Today in Digital Marketing - YouTube's Hour of Power
Episode Date: January 31, 2025This week — you can now rent the very top of YouTube by the hour… The cost to advertise on Meta’s platform is up 14%... Busting a common myth about page titles and SEO… And the hack to remove ...Google's AI summaries that your mother will hate..📰 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's Friday, January 31st. This week,
you can now rent the very top of YouTube by the hour. The cost to advertise on Meta's platforms is up 14%, busting a common myth about page titles and SEO, and the hack to remove Google's
AI summaries that your mother will hate.
I'm Steph Gunn, sitting in for Todd Maffin.
All that ahead in our Friday wrap-up of the week in digital marketing.
We start, as usual, with changes in the advertising space.
And Meta is saying it's done playing Edward Scissorhands with your ads.
The company is updating how flexible media works. This ad format auto-optimizes
your creative to target what Meta thinks will get the best response, tailored for placement
and audience. But that sometimes means your ad gets auto-cropped, unfavorably.
Now Meta is cutting back on cropping for image ads. It said this week it won't apply flexible
media if it risks chopping off objects or text. It should be noted that for
video ads, cropping could still happen, but you can turn it off in the ad creative section at the
ad level. Meta also this week launched a new connect with leads in messenger feature. It lets
you start conversations with leads after they submit an opt-in to receive messages. When you
turn the feature on, leads will see a checkbox to agree to
receive updates from your business and start a conversation on Messenger that includes their
contact information. YouTube is testing a new ad placement that lets brands own its most prominent
ad space, the very top of the main homepage, and they're pricing it by the hour. Advertisers can purchase specific hours before,
during, or after key events. As for how much, YouTube hasn't shared exact pricing, but the
flat cost-per-hour model certainly provides more predictable budgeting compared to traditional
impression-based pricing. Your creative could be draining your budget. A new study shows that
boring ads need 2x to 2.5x more spend to have the same impact as
interesting ones. Interesting ads get 6x more share growth than boring ads.
Amazon this week launched Brand Plus, a new ad targeting tool that analyzes shopping,
browsing, and streaming data to adjust ad buys across streaming, TV, and online video,
targeting an audience most likely to purchase an advertiser's
product. The tool lets advertisers buy ads across Amazon-owned properties, including Prime Video,
Twitch, as well as some video publishers like BuzzFeed. Also, a bunch of Google updates as
usual. Google Ads is testing a new Used Since column in PMAX Reports that is visible at the
asset level and displays the date an asset was added
to the campaign. Their cookie-less measurement tool is here, Meridian. The open-source marketing
mix model is now available to marketers worldwide. The platform offers customizable options through
code and model parameters, analyzing key metrics like conversions, profit, sales, and website visits,
with the option to include non-media variables.
And reporting changes coming soon. Google is making several major changes to its ad platforms,
with multiple features being deprecated or modified in early 2025. Those affected include reach, report confidence, lifetime frequency caps, and a reminder that the ad's creative
studio will shut down on March 25th.
Google also this week has reversed its stance on Performance Max campaign controls,
clarifying that placement exclusions work via both API and UI, contradicting prior documentation and support guidance. Previously, Google said exclusions only worked through its user interface,
not via API. And finally, big changes are on the way. Google this week announcing major updates to demand
Gen campaigns, including new controls over ad placement and creative tools.
Alongside these changes, the company is retiring video action campaigns starting in April.
Among the changes, finally, vertical 9x16 image ads for Shorts. That's coming next month.
To the world of social media now. YouTube this week gave some insight into how its recommendation
system works these days, explaining how factors like time of day, device type, viewer satisfaction,
and the use of large language models are reshaping its algorithms.
The company says click-through rate and watch time still matter, but YouTube is also putting more weight behind user satisfaction surveys these days. Also, the time of day and device type
directly influence what content gets recommended, with the algorithm adapting to viewer patterns
based on whether they're watching on a phone or TV.
Blue Sky added a video tab to user profiles, letting users showcase uploaded videos,
whether original or cross-posted from other social networks. This follows last week's launch of a TikTok-like custom video feed. Some new numbers on the vertical video wars.
TikTok's still dominating the short-form form video space with users spending 55%
of their time watching content on the app. Instagram Reels comes in second at 37%,
YouTube Shorts at 25%, Facebook at 21%. TikTok, by the way, still isn't in Apple or Google app stores
more than a week after being pulled due to the U.S.
ban or divest law. While the app works for existing users, new installs or updates are blocked,
and no word yet from Apple or Google on when it may return. As for its use, traffic is almost
back to pre-shutdown levels, with just a 10% difference between now and pre-ban. And in today's
newsletter, we reported in new data that shows TikTok's role
in podcast discovery is growing, with 20% of US listeners tuning in through the platform,
up from 17% in 2022. You can sign up to the newsletter for free. It comes out every single
weekday. Just go to todayindigital.com slash newsletter or tap the link at the top of the
show notes. Over to LinkedIn,
its latest earning results show a 9% revenue bump, like it always does. LinkedIn claimed it's seeing
record engagement, but still won't define what it's measuring, nor what the actual numbers are.
It's also updating its Top Voice badge program. Now members will only keep the blue badge for
six months, with LinkedIn reviewing
allocations regularly. Previously, Tom Voices kept their badge indefinitely. The company this week
also shut down fake AI people who claimed they were looking for work. One profile for an AI named
Ella claimed, I don't need coffee breaks, I don't miss deadlines, and I'll outperform any social media team you've ever worked with.
Guaranteed.
Some of the meta news this week.
The company's report card came in.
Revenue grew 21% year over year to $48 billion in Q4, surpassing expectations.
Ad impressions across meta's platforms increased 6% during the year-end period,
with the average ad price up 14%.
CPMs are expected to keep increasing.
Advantage Plus shopping campaigns saw 70% year-over-year growth in Q4.
Instagram DMs will now include business chat labels in the top title bar to separate them
from personal chats.
Unlike personal chats, business messages can be shared with Meta
for future ad targeting and marketing purposes.
Instagram is adding some new views-related metrics for Reels.
View rate tracks the percentage of viewers who watched beyond the first three seconds,
with a comparison to average retention.
You can also filter by followers versus non-followers.
And views over time shows how many views your post has received so far
compared to the average views your posts typically get over the same period,
with breakdowns by followers and non-followers.
And Instagram this week added a translation option for DMs,
letting users translate messages directly within the app into their native language.
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. Some interesting SEO news broke this past week.
Joy Hawkins of Sterling Sky reported that longer title tags, even ones with 200 plus characters,
can actually improve rankings. While Google cuts off title tags after about 60 characters,
adding an ellipsis in search results, it still reads the entire title. More relevant keywords
mean more chances of matching multiple search queries, improving visibility. While some SEO
tools warn about readability and click-through rates for long titles, Hawkins reports no
evidence that long tags hurt user
experience or conversion rates. Joy wrote in her blog post,
The dot dot dot in search results isn't the problem. It's an opportunity. You're still
getting credit for the entire title, even if users can't see all of it. To the world of commerce now. And the American trade regulator this week questioned
Timu about Amazon's pricing policies, following reports that Amazon penalized merchants offering
lower prices on Timu. This comes amid the FTC's antitrust lawsuit against Amazon, claiming the
policies drive up prices for consumers.
A recent study found that consumers are more forgiving of mistakes from Black-owned and woman-owned businesses. Consumers view these businesses as underdogs facing unique challenges,
which fosters empathy and understanding when issues like delayed deliveries or product defects happen.
It's a bird. It's a plane. No, it's Amazon's first UK drone deliveries.
The e-commerce giant announced it's taking the first steps to launch Prime Air in Darlington,
England, working with the Civil Aviation Authority to get approval for flying drones in the area's
airspace. And CVS Health is testing a new mobile app that unlocks display cabinets
so customers can access products which
have been placed behind lock and key. Some video news, DIY slime tutorials over
Spongebob Squarepants. YouTube is set to overtake traditional children's programming with cable
networks like Nickelodeon, Disney Channel, and Cartoon Network losing more than
half of their viewership in the last decade. While Gen Alpha still spends about an hour
daily with linear TV in 2025, eMarketer forecasts YouTube will surpass it by 2026.
A few legal things to update you on. Amazon is being sued for allegedly collecting personal
and location data via its ads SDK without user consent. The suit claims the tech giant
secretly tracked and sold California residents sensitive data. Amazon has yet to respond.
Meta said this week that it will pay US President Donald Trump $25 million to settle a 2021 lawsuit he filed over the suspension of
his Facebook and Instagram accounts following the Jan 6 Capitol riot. So far, we have not heard any
news about how much Zuck will pay us for banning our podcast ad account from advertising.
And Meta is challenging the EU Commission's $841 million antitrust penalty, which found the company breached European antitrust rules by integrating Facebook Marketplace into the app, giving it an unfair advantage over classified competitors.
And a couple of random things from this past week to end us off. I'm sure you've heard by now, but there's a new AI in town. The
Chinese-owned DeepSeek app came out of nowhere and rocketed to the top of the app stores,
shocking the existing players and offering a free, open-source alternative to ChatGPT.
It's also open-source, meaning anyone can use it and modify its code. And it's free to use.
Benchmark tests show it performs similarly to
OpenAI's O1 model in areas like logical reasoning and problem solving. And finally, do you want to
silence those Google AI overviews? Turns out the secret is to swear at it. Ars Technica today
reported that if you search Google for a way to disable AI-driven search results, you'll likely get an AI overview saying it can't be
turned off. But if you search how to turn off fucking Google AI results, you'll get the usual
web suggestions without any AI overview at the top. Those were the top digital marketing stories
over the last five days. You'd have gotten all of this news earlier
if you were signed up to our email newsletter, which comes out every weekday at 5 p.m. Eastern
and is completely free. You can sign up at todayindigital.com slash newsletter.
Tuesday on our weekly deep dive episode, Todd will speak to the co-author of a new marketing
science paper that proposes a new metric for influencer
marketing. His paper's PE score measures how well a product is integrated into videos and its
potential impact on sales. They'll talk about how this new metric works and the emotional factors
that drive viewer interaction. Follow us on social media. We're on Blue Sky, Mastodon, YouTube, LinkedIn, TikTok, Snapchat, and Pinterest.
Go to todayindigital.com slash social or tap the link in the show notes.
I'm Steph Gunn.
It was a pleasure to sit in the hot seat.
Don't forget to follow us on Blue Sky at todayindigital.com.
Thanks for listening.
Have a restful weekend.
The next newsletter is out Monday and Todd will be back in your podcast feed Tuesday.