• Home
  • Blog
  • Our Story
  • Local Search Marketing
  • Mobile Marketing
  • Role of Social Media
  • Case Study
    • The Initial Interview
    • The Development of the Marketing Plan
    • Baseline – Where Are We Today?
    • Action Plan
    • Monitoring of Results
    • Maintenance-Constant Adjustment
  • Contact Us
Photobucket

Call Discovering Profits - 866-856-5828

Archive for industry statistics

Internet Advertising is On the Rise

April 4th, 2011 by bstoller

I ran across this article today.   It gives a good indication of what is going on in the advertising world today.

Despite the recent economic downturn and reduced marketing budgets, online ad spending continues to rise. According to Jason Gamwell, CEO of Morning Falls, a Denver-based Internet marketing firm, statistics show online ad spends were up 13.9 percent to a record $25.8 billion in 2010. Gamwell expects this trend to continue for many reasons, from the expanding use of social networks to the shrinking numbers in newspaper ad spending and readership – to the lower cost and higher tracking advantages of the Internet itself.

2010 was the first year in history U.S. marketers spent more money to advertise online than in newspapers, and the first year online readership exceeded print readership. Overall, newspaper spending, including advertising in print and online editions, fell to $25.7 billion, a decline of 6.6 percent, making Internet advertising second only to TV in media spends. Source: eMarketer.com

The reason for this continued growth says Gamwell is that Internet marketing is relatively inexpensive when calculated using the standard formula of the ratio of the cost against the reach of the target audience. When advertising online, companies can reach a wider and more diverse audience for a fraction of the cost of traditional advertising.

The Internet also enables consumers to research and buy at their own convenience. Studies show over 90 percent of customers go online to check out potential purchases, competitive pricing, consumer ratings, and other factors before they buy. As a result, businesses have the advantage of appealing to consumers in a medium that can bring results almost instantly.

Online advertising also offers greater pricing flexibility as firms can run campaigns based on a variety of payment options such as pay per impression and pay per click; and, it provides more accountability, as marketers can measure their return on investment (ROI) quicker and easier than with other forms of advertising.

29 percent, or one in three businesses, say they plan to increase social media spending this year.

According to Gamwell, the advent of social media networks is also fueling online ad spending. In a report published by internetretailer.com, small- and medium-sized firms plan to up their online budgets this year by nearly 29 percent to $40.6 billion from $31.5 billion in 2009, primarily to leverage the rapidly growing social media phenomenon.

With over 550 million users, Facebook is now the web’s most popular site. Almost 72 percent of U.S. Internet users are now on Facebook, and over 70 percent of local businesses are marketing through this social media site – more than anywhere else online. Source: digitalbuzzblog.com.

Naturally, added Gamwell, Internet media spends are most effective when part of a mix of other mediums, including print, radio, and TV – depending upon a brand’s budget and demographics. Despite the dramatic changes brought on by the web, some things never change, such as the fact that repetition and consistency still bring the best advertising results, said Gamwell.

About Morning Falls. Based in Denver, Colorado, Morning Falls provides Internet-based media solutions to businesses worldwide. Established in 2004, the company has generated hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for its clients around the globe. Morning Falls offers advertisers a single point of access to thousands of premium advertising channels online and billions of Internet users worldwide via its robust display advertising network, cutting-edge ad serving technology, and state-of-the-art analytics. The firm also provides lead generation, search engine optimization (SEO), and social media marketing as well as marketing and advertising support. More information on Morning Falls can be found online at http://www.morningfalls.com.

Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/266823#ixzz1IYDLbgqV
Categories : industry statistics
Comments (1)

Internet Advertising Predictions

June 27th, 2010 by bstoller

I ran across this article that will help with internet advertising predictions.  Dedicated to bring you the best information available on trends and marketing fundamentals for small and medium sized business, I believe that every business owner and manager should read this, as it is giving you the future of your advertising.

This is our particular goal with all our customers.

Seven Predictions for 2010 from eMarketer’s CEO

DECEMBER 14, 2009

Geoff Ramsey—CEO, Co-Founder

FBLI
Share

It’s that time of year again—the season for looking back, reflecting on what transpired over the course of the year, and simultaneously looking forward, to formulate thoughts, and perhaps some hope, for what the coming year will bring.

Like last year, I have seven predictions I’d like to share with our readers, many of which will get underway in 2010 but gather momentum and take on greater importance in subsequent years.

1. During 2010, as US ad budgets crack open just a little, look for an accelerated migration of ad dollars from traditional to digital media. According to Forrester Research, 59% of US marketers plan to increase their budgets for digital by pulling funds from traditional outlets. Other sources support this shift, including a recent survey among Association of National Advertisers members and a separate study from Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business.

Areas of Marketing Spending Growth in the Next 12 Months According  to US Marketers, July 2009 (% change)

Next year, while broadcast television, radio, newspaper and magazine spending continue to downsize, though more slowly than in 2009, online ad spending will enjoy a nice bump-up: eMarketer currently forecasts 5.5% growth. And the increase won’t all come from search—banner ads will grow 3.3%, and online video will jump by 40%.

Other researchers and investment banks are even more bullish on digital ad spending next year, with many predicting growth rates exceeding 10% (e.g., JPMorgan, ZenithOptimedia, Forrester, Collins Stewart, Citi Investment Research, Credit Suisse and Oppenheimer). Only one researcher, out of the 23 eMarketer is currently tracking in this area, is forecasting negative growth. The Yankee Group believes online ad spending will take another hit in 2010, dropping 1.5%.

2. Even post-recession, aggregate media dollars will fail to return to former levels. Looked at another way, while total US media spending will decrease by 14.6% this year, the $192 billion spent in 2008 will represent the absolute peak of media spending—at least for the next decade. I don’t believe we will ever return to that historic level, for these four reasons:

  • The measurement and accountability mandate will intensify demand for lower-cost, more efficient media.
  • Media fragmentation will force marketers to target their messages to ever smaller niche audiences.
  • Digital technologies are creating new opportunities for firms to self-market, such as a company’s own Website, online videos, e-mail marketing to existing customers and so forth. These channels end up bypassing paid media such as yellow pages and direct mail.
  • There will be a continued emphasis on “earned media,” such as on social networks and other consumer-generated community platforms. This will also siphon dollars away from paid media.

For decades, the entire multibillion-dollar media industry has been puffed up beyond its true value because of waste. Marketers paid huge sums to maximize reach, while knowing that thousands or millions of the people seeing their campaigns would never buy their products. Gradually, though, as the financial and housing markets are doing, media will shrink to match the true value it is delivering to marketers. That “true value” is being unearthed by better measurement systems, such as more efficient targeting.

For decades, the entire multibillion-dollar media industry has been puffed up beyond its true value because of waste.

3. While media dollars have imploded, media consumption will continue to explode. Due to increasingly empowered consumers and further advances in technology, look for media to become more:

  • Distributed—the same content will pop up in multiple locations, formats and channels.
  • Personalized—media will be tailored to reflect what consumers have watched, read, experienced and shared.
  • Contextualized—when and where consumers get their information will dictate its content and format, and that, in turn, will shape how they interact with and share it.

Each of these trends will lead to more precise targeting, which will also reinforce trend No. 2, the stagnation of media spending.

4. Advertising will support less and less of the load for content and entertainment. Fueled by the low cost of digital distribution, combined with vast amounts of consumer-generated content in the form of blogs, social networks, photo- and video-sharing sites, and rampant Twitter activity, media choices have exploded. There is no way advertising can pay all the freight for this media tonnage. In addition, marketers are clamoring for more direct contact with consumers, especially to engage with them on social networks, and this will divert ad money and attention away from third-party publishers.

Advertising will by no means go away, but it will play a smaller role as paid content and hybrid models emerge.

5. Advertising on social networks will never attract a large share of marketers’ ad dollars. eMarketer estimates social network advertising will grow only 7% next year to $1.3 billion, accounting for a mere 5.5% of total online ad dollars. And while ad spending on these sites will never represent a significant share of total online ad dollars, spending on non-advertising forms of social marketing will rise significantly next year and beyond.

Marketers are more interested in genuine engagement with consumers on social platforms, and less in opportunities to flood them with banner ads.

Social marketing works best when it’s earned, not paid for.

The spending emphasis is on internal staffing, and building structures and systems for two-way, real-time communications with consumers—and not so much on deploying ads. Social marketing works best when it’s earned, not paid for. It’s a matter of leveraging the inherent trust consumers have in each other.

Eventually, online social activities and connections will be baked into every form of digital content on the Web, from brand Websites and shopping sites to search engines, traditional media sites and entertainment portals.

6. Marketers will be increasingly willing to trade off reach for deeper engagement. This goes right along with the drive toward improved targeting and increasingly efficient media buys.

Rather than try to reach every conceivable person who fits a particular demographic, marketers will be looking for technologies and ad solutions that allow them to reach only the people who—by their past surfing behavior, search queries, online purchases, social connections, Twitter posts and other digital footprints—indicate that they are likely prospects.

The analogy here is to search. The search advertising market has been so successful precisely because it captures consumers’ intentions. When a user types “hotels in Bermuda” into a Google search box, you can be pretty sure they have an intention to reserve a hotel at that destination, and they are therefore likely to click and convert. Marketers wanting to capture intentions higher up the purchase funnel will want to identify people who demonstrate a likely desire to interact with the marketer’s brand, possibly leading to a purchase.

If a marketer is successful at the above—zeroing in on a narrow group of likely prospects—then there is a much better opportunity to engage with those consumers on a deeper, more meaningful basis.

In effect, less is more.

7. The classic interruption/disruption model of advertising, whereby marketers insert unwanted, usually irrelevant ads as a price the consumer must pay to view desired content, will erode, if not fade away. Consumers in the digital age simply have too much control over their media environments these days for marketers to be pushing unwanted banners, buttons or videos. This raises the bar for marketers and their agencies to develop new forms of messages that are not even perceived as ads, but rather as welcome content. The challenge will be twofold:

  1. To better identify likely prospects (as in prediction No. 6 above)
  2. To create communications that are so compelling, entertaining, informative or useful that the consumer is not only happy to receive them, but also motivated to share them with others.

Advertising creative, as well as the targeting technologies needed to identify likely prospects, will have to step up to this challenge.

Whether or not the recession ends, 2010 will bring about monumental change. Are you prepared to capitalize on it?

For a link to the actual article, click here.

Categories : industry statistics
Comments (46)

Online Advertising Growth Rate – At Least 20% a Year

June 13th, 2010 by bstoller

According to  The Kelsey Group, they predict that advertisers will spend $147 billion by 2012. That’s worldwide advertising and it’s part of their report, “The Kelsey Group’s Annual Forecast (2007-2012): Outlook for Directional and Interactive Advertising.”

The Kelsey Group states that in 2007 the market hit 45 billion, which represents a growth rate of 23.4 percent.

“Interactive advertising, which comprises search (including local search), display advertising, classifieds and other interactive ad products, grew its share of global advertising revenues from 6.1 percent in 2006 to 7.4 percent in 2007. By 2012 Kelsey Group analysts expect the interactive share of global ad spending will reach 21 percent.”

Just focusing on the US, the group predicts that for the years 2007 to 2012, in the United States interactive advertising revenues will grow from $22.5 billion to $62.4 billion (22.6 percent CAGR).

Categories : industry statistics
Comments (1)

Tired of Wasting Your Advertising Dollars?

Learn How to Use Twitter to Explode Your Business!

FREE!

New Graphic

We respect your email privacy

This is a must for any business owner - large or small

 

Case Study and Testimonial – Bliss Salon and Spa

Click here for The Bliss Salon and Spa Case Study

Archives

  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • September 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011
  • April 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • September 2010
  • August 2010
  • June 2010

Categories

  • Facebook Marketing
  • industry statistics
  • Just Good Stuff
  • marketing fundamentals
  • Marketing Strategies
  • Mobile Marketing
  • No Cost Marketing Ideas
  • Social Media Marketing
  • Various marketing media