54

Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans
Page 2: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Understand what your competitors are doing and how to improve your marketing playbook.

Page 3: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Information Overload

Page 4: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Meet Jeff

Page 5: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Where Jeff Should Begin

1. Find where his target audience is located online

2. Find out what his competition is doing

3. Put it all together and build an online marketing playbook

4. Use contests to blend online marketing channels

Page 6: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Finding Jeff’s Target Audience Online

35 Years or Older, with a College Education that makes over $100k

Page 7: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Quantcast.com• US Demographics

Awesome! – Get a break-down of what types of visitors are going to an individual site.

• Audience Also LikesFind out what other sites a visitor will go.

• Site Found By These KeywordsLearn what keywords sites are being found under.

Page 8: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

3 Steps to Finding Your Audience Online

1. Use Quantcast.com to find the demographics of your website

2. Compare and match up with the demographics of top online sites or niche networking sites

3. Find additional possibilities through Quantcast’s “Audience Also Likes” section.

For example: Users of tagged.com also visit urbanchat.com – which directly matches their top demographic.

Page 9: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Facebook

Top Five Social Media NetworksTwitter LinkedIn MySpace Google+

Page 10: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Facebook Twitter• 32% are over 35

years old

• 32% make $100k or over

• 53% has college or grad. School education

• 38% are over 35 years old

• 30% make $100k or over

• 51% has college or grad. School education

Making the Cut

Page 11: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Getting to Know Jeff’s Competition

Stay ahead by figuring out what’s working for your competition

Page 12: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

• Who has the most/least traffic?

• Who has the most/least search volume?

• Who has the best success with organic traffic?

• How are people searching for the competitors?

• Are there geographical areas that are week and can be exploited?

• Are his competitors using paid search?

• What size budget is required to compete within paid search?

• Is social media working? What’s effective in this industry?

Jeff Needs to Find Out…

Page 13: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

MOST/LEAST TRAFFICwww.compete.com

Page 14: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Compete.comCompare up to 5 Sites at Once

•Traffic Levels with Monthly and Yearly Change

•Number of search terms associated with site

•Other website that refer traffic

•Top destination sites

•Top tags associated with websites

Page 15: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Using Compete.com

Page 16: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff finds Competitors with the Most/Least Traffic

Most Traffic

1.Hilton.com

2.Marriott.com

Least Traffic

1.Sheraton.com

2.CrownePlaza.com

Page 17: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

SEARCH VOLUME, TERMS AND GEOGRAPHY

Google Insights for Search

Page 18: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Google Insights for Search

Compare up to 5 Keywords at Once

•Search Trends (insights)– Seasonality– Upward/Downward Trends– 12 Month Forecast

•Searches by Geography•Top Search Terms•Breakout Search Terms

http://www.google.com/insights/search

Page 19: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Using Google Insights for Search

Page 20: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Refining Search Phrases to Get Accurate Data

The search phrase we used to understand the search volume for the hotel chain Hilton was:

hilton -prez -perez -paris -hannah -hanna -head

Why? What does that all mean?

If we were to just search for “hilton”, we would have search volume numbers from people searching for “paris hilton”, “perez hilton”, “hilton head”, etc…

“-” means “exclude”

Use the minus sign in your keyword searches to exclude that word from the search results. The results below show this in action:

Page 21: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff finds Competitors with the Most/Least Search Volume

Most Search Vol.

1.Hilton.com

2.Marriott.com

Least Search Vol.

1.CrownePlaza.com

2.Sheraton.com

Page 22: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Learns How Consumers are Searching For his Competitors

Use these to identify how people are searching for the competition and what search phrases are soon becoming popular.

Page 23: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Finds Geographical Locations where His Company is Strong and his Competitors are Not

Cro

wne

Pla

zaH

yatt

She

rato

nH

ilton

Mar

riott

Page 24: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

COMPETITOR SOCIAL MEDIA ACTIVITY

BizShark.com | Facebook.com | Twitter.com

Page 25: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Determines the Effectiveness of Social Media

Page 26: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Views Competitors in Facebook(2010)

Community Page – Not moderated

by company

Community Page – Not moderated

by company Company Page –

Maintained by Hilton

Company Page –

Maintained by Hilton

Page 27: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Competitors in Facebook (2011)

Getting Better! – Now a managed page and custom

tabs!

Getting Better! – Now a managed page and custom

tabs!

Great! – Had a head start and now

pushes engagement through incentives

(giveaways)

Great! – Had a head start and now

pushes engagement through incentives

(giveaways)

Page 28: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Finds Potential Engagement on Twitter

Page 29: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Tips for Advanced Searches within Twitter

http://search.twitter.com/advanced

Page 30: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

COMPETITOR PAID AND ORGANIC PERFORMANCE

Spyfu.com

Page 31: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

SpyFu.com• Paid Search History, Ad Variations

and Details

• Paid Vs. Organic Traffic Rankings

• Top Paid Keywords

• Top Paid Competitors

• Top Organic Keywords

• Top Organic Competitors

• Other Domains Owned

• Sub Domains

• Up to 3 site comparisons for:

– Paid Keyword Overlap / # of Keywords / Paid Search Spend

– Organic Keyword Overlap / # of Organic Results

Page 32: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Identifies Competitor Paid Search Efforts

8,606 Keywords are used by all

three top competitors

8,606 Keywords are used by all

three top competitors

4,253 Keywords overlap between Hilton and Hyatt

4,253 Keywords overlap between Hilton and Hyatt

20,915 Keywords

overlap between Hilton and

Marriott

20,915 Keywords

overlap between Hilton and

Marriott

6,726 Keywords

overlap between Hyatt and Marriott

6,726 Keywords

overlap between Hyatt and Marriott

By Targeting these

keywords, Jeff could help keep costs

down by only competing with the #3 competitor

instead of all.

By Targeting these

keywords, Jeff could help keep costs

down by only competing with the #3 competitor

instead of all.

Page 33: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Identifies Competitor Paid Search Efforts (cont.)

This is a good indicator that Paid Search is working for this industry.

This is a good indicator that Paid Search is working for this industry.

Estimated Spends:

Hilton.com$59,650 - $77,570 / day

Marriott.com$37,350 / day

Hyatt.com$32,350 - $51,000 / day

Page 34: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Identifies Competitor Organic Search Efforts

Hilton may be spending

more in paid search, because

Marriott is generating

more results organically

Hilton may be spending

more in paid search, because

Marriott is generating

more results organically

Jeff is able to pick and choose the organic words from the overlap chart that only competes with one of the competitors instead of all three.

Page 35: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

DETERMINING PAID SEARCH BUDGET SIZE

Google External Traffic Estimator

Page 36: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Google External Traffic Estimator

• US Search Volume

• Estimated Cost-per-click (CPC)

• Estimated Ad Positions

• Estimated Daily Clicks

• Ad Competition / Keyword

• Daily Summary (CPC, Clicks and Total Cost)

Compare multiple Keywords at Once

Page 37: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Using Google Traffic Estimator

Leave Blank to estimate for the #1 thru #3

spots

Leave Blank to estimate for the #1 thru #3

spots

Page 38: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Determines Budget Requirements for Paid Search on Google

Keyword Comp. Est Avg. CPC Est Ad Pos Est Daily Clicks Est Daily Cost Local Monthly Searcheshilton 100% $1.63 1.56 6,450 $10,525.58 13,600,000 marriott 100% $1.54 1.26 4,278 $6,678.23 9,140,000 sheraton 100% $2.72 1.6 2,460 $6,705.90 2,740,000 hyatt 100% $1.95 1.53 1,877 $3,653.25 4,090,000 crowne plaza 100% $2.19 1.52 697 $1,524.90 1,000,000

Estimated Total Search Volume: 30,570,000

Page 39: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

UNDERSTANDING WHAT IT ALL MEANS

Summary of Collected Data

Page 40: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Data Summary

Page 41: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Data Summary (cont.)

Page 42: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Builds a Marketing Playbook

There’s more data than ever out there. Knowing how to use it, test concepts and

track performance are now core skills.

Page 43: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

SELF-PROMOTING CONTESTPlaybook Strategy

Page 44: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Combining Contests, Email and Word-of-Mouth

• Jeff chooses Blazon to automate a majority of the contest creation tasks:– Creating a landing page

– Picking a winner

– Managing multiple contests at once

– Contestant management, filtering and email communication.

• Creates widgets for entry forms, contest activity and sponsorship widgets that can be placed in multiple locations online.

• Bridges the gap between email and social media.

Page 45: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Using Blazon

Page 46: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Defines His Contest Parameters

• Prize: Two nights in the Presidential Suite

• One entry for each field completed on the entry form

• Two month duration

• Maximum spend of $5,000

Page 47: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

PAID SEARCH CAMPAIGNSPlaybook Strategy

Page 48: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Google Paid Search Targeted by Keywords and Geographical Location

• Promoting the hotel group and the contest.

• Run for at least eight weeks to gather the necessary data to allow for educated business decisions on continuation of the campaign.

• Include a budget of $5,000 per day. This will provide enough room to test out various ads and keyword combinations within the eight week pilot.

• Target major metros in the Pacific Northwest and the Midwest.

• Tracked through Google Analytics + AdWords reporting to ensure that the traffic generated is quality.

Page 49: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Facebook Paid Search Targeted by Demographics

• Run for at least eight weeks to gather the necessary data to allow for educated business decisions on continuation of the campaign.

• Include a budget of $1,000 per day. This will provide enough room to test out various ads within the eight week pilot.

• Target by age and education level

Page 50: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

SOCIAL MEDIAPlaybook Strategy

Page 51: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Playbook Strategy: Social Media Content Ideas

Page 52: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Overall Playbook Process

1. Understand the environment before jumping into campaigns

2. Start small and test the waters (find out what works first)

3. Maximize the effective strategies and minimize the ineffective

4. Track Everything

5. Rinse and Repeat (things change quickly, make sure you stay on top of what is going on out there)

Page 53: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

JEFF ROCKSThe Campaign is a Success

Page 54: Know Your Opponents, Grow Your Fans

Jeff Defeats Info Overload

• Understands what the marketing environment is like out there

• Found out where he could be most effective

• Leveraged contests to build a direct communication database

• Identified how to track and improve

• Started a marketing playbook that will continue to change and increase efficiencies