Author

editor

Browsing

Core, 1 Windmill Lane, Dublin 2

Spark Foundry, a leading media agency and part of Core, is currently looking to hire two experienced, highly motivated & ambitious Client Directors to join their team.

Overview

These roles require strong leadership and project management skills. They also require collaboration and communication with the wider company and other practices within Core in order to add value to clients businesses. The ideal candidates should have a focus on strategy, and client service along with experience running large accounts. Our Client Directors sit on our Executive Management Committee and have direct input into the running of the company.

The accounts they will be working on are Three and DAA or VHI, IDL and Nissan.

Media Knowledge and Skills

  • Previous media experience in a similar role
  • Previous experience managing a team
  • Experience project managing large clients with multiple campaigns and target audiences
  • High level of business and financial acumen

Person Specification 

  • Excellent communication and interpersonal skills
  • Team player – be solution focused, and responsible for the development and motivation of junior team members
  • Energetic, innovative and creative when communicating with clients and colleagues
  • Learn on a continuous basis while also sharing knowledge
  • Leadership skills, leading the team and managing workflow
  • Ability to build and maintain strong relationships with our senior clients
  • Strategic thinker – think more strategically about the clients and their business, be able to see where improvements can be made and implement these changes
  • Take an interest in the management and implementation of new revenue streams for the company

What we’ll give you in return

  • Training and development at one of Ireland’s top media agencies
  • Unrivalled career progression
  • An inspiring Media team to work with
  • Competitive salary and benefits package
  • Remote working and flexible working hours

Click HERE to apply for this job.

Headcase Marketing / Homebird Studios, 1 Newmarket, Dublin 8

We are looking for an absolute stand-out candidate to join our team .Headcase is a very unique, creative and entrepreneurial place to work- and we take a unique approach to building our teams & culture. This is NOT your average promo staff gig…

About The Role:

Instead of working with large, broad teams, we like to create a tight group of engaged, trusted staff. These staff develop and grow with us, and we provide more significant, ongoing levels of work – throughout the year.

Brand ambassadors at Headcase have opportunities to work across various exciting events, festivals, and brand activations, as well as a chance to grow within the creative and operations team.

We are looking for a confident, excellent communicator who is well presented and has the ability to engage with the consumer at various different types of environments. All Applicants must be reliable, hardworking and have previous promotional experience to be considered.

When applying, please reference and explain your promotional experience to date.

Drivers with access to our own transport is a distinct advantage.

The Ideal Candidate:

  • Excellent Communication Skills.
  • Well Presented and Confident.
  • Experienced in brand promotions or the events industry
  • Team Leadership experience a plus.
  • Punctuality, Reliable and Trustworthy.
  • Full Clean Driving Licence & Access to a car a plus.

Click HERE to apply for this job

mosaic, 32 Baggot Street Upper, Dublin 4

mosaic, the leading app development company in Dublin, have just launched a NEW exciting startup – Linkie (www.linkie.app)

What stuff do you check everyday? Linkie is a simple app that enables you to swipe through all of your links in ONE place. Check out the 19 sec VIDEO

We are looking for an ambitious Digital Marketing Executive to help launch our app and grow our user base. We are looking for an energetic candidate who can bring marketing and growth ideas to the app.

We want you to focus on driving installs and retaining our users. We also want you to focus strongly on getting users to SHARE the app via our SHARE feature.

If you are the right candidate for this role, download the app, take it for a spin… and let us know how you can drive users and in particular, how you can maximise the SHARE feature in the app.

Click HERE to apply for this job.

By

Do you need to bring some organization to your social media workflow? Looking for tools to help?

In this article, you’ll discover three tools to help you better organize social media posting, monitoring, and campaign execution tasks.

#1: Plan Your Social Media Schedule With ContentCal

One of the biggest challenges for multi-platform social media managers is keeping all of their channels meaningfully active and engaging. Finding content that works and keeping social media accounts updated are keys to building a solid social media presence.

A social media tool like ContentCal can help with this. It’s a neat social media editorial solution that helps you manage all of your social media entities using an online calendar and delegating tasks.

To set up your ContentCal calendar, you’ll need to:

  • Register for a free trial and invite team members to help you manage your brand’s social media calendar.
  • Connect your social media accounts (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn).
  • Set up your “planning channels.” These are the types of content you’re creating and marketing—videos, email marketing campaigns, or interview-type posts, for example.
  • Set up category color-coding. This allows you to color-code your calendar for more balance. A quick look at your calendar will allow you to see which topics you cover more often than other topics.

From there, you can start filling in your calendar with all kinds of updates to make sure you’re posting something each day.

Click HERE to read the remainder of the article.

By

Sourced from Social Media Examiner

By Daniela McVicker

Hashtags, they’ve become something like an ironic t-shirt print now. Everywhere you turn, people are using them, they’ve even become a part of our verbal dialect, hashtag weird.
As overblown as they are, they are essential to social media. With platforms like Instagram and Twitter, they really can allow your business ideas to grow and your service to be reached by many more people. However, the art of hashtags can be a tricky one to master. We’re here to help.
Instead of telling you what you should do, we’re here to tell you exactly what to avoid. If you find yourself doing them, just hashtag stop. Here are the 9 most common hashtag mistakes to avoid.

What are hashtags?
There was a time when they were used as a number sign, used in databases and cryptographic applications. In 2007, Chris Messina changed the meaning of the key all around.
They’re no used all over the world, as a type of link or tag for users on social media. They basically identify a keyword (or multiple) and the indexed into the realm of social media. They then become discoverable by the other users.
Agreed, they are a tiny bit overused in today’s social media mad world, but they are instrumental. They categorize specific messages, have become a marketing tool by many businesses and lead users to certain discussions and conversations that they wish to be a part of.
Here are just some of the things that you should avoid when using hashtags.

1. Using only the popular hashtags
Yes, you see something trending, and you join the wave. We get it. In theory, it makes total sense — using the ones that have the most followers. However, these won’t get you the results that you’re searching for.
Tagging your pictures with #love or #beauty will put you in a world of hundreds of thousands of posts. Don’t mistake the extra likes for anything meaningful — they usually come from automated robots.
If you don’t believe us, check it out for yourself. Post a picture with generic hashtags like, say, #followforfollow and #motivation and try to find your post amongst the millions of photos. It’s next to impossible and really won’t increase your popularity.
You should always seek to use more specific, relevant hashtags that will speak to your target audience. Looking into your industry’s keywords could help you massively with this.

2. Don’t be too #obscure, though
On the opposite end, you don’t want to use a hashtag that literally nobody knows about. This would be futile.
Yes, it could be beneficial to start your own hashtag and watch your brand grow with it. Initially, this won’t gain you any new visitors or customers or followers.
You really want to be finding that perfect balance between popular and obscure — something which has a couple thousand posts on it, enough for you to be seen, but not too little that nobody notices.
We promise, there are enough out there for you to find, you just need to be a little bit creative and check up on your competitors.

Using way too many hashtags
We’ve all seen it, people posting something which quite literally has a million hashtags on it. Do you need reminding? #Travel #Travelpictures #Travelgram #Instatravel…you know the rest.
Captions which have tonnes and tonnes of hashtags on tend to kill the message you’re trying to put forward. It can be seen as overkill or desperation. The majority of followers and likes you get aren’t ones who engage, shop or provide anything meaningful. They’re programmed, and will sometimes even unfollow you after a set amount of time.
The best copywriting services that know a thing or two about social media and efficient use of hashtags live by the mantra: “quality over quantity.” Using 1-5 hashtags will stop your post looking cluttered and will gain you actually positively interested readers, not just automated likes.

Not analyzing your hashtag use
Social media campaigns rely on hashtags. Without them, everything would be a little bit crazy. That being said, if you’re not analyzing your hashtags properly, it can lead you to quite the #confusion.
For example, you have a social media campaign in which your followers have to use a unique hashtag, that you created. In order to measure your reach, track your growth (and pick a winner) you will need to monitor your numbers carefully.
There are social media tools and platforms which can help you with this, as well as just a very eager eye. You don’t want any angry competition entries, either.
Social media marketing relies on analytics just as much as any other type of marketing including email marketing. So, don’t underestimate the power of the hashtag.

Not using any hashtags at all
You might feel like they look messy, or people will judge them, or whatever reason. Ignore all that, because the biggest mistake you can make is not using them.
Once you have a big brand name, tonnes of followers and organic engagement, the hashtags can come to an end. Yet, when you’re building up your brand, they will become your new #BestFriend.
The little tags should be seen as targeted exposure, and nothing less. Think of them as a search tool — something that people can find your profile and content with. Nobody is too good or too proud to utilize a hashtag, they’re a great marketing tool that will give you so many benefits.
Did you know that tweets containing 2 hashtags get 2x more engagement than those without? It’s quite impressive, and something you should completely get behind.

A lack of research
It’s really no use describing everything you see in your picture using hashtags. To make the most out of them, you need to do a little bit of research.
You should take a look into the world of hashtags, using tools like Ritetag and Tagboard. These allow you to look at trending hashtags and review the performance of your own.
Also, don’t forget to dive into the world of National hashtag days. Things like #SmallBusinessSunday #TransformationTuesday and #MondayMotivation could be great little time markers for you. There’s even #NationalSelfieDay and #NationalNutritionMonth…there’s a hashtag for every event, some might just be great for your business. Check out if there are any more relevant to you and your purpose.

Not trying out new ones
So, you found your perfect set of hashtags, and you use them in every single post. We hate to break it to you, your users notice this (and they get bored), and it isn’t gaining you any new exposure after time.
Never get too comfortable with your hashtags, social media is an ever-changing world, and you need to move with it. You might find some of the best hashtags that you used to begin, are now completely oversaturated or deserted.
There’s always room for new hashtags. Take a nice scroll through your timelines, see what other people are using and see if they’ll work for you. Switch up your current favorites every now and then, checking your analytics to see if they really worked for you.

Not localizing your hashtags
This is especially true for the brick and mortar businesses out there. If you want people to come to your shop, it’s not particularly useful to use hashtags that are only being seen by people hundreds of miles away.
Check out your local community, see what hashtags they’re using, build relationships and gain exposure.
Even something as general as #NewYorkCity might just attract one new visitor to your shop. There’re also location hashtags that will be relevant to your industry. For example, #NewYorkBloggers or NewYorkBusiness will be more condensed, but much more effective hashtags to use.
Side note: make sure to utilize that location button too — more people use that than you might believe.

Using hashtags that aren’t relevant
We touched on using hashtags that are really popular and too obscure, but what about the ones that just aren’t relevant.
Yes, you might have found a great hashtag, that has a few thousand posts — but if it isn’t relevant to you, it won’t help you at all.
Just think about your profile, your target audience, your goals. What hashtag would be really great to go along with this?
As an example, say you’re a new sustainable fashion shop. In today’s world, #sustainable will have thousands and thousands of posts, there’s a risk you won’t be found. Why not try #SustainableFashion or #EthicalDesigner? It’s a little bit more relevant, not so popular and will bless you with specific exposure.

Conclusion
It might seem like a lot, especially listed out like this, but it is actually straightforward. You can easily avoid these mistakes and utilize hashtags to your best ability.
Like with every kind of marketing strategy, there is a bit of a trial and error process. Some will work, some won’t work — emphasizing the importance of analytics and careful tracking.
The truth is, hashtags are the key to growing a following on social media, especially one that engages with you and your brand. So, what are you waiting for?

By Daniela McVicker

Daniela McVicker is a blogger with rich experience in writing about UX design, content planning, chief editor at StudyClerk.com and digital marketing. Currently, she is the chief contributor at Trustmypaper where she helps individuals and organizations improve their web content writing, design, and planning skills. Her posts are always packed with examples and actionable content that readers can put straight into the action.

Sourced from Irish Tech News

By Zak Mustapha    

Imagine yourself in 5 years.

The great idea, your hard work and efforts…

Where have they gotten you?

It’s a scary thought actually and something I’ve experienced.

You have a great idea, you work day and night on it for years only for it to fail.

5 years later and I was still where I had started… with nothing to show for my hard work.

Was it time for me to give up and just get a job?

I had a personal meeting with myself one day and came to the realization that I was broke when I started and still broke after 5 years.

I wondered if there was a way I could have predicted my failure or success. What caused my failure in the first place? I mean there has to be a more predictable way to determine if you’re going to fail or succeed without the year long wait?

I stopped what I was doing and went on to study some successful entrepreneurs in my field, I went through hundreds of their videos and applied their teachings.

What worked really well wasn’t what I had expected. In fact, it had nothing to do with hard work – although that was still required.

Adopting these habits will ensure you know how you’re progressing without wasting months or years of your life.

1. Scheduled Habits

You are your habits. Successful people have successful habits. If you have poor people’s habits, you’ll be poor. If you have middle class habits, you’ll have a middle-class income. If you have a millionaire’s habits, you’ll have their income too.

Look at your task list and question every single thing you’re doing. Is this the best use of my time? Is this task moving me towards my goals?

If the answer is “no” then just outsource or don’t do it at all. They key is to only focus on the few things that work and stop doing everything else that doesn’t work or isn’t worth your time.

2. Thinking

“I’ve got so much to do” is a common phrase entrepreneurs utter.

You’ve probably heard of the saying… failing to plan is planning to fail.

I’m not talking about the thinking you do in the shower or during a short commute – although that is helpful.

It’s about purposeful thinking. When you actually sit down in a quiet space and just think deeply of what you’re doing, where your actions have taken you, where you want to be, who do you need to be to get there, what could go wrong, what could go right… the wealthiest people take time off to think.

In fact, Bill Gates takes two weeks off each year just to think in a forest. Where have his habits taken him? Where could they take you?

3. Measurements

“Oh, I don’t have time for this!” and “I’ve got a lot of work to do” are the first things I would say when it was time to measure my results. I could imagine the whole boring process of gathering my results, inputting them in an excel sheet (or whatever tool you want to use) and then thinking again on how I would improve.

As an entrepreneur you will iterate between thinking, planning, scheduling and measuring.What gets measured gets improved. If you don’t measure your results on a regular basis then how are you going to improve? Eventually you’re going to get measured either way by people around you after you have no results to show for your hard work or by yourself – it’s your choice.

By Zak Mustapha    

Sourced from Business 2 Community

By 

Gone are the days of SEO being a straightforward process of keyword research, on-page optimization and link building. As Google adds other factors to its algorithm and learns to assess website quality in a human-like way, SEO becomes intertwined with other marketing tactics. One of these tactics is social listening, which has been mainly used for social media marketing until recently. In this post, I explain how social listening can benefit your SEO.

First things first: let’s figure out the meaning behind “social listening”. The term describes what social media listening (also called social media monitoring) tools do. They crawl the Web, news, blogs, forums and social media platforms (Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, etc.) to find mention of any given keywords. Keywords are usually brand names, words that describe the industry or people’s names (e.g. a CEO, an author, an artist).

Using social listening for SEO requires proper knowledge and skill. It’s very important to set specific goals and know the details of how to conduct a proper search. Here’s how to go about it:

1. Find unlinked brand mentions and turn them into links. 

With link building still being at the core of any SEO strategy, it’s vital to cover all such opportunities. Here’s the one you might not have thought about: turning existing brand mentions into links.

If your brand has been around for a while, or if your brand, company or a specific product has had any kind of popularity at some point, it’s almost certain that there are mentions of your brand on the Internet: on blogs, forums, news sites or just somewhere on the Web. Obviously, not all of them will link back to your site: writers don’t care about promoting anyone else but themselves; they don’t have your SEO goals in mind, and the idea of linking might’ve never even crossed their minds. However, that doesn’t mean they would have a problem with adding a link if you ask them. So the only real challenge here is to find the linkless mentions. This is where social listening is relevant.

To be fair, you won’t be able to get linkless mentions with every social listening tool: you’ll need one with the Boolean search mode. With Boolean search, the user sets up the search query manually using the Boolean operators, such as AND, OR, AND NOT etc. So in the case of finding linkless mentions, the user should type their brand name as a keyword and add AND NOT link:yoursite.com/* . Tools that have Boolean search as their option include Awario (disclosure: I work for the company), Talkwalker, and Brandwatch.

2. Monitor new links to your site.

Modern link building means knowing where and how your backlinks are being built. First, it’s useful to know marketing purposes: what if you can get more out of the website that already links to you? Second, you’ve got to know if your backlinks are coming from quality sites, because, as we know, links from the spammy and untrustworthy sites can seriously hurt the rankings.

With social listening, you find out about any new links anywhere on the Internet in real time. To start looking for new links, type your site’s URL in a website/web page field, which is available in most social media monitoring tools, and choose to search from limited sources: the Web plus news/blogs. This will exclude mentions that come from social media platforms (e.g. Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, etc.). You can also use the link: operator if your tool offers Boolean search.

3. Find guest blogging opportunities. 

Any SEO will tell you that guest blogging is a sound link-building strategy. It will not bring you a sudden rankings boost, but it’s a solid, tried and true way to build up your site’s reputation. This is why finding guest post opportunities is an ongoing task for many marketers. While there are always a couple of blogs that are easy to find but impossible to get featured on, there are also other blogs that are harder to find because they are not in the first two pages of Google. Yet, they might be more relevant and have a more loyal audience — that’s what usually happens in smaller communities. These blog editors are also more likely to publish your articles.

Guest-blogging opportunities can be found with social listening. To find relevant blogs, type in the keywords that describe your industry (or rather a range of topics you’d like to write about) and wait for the tool to find:

  • All blogs that talk about this topic: you can go through them and find the ones you didn’t know about.
  • Social media influencers in that industry (people with a large following that talk about your topic a lot). Go through the people in the list of influencers (all tools mentioned before offer a feature to find influencers) to see which ones have a website with a blog. You’ll be surprised to find out just how many have a relevant (maybe not that well made) website with a dedicated audience.

There are a number of other ways to find guest posting opportunities with a social media listening tool. All of them go beyond your usual methods and are worth checking out!

4. Keep an eye on your brand’s reputation. 

In 2010, a horrible story appeared in the New York Times. In it, the author explained how negative reputation could help brands rank better in Google and cause more sales, as bad reviews generated links and buzz around the brand. The whole approach received a name: negative advertising. Merchants were acting badly on purpose, making their customers angry and, therefore, more likely to write passionate, albeit angry, reviews.

Of course, that wasn’t a good thing for Google, and, after the problem became apparent, they announced they incorporated an algorithmic solution to down-rank brands that provide poor user experience. We don’t know how it works now, although they talked about their “world-class sentiment analysis system” at some point. We do know it works, though. No more similar cases were in sight.

You are probably not one of those terrible marketers willing to torture their clients just to get a higher Google ranking. However, social media crises do happen even to the best of brands with the best intentions. A social media crisis can result not only in a long-term reputation problem but also in a serious ranking drop.

This is why it’s important to keep an eye on the sentiment around your brand. A social media tool with a built-in sentiment analysis will help you notice any suspicious spikes in time and take care of the problem before it goes viral or gets big enough for Google’s algorithm to notice. 

5. Grow brand mentions. 

While link building is still absolutely essential in SEO, it is becoming less and less so. You can see how passionately Google is working towards new ways of figuring out the real value of websites, understanding their content and being more and more capable of evaluating the Internet the way humans do. The Internet is much more than just links. These days it’s more about being popular, going viral and being heard in its various corners. Most of all, the Internet is about social media: taken together, the most used websites that don’t have any dofollow links.

What does it tell us? That we should shift our attention to linkless mentions. It’s not just our speculation. In 2017, Google Webmaster Trends Analyst Gary Illyes said in his keynote at Brighton SEO the following:

“If you publish high-quality content that is highly cited on the internet — and I’m not talking about just links, but also mentions on social networks and people talking about your branding, crap like that. Then you are doing great.”

At the same time, we know that Panda patent talks about “implied links” as a signal that could be no less important than backlinks. An implied link is defined as “a reference to a target resource, e.g. a citation to the target resource, which is included in a source resource but is not an express link to the target resource”. Sounds like a mention!

This is why you should work towards growing brand mentions. With social listening, you can, firstly, track brand mentions. Knowing when, where and in relation to what brand mentions appear will no doubt give you a much better idea as to how to grow more. For example, should your marketing strategy focus more on social media? If so, on which platforms? Or maybe you have to move to forums and blogs (e.g. try marketing on Reddit?).

Second, you can apply new techniques of growing brand mentions, such as social selling and influencer marketing.

6. Learn from your competitors. 

All the tips above can be used to monitor your competitors and discover where they get links, where they guest posts, with which influencers they work and so on. All this information can be used in your own marketing and SEO strategy. 

The workflow is as straightforward as it gets: everything that you’ve done for your brand can be completed using your competitors’ brand names and URLs. Creating a different alert for every vital competitor will make the task even easier and let you see your progress compared to that of your competitors in a clear and detailed way.

Conclusion

Social listening is full of possibilities. It’s this new, not-totally-explored-yet technology that slowly changes the way we do digital marketing. Try using it for SEO and you might see changes you never expected to see.

By 

Aleh Barysevich is Founder and Chief Marketing Officer at companies behind SEO PowerSuite, professional software for full-cycle SEO campaigns, and Awario, a social media monitoring app. He is a seasoned SEO and social media expert and speaker at major industry conferences, including 2018’s SMX London, BrightonSEO and SMX East.

Sourced from CONVINCE&CONVERT

 

By Andy Culbert

Following in-depth research into the wants, needs and very unique habits of the UK’s Gen Z market, and successfully rebranding established brands to appeal to this hyper-connected audience, Andy Culbert from digital-first design agency MERó shares his five key take-outs of designing for Gen Z.

It’s all change again for the digital design industry working with brands that need to appeal to the two billion ‘Gen Z-ers’ worldwide – a generation of digital natives who could pinch and swipe before they learned to talk and who are now entering the workforce. For some brands, digital design that worked, even for Millenials, is now obsolete. Generation Z is demanding a different approach.

1. Create empowering, explorative design for a self-reliant generation

Our own research into this audience supports other industry findings that they have a strong level of self-direction. Having held the answer to almost any question in the palm of their hands from the day they were born, they’re able to find whatever they want without the help of intermediaries.  Self-reliant and innovators – they’re fuelled by their experiences (good or bad) and able to affect change through the digital spaces they occupy.

Design is therefore ‘empowering’ for this audience; and design presented in such a way, as to encourage personal growth and the capacity to shape their surroundings, clearly resonates with them.

Because they’re innovative ‘unique-seekers’, Gen Z is also a cohort that pushes boundaries.  This can be really exciting for designers. Imagery can be experimental, colours – confident and clashing – they even have their own colour, Gen Z yellow.

There’s scope to exploit the ‘unexpected’ through design; a concept we explored during a recent rebrand of online beauty destination, Beauty Bay. In the developmental phase, we found a bold, challenger proposition of ‘Breaking the Rules’ resonated most with the fearless and experimental Gen Z audience. The aim was to challenge the traditional idea of what a beauty brand should look like and seeing how far we could push the idea was all part of the fun.

Our experience with Gen Z on this project also proved that it’s not just about pictures – key words need to form part of the brand guidelines to peak their curiosity.

And another strong theory worked: if it demands your attention, it will do the same for Gen Z, cutting through their cluttered digital landscape.

But designing for Gen Z is not just about making things look appealing – it must be about how a brand allows them to live their lives with efficiency. Digital design that delivers a slick online experience is the only way to engender their loyalty. Design needs to be as digitally intuitive as they are. Similarly, design without function does not cut it with this audience.

Content needs to translate from online to offline and across all social channels.  All content needs to be scalable, and, often overlooked, even ensuring fonts are available for digital and legible on mobile is a must. Ensure designs work in the smallest of digital spaces first then scale them upwards and outwards – not forgetting that creative often still needs to work offline.

2. A need for flexible branding 

Gen Z want to align themselves with people, brands and causes that reflect their desired identities – that they self-control through social channels and online personas.

Sounds easy, but bear in mind that everything is fluid in the world of Gen Z. Research has shown that this generation is open-minded and diverse, but identity is dynamic. There is often no defined snapshot of a Gen Z ‘personality’, they don’t see themselves as occupying one over-riding defined role or trait.

Brand identities are of course created at a moment in time and are created to deliver consistency. But this means they (can) date easily – particularly when competing against the almost daily influx of fresh new brands designed more recently for a new generation’s needs – thus grabbing their attention. A brand created less than five years ago can feel very dated now. This doesn’t mean that all brands need to totally reinvent themselves and their identities, but it can mean branding needs to be refreshed more frequently.

Brand flexibility is now needed to stay ahead. Implementing a brand refresh, with a flexible system to stay current to the ever-changing Gen Z consumer, involves keeping a consistent brand identity, deep rooted in the brand’s values, but one that’s supported with a set of regularly updated brand guidelines that can flex with current trends and channels.

For example, this can be achieved by having a fixed primary brand colour palette, logo and typography style but creating seasonal / trend-led identity packs with a flexible palette of icons and colours to reflect ‘trends’. It’s a way of refreshing the brand in line with external influences while maintaining consistency and control. Branding can support campaign and imagery to greater affect; there is less disjoint when photography and visual assets need to move in another direction.

With a flexible identity system the whole brand can refresh without the need for a full rebrand.

3. Make it Sharable and Digestible

Gen Z has a perilously short attention span. In fact, if you’re a Gen Z, you’ve probably moved on to the next point already. The first cohort born into the digital age, Gen Z is accustomed to flitting between numerous screens. They’re more easily distracted than any of their predecessors. If brands thought grabbing audience attention was tough before – Gen Z has taken this to a whole new level.

The upshot of this is that Gen Z are quicker than any of their predecessors to decide if something is relevant to them. And they’re quick abandon brands that haven’t kept up with their pace.

To cater for their fast and flighty rules of engagement, the most effective approach is to design in their language. Short videos, image sequences, images with text overlays and quotes can help to cut through the noise. Legible typefaces that work across all media are a must to allow for ‘quick take outs’ and, as mentioned, vibrant, eye catching colour combinations that twist convention.

Stereotypical design elements and imagery doesn’t resonate with this audience – they’re looking for fluidity across both gender and age. And don’t make the design feel younger than the target audience as they won’t engage with it.

Both images and language used can help to create an ‘instant’ emotional connection, increasing engagement. Gen Z wants content that feels real, personal, casual and informative.

And of course, the holy grail is to make everything instantly sharable.  By utilising bite-size, sharable content there’s an opportunity to mobilise an army of hyper-connected social media natives who can amplify your brand like never before.

4. Get them to prove what designs resonate

The digital age presents us with unrivalled opportunities to understand real-time consumer behaviour, both within a brand’s platform and social channels.

Not only does this mean designers no longer have to ‘hope’ that a design will resonate with a specific target audience when they put it live, based on assumption, it means it can be tested with real audiences and adapted as consumer behaviours change (and they will).

Understanding Gen Z’s nuances is crucial if you want to connect with them and deliver what they need at every touch point – whether that’s through your platform or Instagram. So ignore ongoing user testing at your peril. To be truly customer-centric in order to hit the sweet spot, the only way to really know if a design or feature will produce a positive reaction is to test it with real users in real time, then iterate based on these insights.

And don’t forget that what works for one brand competing for Gen Z’s attention might not necessarily work for another.

5. Use design to showcase a brand’s values

Introducing a new brand identity can revitalise a decades-old business but with this generation, more so than others, the new identity must still reflect the brand ethos. If a brand is trying to be something it’s not – Gen Z will soon see through this. Similarly, claims must have substance. Gen Z are quick to call out brands that aren’t authentic. And through social media they have an authoritative voice and means to do this.

The challenge for established brands implementing a brand update to appeal to younger audiences is how to remain true to core values, making the new brand part of the organisation’s DNA.

To succeed in this area of design, explore the business, its culture as well as audience in great detail. Any brand revamp needs to work from the inside out with internal teams living and breathing the brand to convey this outwards. Hold live the brand workshops with staff and internal departments to find out what the company’s vision is and how this needs to be evolved to connect with Gen Z.

Success with Gen Z will come from being original, innovative and authentic, rather than a question of ‘who shouts the loudest’. Cater for their needs with empowering and intelligent design, coupled with a slick online experience (that works how it’s supposed to) and it shouldn’t be too difficult engender their loyalty. For a short time at least.

By Andy Culbert

Sourced from Digital Doughnut

By  Freddy Muriuki    

Have you ever wondered how some marketing experts seem to have the magic bullet to drive many sales while you can barely get a single prospect to click any of your buttons?

They naturally appear to have the knack for convincing prospects to buy what they are selling and at whatever price.

It’s like they have a solution for every need the customer has, which causes people to flock to their businesses, whether offline or online.

How do these successful marketers do it, and what can you learn from it? Well, it’s nothing profound; extraordinary marketers have learned how to incorporate psychology into their marketing campaigns.

They know exactly how to get into the mind of their target customer. As a result, they create content and offer solutions their customers can’t resist.

Yap, psychology has a great role to play in marketing. And according to Maryville University, there’s a growing demand for workers with a background in psychology in fields such as market research ($62,560 per annum), surveying ($54,470) and human resources ($59,180) among other career choices.

In today’s post, I highlight a couple of ways you can use psychology to drive your marketing efforts forward. Read on to learn how you can appeal to the emotional and psychological needs of your prospects, and leave them craving for your products.

Relate To Your Prospect

As human beings, we love forming packs or groups. We also tend to view and treat kindred spirits more favorably, a phenomenon known as in-group favouritism.

In marketing, you can use this phenomenon in your favor. It all begins with segmenting your audience in smaller and more focused groups. After that, create relevant content and appeals that are specific to each group.

It is one of the reasons testimonials are a popular part of marketing material. They show the prospect other users like them found a solution in your products and services.

On top of that, have you noticed how marketers are fond of displaying social proof at any given opportunity? Also known as social herding, showing social proof makes the prospect feel like they are part of your community.

Users are more likely to engage with your brand and products if they see others (who are like them) doing it. Take dancing for instance. At the beginning of the dance, everybody is hesitant to take to the floor. But as soon as the first few people start dancing, everybody else wants to join.

It is psychology in action, and you can leverage this technique in your marketing campaigns by trying your best to relate with a prospect at a personal level.

See how almost every mobile app has an “Invite Friends” button? Many web apps and social media sites thrive on this “join your friends” mentality.

It goes something like, “if your friends are doing it, then it must be good.” So, you figure out that “if my friends are buying this product, then it must be good.”

Foot-in-the-Door Technique

Psychological studies show that people are more willing to agree to larger requests, if they previously agreed to a smaller request.If you’re in doubt, you can try this psychological trick on your friends. Say you want to borrow $500 bucks from your friend, asking for $500 bucks in whole outrightly will face some resistance.

But by borrowing $100 bucks first, and then after a couple of days asking for $400 bucks, you’ll realize better results. Try it and come back with results, guaranteed.

This is common especially with email marketers. It’s easier for a user to provide an email address as opposed to buying your products.

Now, instead of throwing products at the prospect’s face and hope something will stick, the smart marketer starts small by asking for the email address.

Afterwards, you can send targeted emails to the user to provide context. Later on, you can introduce the user to your sales funnel.

If a prospect takes time to subscribe, they are more likely to engage with your brand and products later on.

The opposite of this technique is often known as the door-in-the-face technique. Instead of starting small, you start with a large and outlandish request that the user, obviously, turns down.

After that, you make a smaller request that the user “magically” accepts. But this is not a magic show, it is psychology at work. So, start big or small but make your second offer the exact opposite.

Appeal to Emotions

Along with getting personal comes appealing to emotions. If you can trigger the right kind of emotions in your prospects, you can get them to do whatever you desire.

At every stage of your marketing campaign, seek to appeal to your customers’ emotions. So, instead of listing your product’s features, outline the benefits the prospects will enjoy from the said product.

If you had no idea, highlighting the benefits of your product appeals to emotions as opposed to listing the features. By all means, the “features section” is important, but add a “benefits section” as well.

Make the benefits prominent across your marketing collateral. This shows the user you understand their needs, and have just the solutions they need.

And since we are talking about emotions, another psychological trick to use in marketing involves introducing fear, uncertainty and despair. Oh yes, evoking these kinds of emotions in your prospects is legitimate, and a popular tool that many politicians use to great success.

You can show your prospect how opting for an alternative product will cause mayhem in their life. By any means, you want the user to take your product as the best option.

Fear is a powerful emotion and if you can harness it to turn your prospects against the competition, you’re golden.

Appealing to emotions can, in fact, help you to reposition your competition in your prospect’s mind.

Use Amazing Multimedia Content

Using multimedia content helps you to appeal to the customer’s senses. Whether you like it or not, people will judge your business depending on the quality of the marketing materials you use.In practice, get in the habit of using plenty of high-quality visuals on your website, blog posts, email, social media, ads and brochures among others.

Don’t bore your prospects to death with a ton of text! Combine images, videos and infographics among other multimedia content to jazz things up.

If you use audio content, strive to create a catchy story or jingle that prospects associate with your business. Many brands do this, and a good example is McDonalds.

The McDonalds’ “ba da ba ba ba” jingle was originally sang by Justin Timberlake, but it has grown more popular than Timberlake’s actual songs.

Don’t hold back and never skimp on your content. Go all out and create multimedia content that appeals to your customer’s senses. Your content (whether online or offline) must have that wow factor or your marketing campaign is doomed.

Reward Your Customers

There is a reason the opposite of generosity is stinginess, and nobody gyrates or gravitate to the latter. Generosity is a virtue, and stinginess is a vice you should let go off. Remember, there is a big difference between being frugal and stingy, but I digress.Rewarding your customers needn’t be challenging or expensive. For instance, you can create cheap gifts for your customers. You know, I’m talking about something like an order of t-shirts and key-holders for your customers. Or cookies, mint and anything else you can think about.

All because, let us admit is, we all love free stuff. This psychological need is the reason giveaways are incredibly powerful as marketing tools.

If you had no idea, you can use a single giveaway to grow your social media presence, boost engagement on your site, increase email subscriptions and drive relevant traffic to your products among other things.

Use generosity in your favor by rewarding your customers at all stages of the conversion funnel. For instance, mobile games are fond of this technique.By rewarding users at the end of each mission, mobile developers boost engagement and brand growth. You can reward your users for completing a particular action on your site.

Conclusion

Psychology and marketing go hand in hand in the offline or online worlds. By getting into the mind of your target audience, you can craft content and solutions they can’t pass up.

Going forward, strive to incorporate psychology into your marketing campaigns, from market research and product creation to promotion and beyond.

We hope this post points you in the right direction as far as using psychology in your marketing goes. Still, this is not an exhaustive list, which means we gratefully welcome your contribution because there is more to learn.

Which are your favorite psychological techniques in marketing? Let us know in the comments.

By  Freddy Muriuki    

Sourced from Business 2 Community

By ASU’s W.P. Carey School of Business

“Entrepreneur” has caught on as a buzzword and an idealized career, it actually takes an awful lot of work. Some entrepreneurs are lifers, seemingly born with a silver patent in their mouth. For others, arriving at entrepreneurship is an accident, or at least is inadvertent.

Aaron Pool, owner of Gadzooks Enchiladas and Soups in Phoenix, could be considered one of the lifers. “Growing up, I found myself wanting to make the decision or create things with a certain quality. Some places may say, ‘That’s wrong, you need to do it this way,'” Pool says.

1. Find someone (or something) that will have your back

“You learn that you shouldn’t feel ashamed of having big, unique ideas as long as you have the support system, like W. P. Carey was for me,” Pool says. Four years after graduating from the W. P. Carey School of Business at ASU, Pool opened his first Gadzooks location. He now has a second.

“It’s not about being the smartest person in the room. It’s about pulling the best people together and helping them become successful in their own right. So, while I’m very proud to be the captain of the ship, does my name personally account for our success? I hope not. If that’s the case, I haven’t created a sustainable team.” – Christopher Myers, (B.S. finance ’06), founder, BodeTree LLC

2. Cut some things from your life

You’re not superhuman, no matter how much kombucha you drink. If you’re trying to launch a product or business, odds are it’s a side hustle. Odds also are that you can’t manage a career, a passion project, family commitments, and a bunch of other obligations. So identify your priorities accordingly.

3. Make sure your business model is solid

One of the biggest mistakes many entrepreneurs make is living in the “what if” of their product or business. Just because you dreamed it up doesn’t make it won’t live in reality. Make sure you have an airtight case for what you’re trying to do.

“It takes a lot of the risk out of it. You actually have a plan.”

4. Ask for help

“Do your research and ask good questions of experts you trust. Some things might feel like good ideas, but the more you dig, the more you find out they’re not,” says Tim Haitaian, who was an audit associate at KPMG before co-founding Redshelf, which delivers and distributes e-books, e–textbooks, and other digital learning materials to publishers, institutions, and campus bookstores. He helped launch Redshelf in 2011, and today it serves more than 500 college campuses in the U.S. But Haitaian never could have reached his goals without a sounding board.

5. Develop routines

It’s easy to get caught up in the creation and ideation that play such a big part in entrepreneurship. But believe it or not, you’re probably better off thinking about your process and the product lifestyle than you are standing at a whiteboard waiting for the inspiration to strike. By giving yourself parameters, you allow creativity to flow in the natural course of things, and when it’s required, not just when you want to feel inspired.

6. Learn how to say no

“Don’t say no to all opportunities,” cautions Haitaian. “Say no to the ones that take you away from your primary goal.”

7. You can pay your bills and fund the company for at least six months

This seems obvious, but you’d be surprised how many aspiring entrepreneurs don’t think this far ahead. The reality is, no matter how good your idea is, you will almost certainly start with some lean times. From turning on the lights to a new space to paying contractors to not having more money coming in, if you can’t float yourself for a while, not only will your venture suffer, you might, too. Don’t sacrifice the basic needs of existence to create the next widget.

8. It’s a team effort

Entrepreneurs have a reputation for going it alone, but lasting success with any endeavor can only happen with the right team. “It’s not about being the smartest person in the room. It’s about pulling the best people together and helping them become successful in their own right,” says Myers, founder of BodeTree. “So, while I’m very proud to be the captain of the ship, does my name personally account for our success? I hope not. If that’s the case, I haven’t created a sustainable team.”

9. Learn to sell well

This one seems obvious, but if you can’t make the product, the pitch, your company, or yourself seem worth the investment, it won’t be.

10. Get over yourself

There was only one Steve Jobs. That doesn’t work for everybody. “Egos get in the way,” says Haitaian. “You’ll gain more respect, you’ll get further, by sacrificing your ego for the right decision than for trying to hold on to some essence of ‘I want to be the one with the right answer.'”

Feature Image: Entrepreneurs have a reputation for going it alone, but lasting success with any endeavor can only happen with the right team. Hoxton/Tom Merton

By ASU’s W.P. Carey School of Business

Sourced from Phoenix Business Journal