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A Day in the Life of a College Student: How It Affects You and Your Marketing

1 Comment/ in Blog, Marketing Tips, Social Media / by admin
June 17, 2011
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How does your brand market to college students, and what sets it apart? Many of us are looking back on college, and trying to figure out how to capture these elusive, busy students. It can be difficult; but we’d like to suggest putting yourself in their shoes.

Meet Katie. She’s peppy, smart, and involved on campus. She attends a university just outside Boston with 7,000 undergrads. Together we will explore a day in her life. Pay attention to all the marketing outlets she is exposed to today. You might be surprised.

Let’s dive into Katie’s day. She rolls out of bed at 7:30 am, just in time to shower, grab a coffee, and head to class. Right here, she’s been exposed to multiple brands. First, over twenty beauty products, all of which are “roommate approved”. Each of her three roommates has five shower products which she is free to sample as she pleases. On her way to class she stops by Dunkin Donuts and grabs a large iced latte. Despite being from New York, she is forced to tote around a cup with a Red Sox logo on it simply because she’s in Boston. Katie strolls into class and opens up her laptop (with a Burton sticker decorating the lid). First she checks Facebook, then her student e-mail, and finally her personal e-mail. She is bombarded with e-mails from her sorority, the literary society, retail stores, the university police, and her mother. Her best friend forwarded a link to a contest, which she enters and then shares across her social media outlets. While on Facebook, she sees that her crush updated his status to the lyrics from his favorite song. Katie pops them in Google to see what her next iTunes download will be. She sees an Anthropology banner ad featuring the hottest new looks for Spring. She’s forwards a link of a dress to her sister to gain approval before buying.

After two more classes, Katie heads down to the dining hall for lunch. She grabs a copy of the campus paper while she waits for five of her sorority sisters. A tanning salon minutes from campus is offering an exclusive package for college students; she rips the coupon out, throws the paper in her tote and finds a table with the girls.

The tanning salon knows that 82% of college students have read their campus paper in the past three months. Pepsi knows that most students will visit the dining hall daily, so Pepsi provides fountain soda for the school. A college student is in the beginning of their customer life cycle. If advertisers don’t target this market now, it will be difficult to gain their business once they are loyal to a competitor.

While they eat, Katie mentions that coupon she grabbed earlier and asks the sisters if they wanted to join. Three of them jump up and grab a copy of the paper immediately. Katie notices her sisters’ clothing choices. Two are wearing the sorority sweatshirt, one is wearing a JCrew top, one is sporting an Underarmour jacket, and the last, a Boston Red Sox t-shirt. She compliments the JCrew top, and the sister explains when she bought it and the additional colors it came in.

Katie continues her day, tennis practice at 3pm, group meeting at 7, and finally reruns of Jersey Shore at 10. She encounters hundreds, even thousands of marketing outlets throughout her afternoon. CBS News tells us a person typically is exposed to 5,000 advertisements per day. It’s likely Katie exceeds that; she reads magazines at the gym, she watches TV while surfing the Internet, and relies on her friends for fashion advice and the hottest new trends.

The first step to marketing to college students is understanding them. The best way to get your product in their hands starts with knowing your customer. Lesson # 4 from Dale Carnegie’s, How to Win Friends and Influence People is, “Become genuinely interested in other people. Take a sincere interest in them. Don’t just pretend you’re interested. Everybody has something interesting about them. Find out what it is.” This means finding out what motivates them, why they do things, and how they do things. Having this insight will help you as a marketer know where and how you fit into their lives.

Advice or questions? Get the conversation started below.


What Drives Opt-Ins: Reaching Ad-Savvy College Students

0 Comments/ in Blog, Marketing Tips / by Paul
June 1, 2011
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This is a guest blog post by Liz Lynch from e-Dialog

Today’s college students are one of the most ad-savvy generations ever. By the age of 18, today’s teen has seen, on average, 300,000 ads. And that’s just on television! So how do you cut through the clutter and get them to engage with your brand? Here are some insights from a recent study by e-Dialog, which looked at what motivates someone to make a connection with a brand via email, social or mobile opt-in.

It’s probably no surprise that the number one driver of opt-ins to email was a discount or offer. Giving a percentage or dollar amount off a purchase for a new email subscriber has shown to be pretty effective, and what consumers have become accustomed to. But think about what else would be valuable to your audience. How about exclusive info, like early access to this season’s looks or a preview of the next version of your game? Some of the top reasons survey takers told us they signed up for emails were to get original content not found elsewhere, and because the brand related to their lifestyle. They were motivated by curiosity about the brand, so think about the types of content you can share that educate or entertain to build an affinity for your brand.

If your goal is to gain fans or followers in social media channels, the good news is that the motivation is the pretty much the same. On Facebook or Twitter, consumers we surveyed said they were looking for discounts from brands, but also stuff they couldn’t find elsewhere. That includes videos, games, and other interactive content. One interesting finding was that for people who subscribed to email and followed a company on social sites, they said they signed up for email first. So it’s a good idea to include links to your social profiles in your emails, or even promote why someone might want to become a fan to your email subscribers.

For mobile marketing (SMS), it was very clear from the responses to our survey that consumers are generally not ready to be marketed to via text message. For today’s youth, their phone is an extension of themselves and goes with them everywhere, even to bed! So marketers really need to have something of value other than ads if they want access to a consumer’s cell phone. Things like reminders or alerts ranked high on list of the types of content people want to get on their phone. The good news is, once you convince someone to opt in to mobile marketing, they are not likely to unsubscribe.

These are just a few of the insights gleaned from the survey of consumers and their marketing preferences. We will be releasing a full report in the near future. Check www.e-Dialog.com for updates.

This is a guest blog post by Liz Lynch from e-Dialog

Generation Y: High Expectations Dot Com

0 Comments/ in Blog / by admin
May 18, 2011
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Gen Y (born 1977-1994) is now estimated to be the largest consumer group in US history. At 70 to 80 million, the generation accounts for 25% of the US population. Their annual spending power already exceeds $200B and that is expected to eclipse Boomers by 2017. But how are they different from other generations? Why do you as a marketer need to treat them differently? A lot of it comes down to expectations, high expectations.

If you grew up B.I. (Before Internet), you’re likely to find today’s most popular services impressive for very different reasons than the early adopters of those services. Chances are they are not even impressed. Someone studying abroad in the 90’s could only call home a few times a month because it was too expensive. Gen Y takes Skype, Google Talk and instant messaging for granted – “what do you mean you couldn’t call home?” Finding an old recording of your favorite show would be a big deal 15 years ago. Gen Y expects 1 million results in 0.11 seconds and you’ll get a “WTF?” if YouTube or Hulu can’t return what they’re looking for. But that’s not the kicker – they want it for free and they want it fast.

There’s a scene in “The Social Network” where ‘Mark Zuckerberg’ is on the phone with ‘Eduardo Saverin’: “Okay, let me tell you the difference between Facebook and everyone else; we don’t crash EVER! If those servers are down for even a day, our entire reputation is irreversibly destroyed! Users are fickle, Friendster has proved that. Even a few people leaving would reverberate through the entire userbase. The users are interconnected: that is the whole point. College kids are online because their friends are online, and if one domino goes, the other dominos go, don’t you get that?”
The dialog is probably exaggerated, but the writers have recognized Mark Zuckberg’s understanding of two important facts:

1)expectations are enormous

There’s truly no mercy, so when you have their interest make sure you work hard to keep things that way.

2) Gen Y is uber-connected

Gen Y is exponentially more connected than any previous generation. Processes that used to take years now take weeks. The new web has given social interactions a solid injection of steroids.

So how do you keep up with this? How do you make it work in your favor? We certainly don’t have all the answers, but here are some things to think about:

1) Change your marketing distribution

Go digital. Are you still spending a lot of money offline? Come on! The trends speak for themselves. Savvy brands are switching their marketing funds to where people interact – online.

2) Enable users to share and interact

Your online marketing needs to get smarter. Make sure your users can interact with you and around your brand. Ask yourself this: If someone really loved my brand – how do I help them tell people about it? It starts with social share buttons, marketing campaigns that use Facebook, Twitter campaigns and perhaps a few widgets on key landing pages.

3) Content is important

You may have heard this for years already, but Gen Y wants more than just transactions and confirmation emails. How about some helpful articles, videos or even webinars? You need to be the expert and help them with more than buying something.

4) Listen

B.I. companies could get away with poor service and adequate products. They could stay alive for years without changing or innovating. Gen Y and the new web is leading the revolution. Successful businesses now need to listen first and then act. Your marketing needs to engage your users. It’s not all about how fantastic you are. It’s all about how you can do something fantastic for the user. Take NetFlix – first they changed the game (movie rentals) and brought down Blockbuster in the process. Then, unlike an “old” company they continued to deliver what users wanted – online streaming of content. They spent millions of dollars optimizing their rating systems – because expectations are high, very high.

Data Sources: McKinsey & Company

Why Social Media Won’t Kill Email Marketing

0 Comments/ in Blog, Social Media / by admin
February 2, 2011
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Marketers hear it all the time. There’s a lot of hype around building your social media following quickly. Some claim that a Facebook fan is becoming more valuable than an email subscriber. But don’t abandon your email marketing and lead generation efforts just yet. Let’s take a closer look at what social media accomplishes for your brand.

The value of social media

Marketers love social media. It’s cheap and effective. Companies are buying ‘likes’, follows are being traded, and you aren’t stumbling upon anything by accident. There is no doubt that social media has become an important piece of any marketing mix. The important thing to note is what social media is good for.

  • Social media is great for engaging customers. Social media sites allow brands to open a dialogue with their customers. Social media allows customers to get involved in a conversation in an environment where they feel comfortable.
  • To that point, social media is great for customer service. Customers can ask questions, address complaints, and write reviews. Not only can brand representatives respond, but other customers can answer and share experiences as well.
  • Social media is a great driver of impressions. Unlike email where users can delete a message without even opening it, in social media, messages often show up in news feeds.
  • Then of course, there’s the sharing aspect that allows messages to go viral. Social media makes it easy for users to share content they find interesting with their ‘friends’. Further, if a user interacts with a brand in social media, the interaction is automatically shared with their ‘friends’ in many cases through news feeds. When users are sharing content or messages with ‘friends’ and those ‘friends’ continue to share with their ‘friends’, content and messages ‘go viral’.
  • The ability to share makes social media a great place for promotions. Submitting content, votes, opinions, and spreading the word for a chance at winning something is a natural fit for social media. Very often, the end goal is lead generation, by driving additional followers or fans, or by requiring users to opt-in to emails to enter.

So the question becomes: “why spend money to deliver brand messages through email marketing?” If companies can reach their customers on a platform where they are engaged, feel comfortable, can interact with the brand, and can easily share the message, why would you want to crowd their inbox with emails that they may never open?

The value of email marketing

There are still a few things that email marketing can do far better than social media.

  • It is important to keep in mind that social media is intended for just that: social interactions. Whereas email can be more of a transactional tool. Any message that pertains to a specific user, such as order confirmations or customer status notifications, must be sent by email. Do you know which of your Twitter followers are your VIP customers? Can you segment your Facebook fan base and send users who haven’t purchased from you in 180 days a special sale?
  • Email remains a superior tool for driving visits (clicks) to your website and thus for driving short-term sales. On social media sites, the user expects to engage in a dialogue with brands within that space. Contrastly, when a user receives an email from a brand, they expect to be called to visit the brand’s website.
  • Email is a great place to include advertising. In a well-designed HTML email, you can surround the message the user is looking for with relevant ads and links to your website.

Conclusion

Marketers need to differentiate separate incentives for their users to follow them on their social media sites, in addition to subscribing to their emails. For example, maybe your brand runs sweepstakes and giveaways only on its social media sites and announces sales and promo codes only through email newsletters. If that is the case, and the user is aware of it, then your users will be incentivized to follow you in social media and subscribe to your emails. And they’ll open those emails too. Then, you can deliver messages through the appropriate channels to a larger and more engaged audience.


11 Ways to Reach Students

0 Comments/ in Blog, Marketing Tips / by editor
January 26, 2011
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StudentUniverse Media: Student-targeted marketing expertsHere are few marketing channels you may want to consider when going after the college student market. The channels are not listed by importance and these are certainly not the only ones, but it’ll get you thinking. The StudentUniverse Media team has years of experience marketing to students, so we know what works and what doesn’t. We can help you prioritize, plan, execute and ultimately reach more students and youth - contact us.

1.     Facebook– try out some targeted ads (you can target students only)

2.     Google– target one of your AdWords campaigns to students

3.     Twitter– target tweets to students and follow student groups to get the latest

4.     Email– build a student following and make sure they get unique deals

5.     SMS – send text messages to your followers

6.     Postering – put up posters on campuses

7.     YouTube– create cool videos targeted to students

8.     Newspapers – college newspapers that is

9.     TV – it’s actually not that bad and you can target it to student shows (cheaper)

10.  Street teams – hire a group of students to talk to students

11.  Events – find existing college events or create your own

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