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Until recently, my entire professional career has been spent within some of the world’s leading publishers and the three most important values I learned are trust, quality and experience. 

I don’t think it would be an exaggeration to say that now, more than any time in a generation, those values define the future of the media.

Yet, until recently, those trusted publishers and their journalists are struggling with the decline of print advertising and the migration of spend towards social platforms who benefit from only having to pay a small fee to the content creators (#cutecatpics). 

I am optimistic that society and brands have already started to recognize quality journalism (content creators and storytelling) not least because 80% of all time spent online is consuming content outside of the big social platforms. Let’s hope that this logical shift back to quality will only accelerate now that the world’s population is rediscovering the importance of quality information.

How do we ensure that quality news and journalism achieve a sustainable position within the media ecosystem? One way that we can assure this future as readers is to ensure that we become more thoughtful about what we consume and where (almost like how we consciously shop for food with better providence). As media and marketing professionals, we should also start to recognize and prioritize the importance of quality environments and content as a proxy for quality advertising outcomes.

It may be a little self-serving for me to point to native and sponsored content as part of the answer and opportunity but there is absolutely no doubt that it remains an unexploited channel. 

So why is this channel still underdeveloped?

Native achieves exceptional results and cost per outcome returns but the hard truth, until now, is that the quality of content and advertising has been extremely poor.  

It pains me to see such low quality content being served in such premium environments. Yesterday, I was reading an article on one of the best known sites and I was served a link to the five best solutions for senior incontinence. Whilst I may have recently hit 40, I don’t think this was ever going to improve my experience!

Not all content is created equal. The set of recommendations I was served on the main page of “Sectors”..!

In-feed sponsored content is booming on platforms like Facebook where they get it right by integrating personalized content that works for the user. That platform won’t scale for professional or B2B content but there’s no reason why we can’t produce an equally efficient approach to the “open” internet using quality publishers, aligned sponsored content and excellent technology.

Research proves that native advertising and sponsored content work to drive better engagement and ROI than standard display. However, unlike programmatic, where the industry has moved to improve quality and leverage the channel as an opportunity to personalize vs. simply serve poor quality ads into remnant inventory, native and sponsored content remains underrepresented in the ecosystem.

Quality is the starting point. Dianomi has been working hard in the background with the leading publishers (Reuters, MarketWatch…) to build a high quality supply of native opportunity. We’ve been working with a number of financial and technology brands to test delivery of high quality sponsored content into these premium environments to measure the results for both the publishers and the brands.

The results have been extremely encouraging. It’s not surprising that the publishers / editors are leaning in, monetizing without damaging the integrity of the “trust, quality and experience” mantra we discussed at the outset. Brands are also excited for the same reasons. It turns out that quality context unlocks performance and our native platform unlocks the scale.

I am excited to continue this work with the whole advertising eco-system. I’m determined to not allow Dianomi to dilute its purpose by taking on the wrong type of content/ brands. We are committed to financial, business and technology brands and publishers.

If you are a publisher, an agency focused on helping brands leverage their content investment in a safe and positive way or a brand – I’d be delighted for you to reach out. 

Now is the time to do business in the right way which means, creating trust, quality and a fantastic experience for the consumer.


 An Interview with Dianomi EVP Dianomi USA, Rachel Tuffney 

Gramercy Institute Chief Analyst, Bill Wreaks, recently met up with Rachel Tuffney, EVP Dianomi, USA. Tuffney leads North American growth and operations for this fast-growing London-based financial marketing firm.

Wreaks engaged with Tuffney to better understand the challenges and opportunities in the financial marketing world that we are all navigating today, Dianomi’s key value to financial marketers as well as the growth, success and North American potential of this important company.


READ FULL INTERVIEW

RachelT

“I think it is important that we start off by making sure that we think in human terms.”

Key Points Covered:

  • Crisis Advice in Financial Marketing
  • The Relevancy of Relevancy
  • Measurement of Success
  • Power of Content in Marketing
  • Our Industry’s Long-term Outlook

Account-based marketing can be a powerful tool in b2b marketing, allowing financial services firms to identify closely with their buying committees, according to Jennifer Grazel, managing director for US marketing and brand officer at RBC Capital Markets. With account-based marketing, “you’re no longer fishing with nets, but fishing with spears,” she said. 

For an M&A advisory firm, for example, account-based marketing means focusing on a buying committee that is vast and can include a chief executive, a board of directors, shareholders and the law firms that are advising a corporation.

A lot of companies in the B2B space begin an ecommerce initiative focusing on their existing customers. It’s very common for B2B companies to start there, and I believe that is probably responsible for a portion of the companies that fall within that 51.4%—it’s just the stage they-‘re at within their digital transformation journey.

Grazel explained that b2b marketing in financial services has changed dramatically in the past few years, from a focus on print execution solely, with ads in financial newspapers and sponsorships of events for example, to a much broader endeavor. 

“It’s really evolved since then and b2b marketers have to think more of a holistic, omni-channel approach and really an ecosystem approach in thinking about who their heartland audience is and at what stage they are in their information discovery journey,” she said. 

In the future, Grazel anticipates that formats will continue to evolve, with different channels connecting even further. “Ultimately, it’s about storytelling, but really thinking through your people and where they’re at in the decision journey. You have to re-think the varying channels and how you serve up the right information.”

Data has become critical in financial services marketing, especially as it relates to content marketing, according to Ed Nini, head of ETF Marketing at Principal Global Investors.

With the rise of content marketing, data has allowed firms to better understand and better assess which message connects with a particular audience and the next steps to undertake. It has allowed them to produce more personalized content that translates into actual sales.

“Data has changed the game,” said Nini. “Data has allowed us to target better. It has allowed us to understand the effectiveness of our content and overall marketing activities.”

He added that it also leads to better leads and sales engagement and that it helps connect the dots between marketing and sales.

“Having data helps us understand what is truly relevant and is truly engaging to a particular target audience,” he said. “Without that data, you’re throwing darts at the wall to determine what content sticks with that person,” which makes it more challenging to understand the cause and effect of a sale.

On a more granular level, data has shown that videos, especially short videos, as well as podcasts, have had a tremendous impact and effectiveness on target audiences. “Videos and podcasts are gaining more prominence in marketing strategies and being used as tactics that move the needle for marketing plans,” he explained. 

Nini predicts that going forward, the traditional intersection between marketing and sales in the B2B space will slowly disappear.

“Organizations will figure out a way for us to engage with a particular audience without human intervention,” he said. “It’s going to be a digital engagement, even digital capabilities, that we don’t realize today. Much different ways of delivering information.”

The power of marketing in financial services is about being able to assist sales and to have the two divisions work in tandem, according to David Master, chief marketing officer at global asset manager Janus Henderson Investors

“Increasingly, our sales organization is comfortable with ours serving up leads,” he said. “That may sound mundane, because isn’t that what marketing does everywhere? But in asset management, that has not always been the case. A lot of times, it’s been ‘keep your nose out of our business’.”

He explained that Janus has been able to create what he calls “interesting moments” that can be delivered to a firm’s sales team, a term he favors over leads. “I think leads sometimes take on a connotation that may be too extreme,” he said, adding that “interesting moments” can be created through advertising, webcasts or emails.

When sales and marketing are aligned closely and jointly executed through a specific campaign, it’s easier to look at the tangible results of that campaign. But firms should refrain from trying to figure out how much of the success should be attributed to marketing and how much should be attributed to sales, because it creates a chasm between sales and marketing.

Proper measurement in financial marketing can be extremely difficult, in part because marketing represents a cost. But combined with sales, which represents more an element of revenue, then the measurement makes a lot more sense, Master added. Looking at marketing activity just by itself is limited.

“As we begin to use more and more marketing automation, we’re careful about how we create stories and criteria that also characterize something as an interesting moment, and then we do hand those over,” Master said. “In that sense we are able to calculate a reasonable measure of what the cost of an interesting moment might have been. And we’re getting more and more data about how many of those interesting moments translate into something real and tangible.”

We are excited to announce that Rachel Tuffney has been named EVP of U.S. operations at Dianomi and charged with leading Dianomi’s North American business growth.

Rachel has spent most of her career in the financial services industry on both the client side (Citi) and the media side. She joins us from Dow Jones (WSJ), where she spent nearly ten years leading teams responsible for the key advertisers such as Morgan Stanley, Citi and State Street Global Advisors. Most recently, she was head of finance vertical sales and accountable for the largest business unit (revenue) across the business.

The U.S. region poses a significant growth opportunity for Dianomi and Rachel will be instrumental in defining both our future product and customer opportunities in that market. Marketers are moving away from third-party cookies and towards brand-safe targeting. We believe that contextual relevance, combined with highly engaged audiences, is a powerful proposition for marketers and where the industry is heading.

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By Rupert Hodson, CEO

Digital marketing is now well into its adolescence, having disrupted traditional media, advertising and publisher models, but its next stage of evolution will surely be advertisers and clients becoming ever more sensitive to context and real value of what they say and do online. Governance I predict will become increasingly significant for platforms, especially in the highly regulated industries in financial services. As anyone who has watched the alarming film “The Great Hack”, there’s ever growing concerns about privacy and “fake news” that is increasingly top of mind.

Our business at Dianomi now works with over 350 business and financial publishers around the world. They rely on us to be served reliable and fair advertisers and we in turn rely on them that the content is placed respectfully and in the right locations on their sites. As such any placed content or advertisements we operate for clients only ever appear in positions that are contextually relevant and that the message sources are quickly identifiable. The future success of placed content is becoming increasingly complex, as the boundaries blur from what was once advertising, to advertorial to news. I believe strong publisher brands have a vital role to play in safeguarding quality and integrity of reporting, narratives and advertising.

Since we founded Dianomi in 2003, we’ve watched some digital developments with growing anxiety. Piers and I have sat on panels worried about “programmatic advertising”, where advertisements are served to people’s own websites, irrespective of where they may be searching and visiting on the internet. Some of this feels innately discourteous, like stalking and although cost metrics might show such ads reach their audience, it is hard not to think that brands risk reputations by ads and messages appearing in the wrong locations. Running investment ads when I am searching say for a recipe on a food site feels just wrong and out of place. And increasingly, the idea of your computer watching your own moves and behaviours disturbingly can feel lacking users consent or permission.

In order to safeguard brands, firms increasingly need to ensure their content is clearly flagged as to the type of communication it is that is being served. Likewise, the objectives of marketing activity operate best when clear; ads can be superb traffic builders to client websites, insightful copy on its own can lift a brand’s credibility. Expecting both results from one activity might confuse the objectives of each.

I think Piers Currie of Warhorse Partners is right that metrics of digital against marketing success still has some catching up to do. The misattributed quote of Albert Einstein: “The computer is incredibly fast, accurate, and stupid. Man is incredibly slow, inaccurate, and brilliant. The marriage of the two is a force beyond calculation” is surely still so true. As we evolve into the next generation of users, understanding the right measures of how we balance both brilliantly will be the recurring challenge.

This article was originally published by Warhorse Partners.

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At Dianomi, we spend a great deal of time analyzing campaign performance data to understand why certain ads perform better. One of the reasons is targeting and the other is creative. Once you have a thorough understanding of who you are targeting, you should optimize your creative for the best performance. (Want more insights? Download our Mastering Native Advertising in Financial Services Report here.)

We evaluate creative variations and make real-time optimizations with placements, so that the advertiser achieves the best performance. Our data shows that the better the headline, the better a native ad performs. The best performing headline that we’ve seen performed at 650 percent more than the average. In native advertising, certainly the headline is the best chance for a quick win to drive more sales. Here are five surefire tips to master your headline creative in your next native ad:

Write for the time poor reader: According to data from Microsoft, people lose concentration after eight seconds. This is why the best headlines are 70 characters or fewer and get straight to the point.

Use High Performance Words: There are 49 words that best perform in headlines. Some of them are:

  • Numbers and years: 5, 7, 9, 10, 20XX: The No. 1….
  • Questions: What, Why, When, Which, Will, etc.
  • Adjectives: Top, Exclusive, Essential and Critical
  • Benefit: Ways, Rules, Tips, Facts, Lessons, Reasons and Secrets
  • Qualify the Audience: Words like Trader, Investor Financial Advisor, Retiree

A/B Test: There is no reason why you cannot and should not test your native ad content. In one situation, we tested two headlines where one headline generated a 48 percent higher click-through rate than the other.

Get into your customer’s head: The key to any marketing is knowing what is important to your customers. A/B testing will only tell you how one ad performs against another. Spending time with your sales team, and understanding what’s important to your customers, should be key to informing any content strategy.

As marketing in financial services moves away from big campaigns and blanket messages, innovation is becoming crucial.

“I’m a big believer that innovation is important in every aspect of everything you do professionally, but particularly in marketing when you think how fast paced the world has become. If you are not moving beyond the status quo, you are going to become irrelevant very quickly,” says Janette Jovic, head of digital and content at PGIM Marketing, adding that her team is now moving towards more agile, test-and-learn, marketing initiatives.

Innovation comes in many different shapes and forms. One aspect of innovation that PGIM has already fully embraced is analytics, and not just as it relates to digital channels.

“We hired a marketing analytics manager that sits within our team,” Jovic says. “I worked with him to develop an executive dashboard that gives us a sense of how everything is performing across all of our marketing efforts, including offline, things like conference engagements, PR. That really helps us to understand what’s working and what isn’t.”

Another way to innovate is to focus on personalization, which she sees as the future of marketing in financial services. Offering tailored content to clients is one piece of the puzzle, but “it’s really about offering them something that allows you to connect on a one-on-one level,” according to Jovic.

“It’s only going to resonate with them if it truly helps them do their job or make better decisions at the end of the day. That is something that, until we can do it in a very thoughtful way that’s true to our brand, we’re not even going attempt it. But we’re thinking about it.”

Jovic explains that as people consume information in different ways, in both their personal and professional lives across industries, they’ve come to expect a certain standard, and PGIM has realized that it has to be there to meet clients where they are.

In a world where everybody can build a global brand through technology and social media, but where brands can also easily be destroyed, protecting a brand’s integrity has become more important than ever.

“You’ve always had to protect your brand,” said Wendy Marcone, senior vice president for global marketing at Bank of America. “I don’t know of a time when that wasn’t true. There’s just a lot more opportunities for your brand to take a hit.”

She explained that large companies need to have checkpoints in place to ensure marketing messages are well understood by everyone. This is especially true at global companies.

“If something works very well in the US market, it may not work in every other market,” she said. “It might be offensive, or insulting, or something they can’t even pronounce. There’s a lot to think about.”

She added that “reputational risk is a big deal and the path back from that sometimes can be long”.

In Marcone’s world, internal marketing goes hand in hand with managing that reputational risk, since hiring people who represent the brand accurately goes along way in protecting it.

“Internal marketing has almost become more important than anything else in certain ways,” she said. “The bankers are really the stewards of the brand. They’re out there all the time with clients.”

Every bank employee must believe in what Marcone and her team are trying to communicate about the brand and the company’s personality. “If it’s not believable to them, why would a client, or a prospect, ever believe it.”