There are emerging developments in digital marketing that could lead to some interesting opportunities for marketers, media companies and technology developers. The biggest trends are around the
movement towards autonomy, or away from external reliance and commonality, especially in video and mobile media.
Non-standard publishers will become the standard.
The era
of commodity media — where brands could only get scale by advertising across Web sites that conformed to standardized formats — is coming to an end. The new breed of audience
platforms is creating unique experiences where both brands and consumers have an opportunity to invent, create, and connect.
Platforms like Facebook, Amazon, Twitter, and Kik are
autonomous – they are technology independent, nonconforming, and personal. These autonomous marketing platforms will become increasingly necessary for marketers. As technology solves the
challenges that a lack of standardization in native advertising creates, they will move from being specialized to becoming the standard form of online marketing.
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Brands are becoming
autonomous.
We may soon see a tipping point of brands bringing their digital media buying in-house. According to eConsultancy, 45% of brands are already buying their paid search in house.
P&G, Netflix, Kellogg’s, Experian, Thrillist, Allstate, Fidelity, StubHub, 1800 Flowers, Amazon and others are all taking their programmatic buying in-house. We are headed
towards “the autonomous future,” where brands demand more control, transparency, and cost savings.
Agencies won’t go away. In fact, there will be an explosion of new
in-house agencies which will have access to all the same tools, talent, and technology. While individual brands won’t have the “consolidating buying power” that the big agency groups
do, the intuitive sense of their own marketing combined with their ability to move with speed will all lead to strong ROI.
Organic and paid social marketing will merge into a single
process.
In the beginning, social marketing was about distributing content to a fan-base. If a piece of content had strong engagement and the brand wished to amplify it, then they would
put some paid media behind it. Publishing and amplification were t two separate and technically disconnected processes — and there were some pretty obvious inefficiencies as a
result.
The precipitous decline in organic reach across the major social networks is foreboding. By the end of 2015, “organic” content marketing as we know it will
cease to exist, and the acts of publishing and testing social content will be tied directly to paid media. While this might be met with concerns around increased media costs, uniting the
publishing and amplification processes will create more efficiency and cost-savings. Brands won’t need two teams, two software platforms, and two budgets. There will be one social
marketing team, one budget and a single platform for both publishing and promoting content.
Facebook and Twitter will be the next video powerhouses.
Facebook now delivers 1
billion video views per day, with 65% of them in mobile, per eMarketer. Both platforms have made major investments in their video ad products and it is paying off. Despite the propagation of digital
video, there has been a shortage of high-quality, premium, native video inventory, and Facebook and Twitter are changing that. The ads drive engagement, brand lift, and sales. Keep an
eye out for a stream of data and research pointing to the efficacy of social video.
Mobile message apps will storm the advertising world.
According to a recent Gallup study, about the most common forms of nonpersonal communication, US adults under 50 said they use text
messaging more frequently than any other nonpersonal communication method, including phone calls and sending or receiving emails.
With mobile messaging becoming the predominant
communication vehicle, brands are finding inventive new ways of integrating themselves to reach these massive audiences. Platforms like Kik and Snapchat will become meaningful players in the
media business and will start to command both creative mindshare as well as share-of-wallet.
The function of mobile media planning will becomefully integrated with other digital
channels.
Mobile media cuts across every other digital channel – social, video, native, etc. With many of the historical challenges of mobile advertising being addressed
by platforms like Facebook and Twitter (creative, tracking, targeting, measurement) we saw a dramatic increase in mobile media investment last year. Spend levels across the entire industry will
spike to a level this year. Agencies will think about mobile holistically and will eliminate the concept of “mobile teams” by integrating the planning and buying functions with their other
media channels.