Content Marketing News for the Week of Jun 23

Mom always told me, “Moron, never compare yourself to others because we were all meant to be different.”  So in that spirit let me help you compare yourself to other corporate content marketing operations.  Curata research says 43% of companies plan on increasing the staff they have working on content marketing this year.  87% have a content marketing team and the majority, 68% have 1-3 people on it.  21% have 4-6.  42% say there’s an executive in charge of content marketing but that number will go up by 2017.  21% call that person a content marketing director or manager.  Almost the same amount call them the Chief Content Officer.  Now, if you’re a writer or producer and no one is calling you, this next thing will make you mad.  41% say the most important skill-set that’s missing from their team is content creation.  After that comes a content marketing lead at 21.2%, then way behind that at 8.8% is a tie between content promotion and data oriented skills.  Maybe recruiters don’t know how to look for content creators.

 

Silly bosses, always wanting content marketing to be effective.  Can’t they just let us do it because it’s fun?  The answer is no.  It’s not seen as art, or performance, and if someone is caught having fun, it’s usually taken as a sign something is happening outside of corporate policy.  Well maybe everyone can be a little happy because an Ascend2 report says 89% of marketers think content marketing’s effectiveness is on the up, going up, headed upward.  But effective at what?  CMO Todd Lebo says the top goals right now are increasing lead gen, improving customer engagement, and a bit behind those two is increasing brand awareness.  The 3 biggest barriers are lack of an effective strategy and lack of content creation resources (tied at 48%), then budget constraints at an almost tie of 47%.  Many companies still expect content to be free and magically come out of thin air, like, you know, toddlers might expect.

 

Where are you?  What are you looking for?  Bam, we found you and now here’s an ad on your phone to go buy something nearby.  BIA/Kelsey says location-targeted mobile ad spending on stuff like that should grow 24.6% from 2015 to 2020, hitting $29.5B.  Virtual Strategy Magazine reports that it looks like search will keep beating the daylights out of the other ad formats, BUT…nothing stays the same forever.  Its share is actually expected to drop from 57% in 2016 to 42% in 2020.  BIA/Kelsey VP of Content Michael Boland says, “Several market factors are bearing down on the mobile ad marketplace—from Google’s moves to adapt to an app-based world, to the media consumption habits of Millennials.”  What’s one of the fastest growing mobile ad formats?  Native social, like Facebook’s news feed ads or Snapchat Stories.

 

Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell, and Skyword; these are the names you think of when you think of the world’s greatest inventors.  Okay, Skyword might not belong with those other two, but the content marketing platform did get a patent for something called PeopleRank.  It’s a way for you to measure how much influence somebody has in a certain community or on a certain topic or group of topics.  Finding influencers is step one of an influencer marketing strategy y’know.  PeopleRank is the 4th patent for Skyword and the 2nd in 6 months.  Next they might invent a blender that plays the Cars song “Shake it Up” when it runs.  Please be aware that if you love to steal ideas, Skyword has protection for this PeopleRank thing to at least 2032.

 

Kicking it up a notch, that’s what The Financial Times is doing with their branded content production.  The Guardian didn’t report how much they paid for it but they went out and kicked some tires and decided to drive home with Alpha Grid.  That’s a company that’s been making branded content for all kind of media platforms as well as events.  The whole operation is going to be in a new studio that was launched in September, and Financial Times tech, media and telecoms editor Ravi Mattu will run it as editorial director.  What about Alpha Grid founder and managing director Roslyn Shaw?  Don’t worry, she’ll be alright.  She’ll stay in her current role and be the Financial Times’ Executive Creative Director.  Why all this notch up kicking?  The company says since they introduced paid posts on their site, they’ve seen a 30% lift in revenue from its Branded Content operation.

 

If you’re a user of Facebook Instant Articles you’ll want to lean in and hear all this because SocialTimes tells us you’ve got some new options.  You’ve got support for marketer logos at the top of Instant articles.  The style editor has been updated so you can have new color, text and spacing features.  Publishers can add customized bylines and kickers.  And there’s a real-time preview tool, because who wants to wait 4 weeks to preview your article edits?  When can you have these things?  Instant Articles’ Product Manager tells you eager beavs the custom bylines and kickers are ready to go.  Adding marketer logos happens later this month, and when you get it, you can identify a product, brand or sponsor in the article and their logo will automatically get pulled in from their Facebook page.  The style editor updates will be here “in the coming weeks.”

 

If you’ve been spending your time uploading videos of Three Dog Night singing “Joy to the World” to Vimeo, you’re really creating a lot of problems.  The company had to go to court, actually they’ve been in court since 2009, trying to prove they shouldn’t be held liable for copyrighted pre-1972 music users uploaded to their platform.  Well the latest verdict, from the US appeals court, has said no, they can’t be held responsible.  Reuters reports that reverses earlier court rulings that favored Capitol Records and Sony, who also tried to say that since Vimeo employees saw the copyrighted uploaded material, the company is guilty of ripping off Three Dog Night and their friends like John Denver and The Osmonds.  The new ruling says no, you can’t expect a platform like that to be able to monitor every single upload.  All of this was about just 199 videos.

 

Don’t you dare have a technology platform that doesn’t offer live streaming video.  Everybody’s doing it and offering it and Tumblr is now no exception.  Except they’re doing it a little differently.  They’re not interested in hosting all this video, just being the discovery and distribution outlet for it.  Here’s what that means.  Users will actually do the shooting on other services like YouTube and Kanvas, but they’ll link those apps to Tumblr and streams will play in Tumblr’s video player.  And your followers will get notified.  And the post will have a badge showing which video app you used.  Save the replay of a live video on the video app, and it’ll stay on Tumblr as a regular video post.  Sarah Perez reports Tumblr’s working with 15 media partners for some live streaming content.  No ads yet, but count on that to change.

 

Who wants $50M dollars?  Come and get it!  Actually you can only come and get it if you’re an established content creator who’s good at live streaming.  David Cohen reports there had been some scuttlebutt that Facebook as paying a pretty penny for Facebook Live content, and now the WSJ confirmed it.  Their reporters Steven Perlberg and Deepa Seetharaman saw proof of 140 deals with media companies, publishers and celebrities, like Vox Media, Tastemade, Mashable, Kevin Hart, Gordon Ramsay, and Deepak Chopra.  The 3 highest paid Facebook Livers are BuzzFeed, The New York Times and CNN.  Facebook VP Justin Osofsky said the partners were picked if they had a live video track record and could make and test different kinds of live programming.

 

It’s kind of an apples and oranges comparison, but if you’re out there trying to prove radio’s worth as a medium, the latest Pew State of the News Media study is going to help you say it’s better than podcasting.  Michael Balderston writes that 21% of Americans 12+ have listened to a podcast in the past month and 36% have ever listened to a podcast.  But, when you look at overall audio consumption and who has the bigger share, radio gives podcasting a lot of static, pun intended.  2% of audio listening goes to podcasts while 54% is spent on AM/FM radio.  Why it’s as if radio has had an 89-year head start before the survey was taken!  Nonetheless, 49% of Americans know about podcasting, 6,000 hosted shows were added from 2014 to 2015, and there were 3.3B download requests in 2015.

 

That’s it.  Help me impress my friends, follow me @mikestiles.

Content Marketing Quickie for Week of June 16

There are some things about social media that just annoy you.  It’s okay, it doesn’t make you a bad person.  You’re just the best you you can be.  eMarketer reported on the reasons UK users lose trust or are turned off by a brand, and the top answer at 52% is, see if you can relate to this, brands bombarding them with posts.  Next at 39% was brands putting out content that isn’t genuine.  22% heard a negative story about the brand in the media, and the same amount got ticked off because the brand kept them waiting for an answer.  But now that brands know what clearly makes users like them less, they’ll change, right?  Oh hell no.  A different study from Headstream asked the same question a year ago and got the same answer; too many social posts.  Brands are making the same mistakes, making people think less of them, and proving once again they don’t really give a rats about what people want and like.

 

One time for Christmas I got a present and I was so excited.  I opened it and it was a woman’s negligee.  That gift wasn’t personalized and so I found it off target and irrelevant.  Okay that didn’t really happen but, personalization is the siren song that lures people to engage content, thinking it was made and sent with them in mind. But a report from Demand Metric and Seismic says while 61% of marketers say they personalize content in some way, only half say it’s meeting objectives well or very well.  Robert Springer writes the nuttiest thing analyst Jerry Rackley found was that the best results came when brands personalized 21 to 40% of their content, not all.  Turns out personalization is only as good as your data and most don’t have enough good data.

 

There are very few things I look forward to every year; the holidays, the start of football season, Tax Day because I hate myself.  But I also look forward to the big ass annual Internet Trends report from Mary Meeker of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.  Mediashift founder Mark Glaser lifts out the parts we content marketers should particularly care about.  Google and Facebook just rule, that’s all there is to it.  They control 76% of the growth in US online advertising, so nyah.  Everybody else is at around 13%.  Only 12% of advertising right now is on mobile and that’s dumb because it’s a total disconnect from what consumers are doing.  For Millennials and Generation Z visual communication is the way.  Chewbacca woman mentioned Kohl’s twice and it was seen over 150M times in one day.  And you’ve got to be on the messaging apps.  Lastly, don’t ignore the India market.  It’s exploding.

 

What do you think is the fairest way to pay for branded content campaigns?  Think carefully about your answer, because Polar found out things are kinda changing.  For instance, around 57% of publishers use cost per thousand…still.  But cost per view is the fastest growing pricing method.  Best Media Info reports cost per thousand is used most when dealing with media agencies.  Why?  Because they’re stuck in old fashioned digital advertising land.  What makes that extra sad is brands still largely rely on agencies for their content marketing.  Pete Spande of Business Insider says, “While we initially saw most of the buying coming from media agencies, we’re seeing new clients coming from PR, communications, and in-house newsrooms.”  This research says CPM might get phased out in favor of CPV as content starts getting measured on views and engagement.  Plus, consumer publishers have started giving clients guarantees when cost is determined by views.

 

When you think about the great partners throughout history, you think Batman & Robin, Romeo & Juliet, probably mostly Ernest & Julio Gallo.  So now you can add The Atlantic and Allstate to the list.  In fact, this pairing up of a publisher and a brand should become rather common.  The Atlantic and Allstate’s love child is called The Renewal Project, a “social-first site and newsroom” telling stories about those doing good things and adding to civic innovation. Theresa Cramer lays it all out for us; there’ll be branded content, events, continue The Renewal Awards, and continue the Heartland Monitor Poll.  Here’s the interesting part, if you went to the program’s website you’d barely know it’s an Allstate thing.  You have to go to the About page to really get the branding.  Allstate’s Sanjay Gupta says, “Hope and fueling positive change is the inspiration behind this work.”  Atlantic Media Strategies is the creative agency of The Atlantic.

 

In case you weren’t sure about whether or not this whole video thing would take off, Renegade founder Drew Neisser wrote up some critical reasons to be doing it.  Did you know Facebook lets videos get over twice the reach of image posts?   That gets them 8B video views a day so they can compete with YouTube.  Facebook Live videos are placed higher in Newsfeeds when they’re live and users are spending 3x as much time watching those as regular videos.  Snapchat users spend 25-30 mins a day there watching 10B videos per day.  Millennials are video crazy; 80% consider videos when researching a purchase and 76% follow brands on YouTube.  And of course there’s mobile, which passed desktop late last year in video views.

 

Does your brand have any good ideas for people?  No?  Well go come up with one and then take a serious look at Pinterest, because people look for ideas over 2B times per month there.  2 billion!  That’s a lot of people looking for you to put a thought in their head.  Pinterest’s Naveen Gavini says their database is about 75B thanks to the over 100M users who put them there.  Now SocialTimes says doing searches on Pinterest is even faster because they made some infrastructure updates.  And when they do search, they’ll see an average 55 ideas, that’s 5x more than the text results search engines usually dish out.  And don’t forget visual search.  Since it was rolled out in November, it gets more than 130M visual idea searches a month.  So start thinking and pinning.

 

Can I ask you a simple question?  What’s branded content?  C’mon that’s supposed to be a no brainer.  But apparently it’s anything but…in fact a report from the Branded Content Marketing Association says there’s a lot of confusion about what it means.  Take me for instance.  I don’t even think it should be called branded content.  That’s so negative.  It sounds like good and free content was caught, thrown to the ground, and branded with a logo that doesn’t belong there naturally.  Branded content is a ridiculous thing to call it, it should be brand content.  Laurie Fullerton writes some think it’s an extension of their brand, reflecting and amplifying the brand’s values.  Others think it’s more holistic than that and is any manifestation associated with a brand in the eye of the beholder, meaning something like user generated content that isn’t owned or distributed by the brand.

 

Get ready for some numbers from PwC’s Annual Global Entertainment and Media Outlook Report.  It shows us what the ad revenue drivers will be in the US heading toward 2020.  First of all, media and entertainment revenue will account for 29.4% of the worldwide total, with just about everything going up, not down.  Can you go ahead and guess the one kind of media that will lose revenue?  More on that later.  Internet advertising will grow to $93.5B by 2020 and pass broadcast TV advertising in 2017.  DigitalContentNext goes on to report video on demand and over-the-top services will drive the TV and video revenue.  But regular TV ad revenue will go up too.  Radio is predicted to increase a couple of billion by 2020.  VR will lead to rising video games revenue.  Magazine revenue will go up just a fraction.  And our one and only ad revenue losing media…newspapers.  PwC thinks John Q Public will look for cheaper content bundles, streaming deals and not as many commercial interruptions.

 

If you’re going to make a podcast, why not be aware of who it is that’s listening to podcasts, and on what?  Edison loves to find out that kind of thing so they and Triton Digital phoned up a lot of people to ask them about…phone surveys.  Just kidding, they asked about podcasting.  55% of Americans 12+ are aware of the term “podcasting” and 36% have checked one out at least once.  56% of podcast fans are dudes, and 44% ladies.  They’ve got a higher median income ($63,000) than the average and are more likely to have a degree.  MarketingProfs goes on to report that for people who listen to podcasts weekly, they listen to 5 of them per week.  71% listen on their smartphone; 29% on their computer.  And as out and about as I thought podcasting would be, most, 53%, listen to them at home.

 

That’s it.  Follow my Twitter bird @mikestiles.

Content Marketing News for the Week of June 9

If I had to get a bunch of people drunk and arguing about one topic, I think that topic might be ad blocking.  Is it fair?  Is it empowering?  Is it good or bad?  Sending us in right or wrong directions?  Johnny Ryan of PageFair and Digital Content Next talked about it and came out with some ways marketers should deal with the ad blocking risk.  Users should be able to reject or complain about ads to marketers in real time so brands can get better at the experience and be forced into better creative.  Publishers should offer fewer but better ads that complement the experience instead of disrupting it.  And there should be relevant targeting using volunteered user data, but the user should get something of value in exchange for volunteering it.  Publishers should teach marketers engaged consumers and trusted publishers will pay the big dividends.  Attention metrics should play a bigger role.  And overall, it’d be nice if publishers and advertisers agreed to an industry standard maximum page load time.  Hey, a user experience fan can dream can’t he?

 

It’s time for one of my favorite features on the ol’ Content Marketing Quickie…make listeners feel really good about themselves and their future prospects.  Demand for talent has outstripped supply.  Lin Pophal writes in eContent that if you’re a digital marketing talent, demand for you is WAY outstripping supply and it’s only going to get worse, or better depending on who you are.  A 2015 Creative Group study showed 58% of executives think it’s really hard to find creative pros.  Highest demand goes to content marketing and creative/art direction.  And VP Ester Frey says user interface specialists, mobile app developers, and data analytics pros are in especially high demand, saying, “Companies that haven’t spent money on that in the past are going to have to be competitive and relevant.”  Tim Bourgeois with East Coast Catalyst adds people who can move comfortably among creative, technology, and senior management functions are solid gold unicorns.  He says, “It’s a great time to be a talented digital marketer and a terrible time to be a marketing organization or agency.”

 

Guess what the preferred medium by consumers is if they have to get exposed to a digital ad.  Go on, guess.  Did you say podcasts?  Because that’s the answer Wondery found for US consumers age 18-49.  Wait wait, it gets better.  David Kirkpatrick writes in MarketingDive two thirds reported taking an action after hearing a podcast ad.  Wondery’s Hernan Lopez keeps reporting that a third of people plan on consuming more podcasts in the next 6 months, even though they’re already listening to at least one a month.  What else makes those podcasts listeners so attractive to marketers?  A college education, $100,000+ in income, and early adopters of a lot of different products.  comScore’s Andrew Lipsman thinks podcasts are booming because of mobile and a lot of good content, saying, “Not only do podcasts over-index on reaching some of the most valuable and hardest-to-reach audiences, they also put consumers in a mindset that’s favorable to ad receptivity.”

 

The granddaddy organization in all of content marketing, arguably – but please don’t argue, is Joe Pulizzi’s Content Marketing Institute.  It, like many of the companies it’s covered over the years, has now been acquired.  UBM is the tops B2B events organizer in the US and Asia and they are CMI’s new owners.  Joe says absolutely nothing is going to change, in fact everyone at CMI is going to keep their jobs and you’ll see their smiling faces at Content Marketing World in September.  And he says he deeply believes UBM has the same passion for what’s going on in Content Marketing as he does.  But it is a booming community and UBM is needed to accommodate the boom.  CMI and Content Marketing World will be under UBM’s technology events group.  Joe says they always imagined selling CMI at some point, and this was the right time and the right acquirer.

 

We keep hearing about how the marketing dollars are moving from advertising to content marketing but will we one day see a world free of traditional advertising like Vice Media’s Shane Smith has sometimes predicted?  Actually he said there’s a blood bath in digital media coming within the year.  Well GumGum’s Jon Stubley tells Mumbrella don’t count on it, because while content marketing is awesome, for every Red Bull, there’s a brand that’s not so “right” to generate an earthshaking content stream.  Other reasons it won’t happen is it takes a lot of resources to do right.  It is NOT true that if you build it they will come.  Then there’s my big soapbox: the content has to actually be good, and that’s really, really, really hard.  It’s hard for artists, so the odds of a brand stumbling into content greatness is slimmy mcslimmerson.  Finding true entertainers and journalists isn’t easy and frankly, most brands aren’t even seriously looking for them.  That said, Jon says change is coming, but it won’t be ad-free change.

 

Conversion Logic co-founder Alison Lohse is impressed with how much marketing technology has come along, especially the kind that deals with analytics.  What she wonders is with all that going on, why are most marketers still largely operating in the dark and making guesses and assumptions.  A survey with IDG Connect revealed the majority of marketers are using something like 6 tools, maybe more, in the quest to measure performance.  But despite that, half don’t even really trust the results they’re getting.  59% said centralization and data collection is their big problem, and 46% have a hard time getting insights they can do something about.  And how about attribution?  78% plan to use or adopt it in the next couple of years, but they can’t even agree on what attribution means.  26% will base it on statistical modeling and algorithms, and 23% will use last-click data.  What solution do most want?  They say the ideal solution is a holistic cross-channel view.

 

23 Stories, which is Condé Nast’s branded content unit, has debuted one of those 23 stories, teaming up with the oh so fashionable hoity toity Gucci to get it done.  Alexandra Steigrad tells us it’s a 4-part series inspired by Gucci’s pre-fall collection.  Each episode is a little over 2 minutes and is kind of a modern day NYC retelling of the classic Greek romance “The Legend of Orpheus and Eurydice.”  Have you ever had a rash in your Orpheus?  It’s awful!  And it’s directed by Gia Coppola, yes, the granddaughter of that Godfather director guy.  Want distribution envy?  Well here it comes.  The series will be on Vogue.com, VanityFair.com, GQ.com, NewYorker.com, WMagazine.com, Pitchfork.com and Gucci.com.  It’s very clear right there in the opening credits, produced by Gucci, so everyone should know it’s from the brand.  Gucci’s CEO says, “Digital narrative is the way Millennials in particular like to be engaged today.”

 

Since he is one, Douglas Karr got to wondering just what it is CMO’s want and expect from an agency these days, and the answer is that those expectations are rapidly changing and it’s not that easy to keep up.  He says not just change in consumer behavior, new tech and creative trends, but also how businesses perceive agencies.  Are you happy with your agency?  Did your expectations for them change over the past couple of years?  Well Douglas and company did a survey of CMO’s and asked what makes a great agency.  #1 Complete transparency.  #2 Alignment between campaign and business goals.  #3 A back and forth that allows for new ideas, constructive feedback, and open conversation.  #4 Wise tech vendor selection.  Then comes management of platforms and awareness & introduction of the best of the new technologies that come along.

 

In between listening to twenty one pilots and Swing Out Sister on Pandora, you might want to check out an ad, and Pandora’s got something new to offer marketers.  RadioWorld says it’s a mobile ad that’s more visual and interactive.  It’s right there where the album art goes, is responsive, and offers muted video that goes noisy and full screen when tapped.  Pandora partnered up with Moat to make sure you can measure listener engagement, like viewability and time spent.  Pandora’s Chris Phillips said, “We’ll be emphasizing the human need for attention on an ad, which needs to take place before meaningful interaction with brand content can happen.”  They claim that during the interactive ad pilot, engagement with the brand’s landing page for over 30 seconds doubled.

 

If you’re struggling to make 5 videos this year, or even one, try Time Inc.’s goal on for size.  They’re going for 40,000 pieces of video content in 2016.  Okay, that doesn’t sound like such an easy thing to scale, but TechCrunch’s Anthony Ha says they’re working with a NYC startup called Wochit to get’er done.  Wochit can look at the text of an article, then go find licensed media the publisher can then stitch together to represent or tell the story of that article with video.  Some of Time Inc.’s brands like People and Fortune have already tried it.  Entertainment Weekly used it to break the very serious news Ellen Pompeo is staying with Grey’s Anatomy.  Non Time Inc. brands like The New York Daily News, USA Today and AOL are also using Wochit to help them crank out the moving pictures.

 

That’s it.  Give us a follow won’t you @mikestiles.

Content Marketing News for Week of May 25

People are racing around, on their mobiles, mobile has a smaller viewport, so you might make the assumption that you should stick to publishing shorter content when mobile is the target.  But not so fast.  Pew Research, James L. Knight Foundation and Parse.ly found people spend almost twice as much time with long-form stories on mobile than short ones.  And longer stories attract readers about as much as shorter stories.  But Rande Price writes how users find the story, time of day, and topic matters.  Content consumption mostly happens in the morning and late at night.  Long form articles do best when discovered through internal links, then comes direct or email links, external sites, search, then social.  Lastly, people who read long-form articles are more likely to look at several articles on the site.

 

You’re out there doing what you thought you were supposed to do, pushing relevant, targeted content to the peoples.  But your problem just might be those peoples, because a Rapt Media study says their trust in pushed content is going down, they’re keeping brands that push too hard at arm’s length, and they like discovering content on their own thank you very much.  Laurie Fullerton reports in The Drum the rejection rate for online ads is 43% and 95% are doing something to not get ads.  I’m not terribly interested in depressing you but here come some more numbers; 67% think brands are pushing too much stuff, and 55% don’t think it’s interesting or relevant.  Verdict: while it’s cool content marketing is happening, the public’s impression is we’re just putting out a lot of crap they don’t care about.  Yay us.  But there is a reward if we get the quality of content right, 63% would feel better about a brand if it did ever give them content they liked.

 

Hey, my job is to just bring you the news, I’ll let you decide whether it’s good or bad after you hear it.  You know how on Soundcloud you can follow along the wavelength of the audio track and see the reactions people have to what they’re hearing along the way?  TechCrunch says Facebook Live has something like that for recorded versions of live streams.  Because they know at what point in the broadcast the most engagement happened, they can put a reaction graph up that basically points to the most interesting parts of the video.  So people would have the option to just skip over what you, the video artist, intended them to see and just glance at highlights.  It’s really not the planned experience.  Also, if this catches on videos will start to be made differently, intentionally loaded with big grabby moments.  No visible spikes and people might skip the whole thing.

 

You’re a brand.  You spend a lot of time, money and effort building up an audience of fans on Facebook.  You get them to willingly Like your page and ask to see updates from you.  Then Facebook says hold on, thanks for helping bring all those users to Facebook but we’re not going to let most of your own fans see your posts.  We’re not going to let your content compete on its own merits either.  We’re going to choke off organic reach and make you pay for access to your own followers.  What do brands do when a platform treats them that badly?  Use it MORE of course!  A Quintly study shows post frequency on it by brands in 2015 went up 36%.  SocialTimes reports it was up 14% on Instagram and down 2% on Twitter.  The secret to engagement appears to be stay small.  Engagement was tops on all 3 networks for brands with 1,000 or fewer followers.

 

Maybe your job is to get people to fork over their hard earned dollars to a well meaning charity and use content to do it.  If so, you should know what kind of content has the exact opposite effect on people and makes them clutch their debit cards ever so tightly.  Abila and Finn Partners surveyed United States Americans who donated to at least one non profit in the last year, and 72% of them said poor content affects their decision.  What do they mean by poor content?  The highest number, over a third say that would be vague content.  Sometimes overly-clever comes out vague.  Next at 25% comes content about programs they have no interest in.  That’s followed very closely at 24% by boring content.  Did you know even charitable people don’t like to be bored out of their skulls?  It’s true!  eMarketer reports their favorite way to get content is in short, self-contained emails.

 

I’m going to sling 3 words your way and see if your heart starts racing with excitement, or if you burst out laughing.  Paying for podcasts.  Which reaction did you have?  Benjamin Snyder reports that one Swedish company, Acast, isn’t laughing.  They’re trying out a subscription model for podcasts so that if people really like and value a show, they can express that like by supporting it with moolah, which is Swedish for money.  Also, this gives podcasters the freedom to not mess with advertising if they don’t want to, and let the quality of the show make or break it financially.  Will any podcasters want to do this?  15 of them are signing up for it at launch.  Acast CEO Mans Ulvestam says they’re also going to let current podcasts sell bonus content.  I know it all sounds crazy but hey, the Swedes gave us Abba.

 

Okay babies, put on your hotel robes, open up a bottle of wine and tell Echo to play Marvin Gaye because I’m about to talk about the sexiest part of content marketing there is, the topic that gets everyone’s heart racing.  Translation.  Yeah I told you it was gonna be hot.  Translation platform smarting Smartling has acquired VerbalizeIt because its business is translating audio, video, and other multimedia.  Econtent says Smartling’s second acquisition of the year gets it hundreds of VerbalizeIt’s customers.  So apparently this media translation tool is so awesome the investors on “Shark Tank” were fighting over it, and now it’ll be integrated into Smartling’s platform and founders Ryan Frankel and Kunal Sarda will stick around and take leadership positions.  As unsexy as you might find it, having translated captions and transcripts adds a ton of juice in terms of search and accessibility.

 

We all know the new mission in life is to completely eliminate the written word and no longer require writing of any kind, and Facebook is playing around with yet another way to eliminate combinations of letters that convey messages.  You know how you can include an image when commenting on someone else’s post?  Well in some test countries you can include a video.  Venturebeat reports over 100M hours of video are watched on Facebook as it is, so clearly users like doing that.  All you do, if you’re one of the people getting the test, is tap the camera icon, and when you reply with a video it behaves just like other videos on Facebook, they won’t play by themselves…kinda like I was in college.

 

Music labels are starting to think about stuff other than and beyond music because, you know, they want to survive and stuff.  Warner Music UK is now jammin’ with something called The Firepit.  Billboard’s Georg Szalai says it’s a creative content division and “innovation center” in London that’s already got some projects in the pipeline like online and TV formats, live and campaign content, feature-length projects, and digital artist specials.  CEO Max Lousada said, “It’s not enough for people to hear our artists’ music or see the content they create, we want them to watch, engage, react and connect.  Placing the creative process at the heart of the organization will give us a dynamic space in which we can pioneer rich, immersive experiences for fans and unlock new promotional and commercial opportunities for our artists.”  That was a long quote.  The Firepit will be led by Stefan Demetriou who’s done stuff like produce a 4K Ed Sheeran concert film.  He’s friends with Taylor Swift ohmygod ohmygod!

 

If I said I was going to tell you about Marsbot, what would you think that is?  I would have guessed it’s a mechanical dog to keep the first Mars colonists from going stark raving mad, but I’d have been wrong.  Marsbot is a standalone app launched by Foursquare.  And what it does is text you a recommendation for places you can eat or drink, wait a minute cause here’s the interesting part, without you asking it to.  Maybe it will tell you where you can get a drink on Mars.  Ken Yeung writes it uses where you are and your travel patterns to suggest stuff.  But you have to help it at first by letting it know if you’re a gluten hater, your favorite cuisines, any ethnic foods that put you right in the bathroom…then it can tell you where to go.  Foursquare doesn’t sound enormously confident with it right now, Product Manager Marissa Chacko said, “It’ll take time for Marsbot to learn about you and for us to refine how it all works.  No one said inventing the future would be easy.”

 

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Content Marketing News for Week of May 19

Shareen Pathak interviewed an anonymous social media marketing executive who apparently believes this whole influencer marketing frenzy is, well, not so warranted.  Let’s see if you agree.  The mystery executive said once brands decided social was here to stay, the crush to make content went up, but now there’s too little quality and too many influencers.  And those influencers got too much money thrown at them too fast, so fast they don’t value their art anymore.  Are they really into the topic, or do they just want to be influencers for money?  Brands have no idea what to pay them and influencers have no idea how much to ask for.  What counts as an influencer?  At a major car brand the exec worked for, they paid $300,000 for a few photos because the CEO’s kid liked somebody.

 

When Michael Stelzner and Edison Research’s Tom Webster get together, look out, ‘cause there’s all kind of statistics about to happen.  They talked about how The Infinite Dial survey has been tracking podcasting since 2007.  2 years ago, 15% of Americans 12+ listened to a podcast in the past year.  This year it’s already surpassed 21% as it moves ever increasingly to all kinds of mainstream content featuring known stars and future stars.  In the beginning mostly tech types listened to shows about tech because they knew how to use podcasts.  Today, even though few people have in-dash entertainment systems, they’re going to the trouble of figuring out ways to listen in their cars, which Tom says is a clear sign of BIG pent-up demand for great shows.  In fact, he says look for the term podcast to not even stick around, because a pod isn’t necessarily involved and it’s not cast.  He says they’re on-demand shows, that’s what they are.  Sorry if you snagged a domain name with podcast in it.  I love this stat: the average ‘Murican listens to about 4 hours of audio a day, but not podcast listeners!  They listen to 6 hours a day.

 

For a brief period, everyone got excited when the rumor was swirling that Twitter would give up its 140-character limit.  But then the company came out and said not true, we LOVE random character limitations and will stick with what we’ve been doing.  Okay, turns out they want to give us a little more breathing room after all.  Rumblings are they soon won’t count photos and links against your character limitation.  Sarah Frier reports in Bloomberg Technology this could happen in the next couple of weeks.  Twitter, of course, will not comment.  But since they’re trying to be such a destination for live events, this is a fine way to encourage tweeters to use more media in their tweets.  Fun fact!  The limit was originally put in place because they wanted tweets to fit into mobile text messages.  Maybe necessary in 2006, but you know, that whole smartphone thing has happened now.

 

Have you heard?  Playboy’s putting its clothes on.  Wants to offer up content that’s more safe for work and on par with what other men’s magazines are doing to attract millennial dudes.  At their first NewsFront presentation, CEO Scott Flanders said, “This is the most exciting and complex brand transformation of my career.”  But he was quick to say Playmates will still be part of the picture, calling them the magazine’s “single breast brand ambassadors.”  Best!  I meant best!  Now like other publishing brands, Playboy knows video is key so they’ve got shows going up in the Lifestyle, Documentaries, Food & Spirits, Gaming, and Scripted Comedy categories.  Tim Baysinger of AdAge says it’ll be shows like a dinner party series, a show on the magazine’s editing process, “Tech 360” with blogger Jon Rettinger and model Amy Willerton visiting tech destinations, and Pamela Horton’s “Gamer Next Door” show.  To do all this, you guessed it, they’re launching their own branded content studio led by Deputy Editor Hugh Garvey.

 

My how time flies.  If you need any other clichés you keep listening and I’ll keep ‘em coming.  But yeah, we’re not that far away from being halfway through 2016.  Given that, what have we seen happening in content marketing so far this year?  Craig Zingerline lists some of them.  It’s not a fad, people want shorter and they want visual.  It’s estimated 84% of content will be visual by 2018.  People are getting immune to tons of content coming at them, so it better get personalized and relevant.  Interactive content is rising because passive content struggles.  Demand Metric says interactive is 2-3X more effective than static content for lead gen, engagement and conversion.  Mobile-first.  Stop fighting it and just do mobile first.  And budgets are going up.  CMI says 51% of marketers will increase content budgets over 2015.

 

I’m going to tell you somebody else is opening a branded content studio and you won’t be shocked a bit.  It’s A&E Networks.  You know, they’ve got A&E, Lifetime, History, and a bit of Viceland.  So this place will be called 45th & Dean, will be in Brooklyn, and will open this fall.  Jeanine Poggi writes the studio will be quote – hyper-focused on content creation, distribution, measurement and audience development for A&E’s channels and their branded content partners.  Whenever you hear a studio will be hyper-focused, but then hear a list of 6 or 7 things they’ll be hyper-focusing on, doesn’t feel right does it?  But it’ll be run by pros, Paul Greenberg will head it up while he keeps doing his job as GM of FYI Network, Shannon King is SVP-content partnerships and social, and Todd Pellegrino is SVP-video content.  This content will be data-driven too because A&E has new data products called A&E Precision.  Dog the Bounty Hunter could soon be selling your deodorant!

 

Lucky you, you lucky marketer you.  SocialTimes says video ads are available now through the Facebook Audience Network.  Your ads can be in-stream or in-article, and can run before, during or after videos on 3rd-party apps and sites, be they on desktop or mobile.  If you put it in an article, the video will show up between paragraphs and auto-play once at least half the pixels are there.  Users have to make sound happen though.  All you’ve got to do is make sure Audience Network is checked in the placement section when you’re making your ads.  First place you’ll see them is Instant Articles.  Why would you want to be on The Audience Network’s third-party apps and sites?  Maybe because they make up almost 6% of the total time spent on US mobile apps.  With the announcement, Facebook says advertisers that opt in to the Audience Network can get around 10% more incremental reach than if they just used the mobile News Feed.  Mobile News Feed, so passe.

 

3 French anti-racism associations are not happy with Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube.  They’re so unhappy they’re filing legal complaints against them for not removing “hateful” content on their platforms.  As a matter of fact, it is the law of all of France that websites have to remove racist or homophobic material tout suite!  Wait, is doing a French accent racist?  What about asking that question?  Is asking questions about what’s racist racist?  Am I descending into a spiral of hate?!  VentureBeat reports the groups, who must be incredibly avid social media consumers, found, documented, and reported 586 bits of content they didn’t like in just a little over a month.  Twitter removed 4%, YouTube 7% and Facebook took down 34%.  The president of one of the groups said, “In light of YouTube, Twitter and Facebook’s profits and how little taxes they pay, their refusal to invest in the fight against hate is unacceptable!”  You know it’s really hateful to be the president of anything, because that makes all non-presidents feel bad.

 

That’s it.  Let’s do the follow thing @mikestiles.