Chinese social media giant partners with Hamilton Island to promote Australia

Tencent, China’s largest online community with more than 780 million active users has partnered with Hamilton Island to broadcast the Great Barrier Reef Island to the flourishing Chinese market.

It’s the first time the social network has shifted outside of China and the third largest internet company in the world after Google and Amazon. Tencent’s QQ.com is the ninth most visited website in the world so traction for Australian is immense.

Targeting China’s affluent travellers of the future, Hamilton Island’s first Chinese ambassador Chao Xian Yang will work with Hamilton Island playmakers to build a robust Tencent Weibo community and fan base for the trendy Whitsundays’ island.

Chinese supermodel Li Ya Hong, Hamilton Island ambassador Chao Xian Yang, Tencent Weibo executive Xia Yue and a competition winner will visit Hamilton Island in May to promote Hamilton Island on Tencent Weibo.

Branded the ‘Twitter of the East’, Sophie Baker, Hamilton Island’s senior communications manager, explains the strength of the social media superpower: “China probably has more social media users than Facebook has worldwide. With China’s social media market nearly at one billion users, mostly on mobile, we are honoured to be partnering with Tencent Weibo.”

Capitalising on the high-end travel market, it’s a huge win for Hamilton Island in a monetary sense as Tencent Weibo executive Ai Fang admits. “When it comes to luxury goods, unique and high-end experiences, Tencent Weibo’s hundreds of millions of users are highly engaged consumers with high spending power,” he says.

Using Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Pinterest and YouTube boomed back to the Tencent Weibo juggernaut, Hamilton Island’s social reach should increase dramatically.

 

 

Brand for sale: BYO product

Could selling a brand without a product to marketers be the next big thing for design agencies? One such agency in the US is pioneering the idea, charging a single flat fee of $18,000 for designing a brand identity before a product, service or target market has even been considered.

With the concept engineered by Ben Pieratt, identity/product designer and co-founder of social shopping site Svpply, the goal of ‘Hessian‘, is to design an effective brand identity before a client has even entered the fray.

Hessian shooting star

Within the fee to future-clients, the package includes a comprehensive marketing ensemble of wares: a Hessian URL, Twitter and Tumblr accounts, image assets, an app interface – plus 30 hours of design time to customise Hessian to the buyer’s needs.

Hessian field

Pieratt’s idea is in direct response to the ‘backwards’ approach to the conventional workflow of brand research between client and designer and aims to place brand as hero over product.

But the ultimate goal is to put designers on an equal grounding with clients, with, as Pieratt explains: “designers becoming entrepreneurs in their own right”, before quoting the revered designer behind Coca-Cola, Walter Landor, who stated: “Products are made in the factory, but brands are created in the mind”.

Hessian tshirt

Hessian app

 

Tumblr most underused platform by marketers, microsites are dead

Tumblr is one of the most underused platforms among marketers, while the commonly used microsite is failing to attract visitors, according to an industry expert.

The writer behind viral hit ‘Dumb Ways To Die’, executive creative director at McCann John Mescall, points to Tumblr as a platform with high levels of engagement and strong ‘shareability’ at a time when it’s experiencing rapid growth among Australian audiences.

Despite jumping from one million to 3.2 million unique Australian visitors per month over the course of 2012, few marketers are using the platform and even fewer are doing a good job, according to Mescall.

He credits the short-form blogging network as one of the key drivers of success for Melbourne Metro Trains’ ‘Dumb Ways To Die’ video, which became the fastest spreading Australian viral clip ever when it was released in November last year and has since racked up over 37 million views on YouTube.

“We went really hard on Tumblr, because that right now is a medium that’s really underutilised by marketers,” he says. “There’s not a lot of good marketing on Tumblr, and it’s a format that people love to share from.”

Mescall believes that web browsers, particularly younger audiences, no longer travel to microsites. “They won’t go to a campaignmicrosite.com/whatever. You go into the places they’re going and they will [interact with it] – because they want to take it, own it, put it on their Facebook page and share it with everyone they know, [and say] ‘Look at what I did. Look at what I found’.”

Read: Marketing’s interview with Mescall where he shares tips on being disruptive online, details on the inner workings of ‘Dumb Ways To Die’ and how to be human on social media.

Statistics from Google’s Ad Planner tool show Tumblr received 3.2 million unique Australian visitors in December, up dramatically from one million at the start of 2012. However, Nielsen figures released to Marketing show visitation to be more conservative, at 1.8 million for the month of December.

However, while the researcher’s hybrid Online Ratings system collects mobile web impressions it doesn’t collect impressions through apps, suggesting much of Tumblr’s use may be coming through its smartphone application.

Via web sources, Nielsen could reveal that engagement with the platform was high, with the average session lasting 5.6 minutes. The audience is split evenly between males and females, although females making a higher number of page views, accounting for 68% of views. Browsers aged between 12 and 24 years were responsible for over three-quarters of all pages viewed in the month of December.

Globally the service boasts 54 million members, an audience of 141 million and monthly page views of 17.5 billion. It reports itself to be the eleventh most trafficked site in the US.

Tumblr’s Radar ad units, which constitute sponsored placements of accounts/pages in a featured blog section, cost $25,000 per six million impressions in the US, according to DigiDay.

A range of brands have a presence on the site including media brands The New Yorker, The Economist and GQ , apparel brands Calvin Klein and Adidas, automaker Land Rover and Coca-Cola.

CK Tumblr

The platform is best suited to brands that create a lot of strong, visual content, writes David Moth from Econsultancy.

“Unlike more traditional blogging platforms, Tumblr’s social focus means that short-form content tends to gain the most interactions.

“For brands that create a lot of content it’s a great way of highlighting their most eye-catching or attractive images, but even if original content isn’t your forte Tumblr can still be used to share things that help to build your brand’s identity.”

The platform enables sharing via a ‘reblog’ button, which functions the same as a tweet button, enabling brands to turn owned content into earned quickly and easily.

 

Nielsen: Twitter and LinkedIn reach 13% of online population

The portion of the online population visiting social media sites has grown by 12% in the past year, according to Nielsen’s Online Ratings, with Facebook reaching 71% of the active online audience, and Twitter and LinkedIn reaching 13% each.

Nielsen’s analysis found that the member communities category, which is mostly made up of social networks, attracted a unique audience of 11.9 million Australians in April, a 12% year-on-year increase.

This increase came despite a less active month overall for internet users. April saw 15.3 million Australians go online, a drop of 5.1% month on month.

Google remained the most visited site overall, with a reach of 88% of the active online population and an average of 32 visits per person, while Facebook placed second but continued to dominate for time spent on site, at eight and a half hours per month.

Blogger, Google’s blogging platform, was the second most visited site among the member communities category, and the tenth most visited overall, with a unique audience of 4.5 million people, 30% of the active online population.

Nielsen table

Commonly used marketing tool, Twitter, was accessed by 13% of the active online population in April, with the average visitor making 6.41 visits and spending 21 minutes on site per month.

Read: The best and worst times for Facebook and Twitter posts.

LinkedIn attracted a similar audience size but slightly fewer views per person at 5.85, and less time on site at 17 minutes per month. Rising star Pinterest was visited by 6% of the active online audience, with visitors making an average of 3.47 stops and spending just over 20 minutes on site per month.

Google+ attracted an audience of 8% but suffered from lower views per person and significantly lower time on site than its competitors.

 

The best and worst times for Facebook, Twitter engagement

When is the best time to post links on Facebook and Twitter in order to generated the best click-through potential? Early to mid-afternoon, when the office crowd hit their post-lunch crash, according to data released by link shortening service bit.ly.

In a study of link performance for short URLs generated by the service and posted on Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr, 1pm–4pm on weekdays emerged as the most fruitful time to post a link on Facebook, while for Twitter 1pm–3pm was best.

In a blog post, bit.ly explains, “Bit.ly links are shared across all social networking services, giving us a unique viewpoint on how these networks differ. We track metrics like the main type of content being shared on a network, the geographic locations of the people sharing and viewing the content, and how the popularity of the network has risen and fallen compared to other networks.” The time zone analysed in the study was North American EST.

For both Facebook and Twitter, brands should avoid posting links after 8pm and before 8am, after 3pm on Fridays and on the weekends, or they run the risk of achieving low engagement on the post.

For Twitter, traffic peaks from 9am through 3pm, Monday to Thursday. Bit.ly advises brands to post just after the peak rather than compete in heavy traffic, in order to generate the optimal amount of attention. Posting in the afternoon earlier in the week also boosts chances of achieving a high click count, with 1pm–3pm, Monday through Thursday the highest performing in terms of click through.

Facebook traffic begins to rise at 9am, peeks mid-week between 1pm and 3pm and fades from 4pm. Links posted from 1pm to 4pm result in the highest average click throughs, with absolute peak performance coming at 3pm on Wednesday. For posting at night, the earlier the better, as while traffic counts are similar at 8pm and 7pm, posting at 7pm results in more clicks on average.

Tumblr was also examined in the study and found to be a very different beast to the other two networks. Users of Tumblr prefer to party late, with traffic peaking between 7pm and 10pm, particularly on Mondays and Tuesdays, and while Friday evening is a no-man’s land on other platforms, on Tumblr it’s an optimal time to post content.

 

The future of… print

This feature first appeared in the December 2011/January 2012 issue of Marketing magazine.

 

As 2011 comes to an end, Marketing magazine decided to take a look at the most rapidly evolving channels. The pace of change across the industry made this a difficult decision, but the three we’ve analysed all share a common and ever evolving game-changer: technology.

In the third of our predictions trilogy, Marketing takes a look at print and  how publishers are deepening their audience engagement on advertiser’s behalf through multiple touchpoints.

Everyone loves a good headline, and despite the usual suspects newspapermen and magazine editors, no one moreso than the web-press and bloggers. Yes they move newspapers, but damn can you see your analytics tickers fly when you post something entitled, ‘The Death of Print’. Choir’s love to be preached to. The reality is that print is no more dying than the discipline of marketing is dying. Print media businesses are about building an audience and engaging them deeply on an emotional and/or intellectual level. The media used to do this evolves: formats expand and contract with demand. So, in response marketing to marketing demand, all media businesses are employing multiple touchpoints.  Before the internet there had never been such a macro shift combined with micro influences: delivering in-demand content formats (text, video, audio) more easily.

Recognise that the product of a print media business is not paper, it is content. Recognise that few brands can dream of the brand equity a masthead enjoys. Recognise we live in a time where to take any channel alone and analyse it as a sole medium for reaching consumers, rather than a part of an integrated campaign or communications strategy, is to determine the result before beginning.

At a time when media fragmentation has made audiences harder to reach:

  • the surviving traditional print businesses and the web startups alike have recognised offering an advertising solution that is a single touchpoint leads to insolvency, and
  • savvy marketers understand the engagement reputable mastheads offer over other paid media (including purchased databases).

The real figures

According to the Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC), like-for-like audited magazine sales in Australia fell by 5.5 percent between January and June 2011. According to Magazines Publishers of Australia (MPA) 230 million magazines are sold annually in Australia, although this data is an aggregate based on ABC data of 2009. Aggregate data indicating the split between B2B and B2C titles was not made available before time of press. The MPA claim eight of 10 people read at least one or more magazines, with popularity of the media skewing slightly towards women at 84 percent and 76 percent of men.

On the newspaper front, the total decline has been surprisingly lower – although more significant when viewed as unit sales. The statistics paint a brighter picture than the aforementioned sensationalist headlines would have us believe. Between 2010 and 2009, The Newspaper Works reported a decline of three percent for metro and national paid dailies, juxtaposed with a decline of five percent for US newspapers and seven percent for UK. This international divide in newspaper decline is not an isolated anomalous year, but an ongoing trend between the markets: between 2005 and 2009, Australian newspapers dropped 4 percent, while the US and UK category equivalents saw drastic drops of 13 and 16 percent respectively. The Newspaper Works explains the stark difference is due to serendipitous market conditions. It says Australia is advantaged in that most markets are serviced by a single metropolitan or regional daily, while in the US many markets see multiple metropolitan and regional dailies and the UK has a number of large national dailies in competition with one another.

The brand equity of newspaper mastheads is demonstrated when looking at the top 10 news sites in Australia: seven are owned by newspaper publishers, though pole position is Nine News published by ninemsn. Second and third place are held by Fairfax with the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age respectively, while News Limited holds fourth, fifth, seventh, eight and tenth place with news.com.au, Herald Sun, The Australian, thetelegraph.com.au and Courier Mail respectively. Positions six and nine are held internationally by Yahoo!7 and BBC News. PwC’s Entertainment and Media Outlook for 2011-2015 demonstrates the parochial effectiveness of digital newspapers, showing display advertising growth for Australian mastheads well ahead of their US counterparts at 236 percent between 2006 and 2010 versus just 55 percent for US mastheads. The same report anticipates by 2015, display advertising with digital newspapers will have grown to $440 million from $286 million in 2011.

What are publishers doing?

The internet has really left few industries untouched and in adversity is opportunity. Right Angle Studio is one of the hot young things in the publishing industry that’s taken advantage of media fragmentation and developed quite a divergent model and offering. Publishers of the popular Thousands City Guides (websites and eDMs named after capital city post codes), Right Angle Studio started as a collaboration between brothers Barry and Chris Barton and provides a signpost to where publishers big and small are moving.

“What we found out is that after a couple of years of producing content about cities for inner city people, brands were often coming to us to ask us for our insights into that audience, or to ask us to perform marketing services targeting that group,” Barry, strategy and insights director at Right Angle Studio, tells Marketing.

These insights and audience engagement have spawned several partnerships including:

  • Lost & Found Hotel: the physical extension of a digital magazine targeted at the Australian creative community. In partnership with Tourism Victoria, Right Angle Studio collaborates with creative Melburnians to create, design and furnish a pop-up hotel
  • The Thousands iPhone app: a city guide of the best food and entertainment in Australian cities, produced in partnership with American Express. The app is branded on opening and provides reinforcement through indicating which locations accept AmEx, and
  • The Pond: a 2009 partnership with Pure Blonde as the beer began moving in on the inner-urban market in which Right Angle Studio facilitated the rejuvenation of two dilapidated spaces in Sydney and Melbourne, where drinkers could exchange eco-friendly donations for pots of beer.

“Our focus as a business is on an urban demographic, and how we communicate with that urban demographic can take many forms. And so I guess when people look at Right Angle, it might seem a little confusing because we’re a company that has online publications and owns a cinema and produces events, and does a myriad of things. But for us, it makes perfect sense because we’re still speaking to the same group of people, and we have a very deep understanding of all the different ways in which they communicate.

Barton says that, on the contrary, one touchpoint simply doesn’t cut-through to an audience the way it once did and no longer works for either publishers or advertisers.

We discuss media fragmentation and declining physical readerships and Barton puts forward the idea that, “there has been this proliferation of titles and readership opportunities, and we seem to have gone through an almost kind of gluttonous period of media consumption where we’ve stuffed as many different titles into our repertoire as possible and been left with a lot of things for which we have very little empathy or feeling. And I think that, as quite a pervasive trend across society, not just in terms of the publications we consume, but the number of people in our social networks, is a general sort of consolidation and quality control that’s beginning to creep into our consideration of things. And it would be nice to presume that, as we go through this kind of threshing out of what still works for us and what doesn’t, that publications which are at a higher quality and have continually developed a good product will recapture old markets, or not share that market with as many other publications.”

It isn’t just the hot young things that are adapting to new advertiser demands in order to create deeper branded experiences. The titans of the industry are there too. In the magazine world, there’s really one masthead to rule them all: Vogue.

“Vogue’s circulation is above the 50,000 mark. It’s been there for many years, decades actually,” agrees Mark Kelly, group publisher, lifestyle, at News Magazines. “Vogue will have an increase at the next audit at June. Its readership is up 9.9 percent, and that’s added up with a trend over the last couple of years. I think the key point here, and the one that you’re raising, is that it’s increasingly important to look at the total audience for magazine brands, and that’s really because what we’re trying to look at is engagement, and you can’t only look at circulation or readership [to see that]. So, you really need to look at cross-circulation readership online, social media, and events such as Fashion’s Night Out to understand the engagement levels across all platforms. And just to that point, Vogue Australia has the second highest per capita audience of any Vogue in the world.” [The highest is not the expected French or Italian edition, but Spanish.] “So, our penetration is extremely high in Australia, and online, we’re the dominant fashion or lifestyle brand. So, an example of that is the new measurement system was released by Nielsen, and that shows a unique audience of nearly 500,000 people from vogue.com.au, but there is also a significantly large community audience for Vogue across social media platforms, Facebook, Twitter, the blog, Tumblr, and Vogue forums. Its digital footprint has really expanded exponentially over the last 12 months. So, combined social media audiences of over 300,000 people. Facebook alone is 45,000, and Tumblr has gone from 2000 to 14,000 in three months. So, that is not an unduplicated audience, obviously, but it is true that we’ve always thought about our magazines as more than just magazines and print products, but it’s becoming increasingly true that from an advertiser’s perspective, they want to know what the audience is and the level of engagement with that audience.”

In 2009 Anna Wintour, editor-in-chief of American Vogue, birthed the Vogue Fashion’s Night Out (FNO) amid the GFC. The idea was to put the fun back into shopping while reinvigorating a suffering retail sector. FNO draws shoppers to retail precincts for the ‘VIP style’ experiential activity retailers offer: champagne, street performances, fashion advice etc. In 2010 it came to our shores, lighting up Sydney. Kelly, tells me that following the success of 2010, 2011 saw significant participation growth on the retailer front as 600 came on-board from 400 in 2010. But even at that scale, Kelly suggests it’s closer to good will than gold mine:

“It was a very big investment from our business last year. It’s not a money making venture. Basically, we lend our expertise as the world’s most influential media fashion brand to the retailers, and then it’s up to the retailers, really, to activate within their stores. So, a lot of the prestige advertisers have international alignments, obviously, and the luxury advertisers – the Ballys, the Burberrys, etc. –  they’re doing it in other cities… What we do is work with them on that and advise – we get access to what is world’s best practice for Fashion’s Night Out from the 17 cities around the world that conduct it… Advertisers definitely support it in the magazine around the issue, and that was certainly one of our highest ever revenue issues. In fact, the September and October issues were consecutively the two highest revenue issues in the history of Vogue, 51 years. But that’s more that they’re choosing to amplify their message through the magazine. So, the infrastructure that we do put on is expensive… Westfield was a major sponsor and there was other sponsors as well that supported us, including the City of Sydney. But it’s not going to make the Vogue rich; it’s more about providing an opportunity for the retailers, building relationships with the retailers, and allowing a much broader church of people to touch Vogue.”

Digital Engagement

The meteoric adoption of tablet devices is obviously something publishers are viewing lasciviously and audience expansion through the channel presents an interesting future to publishers and deeply engaging touchpoint to advertisers. The recent iOS5 upgrade including  Apple’s Newsstand has produced heartening figures, with News Limited’s iPad only The Daily shooting to pole position in terms of sales, with 120,000 active weekly readers, 80,000 of which are paying subscribers. Conde Nast reported a 268 percent increase in digital subscriptions after the update and a 142 percent increase in single copy sales. At time of print there were 295 magazines distributing through Apple Newsstand. The dominant player, however, is Zinio rather than Apple. The world’s largest digital newsstand, and through which Marketing magazine is published digitally, offers over 4500 magazine titles across 20 currencies.

“I think that the presence of the Apple newsstand is fantastic,” says Kelly. “Certainly, it’s been an issue trying to find magazines, and we know that the tablet is used for lots of things, social media, emails, gaming, obviously reading as well. But the lack of one place where you can consolidate all the print brands has certainly been a problem, and now it’s there, and having a look at it looks pretty good to me. I think though that we don’t only want to have a relationship with people through Apple, because obviously they’re taking 30 percent of the cut, and there is still questions over who owns the data. We will be seeking to not only have a relationship with them through Apple, but also a direct relationship as well. And I think that may mean different pricing on different platforms, all those things we’re experimenting with at the moment.”

At time of print, The Washington Post had excited the publishing world with its collaboration with Facebook on the social reader app. The web app displays The Washington Post’s content within a Facebook frame. From a publisher’s point of view it’s a fantastic means to leverage audiences they may never be exposed to: the web app automatically shares with a Facebook user’s friends all articles read by the user. It also displays articles read by the users friends, encouraging them to view more content. It also tailors content for the user by scanning her profile for likes and interests. The play is quite beneficial to Facebook as it keeps the user in the social network’s ecosystem – and a senior digital strategist with one of the big five media groups predicted off-record this was the first clue of the “inevitable” Facebook web browser. This automatic sharing also benefits advertisers in reaching hidden demographics through a complex funnel of interest-related sharing that would’ve been unobtainable through traditional research or digital targeting. It’s a step towards un-siloing content from algorithms while ensuring audience engagement.

The future of print is bright and it’s precisely the technological schism providing the light. It’s deeper audience engagement for publishers and advertisers using existing expertise across multiple-platforms – hinged on the medium you’re holding in your hand.

 

This article is featured in the December/January issue of Marketing magazine.

State of the social media sphere address

Things change quickly in Interwebs land. Here’s what you need to know so you can look knowledgeable and sound educated in front of the people who presume you know a lot about all this sort of stuff because you’re in marketing and it’s your job to know these things. Call it a ‘State of the social media sphere’ address if you will.

Twitter

Suddenly got cool and popular. The micro-blogging service has been sitting there doing its thing for a couple of years. Web/blog nerds have been using it to talk to each other since its inception but the consensus of the general public was that they didn’t quite get it or see the point. “So, it’s like a Facebook status update yeah?” was the catchcry. “And if I’ve already got a Facebook status update, why would I need to have a Twitter? I don’t care what millions of random people are doing every second of the day, I have enough trouble following my friends.”

And that was pretty much it. But what the detractors didn’t realise was that celebrities had started tweeting en mass. No one does give a flying proverbial about what millions of random people are doing every second of the day, but plenty of people care what celebs are up to. Rather than relying on the gossip mags for antic updates, fans can now get the word straight from the horses mouths. British songstress Lily Allen declared on Rove Live that she was an avid fan, US basketball star Shaquille O’Neal caused a stir when he started using Twitter to broadcast his location and meet fans, and proving that even at government level the service is being taken seriously, South Australian Premier chose Twitter as the medium to announce a State Election.

Facebook

On the other hand, have been in the shit recently. A few weeks ago they updated their terms of service without much warning and basically said that they owned everyone’s soul. Most of their 175 million users wanted their souls back, and Facebook were forced to revert back to the old terms and conditions, which only allowed them visiting rights on Sundays, but meant they could still put everyone’s baby photos on the moon. The network then did what any 20-year-old professional social media strategist consultant executive advisor would have advised and created a Facebook Group to get their members advice on what to do. Most people said they were evil and that they liked Twitter better now anyway because Twitter let them follow celebrities.

Facebook then announced that they would copy Twitter if that would make everyone happy, but everyone was too busy following Lily Allen’s progress across the subcontinent.

MySpace

Officially lost its Mojo, at least according to CNN. But you knew that anyway.

Tumblr

If you have to ask, you’re not cool enough to know.