the curious digital marketer 2.0

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Authored by 12 Digital Media Professionals THE CURIOUS MARKETER 2.0 DIGITAL Twelve of India’s leading digital marketing practitioners provide you with the answers to key questions around digital marketing. This is your quick and interactive guide to stay ahead.

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  • MRP: ` 350afaqscampus.com

    Authored by 12 Digital Media Professionals Authored by 12 Digital Media Professionals

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    THE CURIOUS MARKETER 2.0DIGITAL

    Today, with the audience for digital media heading towards the 150 million mark, chief marketing officers of the biggest as well as the youngest entrepreneur-driven firms have embraced digital marketing. Spends across the biggest firms are effectively doubling every year. Used well, digital is proving to be a game changer for marketers, and an equally grave threat if left out. In fact, leading industry experts predict a share of over 20 per cent for digital media as early as 2015 in India, from less than 5 per cent in 2010.

    This is no fad, or trend to latch on to. Digital is a change that is set to transform the way business is conducted.

    The Curious Digital Marketer opened up the world of digital media marketing for marketers. This book will help you stay abreast of the fast pace of changes in the sector, and get acquainted with the latest innovations that are making an impact.

    Look forward to a better understanding of online and mobile media, and in doing that, if you crack your next job interview, drive record sales in your next digital campaign, or become the next social media star dont thank us; thank yourself for buying this book. Happy learning!

    AnAnt RAngAswAmiEditor, Storyboard (CNBC)

    The Curious Digital Marketer, to me, is like my copy of Chambers Dictionary. I dont need it all the time, but when I do, it had better be around.

    mAnish KAlRAMarketing Head, MakeMyTrip

    At this point in time, Indian digital industry needs some highly proficient experts and this is an initiative in that direction. The book is a must read for media professionals and digital advertisers who want a clear understanding of digital media and the opportunities it provides. I wish afaqs! Campus and the contributors all the very best for this unique initiative and hoping to see a better equipped digital industry from hereon.

    DippAK KhuRAnACEO & Co-Founder, Vserv.mobi

    Mobile is just not a medium; it is a consumer lifestyle that is fundamentally changing how we live, work and play. As a brand custodian, advertisers are looking at ways to mobilise their brand strategies. This sequel of The Curious Digital Marketer will enable advertisers to navigate this journey effectively by demystifying concepts and bringing synergy to their mobile, social, digital campaigns.

    Twelve of Indias leading digital marketing practitioners provide you with the answers to key questions around digital marketing. This is your quick and interactive guide to stay ahead.

  • Digital marketing is finally an integral part of the marketing mix and this book will help marketers keep pace. Twelve of Indias leading digital marketing practitioners answer more than 101 of the most commonly asked questions. The Curious Digital Marketer 2.0 is your quick and interactive guide to stay ahead.

    The Curious DigiTal MarkeTer 2.0

  • #DisclaimerThe publication contains the opinions and ideas of its authors and is intended to provide informative material on the subject matter covered. However the authors make no warranties regarding the accuracy and completeness of the contents of this publication. Also, the authors do not guarantee that a readers reliance on the content of this publication will produce specific results.

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher.

    Published by: Banyan Netfaqs Private Limited (B-3, First Floor, Sector 4, Noida, U.P-201301). Phone: 0120-4077800; E-mail: [email protected]

    ISBN: 978-81-926649-0-3

    Second Edition: May 2013

    Concept: Kapil Ohri

    Editorial Support: Jaba Bhattacharya and Anshupriya Sharma

    Book Design: Vinay Dominic

    Infographics: Vidit Sachdeva and Supriya Sahani (Decyclebin)

    Cover Design: Rakshita Kapoor and Arti Rohatgi

    Design Support: Joginder Poswal and Ravi Sangal

    Ad Sales: Arunima Bhattacharya, Rahul Puri and Madhur Anand

    Technology Support: Anurag Dixit and Sushil Kumar Singh

    Photo Credit: Sushil Kumar and Fotocorp

    Publishing Support: Andrias Kisku

    iv

  • #ContributorsAuthor1. Kapil Ohri [Head, afaqs! Campus]

    Co-authors2. Reem Saied [Head, Digital Strategy & Alliances, Ad Magnet]

    3. Gayathri Choda [Head, Analytics, India & MENA, MediaMind]

    4. Vishal Jacob [Senior Director, Digital, GroupM (Maxus)]

    5. Sairam Ranganathan [Business Group Head, GroupM (Maxus)]

    6. Amit Lall [Head, Mobile Marketing, Mobile2Win]

    7. Manoj Kandasamy [Business Group Head, Mobile, GroupM (Maxus)]

    8. Karan Anand [Group Head, Strategy Planning & Mobile, Interactive Avenues]

    9. Geetanjali Anderson [Group Head, Media and Search, Media2Win]

    10. Sanjay Mehta [Joint CEO, Social Wavelength]

    11. Advit Sahdev [Co-founder, ODigMa]

    12. Majid Khan [Business Director, South, OMD]

    Mentors13. RP Singh [CEO, Sirez Group]

    14. Preetham Venkky [Business Head, KRDS Asia]

    v

  • #Foreword

    Deer in the headlights.

    Round up a bunch of Indian marketers of my vintage. Look closely into their eyes, and I predict that you will see the same cocktail of fear, shock, incomprehension and ignorance that the proverbial herbivore displays when staring at a speeding automobile on a pitch dark rural highway.

    I find this idiom particularly evocative because, much like the poor animal in the picture above, the marketer is typically a fully grown, mature and experienced individual in his sphere of life, believing he can deal with most of the stuff being thrown at him. And as it happens, the situation he is placed in when discussing digital marketing is not without information, in fact there is a surfeit of it.

    Trouble is, its all coming too fast, its mostly alien stuff and it is a huge challenge to process it all in real time to take decisions that will save the brands life. If I may mix metaphors now, us old dogs are being asked to learn new tricks, which is tough enough at the best of times, but is compounded by our egos coming in the way of asking the right questions that could educate and empower us to forge ahead in this brave new world. Whats more, truth be told, we are all more than a little suspicious of the hordes of snake-oil salesmen who are all trying to peddle their wares to us as miracle cures for the age old problems of RoI from marketing et al.

    Everything is illuminated.

    Fortunately, help is at hand. This useful tome delivers on its succinct promise of making everything clear to us.

    vi

  • Using the most intuitive format of FAQs, it allows us to dip in and find explanations on every single granular thing that befuddles us about this most important, now hard to ignore space of digital marketing. Whats more, it allows you to do so at your own pace.

    Snack on it when you are taking a break, refer to it when in need, browse through it when on a weekend holiday. Whichever way you consume it, I am confident you will emerge wiser, more confident and prepared to do battle, now armed with a digital arsenal of ideas and knowledge that can only help you do your job better.

    In sum, there is light at the end of the tunnel, enlighten-ment and emancipation await.

    Karthi MarshanExecutive Vice President & Group Head, Marketing,Kotak

    vii

  • #Table of Content

    DisPlay aDverTising1. What tools do digital media planners use to get data for media planning? 7

    2. What are rich media ads? How is a rich media ad different from a standard display ad (whether static or flash animated banner)? 8

    3. What is dwell time? Where is dwell time reported? 9

    4. How can I get 100 per cent share of voice (SOV) via online display ads? 9

    5. What are the different buying options available under e-mail advertising? 11

    6. Why should we pay for e-mailers if the recipient has not opened the mail for EDM (electronic direct mail) campaigns? 12

    7. How can I find out the unduplicated audience reach between two sites? 13

    8. How can I find out the audience duplication between a traditional channel, say NDTV, and the digital channel, say NDTV.com? 14

    9. I would like to promote my products to the existing customers who already visited my website. How can I reach them? Is it possible to promote products to the same user across online sites? 14

    10. How does re-targeting work? 15

    11. What is the difference between audience buying and content/genre-based buying? 16

    12. How is a users browsing behaviour tracked for audience buying? 17

    13. Is audience buying alone sufficient or do I need to supplement audience buying with content buying? 19

    14. What is the AdChoices icon? 19

    15. I bought ad inventory via an ad network. Is there any way to know where my ad is being displayed and is the ad location (on the website) good enough to be discovered by the user? 23

    16. All digital media plans look same. I see same portals again and again in most media plans. On which basis you decide portals to be used for the campaign? 24

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  • 17. My target audience is available on a leading portal but the cost of advertising on it is very high. Can you prepare a media plan to reach and target the precise audience via some other online platform? 24

    18. How do I ensure that publishers dont employ robots/people to keep clicking on my ads or dont follow any other fraudulent practice to increase the click numbers/CTR and hence charge me more? 25

    19. How do I split my digital ad budget across different channels? 25

    20. How is optimisation done on display advertising? 26

    21. How can I find out the optimum reach of my campaign? 28

    22. Is there any tool available which can be used to optimise a certain ad network? 28

    23. There are more than 20 ad creatives for a single campaign. How do I know which creative is performing better and how can I utilise it more for other placements? 30

    24. What are TrueView ads on YouTube? 31

    25. Should I opt for in-stream video ad or banner ad on YouTube? 32

    26. What is a good CTR for a pre-roll video ad? 33

    27. How can I increment views of my video on YouTube? 33

    28. What should my digital strategy be if I want my brand to stay active on digital media all the time? 34

    searCh engine MarkeTing1. What is Google PageRank? 39

    2. What are meta tags? 40

    3. How is ad inventory bought on Google? 40

    4. What is more important SEM (paid search) or SEO? 44

    xii

  • 5. When is it best to use SEO and SEM? 48

    6. If my website is visible among the first three places in search, why must I do SEM? 49

    7. When and why should I bid on long tail keywords? 49

    8. What is search re-marketing? How does it work? 50

    9. Why should I do search retargeting if I am already doing site retargeting? 53

    10. How do I allocate budget between SEO and SEM? 53

    11. I have a good content strategy in place. Do I still need SEO? 54

    12. How can I integrate search with my offline advertising activities? 54

    13. If I keep doing only SEO/SEM, do I need to use other formats like display and mobile? 55

    14. Is it recommended to launch a digital campaign without SEM? 55

    FaCeBOOk MarkeTing1. What is EdgeRank in Facebook? Why does it matter? 59

    2. How is EdgeRank calculated? 59

    3. Why should I invest in Facebook pages when less than 20 per cent of fans typically see the posts? 61

    4. If social is where people are spending maximum time and we have a Facebook page, do we really need a website? 63

    5. What is the best way to acquire a fan base on Facebook? 63

    6. What is Engagement Rate on Facebook and how is it calculated? 65

    7. What is the 20 per cent text rule for Facebook ads? 65

    8. How do I determine that our image for ad/promoted content adheres to 20 per cent rule? 69

    xiii

  • 9. I uploaded an ad on Facebook advertising platform but it was rejected/denied. Why? 70

    10. What category of products cant be advertised on Facebook? 72

    11. Which works better ads to website or ads to Facebook page? 74

    12. What is Web of Trust and why is it important for me to know about it before creating a Facebook Ad? 74

    13. How can I target fans of other brand pages? 79

    14. Whats the conversion rate for Facebook ads sent to the website? 79

    15. Is it possible to track sales for each and every Facebook campaign that we execute? Are there any tools available for this? 80

    16. Last month, we routed heavy money on Facebook ads and there was no Google AdWords campaign on at that time.Surprisingly, our website visits from Google Search went up. Why? 81

    17. How does Facebook prevent bogus and fake clicks? 81

    18. How do I know that I am not being charged for fans that like my page because they got to know about my business from other campaigns? 82

    19. What is the process for listing offers on Facebook? 82

    20. What is Graph Search? What can users search using Graph Search? 83

    21. How does Graph Search help my business? 83

    22. How do I optimise for Graph Search? 83

    23. Can I calculate the value of my Facebook Page fan? Is the value of my fan equal to the cost of acquisition of that fan? 84

    24. What are the advantages of Facebook applications, both from a branding perspective and from an ROI perspective? 84

    xiv

  • MOBile MarkeTing1. What is the difference between Native apps and Mobile Web apps? 89

    2. Should I make Native app or Mobile Web app for my brand? 90

    3. How do I identify the most popular applications on mobile? 91

    4. I have created an app, now how can I get enough users for it? 91

    5. Is it right to build a Mobile app for a campaign or should I build an app which is generic and of use on a long term basis? 93

    6. How do I monetise my app? 93

    7. Why should I have a mobile site when I already have an online site? 94

    8. As a brand, should I replicate my website completely on mobile or should I offer limited content on mobile? 99

    9. How does a brand decide between an application and a mobile site? 99

    10. Do I need a mobile site if I already have a responsive website? 101

    11. How can I tell a story in such a small screen? 102

    12. What is the difference between Promotional and Transactional SMSes? 105

    13. Why should we do SMS and Voice campaigns? These are spam, right? 105

    14. Can I integrate TV advertising with the Mobile platform, apart from displaying a URL or SMS short code? 107

    15. Do users in Tier II and III towns and rural markets show heavy mobile usage patterns like their urban counterparts? 108

    16. Why is CTR of mobile ads higher as compared to online standard banner ads? 110

    17. Can we use QR codes on outdoor hoardings? 110

    18. How can IVR be used in mobile marketing? 113

    xv

  • 19. Why should I target feature phone users? 115

    20. Can I target my ad only to a particular handset or operator? 115

    21. For what categories is Location Based Advertising (LBA) recommended? 116

    WeB analyTiCs1. What is the difference between page views, visits and unique visitors? 122

    2. How is new visitor different from repeat user? 124

    3. What is the difference between bounce rate and exit rate? 126

    4. How do I know if my website has a good bounce rate? 127

    5. My website home page has 1 million visitors per month but my registrations page has only 5,000 visitors. How do I know why people drop from my website? 130

    6. How do I know which media channel is driving more traffic to my website? 130

    7. In my traffic referral sources data (on Google Analytics), I see Not provided mentioned as a keyword. Why and what does it mean? 131

    8. How can I differentiate between SEM and SEO keywords in my reports? 132

    9. What is tagging? What is the difference between page tagging and event tagging? 132

    10. What is link tagging and how can it be used to track performance of ads for a digital marketing campaign? How can I track its performance using Google Analytics? 133

    11. How can I track my offline marketing campaigns (print, TV, radio ads or on-ground activation) and find out their impact on my website? 135

    12. Do I need to tag my organic search keywords? 136

    13. What happens if I do not tag or use wrong tags for incoming traffic? 136

    14. Can I track Facebook Likes in Google Analytics? 138

    xvi

  • 15. What is conversion rate? What is a typical conversion rate? 138

    16. There are sudden peaks in my visitor traffic. How do I know what causes these? 139

    17. How do I know if my website is performing better than my competitors? 140

    18. I have multiple creative ad units prepared for a new campaign. Is there a way to know which one will perform better before the launch of the campaign? 140

    19. Where can I get overall reach performance data for my digital brand campaign? 141

    20. How does YouTube count a video view? 142

    21. How can I find out the effectiveness of my website in terms of accomplishing my business objectives? 143

    22. Should I follow the same metrics to measure my online marketing campaigns and mobile marketing campaigns? 145

    23. Which web analytics tool is the best for my business? 145

    xvii

  • Display aDvertisingOnline display advertising broadly consists of banner ads, image ads and video ads.

  • The Curious DigiTal MarkeTer 2.0

    DIGITAL ADVERTISING IN INDIA*114

    0

    1750

    2260

    2938

    FY20

    10-2

    011

    FY20

    11-2

    012

    FY20

    12-2

    013

    FY20

    13-2

    014

    Industry Estimates in INR Crores

    Note: The ad spends from 2011-12 onwards comprises spends on search, display, mobile, social media, e-mail and video advertising.

    INDUSTRY WISE AD SPENDS

    DIGITAL AD SPENDS

    (FY 2011-2012) INR 1750

    AUTOBFSI

    Consumer DurablesE-Commerce Players

    EducationElectronic Media

    FMCGIT

    Online PublishersOthers

    Print MediaTelecom

    Travel

    17% 13%

    12%

    7%

    7%

    9%

    8%

    2%

    8%

    1%

    1%

    1%

    1%

    7% 7%

    7%

    9%

    9%

    11% 12%

    14%

    5%

    2%

    13%

    12%

    (FY 2012-2013) INR 2260

    6 %

    2

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    15%SEO

    85%SEM

    30% 30%

    20% 20%

    20%

    40%40%

    Search Ad SpendsFY(2012-2013)

    INR 850cr

    Display Ad SpendsFY(2012-2013)

    INR 662cr

    Mobile Ad SpendsFY(2012-2013)

    INR 230cr

    IMAGE

    SIMPLE FLASH

    Rich Media with Video

    Rich Mediawithout VIDEO

    In App Adv Mobile web Adv

    Text LinksSponsored/Promoted Tweets & Posts

    Video

    True View Ads by Google

    Standard In- Stream Ads (pre-rolls, mid-rolls & post-rolls)Display

    In Video Ads (overlays)

    Mobile,Video & TV,SMS, MMS Adv

    Social Media Ad SpendsFY(2012-2013)

    INR 300cr

    Video Ad SpendsFY(2012-2013)

    INR 150cr

    SEARCH (41%)

    DISPLAY (34%)

    SOCIAL (10%)MOBILE (7%)VIDEO (5%)

    E-MAIL (3%)

    SEARCH (38%)

    DISPLAY (29%)

    SOCIAL (13%)MOBILE (10%)VIDEO (7%)

    E-MAIL (3%)

    Total Digital Ad Spend(FY 2011-2012)

    INR 1750cr

    41%

    34%

    10%

    7%

    5%

    3%

    Total Digital Ad Spend(FY 2012-2013)

    INR 2260cr

    38%

    29%

    13%

    10%

    7%

    3%

    *Source: IAMAI - IMRB

    8%

    75%

    12% 5%

    64%

    24%12%

    SPLIT OF DIGITAL AD SPENDS

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    4

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    5

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    1. What tools do digital media planners use to get data for media planning?

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  • The Curious DigiTal MarkeTer 2.0

    2. What are rich media ads? How is a rich media ad different from a standard display ad (whether static or flash animated banner)?

    A standard display or banner ad consists of either a static or movable image (GIF file or Flash file). Usually, the standard banner ad has a single clickable option, which routes users to destination or landing page. Here, the click on banner is tracked as click-through.

    Rich media ads offer multiple interaction options to users. For instance -- click to expand the banner or expand on mouse rollover. It also enables the advertiser to embed video films, Facebook Like button and Call facility inside the banner. A user can click on the video to play it inside the banner, click to make a phone call, and also click Facebook Like button. Thus, various interactions -- between the user and the ad can occur within the ad unit itself. One of the clickable options could lead the user to another destination or landing page.

    Every interaction with a rich media ad unit can be tracked. For instance, the advertiser can pull data on the number of clicks used to expand the banner ad, number of times the embedded video played/viewed, time spent on video viewing, the total amount of time spent on the creative or ad unit and the number of users who clicked on the Facebook Like button etc.

    Another important distinction between a standard display ad unit and a rich media ad is the size of the creative. Usually, rich media ad units are much heavier (more than 40KB) than standard ads and are generally served through third party ad servers as publishers (website owner) cannot serve them through their own servers.

    All video ad formats are considered rich media ad formats.

    8

    Image 1: Basic difference between text, standard and rich media ads

  • Display aDverTising

    3. What is dwell time? Where is dwell time reported?

    Dwell time is the average time spent (intentionally) by the user interacting with the online ad unit.

    Dwell time is now becoming a more popular metric to measure the impact of rich media ad creatives. It is a valid metric only for rich media ads. Time spent is not measured in the case of standard (jpeg) banner ads. Standard banners are mainly a communication which the user reads and clicks. So time spent is nearly zero.

    Time spent on an ad can be tracked by the publisher ad server or third party ad serving platforms such as Mediamind and Doubleclick. Along with time spent, it is also possible to track all the actions which happen within a banner ad. All other actions within a banner ad are known as interactions. Interaction with the ad include mouse-on-ad, user-initiated ad expansion (click-to-expand ad), user-initiated video (click-to-play video embedded in ad) and any other customised interaction.

    Dwell time, as a metric, is used to measure the level of engagement of a creative

    ad unit and compare the effectiveness of different ad formats. It is also used to understand which elements within the ad unit is engaging users more.

    4. How can I get 100 per cent share of voice (SOV) via online display ads?

    You can either opt for sponsorship or special advertising options like Roadblock to break through the clutter and get maximum share of voice.

    Roadblock will allow you to serve your ads across multiple placements (all slots) on

    Ad Server

    Ad server is a computer system that stores, maintains and serves ads to one or more websites. Local Ad server usually serves ads to single website. Third party ad servers can serve ads across multiple websites. Third party ad serving companies for advertisers in India include MediaMind.com and Google DoubleClick.

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    the same web page for a specific time period on a website. For instance, homepage takeover of sites like Yahoo!, MSN and Indiatimes can be used for Roadblock.

    Roadblock and sponsorship are useful for brands especially at the time of launching a new product or making an announcement about a product or company. These advertising options ensure that the user doesnt miss the brand communication and the brand gets the maximum SOV compared to other brands in its category. Higher SOV could lead to high recall and more sales.

    How MAHindrA uSed roAdblock

    In January, 2013, the Mahindra group announced its new visual identity and logo. In order to make sure that a large number of users on digital media could notice the new identity of Mahindra, the group opted for a roadblock (for nine hours) on the Yahoo! homepage -- which offers a reach of 3 million unique users1 (approximately)instead of a standard banner ad. To get high impact from the roadblock, Mahindras logo was put up above the Yahoo! masthead, thus increasing the chances of attention.

    Digital agency Interactive Avenues, which managed this campaign, claims that 14 per cent of all users who saw this ad unit interacted with the ad and chose to find out details of not only the new logo but also the Mahindra ideology behind it. For this campaign, Mahindra also bought regular ad inventory (banner ads of 728X90 pixels; 300X250 pixels) but the results were strikingly different and performance of regular banners was below par.

    1. Read more about unique users on page number122 in the Web Analytics section

    10

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    5. What are the different buying options available under e-mail advertising?

    As a marketer, you can purchase e-mail advertising inventory in the following ways:

    o Fixed: Fixed mailer, also known as mail shot. There is a fixed cost for sending out a mail shot to a registered database. The publisher charges a fixed cost for using its database irrespective of open rate, click-through rate (CTR) or leads generated.

    o cPM: Cost-per mailer. Most publishers follow the CPM model wherein you pay for the numbers of e-mailers sent out to users, irrespective of open rate and click-through rate generated.

    roAdblock Pricing ModelS

    The pricing of roadblock advertising is usually based on the duration of the campaign instead of the number of ad impressions.

    o Hour-based pricing: Home page takeover ad can be bought on fixed durations of 3 hours, 6 hours, 9 hours, 12 hours or 24 hours. Pricing will differ based on the type of ad units included in the homepage takeover. As per an industry estimate, homepage takeover on a leading wedsite can cost anywhere between Rs 6 lakh (3-hour) to Rs 20 lakh (24-hour).

    o Per-day based pricing: This is the most common type of roadblock sold in the industry. Some publishers charge on a per-day basis. The advertiser can buy a particular ad slot or all the slots on a particular page or section on the basis of the number of days. For example, Yahoo! News page roadblock for two days, or the MoneyControl.com jacket ad for one day. The cost will remain constant without any prior commitment on the inventory consumption. This can range from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 10 lakh per day, depending on the type of ad units included in roadblock.

    SPonSorSHiP Model

    Sponsorship opportunities are usually available for a fixed duration or for a specific event. For instance, sponsorship of a cricket series, sponsorship for the Union Budget or sponsorship for any other sporting event.

    Usually, publishers have various kinds of sponsorship options available for a particular event - Main sponsor, Associate sponsor, Co-Sponsor etc. For instance, a leading cricket website sells the main sponsorship for the entire cricket series on a yearly basis and the cost for this could run into many crores. However, the same website also sells other sponsorships such as Co-sponsorship or Associate sponsorship on a series to series basis as well. Similarly, sponsorship for a Union Budget is a one-time occurrence in a year and is sold for duration of 15-30 days. Advertisers get huge coverage during such events as the banner/ logo is fixed on the webpage for a particular duration.

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  • The Curious DigiTal MarkeTer 2.0

    o cPo: Cost-per open-up is a response driven model where you pay only for the number of open-ups generated. This is the best model to opt for if you want to generate leads.

    o cPl: Cost-per lead is generating leads using e-mailers. Metrics are calculated keeping in mind the operating CPL.

    6. Why should we pay for e-mailers if the recipient has not opened the mail for EDM (electronic direct mail) campaigns?

    This question arises when the e-mailer inventory is purchased using CPM (cost-per mailer) or fixed mailer method. In these cases, you have to pay for every mailer sent out to users, irrespective of open rate and number of clicks generated. This is the most widely used method of selling e-mailer inventory by publishers. Even if a user has not opened a mailer, you will have to pay for it as it has reached the users inbox; and, it is up to the user to open it.

    However, you can improve the open-up rate by tweaking factors such as the senders name and subject line, visible to the user. Senders name should be relevant and small. Subject line should ideally be very catchy and crisp to grab attention.

    click-through rate is derived by dividing the total number of clicks (the ad unit gets) by the total number of times the ad is shown (impressions) and is expressed as a percentage.

    open rate is linked to e-mail marketing and represents the total number of people who opened an email. It is expressed in percentage. In order to track an open rate, the recipient must allow HTML to be displayed, as well as images to be displayed in the email message.

    click-to-open rate (cTor) is the ratio of unique clicks as a percentage of unique opens and represents the percentage of people who clicked the links provided in the mail out of the total number of people who opened the e-mailer.

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    7. How can I find out the unduplicated audience reach between two sites?

    The unduplicated reach is usually calculated to know the absolute reach of a campaign between two selected sites. At times when there are more than two or three similar sites in a proposed media plan or campaign, chances are that there could be a high duplication of audiences between these sites. If the duplication is very high between sites then investments on all sites may need to be reconsidered.

    doS And donTS oF MAiler SubjecT lineS

    o Keep it short and simple: Clearly state subject line to indicate whats inside the e-mail. Studies have indicated that shorter subject lines lead to higher open rates.

    o Use a call-to-action (CTA) by asking a question. Subject lines framed as questions perform better.

    o Test which subject lines works best with your target audience so that you can use it again.

    o Dont include words and symbols which may get filtered in spam of e-mail service provider. Avoid using words relating to sex or pornography, free, cash and references to drugs like Viagra. Avoid using symbols like @, #, % etc.

    o Dont use FW: in your subject to indicate that e-mail has come from a trusted source.

    Image 2: ComScore Audience Duplication Tool

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  • The Curious DigiTal MarkeTer 2.0

    You can use comScores Audience Duplication tool to find out how many users are duplicated between two sites. This tool will give you a snapshot of unique visitors of various sites, as well as the overlap of unique visitors between the specified sites.

    Image 2 shows that 10.270 million people visit xyz.com, while 4.022 million

    people visit abcd.com. There are 1.782 million users who visit both sites. So the unduplicated reach is 12.509 Million (comScore).

    8. How can I find out the audience duplication between a traditional channel, say NDTV, and the digital channel, say NDTV.com?

    There is no cross-media audience measurement tool which can currently do the above. The only way is to use a market research firm to do a survey.

    When you compare print and digital versions of The Times of India (TOI), you could find that TOIs reach is way higher on the digital medium than the print version. Does this mean all TOI print readers are also online? Not necessarily.

    Likewise, NDTVs reach could be much higher on television compared to the digital medium, and this doesnt imply that all NDTV digital users also watch the TV channel.

    From the audience duplication perspective, its not just important to know the common viewership between two platforms of same company (NDTV and NDTV.com) but also consider duplication between two different platforms of two different companies (like NDTV.com and BBC TV) to create effective media plan. Without a rigorous, statistically valid survey of audience habits across TV, print and digital (or unified single source audience data), we will never know the correct answer.

    9. I would like to promote my products to the existing customers who already visited my website. How can I reach them? Is it possible to promote products to the same user across online sites?

    Have you ever noticed that often when you visit a website (say xyz.com) and move out to another site (say abc.com), you start seeing xyz.com ads on abc.com. Similarly, if you visit an air ticket booking site (say OMGTravel.com), fill some details into the ticket booking page (say from Bengaluru to New Delhi) but exit the site without completing the transaction to go to another site (say LMNOP.com), then you see an

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  • Display aDverTising

    ad (of OMGTravel.com on LMNOP.com) with ad copy of Bengaluru to New Delhi flight tickets at a special discount. This option, where an ad follows you, is called re-targeting, re-marketing or re-messaging.

    Re-targeting works on the hypothesis that it is easier to convert a user who has visited the website before (assuming that user is interested and is in preference/consideration stage) rather than converting someone who has never visited your site.

    Re-targeting is a popular feature on various ad-networks2 like Google Display Network2.

    It is important to note that re-targeting is a way in which you can easily target users (with ads on other sites) based on some action the user has taken in the recent past. This is not only confined to users actions that occur on your website. You can also target users who have taken the desired action (first) on other web destinations (like search engine) other than actions on your website. Read more about search re-targeting in the Search section and Facebook re-targeting in the Social Media section.

    10. How does re-targeting work?

    2. Read more about ad-networks on page number 20 and Google Display Network on page number 44

    Image 3

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