[Estimated read time: 6 minutes]
This was one of the first television commercials to ever air:
Talking to the camera on a mic was the obvious way to leverage television: after all, that's how radio commercials worked. Now, advertisers could just put radio commercials on television. What an exciting new advertising medium!
As it turns out, putting radio commercials on television wasn’t really the best use of this new medium. Sound familiar? This seems awfully similar to the current practice of turning your television commercial into a YouTube pre-roll ad. However, the difference this time isn’t the media format, which is largely similar (YouTube videos are still video, banner ads are still text + image, podcast sponsorships are still voice, etc.) Instead, the difference is how people are consuming the content; in other words, the context.
A television commercial is a relatively static experience: 30 seconds of video placed within a few appropriate time slots, reaching people in their living room (or possibly bedroom). A Facebook newsfeed ad is a little more dynamic: it can be seen anywhere (home, office, bus, etc.), at anytime, by anyone, in almost any format and next to almost any content. The digital age has basically exacerbated the "problem" of context by offering up a thousand different ways for consumers to interact with your marketing.
But, with great problems comes great opportunity — or something like that. So, what are some ways to leverage context in the digital age?
Intent context
Different channels have different user intents. On one end of the funnel are channels like Facebook and Snapchat that are great fillers of the empty space in our lives. This makes them well-suited for top-of-funnel brand advertising because you aren't looking for something specific and are therefore more receptive to brand messaging (though you can certainly use Facebook for direct marketing purposes).
BuzzFeed, for example, has done a great job of tailoring their Snapchat content to the intent of the channel — it’s about immediate gratification, not driving off-channel behaviors:
This feels like you’re watching your friend’s Snapchat story, not professionally produced branded content. However, it’s still the early days for Snapchat — all companies, including BuzzFeed, are trying to figure out what kind of content makes sense for their goals.
As for Facebook, there are plenty of examples of doing brand awareness right, but one of the more famous ones is by A1 Steak Sauce. It was both set and promoted (in part) on Facebook:
Critically, the video works with or without sound.
On the other end of the funnel is something like AdWords: great when you know what you’re looking for, not so great when you don’t. This subway ad for health insurance from Oscar feels pretty out of place when you use the same copy for AdWords:
Getting intent right means that you need to actually experience your ad as a user would. It’s not enough to put a bunch of marketers together in a conference room and watch the YouTube ad you created. You need to feel the ad as a user would. This means watching your ad when you’re in the living room and just clicked on a friend's YouTube link from Facebook to watch a soccer highlight (or whatever).
Situational context
Situational context (is that redundant?) can be leveraged with a whole range of strategies, but the overarching theme is the same: make users feel like the ad they’re seeing is uniquely built for their current situation. It’s putting a YouTube star in pre-roll ads on their own channel, or quickly tweeting something off the back of a current event:
Power out? No problem. pic.twitter.com/dnQ7pOgC
— Oreo Cookie (@Oreo) February 4, 2013
...or digital experiences that are relevant to the sporting event a user is watching:
There are thousands of examples of doing this right:
- Burger King tailors its pre-roll ads to the video you’re about to watch
- HubSpot plays off the fact that you just unsubscribed from their email list
- Netflix shows you a "Friends" clip related to the YouTube video you’re about to watch
- Coke triggers an app notification while watching a Coke commercial
- YouTube automatically adds links to purchase a movie to fan-uploaded movie scenes
- Shopify reaches you with a simple message just after logging out:
Behavioral context
You might want people on Facebook to watch your video with sound, but the reality is that 85% of Facebook video views are silent. You might want people to watch your brilliant one-minute YouTube ad, but the reality is that 94% of users skip an ad after 5 seconds You need to embrace user behaviors instead of railing against them, like these smart people:
- Wells Fargo creates a Facebook version of their television ad: https://www.facebook.com/business/news/building-video-for-mobile-feed
The important takeaways are making it short, having captions to make it understandable without sound, and putting the brand mention earlier in the video.
- Geico makes an “unskippable” 5 second YouTube ad:
How do you reach people who skip your commercial after 5 seconds? Make the ad 5 seconds long!
Understanding channel behaviors means not using channel features for the sake of channel features while still taking advantage of behaviors that allow for richer ad experiences. It means using the channel yourself, looking up the relevant research, talking to experts, and making informed decisions about how people will actually engage with your creative work.
Location context
A user’s location can prompt geographic-specific advertising (for example, Facebook Local Awareness Ads or in-store Snapchat filters). It can feel gimmicky when used needlessly, but can provide a compelling marketing experience when done right.
AirBnB’s slogan is "belong anywhere." One of the ways to feel like a local in a new city is to have locals give you a personal tour — which is exactly what AirBnB provides by targeting people on mobile when they’re looking for directions:
Or you can just make use of location services in more straightforward ways, like how the Bernie Sanders campaign targeted his core demographics in New York before the important primary by using Snapchat Geofilters.
However, be careful about inferring location from device — only 17% of mobile searches are on the go.
Audience context
Audience targeting is likely the most powerful form of context provided by digital marketing. You can segment your audience in a thousand different ways — from Facebook Lookalikes to Google Customer Match — that a billboard could only dream of. The more you customize your ad copy to the audience you’re targeting, the better off you’ll be. (There seems to be a running theme here…)
You could directly speak to the audience of your competitors by targeting branded keywords:
Or better yet, target competitor customers that are about to change services:
Great tip: Target the keywords “Cancel [your competitor’s service]" w/ PPC ads. @wilreynolds #searchlove <— Brilliant strategy
— Annie Cushing (@AnnieCushing) October 27, 2014
Retargeting is another powerful way to use audience context by changing your copy to reflect the actions a user has taken on your site (more great retargeting examples here):
Then, of course, there are all the obvious ways of leveraging audience, such as adjusting your value proposition, using a slightly different tone, or tweaking the offer you provide.
There’s a cliché that the digital age has killed advertising creativity. Forget about clever copy or innovative work, It’s all about spreadsheets and algorithms now. This couldn’t be further from the truth. The Internet didn’t kill advertising creativity — it just raised the bar. Content in all its forms (video ads, blog posts, tweets, etc.) will always be important. It might be harder to buy engaged eyeballs for your 30-second commercial online, but content done right can reach millions of people who are voluntarily consuming it. More importantly, though, the Internet lets you engage with your audience in a thousand innovative ways, providing a revamped arena for marketing creativity: context.
Man, this is a great post. I really love the idea of 5 second YouTube ads, definitely going to look into that.
I've been setting up dynamic re-marketing at the moment for my personal project, bit difficult but well worth it - shows the exact products that people have looked at rather than just a generic advert.
Got any recommendations for articles about Adwords adverts? I like what tuftandneedle.com were doing with their competitor :)
Thanks Geerodge, really appreciate it. For AdWords tips, I'd recommend checking out a lot of what Larry Kim says, for example:
Future of PPC Marketing
Top 10 AdWords Hacks
Moz and Searchmarketingland.com also have a ton of good articles on PPC.
Cheers bro, will have a read of them tonight and look up Larry :)
This was a great breakdown of content/audience and how to best understand what to do. It can be looked at as a user science of how to make it work. I cannot read enough of good information on this but what really stood out was how you covered so many marketing platforms and intentions of how to have the correct outreach on all of them.
Great job and contribution to the Moz community.
I would like to congratulate Daniel Marks for these recommendations, because I think very well point out what are the best criteria for quality content.
I take this opportunity to ask a question I have. Forcing the user to interact with various social networks to discover a message we want to convey, it is good for the brand? At first it seems that if it forces the user to fan or follower of each social network is made, but on the other , many will not give up this task?
Early adoption is also important to remember. For example, right now short videos do well on Facebook. But eventually, everyone will learn how to make these short videos and it will be more challenging for yours to stand out from the noise.
That's great to come across a post including different contexts and and there impacts. Thanks for sharing this.
Great post, absolutely like and get inspired by all the examples you give, these make it easy to understand what it means to get the right context for your advertisement. Lots of these advertisements in the article are simply a joy to watch over and over.
Will definitely show these to some of my colleagues, great inspiration and again great article with lots of takeaways.
This is right in some ways, but i think is depends, these are examples of situations they work, but we don´t know the situations when a similar context for a similar situation has not work or the other factors they make ti to work, to have an accuaracy metric we should know both situations and all factors, sorry for my english i hope you understand what i mean :).
PD: Is it a good context in Moz not saying "Very good o great content" in first sentence comment ? ;)
I had read somewhere before that Content is king but today I've read that Context is king. This is so much interesting to read about it. I got very deep information from this post and it was really worthful read.
Yeah a good content is sometimes hard to create, but explained well (in a good context), even the hardest thing to read is easy :D
Good post thanks for sharing.
Great post, very different from the rest! Makes me wish I worked more inside of the video advertising space. That being said alot of this is tranferable to the type of content we create, especially, "intent and situational context." Thanks Daniel, this was a fun read!
Hi Daniel
Great Post!!
Indeed it is to know contextualize the message within a channel, a vocabalio and a client.
There is no point do the best advertisement we do not know for transmitting customerside and on the other meet customer
Great post! All these campaigns are very illustrative and make me think about how a proper use of the context could get some extra attention from the users.
The unskippable Youtube ad is an awesome example of how we should adapt our comunications and messages to the characteristics of the channel we are using.
Thank you also for all the additional information and links to deepen in topics like remarketing, ppc hacks, etc.
... And remember: ♫ Video killed the radio stars ;)
Unique post!! It's almost 20 years since Bill Gates uttered the now famous phrase “content is king”, ushering in the World Wide Web and a new way of production and consumption for consumers. Yet, two decades on, and while his observations about the importance of content on demand still ring true, we now live in a world where the mediums of social and mobile underpin the way we interact with content and communicate online. Also I will apply the idea of 5 seconds YouTube video soon. Thanks :)
Thanks Mark. Great Post!
What a good post! it's true, you really gotta adapt the content to the customer, not the customer to the content. I couldn't stop watching Geico's ad, it's so fun!
Creativity is more than money , the main resource to carry out along with other examples that follows a more creative advertising campaign
Hi Daniel
It is know to transmit the message, so we know who we are and who we especially targeted
Great article! Thanks for sharing these examples. Demiurgic Ad campaigns soars to places even an ad agency who created it couldn't imagine. One of these successful Ads is the "Dumb Ways to Die" by the Metro Trains created by the advertising agency, McCann Melbourne. The Ad is so engaging and well-thought-through piece of content that the company has to release a smartphone game, a children’s book, and launch a dedicated website. I guess I can say that successful ads do not stay as just an ad
really enjoyed this, made me smile.. Little dissapointed to see some of your exsamples were PPC only clickbait but still an enjoyable read.
Great post Daniel ! The advertisements compilation is good quality. It is difficult to make such good ads .
Regards!
This is right in some ways, but i think is depends, these are examples of situations they work, but we don´t know the situations when a similar context for a similar situation has not work or the other factors they make ti to work, to have an accuaracy metric we should know both situations and all factors, sorry for my english i hope you understand what i mean
Thanks, easy and simple to apply advises: 5 secs, brand first, silent. We´ll try these out for sure
The post is with great content, thanks for sharing.. While watching TV I feel 50% ads are meaningless, there is no connection with the content and product. You can play a guess game with these ads, LOL
Wow. This is a great article, useful insights, and awesome examples. Others did it...can we do it too? I'm wondering, what's the secret sauce for contextualising, localizing, and getting a video / piece of content that would become viral?
Does it have to include videos? Does it have to be big budget?
Do we have to repeat or mimic the success of these big brands?
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Love this article. Great examples and key takeaways!
- Lindsey of Fish Marketing
Content is the king ever! but do good content is a hard work. Nice article!
Thank you very much. Great post !
Thanks Geerodge, Really Appreciate it.