonça

Mendonça brings  25 years of strategic marketing experience to Accenture Interactive. She moved from her title as EMEA President of OMD Worldwide where she led over 6,500 professionals across the region committed to delivering marketing performance for clients including McDonald’s, PepsiCo, Estee Lauder, Liberty Global and Walt Disney. She previously held leadership positions at Capital Radio and Leo Burnett. Mendonça believes in creating a new marketing manifesto for clients in a mobile first digital world. In 2015, she was appointed to the IAB Europe Board, which aimed to help accelerate new industry solutions to the changing needs of both advertisers and agencies across the region.

App Annie: Netflix and iQIYI Lead APAC Revenue Ranking in Online Video Apps in H1 2017

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appannie

According to the global mobile app analytics and market data platform, revenue generated from top video apps in APAC has seen significant increase

App Annie said in the Report on APAC Online Video Apps that the total revenue generated from the top 5 video streaming apps in China has increased by 185% compared with the same period of 2016. The report talks about the first half year of 2017, and points particularly to apps from China. This is seven times higher than that of Japan and makes China the biggest and fastest-growing market in the region.

H1 2017 Popular Online Video Apps (by revenue)
H1 2017 Popular Online Video Apps (by revenue)

Of them, Beijing-based iQIYI currently takes a leading position in subscription revenue. During the first six months this year, iQIYI and iQIYI PPS App rank first and fourth respectively in the App Annies’ Popular Online Video Apps by Revenue for China region, which are followed by Tencent Video, Youku and Douyu TV taking.

App Annie said China’s online video apps have successfully expanded their user base by lowering paywalls. They provide most content free of charge, and offer flexible subscription programs at the same time to attract and retain premium users. App Annie also said that the growth in this market has shown local consumers’ increasing willingness to acquire premium content through in-app purchase, which is more convenient and easy-to-use than traditional payment methods such as credit card for online service websites.

In the first half of 2017, the Asia-Pacific region unseated American area to be the market with the biggest consolidated revenue from entertainment apps in both iOS App Store and Google Play worldwide. Online video apps are a major contributor. In fact, the revenue generated from entertainment apps in these two app stores has grown more than fourfold since the first half year of 2015, driven by the innovative monetization models and premium content.

In China market, original premium content has become a key driver for online video apps’ user number and revenue. For example, this summer iQIYI launched suspense hit drama Tientsin Mystic and music reality show The Rap of China, which has thrilled millions of Chinese fans and helped the hip-pop culture go mainstream in China.

From January of 2015 to June of 2017, the user time spent on ‘video playing and editing’ and ‘entertainment’ apps on Android devices in APAC tripled to nearly 40 billion hours. This figure is almost half of the total mobile video views globally in the first half of 2017, making the region the biggest mobile video consumer in the world. Although the gross revenue in APAC is still slightly less than mature markets, it’s convinced that there’re enormous monetization opportunities in the online video market in Southeast Asia and APAC as a whole.