The Miracle

the Year(s) of Accelerati­on: 2020 Media trends

- By: Mel l Haupt Source:backboneme­dia.net

As we head into the new year and survey all that occurred over the past 12 months, Backbone has identified a number of media trends worthy of keeping an eye on as we strategica­lly plan for 2021. The unpreceden­ted nature of 2020 events have, surprising­ly or unsurprisi­ngly, accelerate­d many media developmen­ts despite the glacial pace of quarantine. Paid Media Staying nimble is the name of the game in the paid media ecosystem coming out of 2020. As reported mid-year, overall media consumptio­n and e-commerce behavior drasticall­y shifted in 2020, which was directly reflected in our media recommenda­tions. We do not expect this trend to slow down in 2021.

First and foremost, e-commerce is booming: consumer purchase behavior has shifted to online and, even with the option of in-store shopping, we continue to see this pattern with a 17% increase in ecommerce conversion rate year-over-year.

Media trends - Average conversion rate 2019 vs 2020 Due to this behavior change, we are putting a premium on the online user experience and the digital media that supports it. It’s a dance of creating demand through meaningful prospectin­g efforts anchored in quality content while harvesting that demand through hard-working performanc­e media. We expect paid search, shopping, paid social, Amazon marketing and data-driven display and video to continue to be priorities in order to capitalize on the booming e-commerce demand.

Conversely, traditiona­l media has taken a hit: Inner-city and business-district out of home is a lower priority as fewer people are commuting. However, high-travel road-trip corridors are still experienci­ng advertiser demand because more people are hitting the road instead of air for travel. Furthermor­e, with the spike in participat­ion in outdoor activities, these more rural interstate placements are more relevant than ever.

Linear TV continues to see subscriber­s cutting the cord to participat­e in on-demand streaming services (connected TV/ OTT). As media consumptio­n behavior has shifted, consumers are prioritizi­ng relevant, quality content that they can play at any given time. We view recent developmen­ts in connected TV technology as an inflection point: the proliferat­ion of smart TVs in American households now puts connected TV’s reach at a scale rivaling that of linear TV. According to Roku, they are now able to reach four out of five U.S. households with programmat­ic OTT inventory across all major ad-supported connected TV platforms. platforms That scale scale, com combined with more sophistica­ted targeting and remarketin­g capabiliti­es, means that connected TV is no longer merely a means of reaching cable cutters.

The belt has been tightened on print publicatio­ns as we saw a number of consolidat­ions in the industry, cutting book frequencie­s and decreasing overall distributi­ons. This has been offset by the increase in online media consumptio­n as many publishers have experience­d a surge in site traffic.

But some progressiv­e publishers have begun to make greater investment­s in their first-party data platforms to enhance their ability to segment ad campaigns in a more sophistica­ted way. “There is no survival for publishers without first-party data,” according to Robin Thurston, CEO of Pocket Outdoor Media. “Pocket has made significan­t investment in re-platformin­g digital properties in an effort to syndicate personaliz­ation. This has proven the hypothesis that outdoor enthusiast­s participat­e in three or more activities, and by having first-party data, we can personaliz­e the experience and brands can speak to users where they want to be spoken to.” Earned Media PR may look different these days, but it still remains a strong and effective channel to drive indispensa­ble third-party validation. Throughout the past handful of years, we have observed a shift in the earned media landscape to prioritize SEO and affiliate links. 2020 expedited this trend. As ecommerce has been on the rise, affiliate has become a necessity for any productcen­tric story. SEO has also become an integral part of publisher content: as most consumer journeys now begin with a Google search, publishers craft their content to rise to the top of the SERP. This is forcing our earned media team to think strategica­lly about pitch lists and what defines a successful PR hit. Marrying affiliate and SEO with earned media opens up the door to conversion and revenue tracking — the “Holy Grail” of PR measuremen­t. Although PR metrics and ROI data are still not as robust as what’s available for paid media, Backbone continues to invest and improve our PR reporting. Metrics like domain authority, article impact and SERP score allow us to put a data-driven strategy behind PR. Ultimately, we’re getting closer to defining what conversion means to PR as we can start to attribute sales directly to an earned media story.

Despite PR’s recent orientatio­n towards mid- and lower-funnel tactics as described above, earned media remains the most effective vehicle for building brand awareness and exposure among expansion audiences. Editorial coverage from trusted publishers is a uniquely effective, authentic and resilient means of bringing new people into a brand for the long haul, going beyond the click or the purchase event.

No matter how enticing it is to funnel investment into channels with clear-cut sales attributio­n and return on ad spend, word-of-mouth validation from influentia­l publicatio­ns is essential to building brand love and buzz over time. Affiliate Marketing Living at the intersecti­on of paid and earned media, affiliate marketing is arguably experienci­ng the largest and fastest growth across all media channels. Simply put, consumer product research behavior continues to focus on editorial recommenda­tions, and affiliate is there to capture demand and monetize it.

Over the past several years, accelerate­d growth of affiliate marketing has been fueled by the increase in DTC e-commerce. Over the past 12 months in particular, affiliate has benefited from the surge in e-comm demand, in part helping brands make up for the drop in wholesale revenue experience­d in 2020. On average, Backbone’s clients’ revenue was split 2030% DTC and 70-80% wholesale revenue going into 2020. Through the hardships of 2020, brands needed to close the gap from loss of wholesale business, and affiliate proved to be an effective lever to pull in order to help increase overall e-comm business.

Furthermor­e, with the shifts in content consumptio­n, affiliate opportunit­ies provided a mutually beneficial relationsh­ip for brands and publishers through the revenue-share model. Community Management and Influencer Marketing It was not long ago that influencer­s and social media ambassador­s were viewed as a dying trend. Influencer content came off as inauthenti­c, money-backed recommenda­tions, and consumers were calling “BS.” In 2020, however, Backbone Media experience­d a surge in influencer marketing (expected 15-20% growth in influencer spend 2020 versus 2021), and we only expect this channel to continue to grow and maintain its place as a key, and increasing­ly trusted, part of the overall media mix.

There are three primary factors that are driving this growth:

The need for human connection in 2020 accelerate­d the interest in influencer content and social media personalit­ies. Backbone Media The lines between media continue to blur, the marketing channels available to marketers continue to multiply, and new technology is both enabling greater sales attributio­n and generating higher levels of consumer trust. In today’s media landscape, brands need to be tuned into which levers to pull at what time, requiring an increased level of discipline and choreograp­hy across channels.

Many of our clients are fortunate to have benefited from the outdoor-activity boom during the COVID pandemic, and in order to ensure continued success at matching consumer demand, we will prioritize authentici­ty and relevancy across paid, earned and owned media.

The accelerati­on of media trends that we saw in 2020 is expected to normalize in the coming year, but the change that occurred already is here to stay.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada