DataManager Online: Alla ricerca dell’emozione, intervista con E-(motional) CTO

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: e-(motional), Moda e Tecnologia, News, Technology

DataManagerOnline logo 300x107 DataManager Online: Alla ricerca dell’emozione, intervista con E (motional) CTO

Alla ricerca dell’emozione

23/12/2010 | a cura di Antonio Savarese

logo emotional DataManager Online: Alla ricerca dell’emozione, intervista con E (motional) CTO

“E-(motional) cambia le regole del gioco: i contenuti multimediali diventano come il web, dove l’utente può andare avanti in approfondimenti quanto gli serve (via hyper links), diversamente dalla carta stampata.”

Chris Anderson ha detto con molto clamore non poco tempo fa che il web è morto, molto si è discusso in Rete con opinioni pro e contro, forse quello che è vero è che il Web sta cambiando, sta cambiando la modalità di fruizione e sta cambiando la modalità di interazione. E se il mezzo cambia, cambia di conseguenza anche il modo di usarlo e gli strumenti, ecco quindi emergere nuovi progetti e nuovi software. In particolare nel mondo dell’advertising i banner sono sempre più oggetti del passato e si fanno avanti nuovi strumenti che promettono una maggiore interazione con l’utente in pieno stile 2.0.

Ne abbiamo parlato con Andrey Golub – CTO di Moda e Tecnologia

LEGGI L’ARTICOLO SU DataManager.it

Video Advertising: Online Video Kills the TV Star

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: e-(motional), News

This is not a super fresh news (of August this year), but we are particularly happy about this prediction, since we work in a new form on online advertising over video, a step ahead over Ad2OneVIRAL: interactive video platform e-(motional).

Online Video Kills the TV Star

5th August 2010

Video Advertising set to become the fastest growing online advertising format claims Irish Digital Agency Chief

Dublin Monday 21st June 2010 – Video advertising is set to become the fastest growing online advertising format according to Irish Digital Sales Agency Ad2One Group Ireland and will, they claim show a 78% growth by 2012 when brands will distribute more professional-quality video content online as part of any advertising campaign as opposed to traditional TV Advertising.

One of the largest international third party sales agencies in the world Ad2One Group Ireland claims that TV advertising will suffer as more companies investing in online videos ads as an alternative advertising medium. Online video advertising will drive greater traffic and marketers can, they say, expect a trade-off for the continued high CPM costs of video ad placements.

According to Roddy Walshe of Ad2One Group Ireland “TV Advertising in Ireland will suffer, maybe not immediately, but certainly over the next three years as online video advertising is set to surge. The equivalent of TV advertising online video marketing is attractive because it’s much cheaper and accurately targets key audiences without any wastage. It offers far superior targeting and offers tangible results, delivered through analytic tracking.

His comments dovetail with the launch of Ad2OneVIRAL, is a new online advertising product which integrates video advertising on the most popular international websites visited by Irish people.  The Ad2One VIRAL product offers media buyers and marketing professionals a fully designed campaign for maximum engagement as all campaigns deploy a highly effective blog outreach as standard.

Ad2One Group Ireland  claim that with their VIRAL product they are one of the only agencies in Ireland with the ability to accurately target online viewers with ads based on demographic information.  YouTube is utilized as an integral part of the Ad2One Group Viral Service where viewers watch over 100 videos daily every month in a rapidly escalating advertising medium which has seen a tenfold jump in the number of advertisers during 2009 alone.

He continued “the big challenge for marketers using online video advertising where it is tempting to use videos disguised as entertainment is to weave the commercial message into editorial content for greater impact. The onus will be therefore to focus on creative content that entices the online visitor and engages with them effectivel

SOURCE: AD2ONE

Shopping-Milano.it – Il mezzo più facile di vivere la città

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News

è stato lanciato il nuovo portale di shopping: Shopping-Milano.it

newsletter header Shopping Milano.it   Il mezzo più facile di vivere la città

ORAMAI SIAMO AL COUNTDOWN.

Pochi giorni ci separano dal NATALE e come sempre cerchiamo di regalarvi chicche: di CURIOSITÀ, di BELLEZZA di CULTURA.

Cosa c’è di meglio di un BUON LIBRO? Tra le tante strenne natalizie abbiamo ‘LO STILE IN CUCINA’, le ricette di Lella Curiel e altre storie.

E PER GLI ULTIMI ACQUISTI? Le ultimissime aperture di nuove boutique: GEOX Shop, all’interno della stazione Centrale, GAP nel corso milanese Vittorio Emanuele, BURBERRY BRIT…

A tutti auguriamo BUONE FESTE


WELL, WE’RE NOW AT THE COUNTDOWN.

CHRISTMAS will be here in just a few days and, as always, we’ll try to give you some tasty bits of news regarding CURIOSITIES, BEAUTY and CULTURE.

What could be better than a GOOD BOOK? Among the many Christmas gifts, we have ‘STYLE IN THE KITCHEN’, with Lella Curiel’s recipes and other stories.

AND FOR YOUR LAST-MINUTE PURCHASES? There are the very latest openings of new boutiques, including the GEOX Shop, located inside the Central Station, the GAP boutique on Milan’s Vittorio Emanule avenue, the BURBERRY BRIT boutique and others

We wish you all a VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS and a HAPPY NEW YEAR!

newsletter body5 Shopping Milano.it   Il mezzo più facile di vivere la città

Mobile Commerce Daily: Why luxury brands should embrace mobile

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News, Technology

Why luxury brands should embrace mobile

via Mobile Commerce Daily

The rapid adoption of the smartphone and the mobile medium is one of the most important trends that shopper marketers are tracking this year and next.

Consumers are not only using their mobile phones to make purchases, but also increasing using them to perform shopping research on their way to a store and while they are in the store.

This trend will only increase with Google’s Android and Apple’s iPhone activating 450,000 phones a day and as a generation of teenagers, who currently average 3,339 text messages a month, come of age.

Luxury shoppers are early adopters of powerful smartphones, but paradoxically, luxury brands are lagging behind when it comes to leveraging mobile marketing.

This is not unusual in and of itself.

Mind the gap
Luxury brands traditionally trail other retail brands when it comes to technology adoption and in providing cross-channel user experiences.

Unlike wide-appeal brands such as Gap or J.C. Penney, luxury brands’ core customers often have higher service expectations due to the higher price points of luxury goods, which luxury brand managers mistakenly assume exclusively means personal service from sales associates.

In reality luxury shoppers’ expectations for high-quality service extend to great self-service tools and rich multichannel shopping experiences.

In a recent New York Times interview, Christopher Bailey, chief designer at Burberry, explained that part of the continued success of the venerable luxury fashion brand is due to its new cross-channel initiatives, especially in the mobile medium.

In fact, during the fashion house’s runway shows, spectators are furnished with mobile devices that allow them to reserve items in real-time while they are viewing them on the runway.

However, Burberry – which ensures that its customers can interact and experience brand consistency across every possible channel – is the exception to the rule.

(See Burberry takes third place: Luxury Marketer of the Year)

Many luxury retailers continue to invest their resources in the same old tools.

For instance, luxury brands spend millions on store facades and interior fixtures, yet ignore the parking lots that surround the stores – leaving them aesthetically displeasing and visually at-odds with the brand experience inside the store.

There is a similar incongruity related to mobile.

While their in-store experience may be unparalleled, luxury brands often receive failing grades when it comes to pre-tailing, an increasingly important step in a consumer’s purchase decision.

Luxury brands need to move quickly to offer mobile and online pre-shopping tools that seamlessly integrate with their existing ecommerce and retail experiences.

These marketers must ask themselves: Do all channels have visibility into a customer’s past purchases, gifts and wish lists?

In many ways, mobile represents the latest incarnation of the venerable clientelling practices that luxury brands have leveraged for years.

Associate sales, not sales associate
Why is mobile so important for luxury brands? Brand perception, loyalty and retention, for starters.

Luxury brand customers feel they have a relationship – even a bond – with the brands themselves, which does not extend, interestingly enough, to the sales associates or other human faces of the brands.

Mobile, in particular, allows customers to limit their interaction directly to the brand via the use of technology and to keep their interaction and brand experience consistent with their own perception of the brand.

For example, users of Gucci’s iPhone application are treated to exclusive music mixes by celebrity DJ, Mark Ronson, as well as sneak peeks of forthcoming merchandise, such as the Gucci Kids line.

The brand is rewarding its customers for using the mobile medium, offering a more intimate interaction than might be had in a bricks-and-mortar store, while also removing the chance that a single sales associate’s bad day could translate into lasting damage to the brand via customer dissatisfaction.

Of course, one of the primary justifications for the mobile medium is the same for Walmart as for Neiman Marcus: simple convenience.

Consumers increasingly rely on mobile devices for everything from calendaring to weather forecasts to GPS, and this ubiquity extends to shopping.

In fact, according to a recent survey by Brand Anywhere and Luth Research Inc., Web retailers could increase consumer engagement by 85 percent simply by offering a mobile version of their Web site (see story).

So, the time is now for luxury brands to add mobile to their channel mix.

While the benefits are numerous for all retailers, luxury brands, in particular, stand to gain higher engagement, sales and retention rates by offering a strong user experience to customers who clearly want – and expect – a direct, intimate and convenient way of interacting with the brands.

Jason Goldberg is vice president of strategy and customer experience at CrossView. Portland, OR. Reach him at jgoldberg@crossview.com.

The “light” social media strategy is encouraging brand love, but not purchase consideration

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News, Technology

Zara’s “light” social media strategy encouraging brand love, but not purchase consideration

via Wavematrix.com

by Joe Waby on 15th December 2010

Zara show how a fashion brand can engage consumers around their products and brand by only posting content infrequently to their Facebook page. However, while the strategy is successful at prompting brand love, it does not encourage purchase consideration.
Zara have a very popular Facebook page with 7.5 millions fans. Zara post official content rather infrequently (perhaps once a week) and then let the clothes do the talking by posting photos of their latest collections. WaveMetrix analysed the consumer response to this rather “light” approach to social media strategy to understand whether it was successfully engaging consumers.
WaveMetrix social media monitoring shows that the Zara social media strategy is successful at engaging consumers around their products and brand. Consumers “love” the “cool” fashion collections and “beautiful”, “quality” clothes from their “favourite” fashion brand. Using 100% human analysis, WaveMetrix can ascertain that while Zara are successful at encouraging brand love, purchase consideration is at very low levels.
Zara’s social media provokes positive buzz about their products, fashion collections and brand:
Zara cat1 The “light” social media strategy is encouraging brand love, but not purchase consideration
  • Consumers discuss Zara’s “quality” and “stylish” clothing: People say clothes from Zara are “beautiful”, “good quality” and “trendy”. They also say the clothes collections are “the best”, “top” and “exquisite”. Some mention when they last bought Zara clothing or say which items they “love” such as Zara’s “t-shirts”, “polos” and “dresses”
  • Consumers discuss the fashion collections featured in the official social media content: People “love” the “cool” new fashion collections. They say the featured clothes are “gorgeous”, “classy” and “amazing”. They praise the “very nice”, “great” designs and a few say they “want” or “must have” items from the collections
  • The Zara Facebook page attracts a lot of positive brand buzz: Consumers post that they “really love Zara” as it is “the best” and their “favourite”. Some say Zara is a “cool” and “gorgeous” brand that is “a lifestyle”. However, a few say they “love Zara”, but they “can’t afford” to shop there
  • Some consumers ask for a Zara store in their city: Consumers ask for a Zara store in places such as California, Cape Town and Sydney. A few want the online store to be available in the US while others complain that their “online order hasn’t arrived yet”
While Zara social media is successful at encouraging brand love, it is less successful at prompting purchase consideration:
Zara bar The “light” social media strategy is encouraging brand love, but not purchase consideration
  • Over half of consumers who comment say they “love” Zara: Consumers use the Facebook wall to post spontaneously that they “love” Zara and their “fashion collections” and “clothes”. Others respond to the official fashion collection content by saying they “love Zara” and their “fashionable clothes”
  • However, purchase consideration is at very low levels: A few say they “must have” items in the fashion collections, but levels of purchase consideration are at much lower levels than seen for other fashion brands