Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
444.5K views | +2 today
Follow
Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

By Measuring Millions of Opinions, Opinary Wants to Reinvent Comments, Engagement - MediaShift

By Measuring Millions of Opinions, Opinary Wants to Reinvent Comments, Engagement - MediaShift | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Opinary has its own newsroom that creates editorial polls, which can then be integrated into a news site in place of comments. Behind the scenes, a data science team tracks the opinions of more than 25 million monthly users and reflects their results to publishers and readers. Currently, Opinary has partnerships in Europe with The Times, The Independent, Huffington Post and others.

 

In January, Simon Galperin joined Opinary as their U.S. head of growth. His goal: to identify how to maximize social impact in coordination with publishers and journalism networks like the Institute for Nonprofit News, Solutions Journalism and Reveal.

 

We talked with Galperin about how to measure engagement, reinvented....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Don't read the comments. That warning has become a familiar refrain for news sites. So what then is the real measure of media impact and success? Opinary intends to find out.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

The newsonomics of the body shop | Nieman Lab

The newsonomics of the body shop | Nieman Lab | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The arrival of the web knocked the news industry's relationships — with advertisers and with readers — out of alignment. But there are signs a few small repairs are working....

 

Misalignment grew, with readers and advertisers, as both themselves went increasingly digital. Think about it. In the old print world, advertisers paid up but really got a huge — and effective — audience, which moved goods and services. In this new digital world, they could buy online display that has never approached the results of print. Clickthrough rates tumbled toward the miniscule, tangible evidence of the growing disconnection. Shoppers found little usefulness in the advertising. Online advertising may have brought in a few billions, but publishers came nowhere close to creating the kind of local marketplace the newspaper had created.

 

Cultural misalignment. Reader misalignment. Merchant misalignment. Shopper misalignment....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Ken Doctor shares several innovations and realignments underway in the newspaper business including:

-  all access circulation

-  memberships

-  marketing services

-  consumer e-commerce

-  more local reporting

-  actionable customer knowledge

 

All part of the new "customer decision journey."

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

Audiences Now Rarely Drawn to Live Television

Audiences Now Rarely Drawn to Live Television | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

When it comes to the traditional screen that families gather around, live television is competing against a growing array of self-selected content, and audiences are bolting.

 

...It’s an apt metaphor. When it comes to the traditional screen that families gather around, live television is competing against a growing array of self-selected content. Given the amount of high-quality shows idling in my DVR and on-demand queue, channel surfing for live television seems very last century. And our television is Web-enabled, so a vast treasure of other goodies awaits from Netflix, Hulu Plus and Apple TV....

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

Magazines Show Highest Return On Ad Spend

Magazines Show Highest Return On Ad Spend | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

According to a Nielsen Catalina Solutions (NCS) study, magazines deliver the highest return on advertising spend (ROAS), with an average return of $3.94 for every dollar spent on advertising.

The study, which was presented today at the Advertising Research Foundation Audience Measurement 2016 conference, revealed the next closest media platform is display advertising with a ROAS of $2.63.

“Over the past year, there has been a preponderance of evidence to prove the effectiveness of print advertising and the power of magazine media to both tell and sell,” stated Linda Thomas Brooks, president and chief executive officers of MPA – The Association of Magazine Media....  

Jeff Domansky's insight:

This study confirms the obvious. magazines are very well targeted, create an attractive environment for both readers and advertisers, and if your product is appropriate, the return is strong.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

The Flack: Media Walls Crumble: Brands Benefit

The Flack: Media Walls Crumble: Brands Benefit | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Nowhere was the wall between editorial and ad sales as high nor as impenetrable than at mainstream news organizations.

 

Who can forget the maelstrom that erupted in 1999 when one esteemed journalistic enterprise the Los Angeles Times blurred those lines by publishing a 168-page special Sunday magazine issue devoted exclusively to the city’s new sports arena, the Staples Center? It was an ad-brokered deal.

 

The Times's respected media critic at the time David Shaw recounted the ethical breech (and the newsroom turmoil it caused) in a 30,000-word critique titled "Crossing the Line." Many other media pundits echoed Shaw's distaste for this egregious church-meets-state no-no.

 

My how things have changed! In an era when display and classified ad revenue at nearly every paper-driven media organization has fallen off the fiscal cliff, and the CPMs at Web-based media have failed to quickly fill the void, publishers have resorted to new and creative ways to blur the lines between advertising and editorial to enhance "ad" revenue. (Shaw, who passed away in 2005, would likely not be pleased.)...

 

[Peter Himler offers an in-depth look at the crossover between editorial and advertising, trends and impact of social media. ~ Jeff]

No comment yet.