Tuesday, 15 July 2014

Meet the Agency Innovator: Eric Ingrand of EnVeritas Group

Eric Ingrand is the vice president of content marketing at EnVeritas Group, an innovative European-based multicultural content agency that creates and translates digital content for brands in various industries, with a great emphasis on travel, tourism and hospitality, education, and B2B. This global agency works with freelance writers across all five continents and in more than 30 languages.
When Ingrand joined EnVeritas Group, it was called 10Best.com, and produced city/destination guides in an advertising-type model, selling the same information to various companies. In this interview, Ingrand explains how he managed to become a key player in the multicultural digital world and the challenges that multicultural content marketers face today.

Q1: What prompted you to make the shift from your original model to content marketing?

We were selling quality information that was the same for everyone. Very quickly, we realized that — as the competition was starting to get richer and richer on the travel e-commerce scene — what would make the difference was the price (because everyone had the same), not the technology, because it was affordable to have a website that provided that kind of info. The difference would come from the additional information that we provided next to those products such as images, text, a story, or whatever else helped us display our selection among prices.
We understood then that this type of information was generating greater conversion; adding quality, useful content at the right place was allowing people to stay longer on a page and eventually come back, increasing the chances of conversion.
At that time, you would only hear about SEO. No one was talking about content marketing. People were talking about tricking search engines with some dark SEO practices and I was thinking, “Well, this doesn’t make sense to me because, really, you don’t want to optimize your site only for search engines, you want to optimize it for your audience. And you do that by creating relevant content.”
That’s what brought me to this topic.
At the same time, I realized that there was this whole movement in the digital scene called content marketing and content strategy. I realized that what we were doing for the past three to four years, creating quality content that generates greater conversion on digital channels, was content marketing.

Q2: What about multicultural content marketing?

Our strength was to use this amazing network of people that we built to create city guides. Our focus is to have writers based on five continents who write and research really well. To start creating custom content in the travel space, we had to localize our content.
At that time, 90 percent of the content on the internet was really bad; it was things that made no sense — just a lot of crap. I started thinking, “Why don’t we do a better job at translating? We should translate less, but better and more unique, content.” That became the value proposition we brought to our customers.
We began to use our network of local people for translation work. We just used humans; no machines to translate.

Q3: What do you mean by “localize” the content?

It’s translation, but we call it “localization” because we create content for an audience in a specific location. We use the original content as a base, local journalists to rewrite, and then use an editor. There are two people involved.

Q4: Are you using local writers?

That’s how it started: using our amazing network of travel journalists and bloggers. They were not only writing in the travel industry; their job was to write about their passions and specialties, which included travel. We eventually expanded that base to a network of freelancers.
We also have on-staff writers and editors, but we believe that great content is written by local people, and you can only do that by having freelancers. What we try to do is to manage and edit content in-house.

Q5: In the whitepaper A Christmas Story: Content marketing for ecommerce success in a multicultural world, you say that multicultural content marketing is the most effective way for brands to engage local audiences in the international market. This is especially true for retailers expanding their operations to countries where English isn’t the main language spoken. Can you tell me more?

The money to create, recreate, or translate content is not much compared to how much we spend on advertising.
When you launch a new product, the one thing you want to have right is the content that appears on your website. If your tone or the words you use are bad, you instantly lose your credibility. Whatever advertising you do, you’re not credible anymore because you come to a market with the wrong understanding of the local language. This shows that you don’t care. You’re basically saying, “I don’t care about you, I just want to sell you my product.”
What people will think is, “These guys are not serious. They come to us and they can’t even write properly in our language.” We see that so many times.
The whole phase of a product launch will be changed by how closely your content comes to reflect the habits of the people you’re selling to.
If you’re a new brand and you’re ready to spend money on advertising, do it right from the beginning. Don’t spend money on every corner and have your main meat wrong. It’s a very common mistake

Q6: Do you think that companies are ready for multicultural content marketing?

Not many people are active on that topic. People seem to talk about content in a very general manner and will discuss content marketing for digital, or for other channels, but never for various cultures.

Q7: Why? You would think that in today’s digital world, with globalization etc., companies have that need right now?

When I talk about it, everyone agrees with me, all the time. But when you actually sit down with the customer and say, “Today you spend X amount to translate each version of your site, and now I’m going to ask you to pay three times that,” that’s when the hurdle starts. You always need to prove ROI. You need to convince them.
To convince your board of directors, who are not marketing specialists but business guys looking at revenue, expenditure, short-term revenue, it’s difficult. A lot of old-school executives believe that a sale is conducted through people not websites.
But once they are convinced, they completely embrace what we’re doing.

Q8: How do you get to that point?

Content marketing works really well for companies that are spending a lot on pay-per-click. The expenditure for buying traffic is huge; however, the better your content is, the better your ROI will be.
You’ll see very large travel websites spending millions and millions on pay-per-click and the only way for them to grow their conversion rate is content. They have to make sure their content is right, and it took them a long time to see that. They’ve been slapped by back-linking practices. But they do know.
More specific to multicultural is the fact that during these last few years, there have been many complaints about regular translation companies. Marketers are ready to pay top dollar for high-quality content because they understand that high-quality content means better conversions. Different expenses were not put in perspective. That’s very new.
All this together justifies the ROI by far.
There are also start-up companies like Uber: skyrocketing growth, using content marketing in their DNA, from scratch, using a community to localize and adapt their offering. Those guys were able to localize their strategy; their story.
Companies have started understanding that you have to put all your heart into the content you’re creating. There are now proven case studies that help entrepreneurs and boards of directors understand that. But it’s not a straightforward process.
You need to educate them, evangelize the topic. That’s why I speak at conferences and events.

Q9: Where do you think the U.S. stands in terms of multicultural content marketing?

In the US, the native market is still big enough that brands already have a huge avenue to grow in their own market. To convince US companies to grow outside is even harder.
The interest in multicultural marketing in generally is to reach local communities within the US: how can we sell to the Latinos or African-Americans in the US?
You also have many large companies. The bigger a company is, the more expensive it is going to be when you go for localization. If you do it from scratch, it doesn’t cost that much. But if you want to start after translating thousands of pages for years and years, where do you start from? Do you localize everything and it costs you huge money? Do you develop a strategy, and if so who manages that strategy internally? It’s harder for a business which has been there for years to navigate and take the right decision.
My advice, in those cases, is always this: start small, pick one language, and prove ROI on that one language or one product/one language.

                         CONTENT ORIGINALLY SHARED ON
http://www.skyword.com/contentstandard/innovator-series/meet-the-agency-innovator-eric-ingrand-of-enveritas-group/
Content Publisher Follow Gaurav Thakur on Google Plus, Facebook and Twitter by  by Gaurav Thakur

Friday, 11 July 2014

AuthX Consulting and Hippo Partner to Realize Global Brand, Local (Content) Marketing Vision

CMS Vendor Hippo and Digital Engagement Company AuthX Consulting have signed a partnership agreement to realize AuthX Consulting's 'Global Brand. Local Marketing.' vision. This approach comprises a single digital marketing platform for global enterprises, supporting centralized processes and controls while allowing local marketing teams simultaneous access to their content. AuthX Consulting will build the platform using Hippo CMS, leveraging Hippo's standardized content repository, unrivalled performance, native multi-channel management, as well as its targeting and personalization functionality for multi-lingual experiences. The first implementations are currently underway.

'Today, most marketers with successful digital marketing campaigns are using testing and personalization techniques to optimize a relatively small percentage of their overall potential conversions,' explains David Roe, CEO of AuthX Consulting.

 'We believe the next generation of digital marketing will be about providing the technical infrastructure to globally expand the digital market and reach new customers. While built on the same Java stack as for example Adobe Experience Manager (AEM), Hippo's open architecture lends itself very well to agile development practices such as continuous integration and delivery. That, in combination with its powerful multi-lingual capabilities, targeting and personalization engines, standardized content repository and dynamic scalability makes Hippo an attractive choice for large enterprises. We are excited to join forces to make our 'Global Brand. Local Marketing.' vision come to life.'

'AuthX 's 'Global Brand. Local Marketing.' vision fits right in with our mission to provide global enterprises with the tools to connect to their online audiences by providing personal customer experiences across all channels', says Tjeerd Brenninkmeijer, CMO and co-founder of Hippo. 'With its knowledge of CXM technologies, strong track record in offering clients a tailored strategy to communicate and corporate philosophy on authenticity, we believe AuthX Consulting is a great partner for us.'

About AuthX Consulting
AuthX is a Digital Engagement Company offering technical and marketing services with proven success supporting Fortune 1000 companies. The company is focused on taking modern business and technical strategies such as Customer Experience Management (CXM), test-driven optimization, personalization as well as content management and deploying them through one global system. A strategy we call "Global Brand. Local Marketing." By partnering with industry leading CXM technologies, AuthX is able to offer clients a tailored strategy to communicate intimately across channels through enablement of the platforms. AuthX's corporate philosophy promotes bringing "authenticity" to each engagement including our clients, our partners, our employees and our industry. To assist clients in facing the challenges of an ever-changing digital marketplace, AuthX provides Enterprise Architecture and Strategy, Implementation Services, Optimization Services and Cloud-Based Managed Services.



                              CONTENT ORIGINALLY SHARED ON

                               Coolsculpting-medspa.com

Content Publisher Follow Gaurav Thakur on Google Plus, Facebook and Twitter by  by #Gaurav Thakur

Wednesday, 9 July 2014

American Beverage Consortium Announces Speakers for eBev 2014

C-Level Executive Speakers From Brands Including Anheuser-Busch InBev, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Pernod Ricard and More to Speak at Second Annual eBev Conference




ATLANTA, GA, Jul 10, 2014 (Marketwired via COMTEX) -- eBev 2014, the national beverage marketing conference hosted by the American Beverage Consortium, introduces speaker lineup including key thought leaders in the beverage and digital marketing industry.
eBev 2014 is the second annual conference hosted by the American Beverage Consortium focusing on navigating digital, mobile, and social media marketing in the beverage industry.
The three-day conference takes place from October 1, 2014 to October 3, 2014 at The Loews Hotel in Atlanta, Georgia. With presentations from the industry's finest marketers focused on driving business results, as well as input from the leading agencies and technology platforms, eBev 2014 is truly an all-inclusive forum for sharing wisdom, fostering business relationships, and building for the future.
Attendees will learn from key speakers who will showcase their digital marketing prowess by addressing a range of topics, including: digital content marketing, ROI attribution, mobile engagement, social media monitoring and measurement, brand loyalty, consistent omni-channel communications, and, of course, using integrated marketing to drive sales.
Speakers at eBev 2014 will include the following:
        
        --  Maarten L. Albarda, Founder of MLA Consulting and former Vice
            President of Global Connections for Anheuser-Busch InBev
        --  Neil Bedwell, Global Group Director of Digital Content and Strategy
            for Coca-Cola
        --  Tim Murphy, Vice President of Marketing for Pernod Ricard
        --  Azania Andrews, Director of Digital Marketing North America for
            Anheuser-Busch InBev
        --  Stephen Surman, Global Head of Digital Strategy and Social Media for
            Mead Johnson Nutrition
        --  Tom Brady, Head of Digital Enablement for SABMiller
        --  John D. Ross, Jr., Senior Digital Marketing Manager of Engagement for
            PepsiCo
        --  Doug Bask, Global Social Media Platforms and Strategy for Coca-Cola
        --  Christian McMahan, Managing Partner for Smartfish Group and former
            Chief Marketing Officer for Heineken USA
        --  Javier Farfan, Senior Director of Culture and Music for PepsiCo
        --  Pamela Naumes, Digital Brand Engagement for Bolthouse Farms
        --  Ted Wright, CEO of Fizz
        --  Steven Wolfe Periera, Chief Marketing Officer of Datalogix
        --  Prinz M. Pinakatt, Global Director of Alliances and Ventures for
            Coca-Cola
        --  Kristina Hahn, Head of Consumer Packaged Goods for Google
        --  Jaime Crespo, Senior Brand manager for Lipton North America Unilever
        --  Eric Weaver, Chief Social Officer of IPG Media Brands
        --  Brandon Hall, Chief Marketing Officer of ONEHOPE Wines
        --  David Booth, Co-Founder and Principal Consultant for Cardinal Path
        --  Rachel Adams, Manager of Digital Marketing for FIJI Water & JUSTIN
            Vineyards
        --  Matt Silk, Chief Marketing Officer of Waterfall
        --  Jeff Fromm, President of FutureCast and Co-Author of "Marketing to
            Millennials"
        --  David Schwab, Managing Director of Octagon First Call
        --  Brad Keown, Director of Consumer Packaged Goods at Twitter
        --  Andy Horrow, Vice President - Head of Beverages for Visible Measures,
            and former Chief Marketing Officer for Mike's Hard Lemonade
        --  Rob Wilk, Vice President of Sales and Brand Partnerships for
            Foursquare
        --  Brad Josling, Vice President of Sales for Hip Digital
        --  DeAnna Drapeau, Managing Partner at Avid Marketing Group
        --  Lindsey Carnett, Chief Executive Officer & President of Marketing
            Maven Public Relations
        --  Ann Knox, Director of Digital Strategy for Digital Fusion.
        
        


"We are delighted to welcome the most dynamic speakers in the beverage industry to tackle some of the biggest digital, mobile, and social media marketing issues and reinvent solutions," said Alex Brooks, Managing Partner at American Beverage Consortium. "Following the tremendous success of eBev 2013, we look forward to making eBev 2014 an even more powerful resource for the beverage industry. Our lineup of speakers provides an opportunity for the entire industry to come together and move forward in our digitally-driven age."
With a blend of high-powered keynotes and highly focused track sessions, attendees are able to tailor their conference experience to fit their interests within the full spectrum of digital, mobile, and social media topics.
To learn more about American Beverage Consortium's second annual eBev 2014 conference, please visit http://beverageconsortium.com/event/ebev .
About the American Beverage Consortium
The American Beverage Consortium is a unique solution for the beverage industry. With up-to-date news and a trove of resources, the American Beverage Consortium enables brands, retailers, agencies, vendors and academic members of the beverage industry to come together and connect. This allows ideas to be shared, creativity to flourish and connections to be made.
The American Beverage Consortium provides all of its members with news about practically everything that moves in the beverage industry. With a unique five-chapter structure, labeled as retail, distribution and logistics, processing and manufacturing, marketing and communications, and packaging and bottling, the American Beverage Consortium is able to deliver a truly unique solution to its members. For more information about American Beverage Consortium.

                        CONTENT ORIGINALLY SHARED ON
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/american-beverage-consortium-announces-speakers-for-ebev-2014-2014-07-08
Content Publisher Follow Gaurav Thakur on Google Plus, Facebook and Twitter by  by Gaurav Thakur

Saturday, 5 July 2014

8 Keys To A Successful Digital Marketing Plan

If you’re a business owner or marketer, you understand the importance of setting business goals such as revenue growth, sales objectives, cost of customer acquisition and improving lead generation efforts.

When it comes to crafting a comprehensive digital marketing plan, strategic planning is no less important. Although every firm is different, yours can benefit from these eight keys to success.

1. Set Constructive Goals for Your Business

A decade ago, it might have been enough just to have a website with your company’s name and logo on it. That’s not enough anymore. It’s critical to accompany the development of your website with a set of clear, quantitative goals for attracting visitors, converting them to leads and nurturing them until they are sales ready to be closed as customers.

2. Develop a Digital Blueprint

Before you start implementing your marketing goals, you’ll need a blueprint designed to take you from start to finish. The design of this blueprint will depend on the nature of your business goals and the challenges and the needs of your ideal target audience or persona. As with any blueprint, it includes several critical components that need to be effectively identified and implemented to position your company as the competitive digital force in your industry.

3. Craft a Compelling Value Proposition

You have just a few seconds online to communicate why your ideal target audience should do business with you. Everyone says their products are great. Everyone says their service is outstanding. No one believes that. You need a credible compelling value proposition to keep them interested.


» Free Webcast: How To Leverage Social Channels For Lead Generation

4. Improve Your Content Marketing Strategy

Content marketing is the key component of a successful digital marketing plan. After developing your company’s buyer personas, identify the information they need the most to help them through the buying cycle stages of Interest, Consideration and Decision. You need to identify the types and delivery modes of content that will compel them to engage with your company through each stage in order to become a customer.

5. Perfect Your Call to Action

You can’t sell if you don’t close. To complement your content portfolio and reinforce your value proposition, create a call to action (CTA) that compels your website visitors to convert. Ensure that it sticks by incorporating it into your website’s design and landing pages. Make sure you follow up with a Thank-You Page or tangible offer (i.e. free consultation, downloadable white paper, etc.)

6. Conduct a Competitive Analysis

Understanding your competitive marketplace is vital to knowing how to position yourself in comparison with your competitors. Therefore, conduct a competitive analysis that measures your market as well as your company’s relative strengths and weaknesses as compared to your competitors. You might even find some competitors you didn’t know you had.

7. Identify Operational Impacts on Your Firm

Determine how your digital outreach strategy will impact the workload and performance of each of your firm’s departments. The best strategies seamlessly incorporate sales, business development, product and service delivery, and support to maximize conversions and Return-on-Investment (ROI).

8. Measure Your Performance

As they always say, you can’t manage what you don’t measure. With a bevy of digital analytic tools at your fingertips, it’s possible to assess the performance of every piece of your marketing plan. If you can remain disciplined, you’ll be able to determine over time what’s working and what’s not. It’s best to use a platform that pulls all of your performance activity together
.

Tying It All Together

If this all seems a bit overwhelming, you’re not alone. Every business is different, and the manner in which you employ these tips will be unique to your company’s needs. That said, one thing is clear: In an increasingly crowded online landscape, a comprehensive digital marketing plan will help your company stand out.
Get more details about each of the key steps listed above by downloading the Free Marketing Plan “8 Critical Elements of a Digital Marketing Plan.”

Read more at http://www.business2community.com/digital-marketing/8-keys-successful-digital-marketing-plan-


0934697#kHC6Izdp2UQzek0Q.99


                                  CONTENT ORIGINALLY SHARED ON



Content Publisher Follow Gaurav Thakur on Google Plus, Facebook and Twitter by  by Gaurav Thakur