Today in Digital Marketing - I’m Sorry, Dave. I’m Afraid I Can’t Stop Those.
Episode Date: February 17, 2023Ads are coming for AI chat... More brands on TikTok are testing in-app checkout ... Digital video overtakes TV... Meta brings Telegram-like ‘channels’ to Instagram... And how to get your next ad p...lacement into the hands of your customers... literally. ✅ Follow Us on Social Media If you like our podcast, you'll love The Daily Upside!The Daily Upside is a free marketing and business newsletter that covers the most important stories in a style that's engaging, insightful, and fun. It delivers quality insights and surfaces unique stories you won't read elsewhere.Sign up free here ✨ GO PREMIUM! ✨ ✓ Ad-free episodes ✓ Story links in show notes ✓ Deep-dive weekend editions ✓ Better audio quality ✓ Live event replays ✓ Audio chapters ✓ Earlier release time ✓ Exclusive marketing discounts ✓ and more!Check it out: todayindigital.com/premiumfeed 🤝 Join our Slack: todayindigital.com/slack📰 Get the Newsletter: Click Here (daily or weekly)Or just The Top Story each day on LinkedIn.✉️ Contact Us: Email or Send Voicemail⚾ Pitch Us a Story: Fill in this form🎙️ Be a Guest on Our Show: Fill in this form📈 Reach Marketers: Book Ad🗞️ Classified Ads: Book Now🙂 Share: Tweet About Us • Rate and Review------------------------------------🎒UPGRADE YOUR SKILLS• Inside Google Ads with Jyll Saskin Gales• Google Ads for Beginners with Jyll Saskin Gales• Foxwell Slack Group and Courses Today in Digital Marketing is hosted by Tod Maffin and produced by engageQ digital on the traditional territories of the Snuneymuxw First Nation on Vancouver Island, Canada. Associate Producer: Steph Gunn. Ad Coordination: RedCircle. Production Coordinator: Sarah Guild. Theme Composer: Mark Blevis. Music rights: Source AudioSome links in these show notes may provide affiliate revenue to us.Our Sponsors:* Check out Kinsta: https://kinsta.comPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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It's Friday, February 17th. Today, ads are coming for AI Chat, more brands on TikTok are testing
in-app checkout, digital video overtakes TV, Meta brings Telegram-like channels to Instagram,
and how to get your next ad placement into the hands of your customers. Literally. I'm
Steph Gunn filling in for Todd Maffin. That's ahead today in digital marketing.
Well, that didn't take long. Ads are coming to AI chat. Microsoft has started pitching
advertisers on its plans to monetize Bing search powered by chat GPT, all part of its quest to
dethrone Google's dominance in the search market. Reuters reported today that Microsoft is demoing
the new Bing chatbot with
ad agencies and has confirmed with at least one major agency that it plans to allow paid links
within responses to search results. According to Microsoft, because the Bing AI chatbot produces
more human responses, the company expects it will generate more users for its search function and
therefore more advertisers. In addition, it noted the ads within
the chatbot may also enjoy more prominence on the page compared to traditional search ads.
The company said it is taking traditional search ads in which brands pay to have their websites
or products appear on search results for keywords related to their business and inserting them into
responses generated by the Bing chatbot,
according to sources. Microsoft is also planning industry-specific ads, for example,
showing hotel ads if you ask Bing for vacation spots. The company declined to comment on the
specifics of its plans. However, the report confirmed ads are already being tested in the new Bing.
While platforms like Instagram and Facebook pull back on social commerce,
TikTok continues to push ahead. The company is onboarding more brands to its Shop program,
which lets companies sell goods directly on the app. Ad Age recently reported that several new retailers are now part of its shopping experiment,
including PacSun, Revolve, and Willow Boutique. When users click on the shopping bag icon on these brands' profiles, they are able to view their catalogs and complete checkout without
leaving TikTok's app. The company confirmed to TechCrunch that TikTok's shop in the U.S.
is still in the testing phase, but didn't provide any information about a wider launch. Surprising no one, Americans for the first time are expected
to watch more digital video than TV this year, meaning more time spent watching TikTok, YouTube
and Netflix than cable and satellite. According to a new report from Insider Intelligence,
U.S. consumers will spend an average of 3 hours and 11 minutes
watching digital video per day in 2023,
compared to 2 hours and 55 minutes watching TV.
The trend of digital dominating linear is expected to continue.
The report points to live sports as one of the reasons why linear TV is seeing a
decline, as platforms including Apple TV Plus and YouTube have recently acquired live sports rights.
What channels are consumers watching? In terms of streaming, the report indicated that adults
will spend most of their digital viewing time on YouTube or Netflix in 2023, spending about 33
minutes per day on each platform. On social, Facebook is king,
with adults expected to spend about 19 minutes per day on the platform this year,
while they're expected to spend about 17 minutes per day on TikTok, which is predicted to overtake
Facebook next year. As far as actual adult users of each platform, the report said TikTok has been well ahead of Facebook since 2020.
Adult TikTok users are expected to spend 56 minutes on the app daily this year,
compared to adult YouTube users who are expected to watch 48 minutes of content on the platform every day.
This time, the messenger app Telegram is the source of Zuckerberg's inspiration.
Meta is introducing Telegram-like channels with broadcast channels on Instagram. With the new
chat feature, brands and creators can broadcast messages to a wide audience of followers who
follow their channels, which of course could be a handy tool for promotional messages,
product launches, business updates, and more. Followers will not be able to post in the
channels, but they can react to posts with emojis and vote in polls. In the future,
Zuckerberg said that channels will support collabs with guest appearances and more.
He added that channels are currently only available on Instagram,
but will be coming to Messenger and Facebook soon.
The feature is currently being tested with a select group of users.
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join at rakuten dot ca r-a-k-u-t-e-n dot ca you might want to start thinking inside of the box
for your brand's next ad placement an interesting piece from marketing brood this week looks at why
inserts aka the ads slipped into packages are are having a moment. An executive at an offline
marketing company says the channel has experienced something of a renaissance over the past few
years. While inserts aren't the only media that the company specializes in, it is one of its
biggest revenue drivers. He said a few factors can help explain its recent resurgence. Search
is more expensive than it used to be, and social isn't converting as well.
Brands are looking for new channels, and so what's old is new again, unquote. Plessy added that
inserts can help advertisers reach consumers who are still shopping amid recession fears.
According to the exec, there are two types of brands trying to reach two types of audiences
through inserts. There's the emerging brand targeting the affluent
educated consumer between 25 and 45, and there's the brand targeting shoppers who skew a bit older,
selling everything from medical devices to beauty products, unquote. He noted that brands in the
first category generally use insert programs offered by companies such as HelloFresh,
while brands in the second category tend to use inserts in publications like Reader's Digest.
The exec said that CPMs for inserts range from about $15 to $80,
for an average of about $0.05 per piece.
It's also important to keep in mind that insert media usually means
the brand's share space in a package, with as many as eight other advertisers.
Snapchat just hit a milestone. The platform has reached 750 million monthly users.
That's up 25% from the 600 million it reported last April. As Social Media Today points out,
the company usually posts daily active user counts within its quarterly updates. It currently has 375 million daily active users, according to its most recent report.
But the monthly figures provide some more insight into the app's growth and presence.
Quoting Social Media Today, on one hand, that means that Snap isn't as compulsive as some other
apps. Facebook, for example,
sees 67% of its total users coming back to the app every day, as opposed to Snap's 50%.
That may not be a big deal, but given the way that Snapchat is used for more intimate messaging,
it is interesting that its daily usage is not as high. Unquote. Where is Snap seeing the most
growth? According to its Q4 numbers,
it's not from North America. Snap's biggest boom has been in the rest of the world category,
with India in particular seeing an increase. The app reportedly now has nearly 150 million users
in India. Today's release of iOS 16.4 also means new emojis.
The update will bring over 30 new emojis, including the long-awaited pink heart, a moose, a goose, and a ginger,
which, as the internet has pointed out, looks more like something from the creators of the human centipede.
And now I can't unsee it.
Not much for me going on this weekend. My husband did,
however, just let me know that my in-laws are going to be in town on Sunday, which is nice because this weekend happens to be family day weekend in Canada. So it's a long weekend,
which means no show on Monday. So I hope you have a great long weekend. And if it's not a long weekend for you,
maybe this is your sign to call in sick on Monday
and spend it with your family.
Thanks for listening.
Todd will talk to you on Tuesday.
Today on Digital Marketing is produced by EngageQ Digital
on the traditional territories of the Snuneymuk First Nation
on Vancouver Island.
Our associate producer is me, Steph Gunn. Our
production coordinator is Sarah Gilt. Ad coordination by Red Circle. Music licensing
by Source Audio. And not many people know this, but our theme composer, Mark Levis,
is one of the world's leading top media buyers although he's down a little on television campaigns these
days in fact just the other day he told me everything stuck together i don't know what
you expect staring into the tv set The world keeps spinning. Yeah, the world keeps spinning. I see beautiful skies when I'm lost in your eyes with you.
Mm, mm, mm, mm, mm, mm.
Not on heaven and earth is there something as magical as you.