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ProBlogger: New Challenges for Advertisers & Why Bloggers and Influencers Will Be Their New Best Friend

ProBlogger: New Challenges for Advertisers & Why Bloggers and Influencers Will Be Their New Best Friend

Link to ProBlogger

New Challenges for Advertisers & Why Bloggers and Influencers Will Be Their New Best Friend

Posted: 25 Oct 2016 06:00 AM PDT

New Challenges for Advertisers & Why Bloggers and Influencers Will Be Their New Best Friend

By ProBlogger Advertising Expert Alita Harvey-Rodriguez of MilkIt Academy.

It's a tough world out there for bloggers. You all have incredible engaging content that your readers love, yet almost everyone expects something for free.

You probably know that your content is more valuable than you're paid or compensated for but justifying your media prices can often be a battle. However, things are about to change for bloggers and justifying media prices are about to become a lot easier, if you know how to change the conversation.

I've been working with tier 1 advertisers, brands and software providers for over a decade and one thing I know about is when trends are changing and strategies need to be approached differently. I also understand the art of influential selling.

The first thing you need to know is you have something no other media outlet has, religious loyal following. You have what's called 'emotional influence'. No brand or traditional advertiser has this.

Take Aussie start-up HiSmile for example. In three years they have built a $10m business all thanks to a strategy to use influencers and celebs to spread the word. Millennial founders Nik Mirkovic and Alex Tomic decided on several when launching the company, and while most traditionalists would be thinking "$10million on just teeth whitening? Impossible!" it's not – the game has changed and the fastest-growing and most influential brands get it.

Now it's time for you to understand the power that lies in the future of your creative little hands.

Challenges Advertisers Are Facing For The Future

Banner blindness is a real thing. Consumers are no longer reacting to advertising like we have in the past. Media has taken a paradigm shift, no one really watches TV ads, reading, magazines or looking at billboards anymore.

This is especially true with millennials who are about to take over the Earth in terms of wealth creation, and the way these guys consume media is wildly contradictory to previous generations. Brands really need to start thinking like millennials.

The rules of advertising, the way people interact with advertising and get new ideas about products to better their lives have changed forever. Advertisers are having to find new ways to create awareness.

  • Ad blockers – The usage of these bad boys have sky rocketed in the last three years. According to Statista in 2015, 198 million internet users use Ad Blockers, up from 54 million in 2013.
    • Not something advertisers will have to worry about too much with booking media through Bloggers
  • Penguin 4.0 – If you're not all over this like a rash then it's time to brush up on the 411 surrounding the good news for quality advertisers… like you, a blogger! Google's now real-time algorithm update in short will be stomping out any spammy looking website’s backlinks. Google wants amazing high quality content. Simples. (We presume this is going to affect a few CDN Content Delivery Networks)
  • Shift in consumer advertising consumption – Like I mentioned earlier in this post, consumer behaviour has changed massively, no one really watches TV ads, reads magazines or notices billboards anymore, especially the millennials. We rely on real social media (Word of mouth from trusted sources like our friends and you!), we tune into LIVE TV and stream when we are ready to watch and when making a big purchase we research to either find the best deal or the best fit for our elaborate needs.

How to pitch better as a blogger

So now knowing all of this, here is my advice to help you pitch to the top of the town with confidence.

Brand managers and media buyers need to be comfortable with new ways of buying media, and you need to get yourself in the mix. Especially if you have good traffic and a solid social following.

1. Your strategy should be two fold, new followers and new advertisers

This is pretty self explanatory. If you want funding to grow your blog you need to have a dual focus.

2. Create your hit list

Who will you be approaching in 2017 and beyond to advertise on your blog? Let the hustle begin!

My advice: THINK BIG. There is no such thing as too big. This big thinking has helped us secure celebrity endorsement for our brands before, "if you aim, shoot for the moon. Even if you miss, you’ll land among the stars"

3. Communicate with authority

When cold calling, have a basic script ready with your elevator pitch and why your phone call will matter to them. I admit, not all calls go to script, but it's good have on hand if you're not a confident cold caller.

You have value, avoid discounting yourself and instead think about how you add value. Providing brands with estimated ROI (return on Investment) tables can help you seal the deal! We use this strategy all the time with selling software. This is the info that really matters to a CEO when choosing what gets approved in the budget.

4.Have a solid advertiser sales process

Make sure you have a firm process for offline sales. When a brand manager asks you what the process is have it there with you in a step by step process making it easy for you to manage and keep your busy brand manager happy.

Conclusion

The power is in the hands of the bloggers. The future for bloggers securing funding from brands is knowing your value and how to pitch yourself correctly.

I hope these tips help, let me know how you go and leave me a comment below!

Alita Harvey-Rodriguez is known as one of Australia’s leading Digital Marketing Futurist and the brains behind Milk it Academy. A training platform an consulting firm to advance businesses into the Millennial market place and improve marketers skills into new school digital leaders.

For over a decade Alita has worked with global brands including SAP, Experian, SEMRush, TS14+, Estee Lauder, Myer & Online Retailer. Alita is a regular contributor to Womens Agenda, SEMRush, internetretailer.com.au, 2015 ORIA Judge (Online Retailer Industry Awards) and the leading lecturer at the Digital Marketing Institute for Email Marketing and Marketing Automation. Follow Alita on Twitter at @MsAlitaHR

The post New Challenges for Advertisers & Why Bloggers and Influencers Will Be Their New Best Friend appeared first on ProBlogger.

      

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney

My Hate & Love Experiences With Marketing Agencies

Posted: 24 Oct 2016 07:30 PM PDT

You got everything cooking in your business but you need one component or more.

  • Maybe you need an agency to take on your media buying.
  • Maybe you need an agency to take on your SEO.
  • Maybe you need an agency to handle your PR.

You are busy doing what you do best and bringing in one of these is a magic bullet…  or is it..  Let me walk you through my experience in dealing with agencies for my own companies and others.

First you start off with a couple of conference calls which establish your goals.

Then comes the monthly base retainer.  Usually 3-10k.

Now the work begins.

As fucked up as it sounds a lot of agencies have this model.  They will ask you for things… a LOT of things and when you find time to deliver them they will want changes to them…. and more changes.

They will assure you they will never stop trying and promise to make it work.

I would say you of the last 10 agencies I have worked with they have never worked out.  And it was “my fault” because I did not supply them with what they needed to be “successful”.

Yup I just did not have the time to constantly give them what they wanted.  Often I said to myself or the people using them felt like “Jesus Christ”.  What do I need them for.

Most of them lock you into an auto-renewing 1-2 year contract for their monthly base.

Fortunately in my situation they have always let me out of that when it was clear to me I just did not have the time to supply them with what they wanted.

But that cost me 25-50k in a couple situations.

So thats the bad,  now let me talk about the good.

In the case of a PR firm the had me gather all the places I had been mentioned and write several bio’s of myself.  I also had great content to propose to big magazines and reporters. I already had all the contacts.  They simply made me prepare the documents.  They got me 70% there.  So from their I had success just having my assistant reach out to my press contacts.

In the case of the Facebook agency they had me make a TON of creatives.  Graphics ads of various sizes.  Video’s for video ads.  Get a bunch of landing pages made.  Again got me about 75% there.   The fact is I have been doing Facebook advertising for a decade.  Way before the IPO.  In fact I was at one time spending over a hundred thousand dollars a day on Facebook advertising.  Now I was fully prepared.  They offered no value anymore.  I could run the ads myself.

While there was never a magic bullet it was almost like a coach that made you do what you needed to do.

So in the end it worked out.  Yes it cost me a lot of money to get that done… but with the Facebook ads alone I made that back the first month.  And I don’t have to pay a monthly base fee or a percentage of advertising spend.

But it never would have happen without hiring them.