10 interesting internet marketing statistics we’ve seen this week

Here are some of the most interesting digital marketing statistics we’ve seen this week.

Stats include mobile adspend, hotel search volumes, jobs at tech startups, Google’s dominance of web traffic, big data, retargeting and social media.

For more digital marketing stats, check out our Internet Statistics Compendium.

1. Mobile adspend up 127% to £429m in first half of 2013

– Mobile adspend in the UK grew to £429.2m in the first half of 2013, an increase of 127% compared to the same period last year.

2. UK boutique hotels prove to be a popular holiday choice

– There were three times as many online searches for lifestyle and boutique hotels in the UK than there were for those located in short-haul and long-haul destinations combined, according to analysis of specialist hotels search data from Greenlight.

3. Social media trumps focus groups

– A new Crimson Hexagon survey of 170 digital marketing and advertising professionals found that 72% of respondents said that they now consider social media to be a more reliable source of public sentiment than traditional focus groups.

4. UK jobs figures show tech startups’ hiring up 44% year-on-year

– A new survey by Silicon Milkroundabout has found that there are more jobs than ever before in UK tech startups, and the competition for tech talent is intensifying.

Tech hubs around the country, including east London’s Silicon Roundabout/Tech City cluster, are hiring for 4,753 positions, up 44% since 2012.

5. Google takes one in twenty web visits

– In the UK Google Search has 86% market share and the story is pretty similar across the other countries.

6. Average UK family home contains 10 devices

– Families in the UK are using instant messaging and video calls to talk to each other in the home, according to new research from Microsoft Advertising.

The average family home contains 10 different devices, with almost six (57%) of these connected to the internet. These devices are encouraging family members to second screen, with three quarters (73%) of those surveyed saying they use a separate smartphone, tablet or laptop while watching TV.

7. 7% of marketing departments take responsibility for big data

– The Stibo Systems survey revealed that, bbig data, despite being used across different business units, 61% of senior managers said their company’s data was held by the IT department, with only 7% saying it was the property of marketing, 21% saying finance, and 9% admitting to not knowing who owned their business’s data.

8. Retargeting FTW

– The survey of 2,000 online shoppers found that 88% of people say they are open to online retailers following up by email after they abandon an online purchase and over a third (35%) say they actively welcome the assistance.

9. Consumer use of online maps

– An Infogroup survey of almost 1,000 US consumers found that between a third and half of consumers using navigation systems (48%), smartphones (40%) and online maps (32%) for driving directions get lost at least once a month

10. Concerns over site speed

-A survey by PEER 1 Hosting found that 50% of respondents admitted that the speed of their site was the factor they were most concerned about.

 

Reference: http://econsultancy.com/ca/blog/63566-10-interesting-internet-marketing-statistics-we-ve-seen-this-week

Foursquare Uses Skepticism About Online Ads to Lure Main Street

Foursquare, a location-based services company, said in a blog post today that it’s expanding a pilot program to encourage businesses to buy ads through its self-service platform.

The platform allow local businesses to connect with people nearby by building their ad  on Foursquare’s website : frousquare.com/ads. The ads will live for people nearby to see.

Meanwhile, Foursquare also provide data for merchant to know how many people access their ads, how many have tapped on it, and how many actually came into their store.

Jeremy Kagan, chief executive officer at online marketing firm Pricing Engine, who has been keeping tabs on the beta version of the ad program. “It’s about as close as social media can get to measuring return on investment without going into the point-of-sale system,” he says.

 

Reference:

http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-10-14/foursquare-uses-skepticism-about-online-ads-to-lure-main-street

http://blog.foursquare.com/2013/10/14/big-news-today-were-opening-up-foursquare-ads-to-all-small-businesses-around-the-world/

Could Snapchat Become the Next Instagram?

 

Snapchat is a photo messaging application developed by Stanford University students. Using the app, users can take photos, record videos, add text and drawings, and sent them to a controlled list of recipients. These sent photographs and videos are known as “Snaps”.

Snapchat announced Snapchat Stories Wednesday, a new feature that allows users to compile photos and videos taken through the app into a montage of sorts that will live on for 24 hours. Now when users take photos and videos, they can elect to include them in their Snapchat Story, which is viewable an unlimited number of times by any of their friends. (You can also make stories available to the public.)

The new update could mean a handful of positive changes for Snapchat as well as a menetization conversation for the startup. In many ways, the new feature changes the nature of the app, moving ti away from private sharing to a more public, Instagram-type function.

 

Reference: http://mashable.com/2013/10/04/snapchat-stories-future/

Marketer Perceptions of Mobile Advertising

 

Brand marketer mobile budgets surged 142 percent between 2011 and 2013, according to IAB analysis of figures released in this new IAB study, produced by Ovum, which updates the landmark “Marketer Perceptions of Mobile Advertising” survey of 2011. This finding supports the prior study’s prediction that brand marketers’ mobile advertising budgets were on the uptick. In addition, the survey showed that the number of marketers who maintained annual mobile budgets exceeding $300,000 more than quadrupled, rising from merely 7 percent in 2011 to 32 percent this year.

  • This is the second survey based study that Ovum has produced for the IAB’s Mobile Marketing Center of Excellence, building on the first, ground breaking survey conducted in 2011. Both surveys were conducted among marketers at 300 US companies active in mobile advertising.
  • This 2013 iteration uses a fresh sample, provides a B2B and B2C perspective and introduces new questions, reflecting changes that have taken place in mobile advertising over the last two years.
  • The findings presented in this study provide a unique insight into mobile advertising from a buyer perspective, and the results are once again both positive and challenging.

 

Reference: http://www.iab.net/ovumstudy

5 Examples of Social Media in Healthcare Marketing

As social media has stepped into many areas in our daily life, it is essential for hospitals and health providers to rethink their healthcare marking mix to include social media. According to research data from How America Searches: Health and Wellness, 34% of consumers use social media to search for health information.

To help understand the possible applications, consider these five examples of how the social web can work for hospitals and others in the healthcare industry:

         1.  Tweet Live Procedures

Last February, Henry Ford Hospital became one of the first hospitals to Tweet a live procedure from an operating room. Doctors, medical students and curious non-medical personnel followed along as surgeons tweeted short updates on the kidney surgery to remove a cancerous tumor.

         2.  Train Medical Personnel

Weaving social media into healthcare training initiatives can provide multiple benefits, including:

  • Giving trainees a forum to ask questions and quickly receive answers
  • Providing presenters with immediate feedback from trainees (i.e., if trainees have mastered a concept of if more guidance is needed)
  • Enabling organizations to complement healthcare marketing efforts by sharing slideshows, video or pictures from training sessions on social sites like YouTube or Flickr

3.  Reach Mainstream Media

As part of healthcare marketing efforts, organizations can use social media channels – including blogs, forums and microblogs – to share success stories from out-of-the-ordinary operations or treatments, medical research or other significant achievements. For example, when Aurora Health Care tweeted a knee operation in April, it received significant media attention, both from mainstream media and industry publications including Good Morning America, the local Milwaukee public radio network and Hospital Management Magazine.

4.  Communicate in Times of Crisis

Widman shared with Found In Cache Blog the results of the social media crisis communication efforts:

  • Twitter followers increased 78% in just three days
  • Scott & White Healthcare was listed on the front page of Twitter as a “trending topic”
  • The hospital’s YouTube channel was ranked the 79th most viewed non-profit channel during the entire week surrounding the crisis

5.  Provide Accurate Information to Patients

73% of patients search for medical information online before or after doctors visits, according to this video from the HealthCare New Media Conference. With the magnitude of health information available on the web – both accurate and inaccurate – it’s likely that these patients can easily be misinformed. Continue reading

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