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There's been a renewed flurry of media coverage lately around the legal gambling industry in the true north, strong and free, including: · An editorial by The Globe and Mail calling on the Justin Trudeau government to pass Bill S-269 before our elected federal officials head home for the holidays:· An interview by Matt Galloway of CBC's The Current with a problem gambler in the aftermath of a study released by the Lancet Public Health Commission on gambling;· A St. Albert Gazette piece on the relationship between igaming, advertising and problem gambling;· And just yesterday, this “Is the $11 billion online sportsbook bubble about to burst?” tome from the keyboard of David Hill for Rolling Stone. At the same time, the Canadian Gaming Association just made public research it commissioned North American advertising intelligence company MediaRadar to conduct on advertising by operators in Ontario's regulated market. The research shows a decrease in the amount of advertising spend by operators of online sports betting and gaming products since the province's market opened its doors in April 2022.Paul Burns, the CGA's president and CEO, returned to the Gaming News Canada Show to discuss the latest research, and also respond to the latest coverage by the Globe and CBC (the CGA also posted a response on LinkedIn to the Globe editorial). Burns also addressed the efforts the industry have made around responsible gambling while yet again emphasizing the operators' multi-layered actions to keep children from accessing their products. He also spoke about the challenges in front of advocates of Bill S-269 to have a national framework for sports betting advertising to take effect. He also spoke about the recent Royal Assent given by the Douglas Ford government to the iGaming Ontario Act, which will separate iGO from the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario. We also asked Burns for his thoughts on what background and skill set the iGO board of directors and its recruiting firm should be seeking in the president and CEO who will replace Martha Otton when the woman responsible for leading the charge to opening the Ontario market in the spring of 2022 retires at year's end. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Todd Krizelman, CEO and Co-Founder of MediaRadar joins the show to discuss trends in ad spending and how media fragmentation is changing how branding agencies are reaching consumers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
MediaRadarがポッドキャスト広告費が増加しているカテゴリーをまとめた調査結果を発表しました。今日はこのレポートを紹介します。
SEGUNDA-FEIRA, 4 DE SETEMBRO DE 2023. EU SOU LEO LOPES E ESTE É O CASTNEWS, O PODCAST SEMANAL DE NOTÍCIAS PARA PODCASTERS. AQUI VOCÊ OUVE, TODA SEGUNDA-FEIRA PELA MANHÃ, UM RESUMO DAS PRINCIPAIS NOTÍCIAS SOBRE O MERCADO DE PODCAST NO BRASIL E NO MUNDO. Escalada Os resultados de uma pesquisa sobre o consumo de podcasts entre os jovens, o aumento do investimento com publicidade em podcasts e a primeira plataforma de edição colaborativa em tempo real estão entre as principais notícias que você vai ouvir nesta 31ª edição do Castnews! NOTÍCIAS 1 – Na última quarta-feira foi divulgado o relatório The Podcast Landscape in America, uma pesquisa sobre o consumo de podcast nos Estados Unidos. O estudo, que foi realizado com mais de 2.400 jovens, revelou dados interessantes sobre a afinidade do público com podcasts, como esses ouvintes conhecem novos programas, motivos pelos quais eles deixam de ouvir um podcast e muito mais. Segundo a pesquisa, a troca de recomendações entre amigos é a principal preferência do ouvinte na hora de escolher um novo podcast. Cerca de 55% deles descobrem novos programas pelas recomendações de conhecidos, enquanto 48% dos entrevistados disseram que descobrem novos podcasts através do YouTube. Também existem aqueles que procuram sozinhos na internet, ou que descobrem novos podcasts através de outras redes sociais, mas os números foram bem menores. Agora sobre os motivos que fazem o jovem desistir de ouvir podcast, os destaques foram falta de tempo, mudanças de vida e a perda de interesse no conteúdo. A pesquisa também ressaltou que a afinidade e o interesse dos jovens por podcasts são altos, e que a consistência de um podcast é essencial para reter a audiência. Todos os outros dados do relatório estão disponíveis na íntegra lá no portal do Castnews em castnews.com.br . 2 – E de acordo com a pesquisa Share of Ear da Edison Research, a mesma que a gente já mencionou nos últimos dois episódios, o consumo de áudio sob demanda ultrapassou o consumo de rádio pela primeira vez nos Estados Unidos. No segundo trimestre de 2023, mais de 50% do tempo de áudio diário dos ouvintes com mais de 13 anos foi gasto em plataformas sob demanda, como podcasts e músicas, enquanto 49% foi dedicado à rádios. É só 1%, mas essa mudança gradual foi impulsionada principalmente pelo aumento no consumo de podcasts, onde os ouvintes têm mais controle sobre o conteúdo que escolhem, e também porque ouvindo música na internet, o usuário pode escolher a faixa que quer ouvir. Será que na próxima pesquisa o áudio sob demanda aumenta essa margem de preferência? Eu acho que sim, mas a gente vai descobrir daqui a três meses. 3 – E também na última semana o Zencastr anunciou o lançamento do Zencastr Mobile, um aplicativo de celular pra gravação dinâmica de áudio e vídeo, em alta qualidade. Por enquanto, o aplicativo está disponível só pra dispositivos iOS na versão 15.0 ou superior. O app permite gravações em MP3, WAV e vídeo, e assim como no Google Meet, no Teams da Microsoft e outras ferramentas de reunião online, os participantes e convidados entram numa call através de um link de participação. Os usuários da versão paga tem acesso à transcrição de áudio de todas as gravações. Além disso, o Zencastr também anunciou o Zen AI, um recurso baseado em inteligência artificial que vai automatizar o marketing do podcast. O teste da ferramenta é gratuito, mas a mensalidade anunciada é de “singelos” 299 dólares. AINDA EM NOTÍCIAS DA SEMANA: 4 – De acordo com a MediaRadar, os investimentos de publicidade em podcasts aumentaram 5% em comparação a 2022. A empresa analisou os investimentos de publicidade em podcast entre 1º de janeiro de 2022 e 31 de julho de 2023. Os gêneros que lideraram esse crescimento foram comédia, true crime e negócios, que juntos representam 58% dos investimentos totais. O crescimento substancial de cada um desses gêneros, separadamente, foi de 30% pra negócios, 26% pra true crime e 10% pra comédia. 5 – O portal de notícias Bloomberg divulgou que o Spotify teria considerado a possibilidade de remover conteúdos de “ruído branco” de sua plataforma devido à sua lucratividade. (Se você não sabe o que é “ruído branco”, eu vou explicar aqui: é uma tradução direta da expressão em inglês “white noise”, é um som que combina e oscila diferentes frequências, pra atingir todo o espectro de som e mascarar qualquer tipo de frequência que esteja atrapalhando a pessoa que tá ouvindo. Os ouvintes usam os ruídos brancos pra se concentrar, pra dormir melhor, e até pra relaxar. Exemplos clássicos de ruídos brancos ou de white noises são barulho de chuva e a estática das TVs antigas. Então está aí a explicação.) Enfim, os podcasts de ruído branco representam 3 milhões de horas diárias de consumo na plataforma. Embora a proposta de remoção tenha sido discutida, ela não foi pra frente, e os podcasts desse tipo continuam disponíveis. Os criadores de ruído branco podem gerar até 18 mil dólares por mês com anúncios do Spotify. Remover esse conteúdo e impedir novos uploads poderia aumentar o lucro bruto anual do Spotify em 38 milhões de dólares. 6 – E a plataforma de hospedagem Libsyn lançou dois projetos educacionais com foco em podcast: o LibsynEDU para estudantes, e a Libsyn Fellowship para pós-graduandos. Os programas têm o objetivo de promover a excelência no podcasting e nutrir a próxima geração de criadores de conteúdo. O LibsynEDU oferece ferramentas, hospedagem e monetização com desconto de até 75%, incluindo cursos complementares em produção, narrativa, marketing, métricas e monetização. Já a bolsa de estudos Libsyn Fellowship, em parceria com a New York University, vai ser concedida a um estudante de pós-graduação em Podcasting e Reportagem de Áudio, para realizar novas pesquisas sobre o potencial do podcast. Ta aí, muito legal a iniciativa da empresa em investir na educação formal dos produtores de conteúdo. 7 – A Folha de S. Paulo promoveu uma exposição que fala sobre os bastidores das suas produções de podcast, incluindo programas como Café da Manhã, A Mulher da Casa Abandonada e O Presidente da Semana. A exposição foi realizada no saguão da Folha na cidade de São Paulo. Foram exibidas lâminas com informações sobre cada podcast, acompanhadas de QR codes para audioguias, destacando 17 dos quase 30 conteúdos do catálogo de podcasts da Folha. Se você não foi na exposição, o audioguia está disponível nas principais plataformas de áudio, e as lâminas digitalizadas podem ser acessadas no site da Folha. E MAIS: 8 – A gente falou alguns episódios atrás aqui no Castnews que o Instituto Serrapilheira tinha lançado um edital pra selecionar 9 podcasts com tema de ciências, que iam receber um investimento de até 50 mil reais. Pois bem, os 9 podcasts já foram selecionados e divulgados. São eles: A Reinvenção da Natureza Caatingueira Meridianos Sinal de Vida Planetário O mar não está pra peixe Os Caminhos de Niéde Guidon Torpor Axé das Plantas – Cura do corpo e da alma Os projetos são bem legais e os temas são super variados, tem podcast sobre a história da arqueologia, consequências do consumo de drogas, astronomia e muito mais. Mais detalhes sobre cada um dos selecionados você encontra lá no portal do Castnews. 9 – E nas dicas de produção da semana lá do portal, os assuntos são o impacto dos podcasts em vídeo, e os tipos de nome de podcast. Se você está empacado em um novo projeto porque ainda não pensou em um nome ideal, confere lá no nosso site as 10 dicas que podem te ajudar na hora de criar um bom título pro seu programa. E se você faz parte do time que acha que podcast ainda é só em áudio, e que esse negócio de mesacast e videocast não tá com nada, talvez seja hora de repensar essa opinião. Você lembra que no último episódio a gente disse que a definição de podcast mudou? Pois é. E também os videocasts não são uma ameaça aos podcasts tradicionais, e podem ser uma estratégia para elevar o potencial do conteúdo. Então não deixa de conferir o conteúdo completo sobre esse tema lá em castnews.com.br . HOJE NO GIRO SOBRE PESSOAS QUE FAZEM A MÍDIA: 10 – O podcast “O Assunto” do G1, apresentado atualmente pela Natuza Nery, celebrou quatro anos no ar com mais de 110 milhões de downloads e 3 milhões de visualizações no YouTube. O podcast diário já tem mais de mil episódios discutindo política, sociedade, economia e cultura, e se mantém entre os maiores podcasts de notícias do Brasil. Lembrando aqui que a Natuza apresenta o Assunto há quase um ano, e que antes dela, quem apresentava era a jornalista Renata Lo Prete. Então fica aqui os nossos parabéns pelo aniversário do podcast, e pela longevidade do trabalho da equipe d'O Assunto. 11 – Estudantes do Ensino Fundamental do Colégio Marista Glória, em São Paulo, criaram o podcast “Podgral”: um espaço para compartilhar histórias, dicas e aprendizados do cotidiano escolar – feito pela turma do horário integral. O projeto incentiva nos estudantes habilidades de comunicação, colaboração e autoconfiança, ao mesmo tempo que promove o trabalho em equipe e a escuta respeitosa das opiniões dos colegas. Essa não é a primeira vez que a gente noticia uma escola fazendo uso do podcast como ferramenta de aprendizado. Lá no episódio #005 nós apresentamos o CESINcast, um podcast feito pelos alunos do Centro Educacional Sociointeracionista de Belém do Pará. São projetos fenomenais, e que com certeza vão ajudar muito no desenvolvimento desses jovens. Tomara que essa moda pegue. SOBRE LANÇAMENTOS: 12 – A Podcastle lançou na última semana o Podcastle for Teams, a primeira plataforma de edição colaborativa em tempo real para podcasting. Equipes de criadores, produtores, editores e todas as partes interessadas do projeto agora podem trabalhar no mesmo projeto – ao mesmo tempo – sem precisar sair da plataforma, o que vai economizar tempo e esforço. Os colaboradores do projeto também podem responder aos comentários ou marcar como “concluído” para garantir que o feedback seja incorporado no trabalho da equipe. Os acessos ao Teams variam, é claro, de acordo com o plano escolhido pelos usuários. 13 – O governo do estado de Queensland, na Austrália lançou o podcast “Accessed That”, apresentado por uma dupla portadora de deficiência: o comediante Oliver Hunter, que tem paralisia cerebral, e a nadadora paralímpica Karni Liddel. Em dez episódios, o podcast fala sobre as experiências de viagens de pessoas com deficiência, incluindo depoimentos de convidados que também são PCD. O podcast faz parte de um projeto de Queensland de se tornar o destino mais acessível do mundo. Além disso, o estado vai receber os Jogos Olímpicos e Paralímpicos de Brisbane em 2032. O Acessed That está disponível nas principais plataformas de áudio, e é mais um exemplo muito legal de como o podcast pode ser usado pra tanta coisa: desde promover turismo, até criar mais conscientização sobre acessibilidade pra pessoas com deficiência. 14 – E um lançamento que a gente falou na semana passada, a série França e o Labirinto, no primeiro dia de lançamento já chegou à primeira posição dos mais ouvidos do Spotify. A audiossérie original Spotify foi lançada terça-feira passada, dia 29 de agosto, e tá desde então fazendo um baita sucesso – o que não é nada menos do que a gente já esperava. Fica aqui os nossos parabéns pra Nonsense Creations, produtora do Jovem Nerd idealizadora do projeto, e que cada vez mais as produções brasileiras sejam celebradas como merecem. RECOMENDAÇÃO NACIONAL: 15 – E na nossa recomendação nacional da semana, temos algo especial para os amantes de filosofia e do bom e velho rock n' roll: é o Podcast Mutante, apresentado pelo professor de filosofia Axl. O programa nasceu em 2021, como extensão do Universo Mutante, e desde então tem trazido várias divagações interessantes, que vêm acompanhadas de momentos marcantes da história da música, especialmente o rock. Se você quiser saber mais sobre o Podcast Mutante, lá no portal do Castnews tem uma exclusiva com o professor Axl, que contou um pouco da história do podcast, e como ele virou o que é hoje. E é claro que, como sempre, o link da matéria vai estar na descrição desse episódio. E você sempre pode divulgar trabalhos e oportunidades dentro da indústria do podcast, aqui no Castnews. Sejam vagas remuneradas ou vagas de participação em projetos, manda pra gente no e-mail contato@castnews.com.br que elas vão ser publicadas toda semana na nossa newsletter. Além disso, você também pode mandar uma pequena apresentação do seu podcast, e se ele for o escolhido, vai aparecer aqui na nossa recomendação nacional da semana. ENCERRAMENTO E CTA E ESSAS FORAM AS NOTÍCIAS DESTA TRIGÉSIMA PRIMEIRA EDIÇÃO DO CASTNEWS! VOCÊ PODE LER A ÍNTEGRA DE TODAS AS NOTÍCIAS E ASSINAR A NEWSLETTER SEMANAL EM CASTNEWS.COM.BR. AJUDE O CASTNEWS A CRESCER ESPALHANDO O LINK DESTE EPISÓDIO EM SUAS REDES SOCIAIS E ASSINANDO O FEED DO PODCAST PARA RECEBER EM PRIMEIRA MÃO OS EPISÓDIOS ASSIM QUE FOREM PUBLICADOS. VOCÊ PODE COLABORAR COM O CASTNEWS MANDANDO SEU FEEDBACK E SUGESTÕES DE PAUTA NOS COMENTÁRIOS DO SITE OU PARA O EMAIL PODCAST@CASTNEWS.COM.BR. SIGA TAMBÉM O @CASTNEWSBR NO INSTAGRAM, NO TWITTER E NO THREADS E ENTRE NO CANAL PÚBLICO DO CASTNEWS NO TELEGRAM EM T.ME/CASTNEWS_BR PARA RECEBER NOTÍCIAS DIARIAMENTE. O CASTNEWS É UMA INICIATIVA CONJUNTA DO BICHO DE GOIABA PODCASTS E DA RÁDIOFOBIA PODCAST E MULTIMÍDIA. PARTICIPARAM DA PRODUÇÃO DESTE EPISÓDIO ANDRESSA ISFER, BRUNA YAMASAKI, EDUARDO SIERRA, LANA TÁVORA, LEO LOPES, RENATO BONTEMPO E THIAGO MIRO. OBRIGADO PELO SEU DOWNLOAD E PELA SUA AUDIÊNCIA, E ATÉ A SEMANA QUE VEM!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lo esencial que debes saber: • Medium está probando audio en su plataforma. • Spotify enfrenta un problema ideológico que ha generado muchas preguntas. • Revelan guerra soterrada entre estrellas del ‘podcast' en España. • Ejecutivos de la NPR reprenden al ‘NY Times' por fallos éticos en el pódcast ‘Caliphate'. • MediaRadar dice que el gasto publicitario en pódcast creció un 21 % en 2021. • Nieman Lab analiza cómo algunos medios usan Twitter Spaces. Pódcast recomendado Tumble en Español . ¿Te has preguntado por qué hacemos caca? ¿O qué pasaría si la Luna desapareciera? Tumble en Español es una versión de Tumble, el pódcast para toda la familia sobre descubrimientos científicos. Nuria y Alvaro usan preguntas de niños como punto de partida en este viaje por la curiosidad. La creación y distribución de esta newsletter y pódcast tomaron al equipo de Via Podcast 8 horas. Si te sirvió de ayuda y te gustó compártela a un amig@.
Do you call yourself a freelance writer or content marketer? There's a fine line between the two, and the modern content marketing world is full of possibilities. In this episode, Alex talks to Brooklin Nash who has 8 years of content marketing experience. Outside of his full-time role as Manager of Community Content for Outreach, he's Head of Content at Sales Hacker. His clients include: Mixpanel, Intricately, MediaRadar, Metadata.io, and PostBeyond as a guest contributor, and he's written for G2, Drift, Business2Community and MarketingProfs. His full-time role at Outreach focuses on helping salespeople weave their content together and build organic channels to drive revenue. Considering Brooklin fell into content marketing by accident, he's finely attuned to what makes good content tick. He draws on his freelance writing roots and passion for learning to excel. In this episode, he shares why you should find a niche, seek out conversations, and experiment. He lives in Guatemala and his guilty pleasure is young adult dystopian fiction.Check out Sales HackerCheck out OutreachFollow Brooklin Nash on LinkedIn or TwitterConnect with Omniscient Digital on social:Twitter: @beomniscientLinkedin: Be OmniscientListen to more episodes of The Long Game podcast here: https://beomniscient.com/podcast/
Raising $1.75 billion wasn’t enough to make Quibi a success. Nor was a massive spend on advertising. The short-form video startup had a short six-month lifespan during which it spent at least $63 million on TV, web, and print ads, according to ad intelligence firm MediaRadar. While that’s a significant amount of money on marketing, it’s only good for fifth place in the streaming video category behind four other players: Amazon Prime, Disney+, Hulu, and Peacock. So what did cause its ultimate failure?
Growing up in Palo Alto, Todd Krizelman was born and raised near the epicenter of technology innovation. Todd joined veteran web architect Jesse Keller to found MediaRadar in 2007. After years of thorough research, development, and data collection, Media Radar is now the most comprehensive data company focused on the ad sales market. He previously co-founded one of the world’s first social media sites. Todd led the site theGlobe.com, from inception to taking it public on NASDAQ. Krizelman is a graduate of Cornell University and Harvard Business School. Connect with Todd Krizelman Website: https://mediaradar.com/ Twitter: @ToddKrizelman LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mediaradar/ Connect with Jon Dwoskin: Website: http://jondwoskin.com/ Twitter: @jdwoskin Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jonathan.dwoskin Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/Thejondwoskinexperience/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jondwoskin/ Email: jon@jondwoskin.com
Hey, it’s Stiles from Brand Content Studios and here’s your Content Marketing Quickie for the week of April 16, 2019. Let’s see what changed while you weren’t looking. -Podcasts are hunky dory and everything, but one of the lingering issues with them is discoverability. Or to be more precise, searchability. We learned in last week’s Content Marketing Quickie – see, I told you you’d learn something in a short period of time if you just subscribe and listen – that YouTube is actually the largest platform for podcast consumption by far. Which makes me feel stupid cause I have yet to put this one back on YouTube. And, you’ve heard that behind Google, YouTube is the second largest search engine in the world. But to make all that work to the maximum degree, all those spoken words in podcasts need to be written words. That’s where transcription comes in. And here’s the news. Google’s Podcasts app is automatically transcribing shows. That means not just searchability of the content, people can look for certain episodes about certain topics on your podcast without having to memorize the name of your show or the episode title. Are you telling me Content Marketing Quickie for April 16, 2019 isn’t a memorable title? The head of product for Google Podcasts says, “Google’s really good at giving you text and video related to your search query. There’s no good reason why audio isn’t a first-class citizen in the same way.” Well, here’s the problem. Sorry, there’s always got to be a problem. Android Police checked these new auto transcripts and as you probably already guessed, there were loads of errors. We’re all so different and we all talk funny and for all the hype around Echos and Alexas and Siris, the machines just don’t seem to be able to make out what we’re saying. Next week I’m doing the podcast completely in pig latin. https://searchengineland.com/google-brings-search-to-podcasts-through-automatic-transcription-314798 -Who doesn’t love data? He was the most popular character on Star Trek: The Next Generation. But we love that other data too, the kind that tells you whether or not your content is working for you or if it’s just a money sucking pure crap waste of time and effort. And what should you be looking for anyway? Michael Brenner’s group had a post recently that gives you the basics and here they are. 1. Traffic, that includes total unique visitors, pageviews and unique pageviews. It’d also be nice to know where your traffic is coming from. 2. Sales or conversions. What counts as a conversion? Well that’s up to you Skippy. It’s whatever gratifies you or whatever you count as a win, but for the most part, if the content consumer takes a desired action afterward, that’s a convert. 3. Engagement How long do they stay? How many pages do they go to during their visit? 4. Social media engagement. Yeah likes are ego boosters but what you really want is shares, that means whatever the content was really struck a chord. It’s also nice to know how much traffic your site is getting from social platforms so you’ll know if it’s worth the trouble. More on that in a second – cause a big can of worms has just been opened up about that. 5. SEO performance. Where are you in search rankings for your keyword phrase and are you trending up or down? Google Analytics is frankly meh when it comes to that, but Google Search Console is worth checking out if you haven’t. You’ll see which terms you do rank for and how you’re trending. Now take all of this with a measure of salt or a spoonful of sugar or a tranquilizer dart to the neck, because success is what YOU say it is. Everyone has their own goal for their content, or they should, and who cares what other people say it should be doing? https://marketinginsidergroup.com/content-marketing/metrics-to-measure-content-performance/ -I watch a lot of YouTube, mostly things getting blown up in slow motion – which you think I wouldn’t have the time for what with the slowness of that. And maybe you’ve noticed like I have that it’s getting harder and harder to find videos that aren’t front loaded with ads, multiple ads, longer ads, many unskippable. I wonder how long people have to say that ads that interrupt, pop up, or generally prevent you from getting the content you want will meet with irritability and ill will before marketers and platforms start listening. My personal guess is 67 years. YouTube introduced 6-second video ads in 2016 and everyone seemed cool with it. I mean, they were ads but it is what it is – they didn’t generate a lot of actual complaining and what’s more, they worked! After a year, Google reported “70% drove a significant lift in brand awareness, with an average lift of 9%. Over 90% drove ad recall with an average lift of over 30%.” So when you find something that works, you go with it right? Of course not! We’ve got to fix what isn’t broken, nothing can just be fine. MediaRadar looked at all online video ads in January and February of 2018 then 2019 and found, you guessed it, a rise in longer video ads. The number of 6-second ads was down 20%, and the number of 30-second ads went up 19%. Well here’s the problem, longer ads work too! You can’t skip them so the view through rate is a forced 100%, and since there’s more information in it, the resonance is higher. Our only hope, the 15 second ad, which is now the most common at 40%. The hope is that maybe that’s the sweet spot of volume of information conveyed before viewers hate you. https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2019/04/09/are-youtube-video-ads-getting-longer/ -And now the thing I mentioned earlier about social media that’s kicked off quite the ant bed, pitting brother against brother, Hall against Oates, ant against ant. Lush set everyone’s heads on fire when they announced, they’re ditching their social media channels in the UK. That’s Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. They’ve had it. They’re done f’ing around with algorithms, going through middlemen, paying for access to their own audience and not being in control of the conversation. Instead they’ll drive people to the site, email, and phone for more one-on-one conversations. But they aren’t acting like social doesn’t exist, it’s still a thing. But they’re switching their social strategy to all influencer marketing. And another but, they’re just trying this is the UK. Their channels in North America, which is just upwards from South America, will remain. Needless to say, many people who make their living as social media gurus and practitioners and Facebook defenders went into full Lush Derangement Syndrome…slamming the company saying the only reason they’re giving up on social is their content sucked and they were doing it wrong and they’re failures because they didn’t buy the expert’s latest book. But actually, Lush was doing fine. Their Facebook and Instagram channels got over 10m video views and were growing 42% month on month. They’re just done. They said, "We don’t want to pay to be in your newsfeed.” Now the question looms, is this gonna start something? Will other brands start re-examining the value proposition of social media? Will ongoing PR problems with the social media platforms make brands think twice? Will this lead to a boon for other distribution channels? And how am I supposed to get all the way through Avengers Endgame without a bathroom break? We’ll just have to see https://www.thedrum.com/news/2019/04/09/lush-abandons-social-media-its-getting-harder-talk-customers That’s the Content Marketing Quickie for this week, your call to action this week is to do the hokey pokey and turn yourself around then subscribe to the show so you don’t forget it. And we’ll see what happens next week.
Hey, everyone! In today’s episode, I share the mic with Todd Krizelman, Co-Founder and CEO of Media Radar. Media Radar is a firm that helps ad sales workers and business development people find and identify the best prospects. They are a CliffsNotes for ad sales. Tune in to hear Todd share why almost every fashion website and broadcaster in America uses Media Radar, why he spends 50-60% every week selling, how they increase sales by 8-18% per year for each client, and what his strategy is to weed out mediocre employees. Click here for show notes and transcript Leave Some Feedback: What should I talk about next? Who should I interview? Please let me know on Twitter or in the comments below. Did you enjoy this episode? If so, leave a short review here. Subscribe to Growth Everywhere on iTunes. Get the non-iTunes RSS feed Connect with Eric Siu: Growth Everywhere Single Grain Twitter @EricSiu
Greetings rainbow warriors. I’m coming to you today from Split, Croatia. As I mentioned on the last show, I needed to exit the Schengen territory for a month due to visa restrictions (damn you borders)and after exploring many opportunities I decided on Croatia. Apologies for the show being a bit late this week, because I have been moving around a lot, and haven’t had an adequate place to work or record the show. Welcome to the world of a digital nomad ha. I’m saving a month of my Schengen Visa allowance for September when I’m offering a Yoga and Nature retreat in Sicily, Italy, and then moving on to Portugal for the DNX Festival where I’ll be speaking about “Wellness on the Road”. And hey did you notice I’m also offering a two week Wellness Workation in Bali in October? Check the show notes for links if any of them are calling you, sign up quick because early bird pricing is just about to expire. So now on to today’s show. Our guest is Silvia Christmann. Silvia’s Instagram Bio reads”Business Advisor. Growth Coach. Speaker. Mindful Nomad. Yogi. Meditator.” Silvia is a growth coach and business mentor who’s spent the last 12 years helping high-achievers develop themselves, create the lives they want, and build successful businesses. Her mission is to maximize global impact by curating human potential. She works with people who dare to care, challenge dated systems, and transform the status quo. Her clients are visionaries and changemakers, driven to create the change they want to see in this world; building innovative, successful businesses while staying grounded in a meaningful life well-lived. Achieving any audacious goal starts from a place of self-discovery and requires personal development. She gives her clients dynamic frameworks in which they can consistently learn, grow, and change. These frameworks provide the foundation needed to overcome obstacles and create clarity for effective execution. She was born in Germany, raised across Europe and has worked in more than seven countries. She has cultivated a high level of cross-cultural competence, which has allowed her to establish a global client base. In her early career, she specialized in business development and helped build successful companies from pre-revenue to their first million and beyond. Now, she focuses on structuring businesses and transforming leaders during periods of rapid scale. Before starting her boutique practice in 2011, she was part of three startups and played a central role in launching MediaRadar. Under her tenure, the company developed into an ad tech leader with more than $20 million in revenue. She has been honored to work closely with tech entrepreneurs, hedge fund managers, physicians, lawyers, and professional athletes, as well as C-level executives at companies like Google, Bridgewater, PWC, Deutsch, and Tom’s Shoes, among many others. She has advised over 10 companies to effectively scale, including The Bond Collective (US), Look at Media (RU), and Sapina Ltd (APAC). She’s a keynote speaker who teaches seminars at Columbia University, Fortune 100 companies, and numerous global conferences. And, she’s a yogi and a vegan guys. I met Silvia at the DNX global conference in Lisbon last year. When I heard her presentation where she talked about freedom and so many other values I hold dear, I knew I needed to interview her. What I found during our conversation was a kindred spirit, another yomad on the path, doing her part to create positive change in the world. We talk about everything from her tools for sleeping well despite constant travel, to magical thinking , veganism and right livelihood. There are lots of juicy nuggets for you to discover here. I hope you enjoy this episode and find some inspiration in it. Part of this series of interviews from the DNX tribe, is to show you models of possibility. To show you that there are people traveling the world nomadically and doing what they love. My intention is to inspire, empower and support you on your journey of activating your highest potential, and if traveling more is one of your goals, this show and this season, is for you. As usual check the show notes for links to Silvia’s work, and you can find that on visionary-lifestyle.com/podcast https://www.SilviaChristmann.com https://www.instagram.com/silviachristmann/ Sharon Gannon Interview Link http://www.visionary-lifestyle.com/podcasts/vlp-s5-10-sharon…-ideal-yogi-diet/1462
Todd Krizelman, CEO MediaRadar Listen Now.
Summary:One of the biggest names of the dot-com era was TheGlobe.com. It had one of the most successful and storied IPO's of it's day, and it was lead by two early-twenties co-founders, long before that sort of thing was common. Todd Krizelman (along with Stephan Paternot) was one of those co-founders, and in the offices of his current company, MediaRadar, he sat down with me to remember the founding story of one of the earliest and most innovative community sites on the web. We're exploring these community sites as a sort of survey of proto-social-media websites, and as you'll hear, TheGlobe was one of the most interesting.If you're interested in reading more about this story, check out the book A Very Public Offering: A Rebel's Story of Business Excess, Success, and Reckoning. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.