Monday, 4 December 2017

Google searches for Bitcoin pass Trump for the first time

According to this article by Jim Edwards on Businessinsider from back in September, the price of bitcoin has a 91% correlation with Google searches for bitcoin. Bitcoin is flying now and the data still backs up the theory:


  • Google searches for bitcoin have surpassed queries for President Donald Trump for the first time.
  • Interest in the cryptocurrency this year has helped drive a nearly 1,000% rally. 
  • US regulators on Friday cleared the way for bitcoin futures trading, which should further increase participation in the crypto market. 

More people are asking Google about bitcoin than are seeking information on the president of the United States, according to Google Trends data. 

It's one anecdote that shows how interest in bitcoin and buying have driven its parabolic 1,000% rally this year. 

Another is the growing number of top Wall Streeters — from bank CEOs to equity strategists — who have been asked or have offered takes on bitcoin. On Thursday, Carl Icahn told CNBC bitcoin was similar to the Mississippi Bubble of the early 1700s.

Bitcoin searches on Google surpassed Trump searches late in November.

Throughout last month, speculation mounted that US regulators would give the green light to futures trading. The confirmation came Friday when the Commodity Futures Trading Commission said it would permit futures on three exchanges.

Futures contracts will allow traders to profit from their bets on bitcoin price moves without necessarily buying the cryptocurrency, and could increase participation among larger Wall Street firms.  

Bitcoin jumped 7% to $10,746 against the dollar at 9:04 a.m. ET, after the CFTC's announcement. It hit an all-time high above $11,000 on Wednesday. 



Digital Marketing Is Evolving: Here Are Two Ways You Can Stay Relevant

Marketing has always been on the move in terms both of how it's both defined and executed. From the early days of the telephone and wireless transmission to the "huge TV" trend, radio and billboard commercials and the internet, to social media platforms, IoT -- and more -- businesses and brands have always had to be on their toes to figure out what's coming next.

If you run a business, you know that most consumers and businesses today are online, so a major part of your marketing has to be digital -- at least if you want to make any headway in reaching them. The scope of digital marketing application is massive -- and, no,  it is not all about social media marketing.

The one-size-fits-all content strategy will grow obsolete.

Your audience is likely made up of new, veteran and prospective customers of different ages and from different cultures and geographic locations. It would be foolhardy of you , then, to expect that they will all respond the same way to the same content. That's why you need to take their individual needs and requirement into consideration.

According to Key Difference Media, 78 percent of consumers will trust your brand if you create more personalized content. Dragon Search Media, moreover, reported that 61 percent of consumers it surveyed made buying decisions they said were influenced by custom content.

Video will continue to dominate other ad media.

If a single picture is worth a thousand words, then a minute-long video is worth a million words — about 1.8 million words actually, according to Forrester research. In other words, video marketing is the new poster child for digital advertising. In the recent past, video content has proven to be the most effective medium when it comes to garnering traffic and engagement, gaining leads and boosting conversions.

Come 2021, video will account for 82 percent of all online traffic according to a visual networking index created  by Cisco Systems. When you crunch the numbers from that report, you're looking at approximately 1 million video minutes per second by the year 2020.

Videos, in fact, are head and shoulders above other media strategies because they don't just provide content for your website users -- they demand engagement. This in turn speaks to the viral ability of videos, as 37 percent of viewers typically watch a video to the end, and 92 percent of mobile viewers share them with others. Simple Measured says that videos are shared 1,200 percent more than text and links combined.

For 2018, your business should concentrate mainly on creating memorable video content that stays true to your brand strategy. Do your SEO a world of good by adding relevant video content to your website, landing pages, content offers and ads (on and off social media).

Why? Video is the marketing tool of choice for 63 percent of businesses, according to a Wyzowl report -- so don't be left behind.




Credit to: Toby Nwazor 

Wednesday, 25 October 2017

Google AdWords Search Advertising Certification

Finally found the time and retook my Google AdWords Search Advertising Certification Exam that had expired earlier this year. I successfully passed the test and I am certified once again. At least for the next 12 months, at which point I will need to retake the exam.

As mentioned in my Google AdWords Mobile Certification post from October 16th, I strongly recommend that all digital marketers try and get certified on AdWords. They have a lot of great material and studying for the tests helps you understand how AdWords works. That's valuable information that can help with your digital marketing plans even if you are not managing or running AdWords campaigns at this moment.


The Google AdWords Search Advertising Certification Exam covers basic and advanced concepts, including best practices for creating, managing, measuring, and optimizing search ad campaigns across the Search Network.

Monday, 23 October 2017

THIS: The advertising industry has been living a lie (i.e the issue with programmatic)

This article is from Mike Shields over at Businessinsider. It's a terrific read and its confirming something that I have been saying for a while:

  • Advertisers have fallen in love with the fantasy of buying ads aimed at exactly the right people on the web's "long tail."
  • But that's not really how people consume media. Most people don't spend time on thousands of websites.
  • Moreover, the kinds of sites that are actually available via ad exchanges are far from ideal for most big marketers. Yet most brands seem stunned when they end up getting ripped off by fraudsters. 
  • "There is no basic internet knowledge among people funding the internet," said  Shailin Dhar, founder of Method Media Intelligence.

Here is the full article as it appeared on Businessinsider:
Did you catch that bombshell story posted by BuzzFeed the other day about the super sophisticated online advertising fraud operation?

I noticed right away that it was remarkably similar to a piece I'd written for Adweek in 2013.

It's not that BuzzFeed plagiarized anything. In fact, their reporting was terrific. It's just that the scam allegedly pulled off in this case – creating a bunch of fake websites, selling lots of ads on them via programmatic channels, and then using bots to simulate human visitors – was almost identical to the one I described in my 2013 story.

Which begs the question – why is this still happening? Aren't big marketers screaming about the need for transparency, and shining a light on the murky ad tech supply chain?

Hasn't Procter and Gamble chief digital office Marc Pritchard been on a crusade, exhorting advertisers to take better control over where their digital ads are running? Considering that some P&G ads were found to be running on fake sites in BuzzFeed's story, it seems like nothing much has changed.

For some reason, advertisers can't quit the long tail.

Let me explain.

Blame Chris Anderson


Digital advertising has many, many problems. You can blame ad tech. You can blame agencies. Or the Russians. Or maybe AI. But it's really all Chris Anderson's fault.

Anderson of course is the author of the seminal 2004 Wired article-turned-book "The Long Tail," which among many themes celebrated a web driven utopian time when every single niche interest would be well served, on a gazillion different websites.

Almost immediately, the ad industry co-opted the long tail concept, and saw it as a way to target people with super relevant ads all over the web, super cheaply. Right around that time, the concept of audience-based buying took hold. Using digital data (mostly cookies back then), you could target people with ads, wherever they went on the web, regardless of content environment or content.

You no longer had to pay high prices to reach car-shoppers on car magazine websites. You could buy 'auto intenders' (people looking to buy cars soon) wherever they were online. For way less cash.

Soon, ad agencies opened up 'trading desks' to buy ads this way. And programmatic advertising ushered in all sorts of ways to buy ads on thousands of sites at once using software. Advertising would become like Wall Street.

Except it never made sense.

People (marketers and agencies) who buy into the long tail concept just aren't honest with themselves about how they use the internet. There are numerous pieces of research on how even as people accumulate hundreds of TV channels, they only watch seven. It's rather commonly accepted that in a sea of millions of mobile apps, most people stick to half a dozen.


People tend to linger on the same websites and apps. comScore

Yet somehow the vision of the 'world wide web' is that we're all nurturing our souls on cupcake blogs and hobby sites and kitesurfing communities. Rather than just checking out Aunt Sally's Facebook posts and then reading something on Daily Mail.

Let's be real

To be sure, there's no doubt that there are niche publishers with passionate followings, like sites for hardcore sneaker lovers. And of course, it's remarkably easy to end up down weird internet ratholes in search of the name of the guy who played Skippy on "Family Ties," or trying to determine what happened to that person you dated 10 years ago.

And certainly, we all spend some time on some weird dark corners of the web. You like whatever you like, I like what I like, and we'd don't need to spend a lot of time talking about it.

The common thread with all of these internet use cases is, they're probably not the right moment for you to hear about some fun new recipes from Kraft, or how great you'd look in a 2018 Suburu. Yet marketers are sold on right audience, right time, environment be damned.

Regardless, this isn't the kind of site you find selling ads through various programmatic channels. Have you checked out what sites are on ad exchanges lately? Mostly, they're just random at best, or obfuscated at worst.

Check out this recent exchange run. Sure, lots of Yahoo and Tumblr ad space for sale, along with aerserv.com and slader.com (?). There's nothing wrong with those sites, other than they are just there.

There's also ad inventory (nearly 250 million impressions a day!) available on Google's ad exchange for Apple.com, which doesn't actually sell advertising. It's likely that this represents apps that run on iPhones, and not someone pretending to sell ads on Apple.com. But it's not clear.

And there's ads for sale on OpenX's exchange for Facebook.com, which doesn't typically sell ads on outside exchanges. 


A prominent ad tech platform

Here's the kind of ad space you can buy on various ad exchanges 

And there's tons and tons of "uncategorized inventory" or "Site Bundle."

A top ad tech company

There are some unexpected sites selling ads via ad exchanges 


In other words, tons of ads to buy on sites you don't know anything about. Not exactly living up to Anderson's dream.

"Long Tail business can treat consumers as individuals, offering mass customization as an alternative to mass-market fare," wrote Anderson in the Long Tail piece.

To be fair, he was mostly talking about retailers selling niche items on the web, not banners ads.

'There is no basic internet knowledge among people funding the internet'

"You have brands complaining about the lack of transparency in digital ads, yet rarely do brands look at domain reports," Shailin Dhar, founder of Method Media Intelligence, which consults marketers on ad tech. "Those reports that list their sites haven't even been pulled. So rarely do advertisers look at where they are spending to begin with."

"What we have found over the last six months or so is there is no basic internet knowledge among people funding the internet. Marketing people are lazy, agencies are lazy and platforms are scared. It's madness." 

Marketers are sure acting like they are on top of things, at least publicly. Recently, Chase was given tons of industry kudos for reducing the number of sites it was running ads on from 400,000 to 5,000 without hurting its business results, as reported by the New York Times.

The aforementioned P&G made a similar boast about cutting back on digital spend and how it didn't hurt the bottom line.

My questions are as follows: 
  • What made you think advertising on a few hundred thousand sites many any sense it the first place? So many big brands bought into this long tail fantasy they seemed to ditch logic along the way. And now they seem to be pointing the blame at everybody but themselves. It's your money guys.
  • Speaking of money being questionably spent, what about all these anti-fraud companies that brands and digital media companies employ to protect themselves against this kind of shenanigans. They all seem to publish dire forecasts about how many billions are lost to fraud. How much is being wasted on fraud protection that doesn't do the job?
  • Why does every single publisher or ad tech company boast of working with three or four anti-fraud vendors at once? Have you ever met someone who says, "Yes, I've hired four alarm companies to protect my house." One usually cuts it. Is it that fraud protection tools aren't that good at fraud protection?
Either way, the long tail seems mostly a tall tale.

And you wonder why some advertisers keep spending money on TV ads.

Monday, 16 October 2017

Just passed my Google AdWords Mobile Certification Exam

With mobile taking over digital over the last few years, this certification is important to anyone running digital marketing campaigns. The exam covers basic and advanced concepts of mobile advertising, including ad formats, bidding and targeting, and campaign measurement and optimization. The certificate is valid for one year, at which point it expires and you need to retake the exam, thus ensuring that you are up to date with all the latest developments.

Check it out here on the Google Partners website

I would actually go a step further and recommend getting any of the Google AdWords Certificates.
In the meantime I will be retaking another exam in order to renew my Search Advertising certificate that has already expired.

Snapchat’s Context Cards turn Snaps into location-based search queries

For venues tagged in Snaps, people will be able to view the address on a map, book a reservation and hail a Lyft ride.


Snapchat continues to flip location-based search on its head. Earlier this year, Snapchat turned people’s Snaps into a spin on Google Maps’ Street View. Now the mobile app is converting them into queries.

On Tuesday, Snapchat rolled out a feature called Context Cards that enables people to access information about a venue tagged in a photo or video posted to the app. For example, a Snap may tag a restaurant, and a person viewing the Snap will be able to swipe up to get its address and directions, see reviews from Foursquare and book a reservation through OpenTable. Or a Snap may be included in a Snapchat-curated Our Story about a local harvest festival, and a person viewing it will be able swipe up to hail a Lyft ride to check it out in person.



Snapchat is working with several companies that will provide the information presented in Context Cards. Those companies include Foursquare, Goop, Michelin and TripAdvisor for maps, location information and reviews; Lyft and Uber for ride-hailing options; and Bookatable, OpenTable and Resy for restaurant reservations.

Snapchat will automatically attach Context Cards to people’s Snaps that carry a corresponding geofilter naming the venue, and Snapchat will also add Context Cards to Snaps submitted to company-curated Our Stories, which people can view on the app’s Stories tab or through its search results and Snap Maps feature. For now, Context Cards will only show up for people using Snapchat’s apps in the US, the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

Snapchat will not insert ads within Context Cards, according to a spokesperson for Snapchat’s parent company, Snap. The spokesperson declined to say whether advertisers will be able to attach Context Cards to Snapchat’s other ad products, such as its Snap Ads and Sponsored Lenses.

“Anytime you can connect people with what interests them and connect them with more information and more opportunities, there’s usually a business there. But it’s just so early, I think there’s a lot of work to do first,” Snap CEO Evan Spiegel told the Financial Times in an interview connected to the launch of Context Cards.

While Snapchat may not yet be making money from Context Cards, it’s not hard to see how it eventually could. Since Context Cards are effectively a Geofilter, Snapchat could combine them with its Sponsored Geofilters. For example, a restaurant chain running a Sponsored Geofilter around its locations could have those filters carry a Context Card. Then, when a person adds the Sponsored Geofilter to their Snap, people viewing the Snap would not only be exposed to the brand but also be able to swipe up to get more information about the restaurant, and even book a table.



Sunday, 8 October 2017

How Desired Behavior Maps Can Lift Your Digital Marketing Results

Traditional product marketing hinges upon one main objective: the sale. The end game is to convince consumers to purchase particular products when they walk into retail stores. 

Naturally, thanks to the rapid rise of e-commerce and online subscription services, this marketing approach is no longer the norm, nor is it recommended. Many digital brands are beginning to realize that in order to thrive in the future, they must promote and facilitate behavior change. Why? Because they aren't just asking consumers to change what they buy; they're asking consumers to change their lifestyles.

For example, companies including Blue Apron, Hello Fresh, and Instacart are asking consumers to stop visiting the grocery store and start cooking more meals at home. Uber and Lyft, meanwhile, are asking consumers to change the way they get around town. If these brands took the traditional route and only promoted the immediate benefits of a one-time purchase, they'd be toast. Instead, every campaign they create must focus on the long game: retaining current users, boosting their lifetime value, and facilitating permanent behavior change. 

Mapping the Path to Behavior Change 


Behavior change isn't something that happens overnight. It's a long and arduous process. Companies like Netflix, Sling TV, and Hulu, for example, were considered add-on services that augmented cable for several years. But over time, these brands were able to convince millions of households to cut their cable subscriptions altogether and completely change their content viewing habits. 

So what's the secret to sparking large-scale, long-term behavior change? It begins with focusing your marketing campaigns toward retention, long-term use, and lifetime value — not just instant gratification.

As a digital marketer, you are likely familiar with building customer personas and mapping their journeys. Creating a desired behavior map is a similar endeavor, but instead of charting historic patterns, you plot the actions you want consumers to take. That's what makes it a desired behavior map; it lays out the journey you want users to embark upon after signing up. 

These four steps will help digital brands create desired customer behavior maps that lift their marketing results:

List Your Potential Retention Metrics


How do you currently determine whether customers are "retained"? How do you identify whether they have officially changed their behavior? 

A ride-sharing service, for example, may consider a user "retained" after he or she pays surge fees during rush hour at least once per week for a month straight. A meal delivery service, on the other hand, may wait until a customer goes 12 straight weeks without cancelling a delivery before considering him or her "retained." 

Jot down a short list of metrics you believe indicate a high likelihood of behavior change. These can be educated guesses; the next step will add much-needed confirmation. 

Identify the Best Indicator of Lifetime Value


Test each metric on your list until you identify which one most accurately indicates full-on behavior change (thus lifetime value). Sit down with your analytics team, conduct a focus group with customers — do whatever it takes to confirm what long-term loyalty looks like. 

After you've identified your best lifetime value metric, make sure everyone on the marketing team agrees with your assessment before proceeding to the next step. 

Chart a Chronological Path Toward That Outcome


After identifying your best lifetime value metric, work backward chronologically to identify the steps users would need to take in order to get there.

For example, let's say a streaming service considers consumers "retained" once they reach their second billing cycle and utilize a device like Roku or AppleTV to stream their favorite shows. What will it take in order to drive new users toward this status? 

The first step would probably be for them to sign up and provide an email address. Step two could be for them to download the app. Step three could be for them to begin watching content on their computer or tablet. Step four could be to watch brand-recommended content and build a library of favorites. Then, once a customer has a large list of content to plough through, step five could be activating a special offer for a Roku or AppleTV because these devices greatly enhance the viewing experience and have the highest correlation to long-term retention. 

This is just one example of how a company can plot a chronological path to lifetime value. The bottom line is that it should be highly detailed. Every step should have a time frame and measurable outcome associated with it. This will help align all of your marketing activities.

Build Creative Content to Suit Your Map


Take all of your active (and upcoming) creative assets and determine where they fall on the map. Then, hone them to ensure they're all communicating a cohesive story in the proper sequence. For example, make sure your welcome emails aren't touting features and add-ons you want consumers to explore two months from now. 

Conduct this exercise with every landing page or outreach asset you've created (or plan to create). Make it abundantly clear in every piece of content what the next step for the user should be, and make sure each step of the process looks and feels like a cohesive, seamless journey.
The modern era of e-commerce and subscription services calls for a new approach to digital marketing. Today, it's all about lifetime value — and the best way to achieve this goal is to promote and facilitate behavior change. 

With a clear map of desired behaviors and a plan to guide customers down the path, you can ensure your product or service becomes an indispensable part of their lives.



Monday, 25 September 2017

UAE Exchange Group invests in digital gifting service Swych



Digital gifting platform Swych Inc has announced the successful completion of its Series A funding round, with a major strategic capital investment by UAE Exchange Group (www.uaeexchange.com), the money transfer, foreign exchange and payment solutions provider.

Currently available in the United States, Swych will collaborate with UAE Exchange to develop and promote digital gifting services in major markets, leveraging the global reach of UAE Exchange.

The service between the United States and India is targeted as the premiere launch.

UAE Exchange, which has a dominant presence in the UAE, with close to 150 branches spread across the seven emirates and 17 branches in the Dubai metro stations, did not disclose the value of its investment.

Swych offers a global digital gift card platform as a solution for global gifting services.

Promoth Manghat, CEO of UAE Exchange Group, said: “Swych’s global gifting technology and vision fits well with our strategy to foster purpose-based money transfers. As a group, we are always on the lookout for opportunities to partner with organizations that drive innovation, provide differential services and promote digital initiatives.”

Deepak Jain, CEO and Founder of Swych, added: “We are delighted and honoured to welcome UAE Exchange as a strategic partner and major investor. The capital infusion, vote of confidence and access to the huge market reach of a world leader like UAE Exchange will greatly accelerate Swych in its mission to become the leader in digital cross-border gifting services globally.”

Launched in 2016, Swych has rapidly built a large network of more than 120 US retailers, offering digital gift options. Swych is in the process of connecting 100+ retailers from India, the Philippines and several other countries to its network.

Wednesday, 13 September 2017

Facebook is pushing to turn Instagram Stories into the next big ad platform


  • Brands can now advertise on Instagram Stories more easily. 
  • They can use a new uploading tool to convert their organic Instagram Stories into ads and can run ads on Instagram Stories existing Facebook ad products.
  • These new offerings are designed to help brands reach newer audiences with existing content and give them more flexibility with how they create and buy ads on Instagram Stories.
Facebook wants to turn Instagram Stories into the next big ad platform, and is trying to get brands of all sizes embrace it.

The company today unveiled a number of updates that make it easier for brands and businesses of all sizes to advertise on the platform, including a new uploading tool that lets marketers who already produce Instagram Stories to repurpose them as paid ads.

Businesses can now also use Facebook's Canvas (click here for more on Canvas) ad format on Instagram Stories as well as well, allowing them to more easily run the same ads across Facebook, Instagram and the Audience Network.

Instagram Stories has been growing at a rapid clip in the little over a year that it's been around for, with over 250 million daily active users and more than 50% of businesses on Instagram creating stories in the past month, according to the company. These tools are designed to help brands reach newer audiences with existing content.

The updates are also designed to give advertisers more flexibility with how they create and buy ads on Instagram Stories. For example, brands looking for a more polished experience can opt for Canvas ads, which should allow them to create compelling and fast-loading fullscreen ads.

Zenith and GroupM Ad buying agencies have both lowered their expectations for global ad spending in 2017 and 2018 according to the Wall Street Journal

Media buying agencies Zenith and GroupM have lowered their expectations for global ad spending in 2017 and 2018, due to factors ranging from political uncertainty in the U.K. to slowing growth in China.

WPP’s GroupM is expecting 3% global ad growth in 2017, down from the 4.4% it predicted last December.

Publicis Groupe’s Zenith predicts global ad spending will grow 4.0% in 2017, reaching $558 billion by the end of the year, according to the company’s new report. That’s down slightly from the 4.2% growth it forecast in June.

“Advertising expenditure grew ahead of the wider economy for the third consecutive year in 2016, but we expect it to fall behind over the next three years,” Zenith stated in its updated report.

In its latest earnings report, WPP blamed disappointing results and a grim outlook for 2017 on a steeper-than-expected slowdown in global ad spending by packaged-goods firms, among other factors. In its updated ad forecast, the holding company’s media agency group also indicated that a reduction in ad spending growth in China is partly to blame for the slowdown. Pivotal Research analyst Brian Wieser highlighted the drop in a note to investors.

GroupM is predicting that ad spending in China will grow by 3.8% in 2017, compared to its previous expectations of 7.8%, according to the company’s report. Zenith is predicting 6.9% growth in China, which is up from 6.6% it predicted in June and down from the 7.7% it expected in December, according to Mr. Wieser.

“Multinational CPG names appeared to spend a lot less in China in 2016, but this is only TV and print, and tells us nothing about the migration to digital these advertisers surely make,” GroupM said in its report. GroupM’s China operation also attributes a slowdown in growth in the region to “a consumer pause, as evidenced by Kantar data; further TV regulation; and digital running out of room as it approaches 60% market share.”

The Chinese economy “is slowing down after years of blistering growth, and the ad market is slowing alongside it,” said Zenith in its latest report.

China will still trail the U.S., “the leading contributor of new ad dollars to the global market over the next three years,” according to Zenith. “Its growth is slowing as its scale increases,” the company stated.

The media agencies also lowered expectations for ad spending in the U.K. while only slightly reducing U.S. growth forecasts. GroupM’s growth forecast for the U.K. dropped from an expected 7.2% growth to 4.1%. Zenith had already significantly reduced its predictions for spending in the region in June, but reduced it even more to 0.7% in its latest report, according to Mr. Wieser. The firm attributed the dip to political uncertainty, among other factors.

Each firm has its own methodology, but it’s not immediately clear why their forecasts in the U.K. and China are so different.

Zenith expects North American ad spend to grow 3.6% this year, and it’s predicting an average of 3.4% growth per year to 2019.


By Alexandra Bruell at alexandra.bruell@wsj.com. Published on the Wall Street Journal

Thursday, 17 August 2017

Skype’s unpopular redesign arrives on desktop computers


In June, Microsoft introduced a completely revamped version of its Skype app, designed with a heavier focus on media-sharing, and other social expression tools, like emoji, reactions, and even a Snapchat-like stories feature. Now that new experience is rolling out to desktop users, but in a more limited fashion, Microsoft announced this morning.

The new desktop app introduces an updated user interface that’s meant to give Skype a more youthful feel. Group chats are multi-colored. Bright, squiggly lines are used to indicate when contacts are typing or to separate out unread messages, among other things. Chats are given more prominent billing. Emojis can be used to ‘react’ to what others are saying while in video calls or in text conversations.

These changes, when Skype’s update arrived on mobile, were too radical for many users. The app suffered from poor reviews on the App Store and Google Play, with many accusing the company of having Snapchat envy.



But there are some additions that will be useful in the new Skype desktop, despite all this social app envy. For example, a new media gallery can be viewed on the right side of a group chat, which makes it easier to locate shared files, like documents, spreadsheets, photos or other media, that had been posted into the group.

However, this gallery is a bit too jazzy…when it’s empty, it has a busy, squiggly line-filled background that seems entirely unnecessary.

Group calling has gotten a makeover too, with support for real-time screen and photo sharing, and of course, emoji reactions that pop up as a temporary overlay on the screen. (Which you probably should not use during work calls, okay?)

Skype is also adding support for @mentions – something that’s become a convention in social and communication apps, whether work-related or not. Most major apps today – like Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and Slack, etc. – support this functionality, so it makes sense to bring it to Skype, too.

When you first launch the new app, you can pick between a light or dark theme – the latter which has become a popular choice for social apps as of late, with dark themes appearing on services like YouTube and Twitter.

When you want to start a chat, group or call, you now do so from a plus button on the top left. Here, you can also find Skype’s list of available bots, like those for travel, work, entertainment and gaming.

One more prominent feature that was a key part of Skype’s mobile makeover, however, is missing: Highlights.

This was Skype’s Snapchat-like take on Stories. The idea is that users would snap a photo or video, decorate it with text and stickers, then share it by posting to Highlights, where your followers can view it at any time.

But don’t get too excited if you were hoping to avoid the Stories takeover of social media. Microsoft tells us Highlights is still in the works for the desktop app. It and other new features, will arrive in future previews, a spokesperson says.

The desktop app is rolling out today as a Skype Preview for Mac users and those with non-Windows 10 PCs. Windows 10 users already received some of the newer features in last month, Microsoft notes.

By Sarah Perez (@sarahintampa), originally published on Techcrunch

Monday, 3 April 2017

What is currently working in Digital Marketing (2017 Edition)

Here is what you need to remember for the rest of 2017

1. The demand for interactive content is on the rise. Last year, everyone talked about video. This year, the trend is content that allows for participation and custom experiences.

2. B2C content creators are focusing on delivering quality. After all, content marketing is still going strong. Because there’s so much content out there, content creators know that their contributions need to be entertaining, informative, and creative.

3. People want to see images in their Facebook posts. This isn’t changing this year. If you want your Facebook posts to get more engagement, be sure to include a visual component.

4. Tweets should also have images. This probably won’t surprise you. After all, an image will help your tweet stand out from the droves of other tweets in your timeline.

5. Infographics aren’t dead yet. They still perform very well! And they’re not going away any time soon.

6. Brands are crowd-sourcing their content. User generated content is nothing new, but more and more brands are catching on. This is particularly popular on Instagram.

7. Content marketing is still king. If you didn’t spend much time last year developing a solid content marketing strategy, it’s time to do that. When content is executed properly (both in its creation and distribution), it can result in massive returns for a brand.

Friday, 3 March 2017

Google Assistant lands on more Android devices today

Your Android phone is about to get an upgrade. Google today is making good on its promise to bring its Siri alternative known as Google Assistant to more Android devices, starting today. The company announced at Mobile World Congress over the weekend that its Assistant would soon launch in the U.S., followed by English-language launches in Australia, Canada and the U.K., as well as for German speakers in Germany.

However, Google didn’t commit to an exact time frame this rollout would begin, saying only that it would be sometime “this week.”

Today, Google Assistant is arriving, the company has now announced.

For more check out the article on Techcrunch here.