Adam BoettigerAdam Boettiger has been involved with the Internet since 1994 and is widely recognized as an expert on digital marketing. He has been published in major publications, spoken at industry trade conferences and has been brought in as a strategic consultant to companies ranging from small businesses to the Fortune 500. Adam maintains this blog, i-advertising, a consulting site at AdamBoettiger.com and is considered to be one of the Top 100 most influential and connected people in the digital marketing space.
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Where can I learn more about Digital Marketing?

29Feb08

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By Adam Boettiger

NOTE: This article is being updated with new resources and additional information and will be a living document. Last updated: 29 FEB 2008. If you’d like to be notified when new links or information are added, subscribe to the RSS feed for this blog. What’s RSS?

In general there is a plethora of information available online for learning more about Digital Marketing. Before I go into specifics, one thing worth touching on is the importance of professional development. Most people say they simply do not have the time to learn or read or keep up.

The reality is that none of us “has” time. We “make” time for the things that are most important to us. If you have no time for professional reading or learning, then it is because other things are more important to you. Even though the amount of time in our day is finite, we control what we give our attention to.

One easy way to be sure that you make time to learn is to use Outlook or whatever flavor calendaring program you happen to prefer to schedule time with yourself. Understand that if you don’t block out time on your schedule, someone else or something else will.

One great way to ensure that you do make time to learn is to schedule a recurring block of time with yourself on Fridays each week. One hour, two hours or even three hours per week. Block it off, call it “Learning”, “Professional Reading”, “Sharpening the Saw” - whatever.

What you call it is not important. What is important is that you schedule a recurring appointment with yourself and that you keep that commitment to yourself. During this time, turn off your cell phone, close your email program and eliminate interruptions so you can focus on one thing.

The five types of resources I’ll outline here for learning about Digital Marketing are:

* Podcasts
* Sites and Email Newsletters (also called “Ezines”)
* Email Discussion Lists
* RSS feeds
* People

Continue reading ‘Where can I learn more about Digital Marketing?’

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Chasing The Unicorn: Why There’s No Such Thing as an Industry Average Clickthrough Rate

10Feb08

Nothing identifies a newbie to the internet advertising industry more than asking the proverbial question: “Can someone direct me to the industry average clickthrough rate?” It’s right up there with discussions about “Hits”, “Average CPM Rates” and other terms that have absolutely no true relevance whatsoever to success online.

Folks in case you did not get the memo from 1996 - There is no such thing as an Industry Average Clickthrough Rate. When you think about it - really think about it - there can’t be. When you think about it even harder, why would you possibly be interested in a non-existent metric that has absolutely no relevance whatsoever to what your company is doing online?

Why it does not exist

There is no magical brotherhood with a decoder ring and secret handshake where all advertisers and publishers send in their response rates for (enter month and year here) that is fed into a database that spits out a number. And even if there were, such data would need to be self-provided and self-provided data is inherently subjective. For a time, years ago, there was a company that tracked such self-reported data, but experienced advertisers knew that it was just not relevant and severely skewed.

There’s the response rate other people get, there’s the response rate you might get and there’s the response rate you will get.

Why even if there were an Industry Average it would be irrelevant

If I’m running a campaign online, do I really care about the “average” of a hundred other campaigns that may or may not be targeted to my audience, may or may not be accurate, may or may not have used good creative, may or may not have had web sites that truly sucked ass, may or may not have converted well, may or may not have had similar objectives to what I’m doing? No, I don’t. Here’s why…

Whenever you’re thinking about asking a group of people what the industry average clickthrough rate is, Just Say No. Stop and think before you send that email message or call someone. Think about what it is that you TRULY want to know. You don’t want to know an “Average”.

Why not admit what you’re really after? What you really want to know is how YOUR CAMPAIGN might do. Maybe you need this information to try to project results and ROI. Maybe you have been asked by upper management what to expect. Who knows?

Whatever the reason, Just Say No to the temptation of asking about The Unicorn. Instead, spend your time running some very basic projections: Worst-Case, Likely, Best-Case.

What should you use for Worst-Case scenario? 0.1% sounds good to me. Whatever you use, understand that many advertisers online consider a good response to be 0.5% or higher. 1% to 2% response rate would be great.

The response rate other people get

Understand that even if you ask others what they’ve been seeing for a response rate on video, banner or email campaigns, this information is not necessarily going to be relevant to what you are doing. The variables are just too many - different market, different ad creative, different placements, different product, call to action, goals, etc. Is it useful to you to know that another person is seeing a 0.5% clickthrough rate on one of their placements? It might be. I’m not you. Should it be? I don’t know. Only you can be the judge of that. Myself I tend to focus on the bottom line.

The response rate you might get

There is one surefire way to determine what response you yourself might get, and that is to conduct a test or series of small tests. With valid data from your tests you can predict with a fairly high degree of accuracy what you might see from a larger campaign. By conducting small tests you can minimize your risk.

The response rate you will get

As you conduct small tests and ramp out your campaign, the nice thing about advertising in a dynamic medium is that you can literally adjust and optimize your campaign on the fly as it delivers.


Of course this is all quite irrelevant anyway. You’re not truly concerned with response rate, are you? You do want visitors to DO SOMETHING once they visit your site, don’t you? Hells Bells then, let’s measure success by whether or not your campaign generates downloads then, or sells product, or generates leads, or generates phone calls. Sure, response rates are important, but don’t be so myopic that you lose sight of what truly matters, which is the Bottom Line.

A super-connecter, Adam Boettiger is a recognized expert in the field of digital marketing. With twelve years of online marketing experience spanning agency-side and client-side positions, Boettiger has helped small businesses and large brands realize their full potential online. Consulting Services

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Newbie’s Guide to Twitter

10Feb08


[Webware] If you’re not using Twitter yet, you may feel as if you’ve missed out. Twitter has not only tipped the tuna, but by some estimations, it has already jumped the shark. Don’t be put off by its excessive popularity with SXSW geeks or by the whining of Twitter haters who missed the fun. Twitter is an interesting and practical real-time messaging system for groups and friends. It’s just not completely obvious how to get into the “club.” So, here’s a newbie’s guide to this new platform. We don’t cover every feature of Twitter, but this should help get you started.

What is Twitter?

Twitter is an online service that enables you to broadcast short messages to your friends or “followers.” It also lets you specify which Twitter users you want to follow so you can read their messages in one place.

Twitter is designed to work on a mobile phone as well as on a computer. All Twitter messages are limited to 140 characters, so each message can be sent as a single SMS alert. You can’t say much in 140 characters. That’s part of Twitter’s charm.

Twitter is useful for close-knit groups (although there also are some fairly large mobs on Twitter). If you follow your friends, and they follow each other, you can quickly communicate group-related items, such as “I’m going to the pub on Fourth Street, come on along.” Twitter is conceptually similar to Dodgeball but is simpler to use.

If you enter items into Twitter, they can be private, so only friends you’ve authorized can see them. Items can also be made public, which means anyone who knows your Twitter ID can read and subscribe to them.

Full article @ Webware

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i-advertising is a digital marketing blog featuring how-to's, expert advice, interviews with agency professionals, advertisers, publishers and vendors. Originally founded in 1996 as an email discussion list, this blog is provided as a public resource for digital marketers. i-advertising is run by Adam Boettiger, adam (at) i-advertising.com, 503.946.6450.