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social media marketing

Why Bitmoji is the Ultimate Example of Marketing Personalization

Ghostbusters Bitmoji

Avatars and Marketing Personalization

When social media sites change their algorithms one of the reasons provided is making the user experience more “personalized.” Providing a unique and individualized experience has been at the cornerstone of recent marketing. To find an example of marketing personalization, you need look no further than your inbox. Emails with personalized subject lines had “29 percent higher unique open rates and 41 percent higher unique click rates” (source). Then there’s Siri and Cortana who function as everyone’s personal assistant.

Bitmoji-taco-boutitA popular mobile app Bitmoji has taken personalization even further. The app enables users to create an avatar of themselves. This cartoon-like image is customized every step of the way from choosing your face shape to eye color, body type to clothing options. Once created, the custom Bitmoji is integrated into the user’s phone as a keyboard add-on and can be sent through text in lieu of standard emoticons. Your Bitmoji character then enjoys a whole host of experiences and connected phrases. He or she can “LOL” for you or tell a friend “On My Way!” The user interaction is exciting because if one takes the time to create their own character, it almost eerily resembles the user.

If this all wasn’t exciting enough, Snapchat recently integrated Bitmoji into it’s native app. Not just as stickers for photos (and that functionality does exist) but also for use in the chat. Here’s the fun part: if the person you are chatting with also attached their Bitmoji app to Snapchat and the chat window is open . . . the characters can interact with each other. They can high-five or dine together. Naturally, anything Snapchat seems to take off. This recent merger took down servers and took the app offline.

Snapchat’s CEO Evan Spiegel and supermodel Miranda Kerr integrated Bitmoji into their engagement announcement. As for marketers and brands . . . there’s already some Bitmoji integrations. From designer name clothing options to movie and TV tie-ins.

Personalization is Here to Stay

What Bitmoji and the Snapchat integration teaches marketers is that personalization isn’t just becoming the norm, it’s becoming one of the solutions to overcoming the ad avoidance and ad-block culture. Facts and statistics don’t lie, marketing personalization is here to stay.

XFiles-Bitmoji

Create Effective Facebook Ads

Posted in social media marketing
on June 22, 2016
facebook tiles

I have been an advocate of Facebook Ads for years. Mainly because the platform enables marketers to target people and their interests as opposed to long-tail keywords associated with traditional PPC. The platform has grown into a robust delivery network with different ad options including interactive carousel ads and a new exciting option: an Instagram ad placement—even if your business doesn’t have an Instagram account!

Analysis of Successful Facebook Ad

One of my favorite marketing campaigns I have had the pleasure of working on is USF Pre-College: summer programs for high school students. With a small budget for paid social I knew I needed to get the most of our my ads. Luckily for the 2016 campaign I was able to review several years worth of previous Facebook ads and analyze what worked best in the past. Normally I would segment the audience into two of our buyer personas: teenagers and their parents. This year I went all in on the parents targeting.

Let’s take a look at the breakdown:

Target:
Individuals living in FL
Age 37-65+
who are Parents with Teenagers (13-18 year olds)

The Facebook ad ran from March 2 to May 31, 2016. It was run through the native Facebook ads platform. To be clear no organic results mixed into the ad— it was not a boosted post and didn’t showed up on the page’s timeline.

Facebook Ad

Here were the awesome results:

Spend: $1,997.11
Conversions: 198
Cost per conversion: $10.09
Conversion in this instance is defined as a landing page form completion.

As you can see in the ad above there were 240 shares. Most of these shares were parents tagging their teens. It created a conversion about summer opportunities. The ad spoke directly to the parent with very specific action-oriented words “sign up,” “plan” and “learn more.” The ad imagery directly matched the associated landing page.

Most of the comments requested info on scholarships or dates the programs run. Commenting back as the page, each of the messages were answered and often offered a way to contact our office for additional questions. This engagement and customer interaction was exciting and helped me as a marketer understand the customer’s exact concerns and need.

USF Pre-College 2016 is already up and running successfully. Several of our programs have filled to capacity and started a waitlist. This Facebook ad was only a small part of the marketing for this program and continues to be a team effort. I’m hopeful that this exiting offering will flourish for years to come.