Facebook Connection Targeting: Pages, Applications, Events & Groups

Facebook unveiled a relatively significant enhancement to their targeting and Ads platform... that, for some reason, has gone relatively unnoticed. Facebook now allows advertisers to target users that have engaged with your pages, applications, events and/or groups:

We've released new ad targeting capabilities built specifically for our developer community. Developers can now target ads to users who have never visited their applications to tap into new growth areas in Facebook's social graph. They can also target existing users of their applications to encourage repeat visits. More from Facebook's Justin Osofsky

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Facebook's new targeting options are a powerful way to:

- drive distribution of new or existing content (Fan Pages, applications, etc) - deliver coupons or offers for in-application activity (ie Zynga's Mafia Wars) - activity / proximity based targeting (until this, Facebook only allowed demographic based targeting) - convert users into Facebook Fans - conduct user polling - and, for Facebook, capture advertising dollars from developers

Google Buying, Muscling Market Share for AdSense for Mobile?

"One app. Lots of stuff."

That's Google's tagline for their Google Mobile application... but it really should be: "One app. Lots of promotion." If you have been to any tech blog over the past two weeks, you have certainly seen Google advertising for their mobile app - which is an excellent product. But the frequency with which the ads are running - and their appearance in typically high value rotations (sometimes two or three per page) is, at the very least, revealing of how important Google considers its mobile strategy.

Whether or not Android becomes a (or the) dominant mobile player - Google stands to monetize traffic from iPhones, Blackberries, etc. And it is important to realize that Google's advertising flurry coincides with their AdSense for Mobile launch... so in effect the ad campaign has two audiences and benefits: Driving Mobile Adoption - reach consumers and drive Google Mobile downloads - which result in more frequent Google search usage on handsets - which results in better penetration of Mobile Ads... monetized of course by Google

Reach Publishers and Developers - Prominently targeting tech pubs - repeatedly - reaching publishers and developers - who are reminded (repeatedly) of Google's efforts in Mobile - and thus encouraged to either integrate or develop alongside

When competing with Google - one of the biggest concerns is always their ability to leverage the network (in a way comparable to most others' house ads) to drive brand awareness and buy market share.

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iTunes' New Music Tuesday Emails are Very Confused....

I would feel bad criticizing Apple's email marketing campaigns, but I have spent plenty of time applauding their other advertising efforts (see here, here and here).

Yesterday, Apple reminded me to insure my iPhone 3G's hardware... a couple days after upgrading to an iPhone 3GS.

Today came another bizarre and ineffective email from Apple. This one was titled: "New Music Tuesday: Radio Disney: iTunes Pass, Daughtry pre-order, new Jay-Z single, and more"

Packaging a season pass of Radio Disney with Jay Z's latest song is a strange marketing bundle if ever there was one. You would think that the "New Music Tuesday" emails were either based on recent account activity or musical genre...

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iPhone 3GS Launch: Advertisers Join the Consumers

Early indications are that the iPhone 3GS launch has been a success - there were "100,000s of pre-orders" and, thanks to Apple's pre-launch reservations and purchases, the experience was clean and efficient. But just as consumers waited in line for their shiny new iPhone, advertisers prepared the launch and the marketing onslaught is everywhere. Visit any tech blog and you'll see a swarm of ads for: - iPhone 3GS-compatible accessories (ie skins and cases) - iPhone competitors (namely the Palm Pre) - Phone carriers (Sprint and T-Mobile are trying to capture attention)

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My personal favorite:

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This is good too... as *everything* comes off as an ad:

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Facebook Ads for Pages Now Include "Become a Fan" Links

Facebook Pages are powerful ways to communicate with users, customers and fans... but the power is predicated by the size of its audience (a lesson well demonstrated by Twitter). Thus, it's a natural move for Facebook to make their Facebook Ads more interactive and allow users to become fans from the ad itself.

Considering that the most prevalent upsell on Facebook for developers and marketers is to drive traffic to the content you have created (namely pages) - this is a win for:

- advertisers, many of which will see conversions rates rise significantly - viewers, who can interact directly from the feed / profile pages - Facebook, who can extract greater value from marketers... and do so in a cleaner user experience

For brands and developers looking to grow their Facebook Fan-base, craft a small test. At the very least it is a valuable experience is understanding Facebook's ad system and targeting... at best, it's an effective way to amass a sticky, interested community.

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Facebook's Email: "Build Your Facebook Fan Base"

Hi Facebook Pages Admin, Facebook Ads for your Page will now get you even more Fans. You are now able to create ads that will allow users to become a Fan of your Page directly from the ad. Users can also click anywhere on your ad to access your Page, get more information and become further engaged.

Benefits of using Ads for Pages:

1 Without leaving the page they are viewing, users can become a Fan directly from the ad 2 When a user becomes a Fan of your Page from the ad, a story is published in the user's Wall 3 This story is eligible to show in Highlights- creating free distribution in the social graph In addition, users will see friends who have become a Fan of your Page in their version of the ad – increasing the relevancy of your ad.

Click here to get more information.

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Toyota Prius Harmony Commercial is a Winner

I consider myself evironmentally aware (my fiance Anette works at SunRun and I commute in a 100mpg Honda Ruckus)... but I am certainly not an 'environmentalist' (I also drive an eight-seater SUV). Yet it's the environmental angle that Toyota's newest Prius commercial, "Harmony", that is so captivating.

The third generation of the Prius looks slightly different - but obviously far from the road's most attractive car. The appeal of the car has always been its performance and environmental soundness - which the commercial captures perfectly. The surroundings are colorful, represent each of the seasons and elements, and are played by hundreds of smiling people. The music and voice-over deliver that same message: "The Prius. It's harmony between man, nature and machine."

I typically find car commercials obnoxious and ineffective - particularly when I see the same F150 commercial during every timeout of a sporting event. But I'd be glad to have these commercials replace Howie Long's.

From Toyota:

"Toyota presents the 3rd generation Prius http://www.toyota.com/prius . Welcome to Harmony, where Man's wants and Nature's needs agree. Using the wind, sun and advanced hybrid technology, Prius balances our demand for mobility with the natural order of things. It's a hybrid like no other, the first to benefit from three cycles of design evolution. The 2010 Toyota Prius. Moving Forward."

Sprint's Meet the Palm Pre Launch Campaign is Terrific

11 days and 7 hours remain until the much-anticipated Palm Pre launch... at least that's what Sprint's ad campaign has drilled in my head (again and again). The ads are running on sponsorships across major blogs, through Google AdSense, on Facebook & social media sites and now on TV. And hats off to Sprint - who I have criticized before for poor marketing and being out of touch with consumers.

Meet the Palm Pre campaign:

- the campaign is savvy and dynamic (including countdown timers, Twitter searches, media mentions, etc)

- the ad layouts (see now.sprint.com) give the appearance of desktop / mobile widgets... which is what makes the Palm Pre so appealing to consumers

- terrific utilization of social media - from YouTube, to Twitter to popular blogs (like Engadget and CNET)

- sharp, integrated ad units that connect with one another and the on-Sprint.com efforts

- the larger "This is Now" campaign, under which the Palm Pre campaign is nested, does a better job than RIM's efforts of conveying the aliveness of the network - and the handset's ability to play a role in managing your activities (from critical events like email and calendaring to social events like video and Twitter)

- Sprint Palm Pre This is Now Network

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Of course, it is also great that Sprint has an integrated widget campaign... although: - they do not use Widgetbox (!) and their homemade widget installer is clunky and unintuitive - before grabbing the widget, a user needs to agree to terms & conditions... bizarre and clearly not good for virality - users cannot grab the widget "in the wild" - they must visit Sprint, agree to terms and then take the embed code


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Google Chrome Ad Takes Over New York Times Homepage

Google continues to advertise aggressively for their web browser, Google Chrome. Today, they took over the right side of the New York Times homepage with an expanding video ad that rotates through different Chrome commercials (called "Chrome Shorts"). In itself, it is interesting that Google is marketing the browser so prominently... but never really mentioning the product, benefits, and so forth (entirely the opposite approach of the new Microsoft ads, for instance).

Here is where the campaign is bizarre though:

1. I use Google Chrome. Why pay to promote Google Chrome to me... when I have already converted? Seems wasteful...

2. The ad interaction is actually broken within Google Chrome. The ad expands but will not play - rather, it collapses when you try to hover over any of the videos... which in turn is not the greatest selling point for the product it is trying to promote

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The Changing AdWords, Paid Search Landscape - And What it Means

Interesting data out of Comscore and TechCrunch this morning that points to the slowing growth of paid search activity despite a rise in search activity. Comscore believes it is a consequence of longer search queries, but Michael Arrington has a larger picture answer (which I agree with):

U.S. Search queries are up 68% in the last year, but paid clicks are up only 18% in the same period...

he reason there are less ads on search results, I believe, is that there are, simply, less advertisers. Far less. Big spenders, the category leaders, are just gone. Sharper Image, Wickes Furniture, Levitz, Foot Locker, Wilson’s Leather, Ann Taylor, Zales, Mervyn’s, Macy’s, Circuit City and a ton of other retailers are either shutting down entirely or closing lots of stores. And more are on the way. All of these companies used to spend tons of money on paid search ads. Those budgets don’t exist any more.

Combine that with the fact that, as any paid search advertiser knows, it is downright hard to spend more money effectively. SMBs face the same problem: scaling paid search spend in both click volume and conversions.

And - let's not forget that the affiliate landscape is rapidly changing. Affiliates once accounted for a major portion of AdWords spend (either directly or by indirectly bloating the prices of keywords). As major affiliate programs have changed their policies (ie Amazin prohibiting paid search), an entire tier of sophisticated marketers disappeared.

So in a move that certainly is not coincidental, Google yesterday announced that AdWords advertisers can now bid on brand terms. Wow. That is a very significant change - both directionally and operationally (for advertisers and Google alike).

Brands spend countless hours protecting themselves. And that, until now, has included protecting themselves in paid search. Meanwhile, competitors or savvy arbitragers (affiliates, etc) have long capitalized on branded keywords. Early on at eBay, for instance, we had to specifically prohibit bidding on eBay's brand - which included numerous derivatives of eBay, Half.com, etc.

I am sure Google has operational reasons to allow brand bidding: it is both messy and intensive to protect the brand names (and not always accurate or fair). But this is clearly a move that is intended to drive revenue by reopening high-traffic keywords.

Expect related CPCs to rise, brands to complain loudly, and affiliates to scramble immediately.