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2014 | Buch

How to Measure Digital Marketing

Metrics for Assessing Impact and Designing Success

verfasst von: Laurent Florès

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan UK

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Measuring the Success of Digital Marketing explains how to determine the success of a digital marketing campaign by demonstrating what digital marketing metrics are as well as how to measure and use them. Including real life case studies and experts viewpoints that help marketers navigate the digital world.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter

Devising a measure of effectiveness applicable to digital marketing

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Definitions of and actors involved in digital marketing’s return on investment
Abstract
The emergence of the Internet – a wholly new medium – and its implications are probably the biggest change that marketing has faced since World War II. It is no longer just a fad, but a truly new order.
Laurent Florès
Chapter 2. The digital market and the main objectives of digital marketing
Abstract
The digital market is growing fast and is expected to account for at least 20 percent of advertising expenditure by 2017. Through its various levers – search, display, affiliation, email, mobile, and social media – it allows brands to implement their complete marketing strategy, from the development of awareness and the image through to acquiring new customers or developing their loyalty.
Laurent Florès

From the design to the implementation of a digital marketing effectiveness measure

Frontmatter
Chapter 3. The different types of metrics and KPIs available: “quantitative” vs. “qualitative”
Abstract
Measuring without an analytic framework is a pointless exercise: the AIDA model allows the objectives targeted by digital marketing and its effectiveness to be articulated.
Laurent Florès
Chapter 4. Measuring paid media
Abstract
For most brands, “paid” advertising or communication has always been one of the most natural ways of raising awareness. This is also the case for digital media. Yet, while the monitoring of effectiveness is well established for advertising in “offline” media, it is not always implemented on the Internet.
Laurent Florès
Chapter 5. Measuring owned media
Abstract
Measuring owned media is fundamental because it is the only point of contact that the brand directly controls: it is the center of the brand’s digital ecosystem.
Laurent Florès
Chapter 6. Measuring earned media
Abstract
Measuring earned media is a matter of some complexity, linked to their inherent nature, which blends both spontaneous actions and/or reactions, as well as the diversity of social platforms.
Laurent Florès

Digital marketing in the service of brand and business development

Frontmatter
Chapter 7. From 360° communication to integrated marketing communication
Abstract
Brand communication is becoming more and more difficult, with the fragmentation of media, shrinking advertising budgets, and increasingly “ad zapping,” “mediavore” consumers (those with a voracious appetite for any form of media).
Laurent Florès
Chapter 8. Digital dashboards: A tool for managing the effectiveness of digital marketing and integrated marketing communication (IMC)
Abstract
The relative measurability and immediacy of digital media can give advertisers the impression that it is comparatively simple to monitor their effectiveness.
Laurent Florès
Conclusion and future prospect
Abstract
As marketing and communications professionals are well aware, marketing has never been more difficult, but, at the same time, it has never been so exciting. If it is, and must be, in the service of the consumer, then today we have entered an era when this is so. Some authors and specialists even see in this a degree of “revenge” by customers, long treated “en masse” (in the sense of mass marketing) and in some cases, on occasion, “mistreated.” The digital world, with its interactivity and immediacy, appears to be rebalancing the power relationships between the brand and its customers. More informed than ever, customers have also never been so “resistant” to advertising and its influence. Customers are now “mediavores,” that is, they consume ever more media, but in an increasingly fragmented way. They are constantly connected through multiple screens (computers, tablets, and phones), and although their average TV consumption is not decreasing, their online consumption continues to increase, reaching a minimum of 20 hours a month in most developed economies and growing fast in developing economies. Ever more eager for interactive and social experience, customers immerse themselves in digital in all its forms. Switching from email messaging in favor of social networks, they become increasingly difficult to locate and reach; the customer is a constantly moving target. The exponential growth of mobile connections – for example, during the first quarter of 2013, tablets were the most popular connecting device sold, in other words, people now buy more tablets than PCs; and, in 2012, there were more than 25 billion application downloads from the Apple’s App Store – has revealed a major trend that brands must adapt to: SoLoMo. SoLoMo refers to the social-local-mobile character of today’s consumers: they connect with friends wherever they are, access information while on the move, and want information that is increasingly personalized and relevant, particularly in relation to their locations, desires, and needs. So should we give up? No, of course not, because although they are very demanding, these customers can recognize brands that progress and make the effort, and will respond positively to them with loyalty and by making recommendations on their networks.
Laurent Florès
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
How to Measure Digital Marketing
verfasst von
Laurent Florès
Copyright-Jahr
2014
Verlag
Palgrave Macmillan UK
Electronic ISBN
978-1-137-34069-6
Print ISBN
978-1-349-46488-3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137340696