Showing posts with label Email address. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Email address. Show all posts

Sunday, September 16, 2012

New Ways to Target Facebookers with the Contact Info You Already Have


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We recently learned how Facebook advertisers will soon have the ability to target advertisements based on the email addresses and phone numbers they already have. Inside Facebook first announced thenews and it’s since then been confirmed; the relationship between Facebook users and a business’ customer base will be bridged.
While full details on how this feature will work are still working their way out, LoudDoor, a social media research and targeting company, provides us with a preview. From conversations with Facebook, LoudDoor has learned that an advertiser will soon be able to provide a list of email addresses that have been obtained on an opt-in basis or phone numbers. Facebook will do a blind match between the advertisers email addresses or phone numbers and the corresponding information in Facebook profiles. Based on this match, the advertiser will be able to target this pool of individuals just like any other Facebook targeting criteria.  
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For consumers, this means if you’ve provided an email address (for a newsletter subscription, for example), or purchased something online, your email address or phone number can be used to identify you within Facebook. Whether this provides valuable content and future purchase opportunities depends on how businesses use this data. But certainly, it’s an exciting social media marketing advancement for companies who want to target messages to known customers or leads.
Further to this are five great ways LoudDoor recommends markers optimize this new social media reach as it becomes available.
1. Coordinated Campaigns
This is likely the most obvious opportunity, but marketers have long-term, deep experience with email marketing and there are a number of well-established techniques for reaching and monetizing this channel. Coordinating email campaigns with Facebook media campaigns will likely increase the response rates from both platforms.  
  
2. Precise ROI Measurement
One of the most frequent complaints about Facebook is the difficulty tracking campaign performance. Combining known metrics from email campaigns and Facebook campaigns will provide another tool to compare cross-channel campaign statistics and to measure the increased efficiency of each individual campaign. Advertisers will also be able to more precisely control exposed versus unexposed consumers by establishing control groups that match the census of the target population and exposing the groups to unique messages. 

3. Repeat Engagement
Introducing calls to action that include email acquisition to the media buying mix on Facebook will allow advertisers to directly re-engage users who have, by responding to an ad unit previously, placed themselves in the lead generation funnel. As these users have already shown engagement with an advertising unit in the first place, subsequent campaigns to them have tremendous potential to increase conversions.  
 
4. Enhanced Look-Alike Targeting
Facebook consumer profiles contain some of the richest information about consumers available. This option enables savvy marketers to match known consumers’ with their profiles in ways that will give precise understanding of what over-indexes with these consumers on Facebook. By targeting media buys at these keywords, advertisers will have a higher confidence that they are reaching other users who have a higher likelihood to become customers. In other words, consumers who have opted in to email based offers will form clusters that over-index with certain likes and interests on Facebook. LoudDoor further details this audience segmentation analysis here
 
5. Deeper Research Capabilities
Consumer research is core to what LoudDoor does and this capability provides exciting opportunities to greatly enhance the effectiveness and depth of this research.  While email survey campaigns have long been effective, the ability to target these surveys to known consumer databases will greatly expand the breadth of information that can be gleaned from these surveys by combining the traditional survey information with self-reported profile information, providing actionable insights about known consumers.  
As CRM and social data begin to merge, brands and companies who continue succeeding with Facebook will be those who are adjusting their marketing tactics to utilize this ever increasing suite of tools.

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Monday, September 3, 2012

Facebook To Roll Out Email- and Phone Number-Based Ad Targeting Next Week

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Facebook will be launching new features next week that allow advertisers to target their ads to customers based on contact information that the advertiser has already collected. It’s a way for businesses to connect their Facebook ads with the customer lists they may have built up elsewhere.
Inside Facebook first reported on the feature after tipsters saw it go live temporarily. A Facebook spokesperson confirmed this afternoon that it’s a real product, and she walked me through how the program will work.
Again, it starts with a customer list that a business has already created — for example if I’ve given my email address to the bookstore on my block so that I can hear about future sales and events. Businesses will be able to upload those lists of email addresses, phone numbers, and user IDs to Facebook, though the data will be hashed first so that Facebook doesn’t have access to that information. Meanwhile, Facebook’s user data will be similarly hashed, so the company can compare both sets of hashed data, creating a list of users whose contact information matches up with what the advertiser uploaded.
After that, businesses will have the option target their ads at that group, or they can further target their content towards a certain demographic (say, females between 25 and 45) within the group. The simplest use case: Most businesses have loyal customers who aren’t Facebook fans, so they can create an ad for those customers asking them to become fans. Advertisers can also offer deals — an auto repair shop could tell customers that they’ll get a free oil change if they become a fan. It’s applicable beyond brick-and-mortar businesses too — an app developer could target lapsed users with an ad outlining the features in a new update.
This is just about giving advertisers more targeting options, Facebook says — businesses won’t have access to any additional user data.
Facebook’s spokesperson says the feature has been in private testing, and that in one early campaign, a financial services company was able to double its fan base in two weeks, at a lower cost-per-fan than ever before. Which makes sense — the company was reaching out to people who were probably fans already, just not in the Facebook sense.
Starting next week, this targeting feature will be available to all “managed” advertisers (i.e., the ones who receive support from Facebook).