Smarter SEO beats bigger Adwords budgets
It was just a few years ago we were introducing our sometimes skeptical clients to the cost efficiencies of online search in their marketing mix. It didn’t take long for them to become converts, with conversion rates so much higher than press and radio advertising. It was as simple as buying category keywords prospects were searching for when researching a purchase decision. For one client in particular, a cosmedic company, a Google Adword campaign was delivering sales for under $30 when traditionally they were resigned to having to spend upward of $400 per sale using press ads. Like most things in the world today, things have changed very quickly.
Google Adwords not the cheap fix it once was
While our clients were at the front of the adoption curve, plenty of followers have made online adword campaigns much less cost effective. Google is in the unique position in Australia of having a controlling share of the search engine market. While in Asia players such as MSN offer advertisers alternative places to reach prospects, here 90% of all people who search online use Google. So if you are an advertiser, you are competing with every one of your competitors for the same limited listing in a limitless bidding war. If you want to be on the first page of results, the same words we bought for cents a few years ago can now cost dollars. Our client who used to be able to grab sales conversions for $30 and below would now have to regularly expect to pay $150 or more. Meanwhile, newspapers are doing deals, so the gap for many advertisers is closing again. Or is it? What are the advertisers at the front of the curve doing?
Natural search is the answer to gaining exposure online
At UNO we’ve been delivering our clients what is close to free leads for years now using Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) techniques. How does it work? A Google search page has three sections. Paid results appear across the top and down the right side of the screen. This is what advertisers bid against each other for. Yet research has shown 75% of all people who search on Google ignore the paid ads and click on the results in the third area, the natural or organic listing in the main body of the page.
So while the majority of companies are still competing in a bidding war for 25% of the prospects, smart advertisers are using SEO experts to help them achieve a higher listing in the main game, the natural search listings that you don’t have to keep paying for again and again. Done right, SEO for natural search pays long term dividends.
Read MoreHere is the news in mass media marketing
A few weeks ago I cancelled my daily newspaper subscription. Not because of the increasing use of bad puns in headlines, a direct result of the publisher subbing out writing to young graduates to lower costs and supposedly bring a youthful feel to the paper. No, I cancelled on the day the business section shrunk to just three pages of mostly superficial stories.
I’m not alone, an associate cancelled his subscription because of the increase in typos and doubling up of stories in different sections.
While once loyal readers are deserting, publishers are desperately trying to entice. The same paper gave me a free 10-week subscription when I signed up to a wine club the following week. I read online free from the same masthead. Since 2001 the Media Alliance estimates that the number of full-time journalists working on Australian newspapers has fallen by 13 per cent or roughly 1000 to 7500.
The hen and egg question of what came first – the thinness of content or the decrease in advertising to underwrite good journalism, is superseded by the issue of where have the readers gone?
Online, just like you.
The news in the last few months is an indication the tipping point is here…there are lists, (found online in seconds) of the latest closures around the world, from Colorado’s oldest paper, The Rocky Mountain News to The Boston Globe.
PriceWaterhouseCoopers latest survey predicts global newspaper decline of 10.2% this year.
What does the decrease in readership of press mean to mass marketers?
Well there’s no refuge in TV. The diminishing returns of this medium in Australia, where the cost per thousand eyeballs doubled over a seven year period while the number of potential viewers declined by 20% means ever diminishing returns for TV ads.
Yet there are still people who spruik packaged TV ad formats that exclaim “Brand News” on TV is more effective? Than what, bad brand ads on TV? Either way, with fewer viewers for greater expense than ever before, the high cost of entry to producing and running ads on TV are driving marketers away. While a FinReview survey of marketers indicated they are sticking with TV ads for their brand marketing, the long term media spend trends show doing the same as before is on the way out.
Australian online ad spend is up 14 percent to an annual $1.4 billion
The smart marketing investment is micro-managed across dozens of touch points, from the web to activation at point of sale. The smart marketer is looking for measurable results, insightful strategies and creative that cuts through and adds value in a sea of clutter.
Read MoreTrust me, I'm in advertising...

10 years ago when I started my own agency, an account director mate left the industry to become a real-estate agent. I remember thinking it was the only place he could go that had a lower standard of trust than we advertising types.
Last week he told me it was a great move financially, he reckons 99% of people in advertising are really smart, whereas he’s happy competing with the 99% of real estate agents he’s found to be really ordinary. If we are that smart, why can’t we lift our own profile, beyond the bottom of the heap for trusted professions?
Trust in advertising? This is not an oxymoron.
Unfortunately, the perception of our industry is on a par with used car salesmen, yet our legal obligations, indeed our personal liability, dictate our practices are squeaky-clean.
In Australia, like most things, our industry is regulated and kept on the honest path by a series of laws and regulatory bodies. You wouldn’t know it.
The 2011 senate inquiry into outdoor advertising standards found only 0.01% of ads were found to be bad, i.e. sexist, likely to offend or straight out untruthful. Yet when prompted on ABC radio, the senator leading the inquiry said that if we don’t clean up our act under self regulation, he’ll "pull out the big stick and regulate" us.
Would you trust a politician to decide whether marketers are trustworthy?
In Europe, clergy are experiencing a decline in confidence levels and politicians are in last place. Our peers don’t rate much better than we do here, with over half of Europeans surveyed* saying they don’t like journalists, marketing specialists or advertising experts.
*Source: GfK Trust Index in spring 2010
I can understand why journalists are suddenly on the nose – the phone hacking scandal at Rupert's tabloid News of the World has in the words of one shareholders action group "laid bare a striking lack of stewardship and failure of independence." The board had been unable to set a "strong tone-at-the-top" about unethical business practices.
Australians generally are a trusting lot. When it comes to believing what our fellow citizens say, Australia on a trust index score of 92 ranks ahead of the U.S. (78.8) and U.K (61), just behind New Zealand (102) and way behind China on 120.9.
Source: ASEP/JDS data bank 2011
So where do Australia’s “ad people” sit on the trust index today?
Who we really trust is no real surprise:
1. Paramedics
2. Firefighters
3. Pilots
4. Rescue volunteers
5. Nurses
At the bottom of the pile are
41. Taxi drivers
42. Real estate agents
43. Car salesmen
44. Politicians
45. Tele-marketers
Source: Readers Digest Austrlalia’s most trusted professions poll 2011
Before you think ad madmen aren’t so bad after all, the only reason they’re not last on this list is because they aren’t included in the survey. Tele-marketers are the closest category, so let’s just accept advertising and marketing guys are way down there. How did we end up down at the bottom with pollies, and what do we need to do to elevate our role to a similar level of respect as other service providers like engineers, doctors and architects?
Advertising first took off in America in 1800s when snake oil makers discovered the return on investment of promoting something of little value with amazing claims in the press. In Australia last year the most damage to our credibility was the public complaints about the posters advertising Advanced Medical Institute’s cure for under performance in bed. It was bad enough they were bad ads, the real breach of trust was the pitch was a fraud. Most of those with a desire to last longer in bed were overcharged for a treatment that generally didn’t deliver on the promise.
As a professional I feel we would be better off refusing to work for these types of people. It didn’t harm Bill Bernbach’s career when he told prospects he wouldn’t accept their business if their product didn’t live up to his standards.
(Glenn Mabbott would like to declare his interest as a sitting member of The Communications Council’s Policy Committee, which aims to raise industry standards through the Accreditation Scheme. UNOmarcomms was one of the first independent agencies in Australia to gain accreditation.)
Are today’s retail ads bland, bland, bland?

Are today’s retail ads bland, bland, bland? This was the question posed by AdNews last week after Dick Smith launched a new brand style ad campaign. If you missed it, here is a cut down of my contribution to the debate.
Dick Smith was an innovator
He built a new category with advertising and brochus that gave Australia’s cardigan wearing tinkerers access to an Alladin’s cave of electronics stuff to play with in their garages. What proved Dick really clever was his ability to sell his growing challenger brand to Woolworths and then go on to innovate time and again. With Australian Geographic and then his Australian Made products, Dick was a natural at creating marketing campaigns that resonated with the public mood of those times.
Contrast this with another retail innovator of Smith’s era, Gerry Harvey. Gerry also made his first million in his early twenties with ads for whitegoods and appliances that yelled, “Why pay more?
Is Gerry a clever Dick?
Gerry didn’t sell his business and continues to be the biggest retail advertiser in the country with ads that follow the same tired formula of thirty years ago. We all know the pitch: yell loud enough and people will rush in to grab a bargain. Except increasingly we’ve learnt to treat those ads as repetitious nagging. We’ve moved on to better retail experiences, which are likely to be online.
It’s time the majority of retailers looked at the current crop of retail innovators, like Net-a-Porter that has just released a new magazine iPad app that makes shopping an exciting, contemporary experience. Or this great campaign in Korea for Tesco’s challenger brand, Home Depot.
This article first appeared in AdNews, 21/10/11
A lateral way to increase retail shelf space: use a billboard
Watch this short video of how Tesco challenged the number 1 retailer in Korea by creating a virtual store.
What’s the next killer app?
The latest stats show Australians are the number 2 adopters of smartphones. And this year, Tablets and iPads are set to outsell mobiles, Australians will buy 1.2 million of them*. In the last couple of years the fastest increase in marketing online has been with using video, so we believe the next big thing for marketers will be video over smart mobile devices.
Ask us about the app factory that will let you make the most of video content. (Soon to be launched by UNO with our partners at Mass Media Solutions.)
*Telsyte mobile device update 2011.
73% of CEOs think marketers "Lack Business Credibility"
According to damning research by the Fournaise Marketing Group, marketers are not the business growth generators they should be.*
The gist of the findings of an Asia wide survey of CEOs is that management believe their own marketing departments are in a world of their own. They believe marketers speak in jargon and are not contributing any value to the business. From my experience you can’t blame most business owners for thinking this way, especially in Australia. Too few businesses have ever had a good marketer sitting round the table at board level, championing the power of marketing to generate wealth.
Marketers need to talk the language of business outcomes
As in “how can marketing get a better return on investment”. Otherwise marketing will remain a misunderstood black art not worthy of the attention of three quarters of CEOs. The vast majority of businesses will thus miss out on the huge opportunities that insightful marketing can deliver when it is woven through the entire business process.
Meanwhile there are a handful of businesses doing better than the rest because they have value-adding marketers on the team. These marketers, obsessed with return on investment, are recognised as an integral part of the senior management team. They are helping their businesses punch above their weight in the following ways…
- Overcome competition based purely on price
- Prevent decline of sales
- Hold on to existing customers
- Build qualified sales leads
- Change the perceived quality of a product
- Revitalise tired brands
- Boost staff morale
- Speed the development of new markets
- Speed product trial and acceptance
- Help businesses raise capital more easily
- Build the value of a business for sale
ROI marketing works
For 100 years Coke has proven it, people from first world countries to third choose Alabama’s black sugar syrup even though it doesn’t taste as good as Pepsi’s. That’s the power of consistent marketing. Perrier taught us to pay more for mineral water than petrol. Branson has convinced Australians to fly Virgin despite having a deplorable record of taking off late, (and you still have to pay for your sandwiches). And thanks to marketing Apple has built a brand that is hugely profitable, marketing has enabled them to sell often inferior spec’d products at a premium to specialist manufacturers like Nokia and HP.
CEOs needn’t fear marketing speak. Business decision makers who embrace marketing with an open mind can still enjoy a sense of control by implementing a test and learn approach. Any marketer worth listening to understands the value of having the results of their work tracked. If it isn’t measured, it isn’t managed. A marketing program that IS managed WILL deliver better results than mindlessly sticking to what the company has always done, or jumping blindly into the latest thing.
ROI Marketing can make a big difference to any sized business, in any category
So what can ROI marketing do for you? My experience has shown me whatever the category, from Watties baked beans to Brita water, Splash Clinic cosmedical treatments to City Index CFDs, a test and learn marketing program can turn good businesses into category leaders.
Read MoreTwo thirds of Australians are using social media. Two thirds of those use it to decide what to buy.*
Social Media Marketing (SMM) is growing, the latest figures show Social Media is becoming a mainstream influence in the purchase decision process. UNO are members of the Australian Interactive Media Industry Association. Together with Sensis, AIMIA surveyed 803 Australian consumers and 1,944 Australian businesses to determine how social media channels are being used. 50% of corporations now have a social media presence, the majority on facebook. Just 14% of small businesses use social media.
Proportion who have Social Media presence
Proportion who have Social Media presence
Social networking site usage by age and gender
Here are 10 ways you can make more of Social Media in your marketing communications mix:
- Start now for free. If your business is consumer facing, get a facebook page, it’s free.
- For B to B, skip facebook. Focus where business decision makers are active. Join LinkedIn. Follow relevant associations and groups, join industry forums and post comments on articles.
- Share your knowledge. Your business is your passion; tell it how you see it where you can add value to a conversation. No need to sell, just build your credibility as an expert and you’ll be increasing the standing of your businesses.
- Don’t post as anonymous. Out yourself. The CEO of a solar hot water manufacturing company follows chatrooms where plumbers share advice. His comments to tradies‘ questions demonstrate he’s in touch with his market. I suspect his competitors are unaware such forums even exist.
- Put someone in charge of your Social Media. Empower a person within your business who is passionate and keen to have a dialogue with customers. If you don’t have anyone internally, outsource.
- Tweet. Reinforce your position as an industry expert by tweeting and re-tweeting about relevant content that others have shared.
- Blog. Blogs and reviews have a big influence on buying decisions, with 63% of social media users reading reviews before making a purchase decision.
- Be regular. Respond quickly.
- Integrate social media. Integrate content with your promotions and product campaigns. Measure. Track.
- Video is the future. It’s the fastest growing area online because it’s easy to share. It’s not enough to post a television commercial on YouTube because no-one will look for it. Be creative, film an interview with an expert, or shoot a behind the scenes glimpse that showcases something you do well.
Social Media can deliver a measurable ROI. No wonder businesses are spending 5% of their marketing budgets managing and creating content for social media.
The good news is that any business that has collected data on their customers is sitting on their own potential gold mine. Rather than spend money trying to appeal to new prospects by running press or even online ads, you will get a much better return on investment by adding some intelligence to the way you manage your data.
Give your CRM some Data Intelligence
Most data is in such a mess it offers little insight to business owners. To turn it into a powerful tool to enable you to communicate with your customers requires a clean, intelligently organised database.
The place to start to release the value from the mountain of data you already have is to give it to an expert to wash it.
You’d be surprised how many emails and addresses are wrong, repeated or out of date. You can’t begin to measure response rates until you know the data you have is clean. It’s better to measure the response from 10,000 real customers than to assume you’re sending offers out to say 30,000 on a dirty list.
Once you have a clean list, your data then needs to be structured and categorized with the aim of maximising its usefulness for marketing purposes. There are then some things you can do straight away to not only deliver quick profits today, but also set you on the path to delivering what customers will want in the future.
Fast profits can come from testing and tailoring offers to:
- up-sell, getting customers to buy more valuable products from you
- cross-sell, encouraging them to add something else to what they usually buy from you
- increase purchase frequency, by building loyalty and giving them more reasons not to be tempted by your competitors
So get the experts in quick smart to professionally clean your data so you can secure the future of your business. Let those who continue to spend big to tempt new prospects pay the price.
Read More
What will it take for retailers to stay in business in this rapidly changing global economy? Futurist Ross Dawson commented in a recent blog that if you expect your business to look the same in 10 years as it does today, expect to be out of business.
Who’d have thought ten years ago that Woolworths would be the biggest owner of pubs and bottle shops today? Constant change is the only way to stay competitive, which explains why Woolworths just bought Cellarmasters for $340million. Kevin Luscombe recognises the future includes database marketing, Cellarmasters “will enable us to serve a whole new customer segment in terms of the direct marketing channel.”
eCRM drives online sales
Cellarmasters has the largest databases of drinkers of premium wines in Australia. For any competitor to stay in the premium wine business they’ll need to at the very least match the way they apply an eCRM program to their database.
Once a database has been professionally cleaned, you can start to mine your database and build a series of profiles of your customers. Using that intelligence will deliver a better ROI on your marketing. You’ll get a better result cross selling Pinot Gris to customers who are heavy purchases of Sauvignon Blanc. With profiles of your customers it becomes practical to promote a 20 case limited offer Coonawarra cleanskin, you simply email your regular purchasers of Cabernet. With data intelligence, while you offer a bonus with purchase of single malt to spirits drinkers, beer drinkers automatically receive a different offer.
Very few customers want to be constantly bombarded with promotions that are obviously being sent to the masses. They will reward targeted offers that demonstrate you understand them as an individual with stronger loyalty.
Your customers know what they like and will actually tell you what they want if you bother to track their behaviour, or quite simply ask them. Every marketing activity, from a mailer or catalogue to a visit to your store, each phone enquiry and every online order is an opportunity for you to measure what works and what can be improved.
ROI marketing will drive e-commerce
Every dollar you spend on marketing should and can be measurable. You don’t actually have to be a futurist to stay in business, with data intelligence you can keep track of where your customers’ needs are leading and continuously adjust and improve to keep up with them.
Read More
Bernard Salt earns a living as a demographer. That’s the art of taking research data and painting a picture of who we are and what we think and do. Before you tune out thinking he’s just another propeller head making money off the back of lies, damn lies and statistics, consider for a moment what you’d give as a business to know where the next big opportunity for making money is, before it happens.
How do entrepreneurs know where to invest today in what will be the sweet spot tomorrow? What did the savvy few who bought franchises in McDonalds in the eighties know? Or the food services that were ready to be part of café culture as we left tea drinking behind?
If you were a tea manufacturer in the 70s Australia’s demographics could have predicted that your volumes were about to decline. The move from a society of tea drinkers to the blossoming of café culture at the turn of this century was a consequence of something that happened in the 1950s. The wave of immigrants from Italy and Greece post war had kids, grew wealthy and infused our Anglo society with a Mediterranean café culture which saw Australians move onto the footpaths and embrace machiattos and cappuccino with biscotti in preference to sitting indoors with a cuppa Bushells and an iced Vovo.
At a Family Business Australia breakfast, Bernard explained the simple truth that the composition of Australia is what drives business growth. And decline. Seems obvious, yet even the high fliers at BHP and the big four banks pay Bernard to keep them abreast of what should be self evident. It’s easier to grow a business and be profitable in a category of growing demand than to compete for a share of a shrinking one.
Change managment – there's money in tea
Follow the demographic trends that will shape what Australians will look like in the next decade and consequently what consumers will be asking for. Today there is a shift away from European immigration to Asian as these stats on fastest growth and loss by place of birth show.
Prediction: Start thinking about tea and noodles not coffee and pasta.
Super was yesterday’s money maker
In the last decade the biggest growth in financial services has been in superannuation. The SMSF category has doubled its share to be the largest segment at huge cost to growth of retail funds as boomers take more interest in their money in super. Industry funds have also grown share with a low fee proposition and the locked in stream of contributions via the super guarantee levy from a membership base that traditionally wasn’t saving much. But that’s today’s boom business, tomorrow it will change, again because of a shift in demographics.
The makeup of working Australia is about to fall off a cliff, as the boomers retire and are replaced by… no-one:
The age at which boomers will retire, now on average 58, as well as the length they can expect to live has also profoundly changed in just a generation:
Prediction: Cashed up retirees who will live for 20+ years will want to travel, eat out, be entertained, live in a city apartment or by the sea and to pay for it all need a retirement pension plan that will last the distance. They’ll be looking at ETFs and annuities.
Bernard Salt has a pretty good idea of what tomorrow looks like. It’s up to you to see how you can position your business today to be ready to reap the rewards of a growing market category before it’s the next big thing.
Read MoreDoes your business have a brand policeman?

When did you last check your brand imagery and how consistently you are projecting your business to customers and stakeholders? Have you done a complete audit of all your “touch points”? Who in your company has the authority to enforce standards?
Large corporations have entire departments looking after how the image they present visually. They have realised the value created by consistent repetition of the company brand marks alongside the product or service it delivers.
Most businesses fail to present themselves as professionally as big brands and end up with a brand “look” that has more in common with a camel than a racehorse. This occurs organically, by allowing too many people to make piecemeal decisions every time something is needed.
There are so many pieces that make up the complete picture of your brand, from a new business card to printing a brochure or sending an email offer. Each is an opportunity to build brand “credits”, or a risk for someone to go off on a tangent.
A complete audit of all your brand “touch points” would cover:
• Internal signage
• Building signage
• Banners
• Vehicle signage
• Advertising
• Email signatures
• Website
• eNewsletter templates
• Fax formats
• Letterhead
• Business cards
• Presentation folders
• Flyers
• Sales force and sales kits
• Product sheets, warranty forms
• Order forms
• Invoices
• Branding on your products
• Point of sale
• Price tickets and notices
Setting brand standards with a professionally developed Style Guide
Brand guidelines (also called a Style Guide) should cover all of the things in the list, and have specific rules for each element. For instance, how your logo is used would cover these specifications:
Colours
• Print: CMYK or Pantone reference
• Digital: RGB
• Mono, reverse,
• Vector files for artwork production.
Size guidelines - how small can it still reproduce?
Usage guidelines - clear space, location on the page, hierarchy with other symbols.
A Graphic Designer with credentials in this area can produce your Style Guide.
Enforcing your brand style
Your creative agency can act as your deputy and arm you with a password protected online archive of logos, images, artwork formats and templates.
Many businesses also find having a professionally developed Style Guide available, as a reference document for staff and suppliers, helps enforce brand rules making it easier to keep the company image under control.
Finally, someone qualified within your company needs the power to enforce the Brand guidelines. It is possible to mandate that all work using the company brand mark is approved by this person before it goes into production.
Success through consistency
Every business can benefit from designing formal brand “rules” so they can weave simple and consistent imagery through the company’s everyday operations. If you have a good product your customers will come to associate that product with your consistently delivered brand mark.
Read More
There’s more to ecommerce than GST
Funny how Harvey Norman and other retailers are running to the regulator with the sob story that they are losing sales to overseas online providers who don’t pay GST. Time for a reality check, they are losing sales because they are slow in changing their business models to keep up with consumer behaviour. 6 months ago I flagged the stats showing how quickly online sales were growing and the failure of our retailers to keep up with the trend.
Consumers reward innovation
It’s how Gerry Harvey made his first millions when, in his twenties, he founded the first category killer electrical discount store, Norman Ross. You don’t have to be young to be innovative; you just have to give consumers what they want in new and exciting ways. Today consumers increasingly are researching and shopping online. In a few years what they want will be something most of us have yet conceived, and more than likely Apple’s Steve Jobs, aged 55, already has in development.
Facebook keeps growing. So how can you make the most of it?
Facebook has broken through the 10 million barrier of active users in Australia*
While this will prompt many to jump in and increase advertising on Facebook from the current $12million a year, content is the cost-effective way any marketer can gain exposure to this increasingly significant audience. Best make sure it's the right kind of content.
Online content is King
When publishers and marketers say content is king, what exactly do they mean? Here’s an example close to my home. When I was 20 I played occasionally in a punk band called The Coathangers. Most nights we were lucky to get paid in free beer, the cover charge might be a couple of bucks. One night we had 6 bands for 69c. It was accepted that routine you played for little or no immediate return to build up an audience. Later you would then sell records to them, which was where the money was. Your loyal following paid for content.
Today you can’t expect to sell many CDs when everyone can download your content for free. My 21 year old son has a new band, The Psychonaughts. They hardly ever play live, they are busy recording, creating content that will more than likely be given away. In the not too recent past a band would build a website that fans would visit to purchase songs and buy merchandise. Not any more, people expect everything online to be free.
So what’s the value of giving away content online?
In the case of music, the content gets passed around and builds an audience, who then pay to see you perform live. Technology has turned the model upside down.
The ease with which people can share content across social media is a lesson for brands – we are now in an era where you have to produce content of value to your target audience, making it available for free. It then requires like-minded prospects to share it by whatever medium they choose: YouTube, mobile-to-mobile, email, or increasingly, Facebook.
According to Facebook regional vice-president A/NZ Paul Borrud, globally two-fifths of the more than 500 million Facebook users are accessing the site through their mobile. And Australians spend longer on the site than anyone else.
Unlike marketing via your brand site, or Google adwords, or banner ads or traditional mass media advertising and PR, the consumer isn’t being paid to publish your message. For content to be spread it isn’t enough to post brochure copy or press releases, content needs to be engaging stuff that your customer sees value in. And by aligning this free content with your brand story you can build a relationship with prospects stronger than an advertising approach could ever achieve.
So the art is producing content that is worthy of the attention of your audience, something they want to share.
* SMH.com.au 10/12/10
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