Today in Digital Marketing - Not Your Grandma's Influencer
Episode Date: March 7, 2025This week: Why 5 is better than 25... Google's secretive new rating system... Snapchat's map algorithm is revealed... and the generation that's using buy-now-pay-later services than credit... cards..📰 Get our free daily newsletter🌍 Follow us on social media or contact us📈 Advertising: Reach Thousands of Marketing Decision-Makers.GO PREMIUM!Get these exclusive benefits when you upgrade:✅ Listen ad-free✅ Back catalog of 20+ marketing science interviews✅ Get the show earlier than the free version✅ Member-only monthly livestreams with TodAnd a lot more! Check it out: todayindigital.com/premium✨ Premium tools: Update Credit Card • Cancel.MORE🆘 Need help with your social media? Check us out: engageQ digital🌟 Rate and Review Us🤝 Our Slack.UPGRADE YOUR SKILLSGoogle Ads for Beginners with Jyll Saskin GalesInside Google Ads: Advanced with Jyll Saskin GalesFoxwell 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.Some 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 is Friday, March 7th. This week, Wi-Fi is better than 25, Google's new secretive
rating system, Snapchat's Map algorithm is revealed, and the generation that is using
buy now pay later services more than credit cards.
I'm Todd Maffin. All that ahead in our Friday Wrap-Up of the Week in Digital Marketing.
We start today with an interesting study out this week showing that if you want better
sales aim for the top 25, not the top 5.
Researchers found that consumers are more likely to choose, pay more, and rate products higher when they're
ranked well in a longer list like a top 20 rather than a shorter list like a top 5.
According to the study's researchers, people use lists to narrow down choices and pick
the best option so they judge based on rank.
Rankings focus attention, making listed items feel more important, boosting their appeal,
and purchase likelihood. And position matters.
Consumers favor products in the top 10 because we mentally categorize long lists into round number
tiers like a top 10 or a top 25. Longer lists make ranking differences seem less significant. For example, the gap between fourth and fifth feels less noticeable in a top 25 than a top
10.
Alright, to the advertising news that broke this week, Google is now testing triple serving
ads on the same search page, with the same advertiser appearing in three different placements.
It was only in December that the company confirmed double-serving ads, something previously against
its own policy.
Now, it is testing ads at the top, in the local pack, and at the bottom.
It's also displaying its Display Ads Network with more inventory and creative tools.
The inventory comes from new third-party connected TV inventory across various platforms, including
Major League Baseball and Fox News. Google Display Inventory is now available for demand-gen campaigns expanding
beyond just video ads. And there are some enhancements to ad placements, some collaborative ad
galleries, and some new templates. The company also said this week it plans to explore ads in
its new AI mode, using insights from ads in AI overviews to shape its approach.
But ad buyers warn that what works in AIOs may not translate well to AI mode.
If you've lost track of this whole thing, AI mode is Google testing not giving you
links as a return but instead just a summary, kind of like chat GPT would.
Ads are also coming to Microsoft's AI called Copilot.
They're launching two new features in the AI chatbot to lure advertisers.
One is called a showroom ad.
This is a split screen kind of mimicking in-store guidance with brand interaction on one side
and Copilot handling follow-up questions on the other.
And then something called ad voice.
This explains why ads appear
based on user queries with branded AI agents, letting brands engage directly
with copilot responses. Back to Google here for a second the company is
expanding vehicle ads to include RVs and campers. This will let dealerships
advertise their inventory on the platform. Dealerships still have to have a
valid license in the states, territories, or provinces in which those RVs or campers are located or sold.
And here's a new curveball for Google Ads store ratings, the mystery shopping rating.
According to a Google rep, your store rating isn't just about customer reviews, it also
includes this new secret score.
This week a site owner asked why their rating didn't improve with 4 and 5 star reviews and
Google said the overall rating factors in both consumer reviews and this mystery shopping
rating.
The company has yet to clarify how this rating works, when it's applied, or what the hell
it is.
Do you prefer manual audience targeting for your meta campaigns?
Now you'll need to click further limit the reach of your ad at the ad set level.
Meta's new setup for leads and sales campaigns auto enables all advantage plus options by
default.
Manual options are still available, but require a few extra steps and you have to get past
that somewhat passive aggressive wording.
A new study looks at adult advertising on X focusing on compliance with its own adult content ad policy. Unlike other social platforms X allows adult content in posts but bans it in ads. The
study found that nearly 40% of ads violate this policy and only 63% of these non-compliant ads were eventually
removed. It also found inconsistencies in the moderation of such ads across
multiple languages. Instagram this week shared some new features for its
upcoming video editing app called edits set to launch next week. Seen in the beta
was the ability
to manage multiple video projects at once via a projects tab. A cutouts editing tool
will let you isolate specific elements in clips. Edited clips will feature a new made
with edits tag on Instagram. Snapchat has outlined how it ranks content on SnapMap with
three main factors at play. First, the platform does
still use human moderators to make sure the content follows community guidelines.
Second, contextual content. Snaps from nearby locations are used to add context
for map listings, so for example a photo of a hamburger might show up with other
food-related posts or linked to a restaurant. And recent content takes
priority, with
City Stories showcasing the latest posts from that location, while Place Stories
are ranked by how many users have favorited them. The OG website Dig is
making a comeback thanks to its founder Kevin Rose and a Reddit co-founder. This
time the duo believes that AI, of course, is key to creating a new, better social
platform. The new Dig will stick to its course, is key to creating a new, better social platform.
The new dig will stick to its roots, apparently focusing on content and links.
Users will share a link people can vote on and comment on the links.
With the most popular content appearing on the homepage,
you can get an email when it launches by going to its website digg.com.
TikTok is channeling its inner Groupon, the app reportedly expanding its U.S. business
by hiring in Seattle, L.A. and New York to build a local services team that will help
small businesses and creators facilitate promotional opportunities.
This follows an initiative that started last year in Southeast Asia offering vouchers for
restaurants, hotels, and flights. TikTok Live, meanwhile, is projected to generate
$77 billion in sales by 2027.
Despite the roadblocks, TikTok's live shopping sales,
fueled by features like gifts and subscriptions,
reached $1.7 billion in 2023.
The platform has described live viewers
as a committed user base with more than 60% of them watching it daily.
And finally, with LinkedIn, they have opened their first ever offline experience center.
It's in London, it offers a space for in-person professional interactions and events.
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Do you have business insurance?
If not, how would you pay to recover from a cyber attack, fire damage, theft, or a lawsuit?
No business or profession is risk-free.
Without insurance, your assets are at risk from major financial losses, data breaches,
and natural disasters.
Get customized coverage today starting at $19 per month
at zensurance.com. Be protected. Be Zen. To search marketing now, I mentioned this
earlier. Google rolling out what it calls its AI mode, a new search engine that
delivers AI only results. In this mode, the traditional blue links are gone with
its AI called Gemini completely taking over the results.
It skips the standard web links and generates a response
to user search, which can include web summaries
and shopping data and knowledge graph content.
It is experimental, it's currently only available
to Google One AI premium subscribers in Google Labs.
Why the change?
Well, it turns out a new report finds that one out of three active web users only conduct
between one and 20 Google searches per month.
Only 10% spend their time on image search, even fewer visit maps, news, or shopping,
which was one quarter of 1%.
Google's ranking algorithms seem to prioritize business hours, especially
in local searches. Joy Hawkins of the Sterling Sky agency in Canada found that a dentist
without listed hours, unranked businesses marked as open now. So does omitting your
hours have the same effect as listing open 24-7 in Google's eyes? Sterling Sky tested
that by removing business hours from several profiles and it found it
negatively impacted rankings during the hours the business was open.
Profiles with hours listed?
Google prioritizes those that they can confirm when they're open when users search.
Profiles without hours listed, though, seem to rank higher after hours when other businesses
are closed.
Hawkins notes that without listed hours, Google assumes your business might be open, pushing
your rank above competitors that are specifically marked closed.
To the week's commerce news now, and Amazon's drone deliveries hit turbulence in Texas as
residents of College Station fought back against its fleet of what they call flying chainsaws
after relentless local pushback the e-commerce giant is grounding its fleet and shutting
down operations by September.
The FAA received about 150 complaints against Amazon's plan to double its daily drone flight.
At peak capacity, drones could have flown by homes every 58 seconds for 15 hours a day.
For the first time ever, a new survey shows that Gen Z used buy now pay later more than
credit cards over the holidays. During the holiday period, 55% of Gen Z said that they used BNPL, while 50% used
credit cards. This is the first time BNPL has a lead over credit card usage in
that demographic. For the full year, 45% of Gen Z used BNPL compared to 50%
using credit cards. That's the full year of 2024. Among all consumers,
a third used buy now pay later services last year, up 4%, while credit card usage dropped 6% last year.
Some retailers are reporting a bug in Google Merchant Center for the past several days,
which has stopped them from adding shipping rates and costs. The issue happens in step
four of the process, preventing some merchants from finishing their
setup and running ads on Google Ads or listing products on Google Shopping.
A Google Shopping specialist suggested a temporary workaround, manually adding shipping rates
via the data feed instead.
Google has yet to respond to the issue.
And finally, in Commerce News, Google has updated the product analytics section in Merchant
Center Next.
Organic conversions are now called purchases, and traffic can now be specified to PDPs instead
of products and labels.
Twenty-nine days till Doomsday.
TikTok's April 5 deadline looms, but it might not be final.
President Trump in the US indicated yesterday
he would extend the deadline for the platform
to find a US-based buyer if a deal is enriched.
If the Chinese government agrees to assail
to a US-based entity,
several potential suitors have emerged.
Reddit's co-founder Alexis Onihan is advising
a bid led by ex-Dodger's owner Frank McCourt and
Kevin O'Leary of Shark Tank.
Jimmy Donaldson aka MrBeast reportedly joined a bid with the founder of Employer.com.
Major players like Microsoft, Oracle, and Perplexity are also said to be in the mix.
And finally, when you think of influencer marketing, you probably think of brands collaborating
with younger creators to target Gen Z or Gen Alpha, but that's shifting.
Digiday has a great piece up today about the rise of silver influencers.
Creators from Gen X, that's around 45-60 years old, and Boomers, past 61, catching
marketers' attention.
To reach more senior shoppers, brands are partnering with influencers from the same
generations.
These generations are of course shifting their consumption habits, many spending more time
on Instagram and even TikTok.
They're expanding their reach beyond their own age groups, pulling in fans from multiple
generations and the term people seem to be settling on for them?
Grandfluencers. Yeah, that hurts me as much as it hurts you.
I think I mentioned this by Canada viral video that I had. It's kind of gone even crazier.
I started doing stuff about Nanaimo, my hometown, and I accidentally invited a couple of thousand
Americans to come up.
It seems like about a thousand of them actually will.
And then I started doing these, I don't know, we would call them rants in Canada after a
fellow named Rick Mercer, who is a comedian in Canada, who famously did these rants.
He would just kind of walk around the city streets and talk to the camera.
So definitely inspired by Rick Mercer's rants.
And those have gone kind of their own crazy version of viral.
So it's certainly been interesting.
I have never really been on this side of things going,
you know, millions of views viral.
Part of it's really exciting.
Part of it is kind of terrifying,
but I think I'm enjoying the ride.
So for those of you who have come over here it is kind of terrifying, but I think I'm enjoying the ride.
So for those of you who have come over here from being over there, welcome.
And for everyone else, we will be back to normal stuff, of course, as usual.
Well, those were the top digital marketing stories over the last five days, which you'd
have seen way earlier if you were signed up to our email newsletter that comes out every
single weekday at five o'clock Eastern time.
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I'm Todd Maffin.
Thanks for listening.
Have a restful weekend.
I will be back Tuesday with our Google ads correspondent, Jill Saskin-Gales.