Archives de catégorie : Video Marketing

Video: Snack Marketing

Business is booming for snack brands, but the flipside is that the category is much more competitive than it’s been in the past. Consumers are snacking all the time, and they see everything as a snack—fortified dairy alternative beverages, yogurt, bars, cheese, nut butters, fruit, etc.

In this video recorded at the 20th SuplySide West in Las Vegas, Lynn Dornblaser, director of innovation and insights, Mintel, explores the topic she covered in the panel discussion, « How to Profit from the Healthy Snack Revolution. » Dornblaser and Sandy Almendarez, editor in chief, INISDER disucss:

Here from the other speakers in the snacks panel discussion:

For now, TV broadcasters see Facebook Live as marketing

Facebook’s live video might rack up enormous numbers, but TV broadcasters still see it as a marketing vehicle for the cash cow of TV.

When the Cleveland Cavaliers received their championship rings before the NBA season opener last night, you could have caught the pregame ceremony on TNT, which broadcast the game that followed. But the ceremony also streamed on TNT’s Facebook page. The main purpose: drive tune-in of the actual game.

“That’s really about marketing,” said Will Funk, evp of sales and property partnerships at Turner, to Digiday during the Live Fronts, an industry conference focused on the growth of live video across platforms. “If you want to see the game, it’s going to direct you to go see the live game telecast.”

While Twitter has started buying broadcast rights to live sports, and a few Facebook-savvy publishers like Bleacher Report and The Lad Bible are doing some live-game broadcasts of their own on the platform, the reality is that live sports on social platforms at scale is still pretty far away. Media partners like CBS and Turner are not likely to broadcast full games on social platforms anytime soon.

“I don’t think [social] will be a place to distribute our most premium content unless the economics change significantly,” said Jeff Gerttula, svp and gm of CBS Sports Digital.

That doesn’t mean sports broadcasters won’t continue to use Facebook Live as a place to experiment with different types of content. CBS Sports, for instance, broadcasts a Sunday morning fantasy football show on Facebook. The company sees Facebook as a way to drive people to watch other episodes of “Fantasy Football Today,” which airs daily on CBS Sports websites and apps. CBS Sports started doing this recently, so it’s not clear how effective Facebook will be in driving audience for content on CBS Sports platforms, but the company is willing to test it out.

“It’s just the first inning,” said Gerttula. “We’re trying a bunch of different things to find out what works, but it’s not a business yet.”

Of course, sports broadcasters sit in a unique position where their most valuable live content — and, therefore, a lot of their time — is focused on TV and expanding and monetizing that in digital and social.

Other TV brands, like NBCUniversal-owned E! News, have also been experimenting with Facebook Live and might have a quicker path to making revenue from the platform. Today, E! News produces about four hours of live video for Facebook every week. This includes its daily morning show “Live from E,” which streams at 9:30 a.m. ET. On Thursday, it plans to launch a Facebook Live series called “Freestyle” with advertiser Ulta Beauty sponsoring the first three episodes, said John Najarian, evp and gm of E! News.

E! News is ramping up its sales efforts around Facebook Live, Najarian said, but there still needs to be a better understanding of metrics. Facebook does not offer an average-minute-audience stat, which TV networks and advertisers use to determine the number of viewers a program has during any 60-second portion of the broadcast. It’s a stat that Twitter offers for its live NFL streams, and would be helpful for media companies when they pitch advertisers on integrations into Facebook live videos.

“[Facebook Live] is a business in development,” Najarian said. “No new platform ever launches with immediate windfalls of revenue. I’ve been in this business long enough to know that when Google got into search, it wasn’t making money right away. Let’s see where this takes us.”

Tech Company Sees Rising Demand for Reverse Mortgage Video Marketing

In response to a growing number of inquiries for reverse mortgage educational resources, one content marketing company has created a series of informational videos that teach consumers about Home Equity Conversion Mortgages.

This month, video content service Fast Forward Stories released a new “Reverse Mortgage Explainer Video Library”for mortgage companies, loan originators, credit unions and banks to use in their reverse mortgage marketing materials.

The library consists of 12 short videos that provide answers and basic run-throughs of the most common consumer questions about reverse mortgages, compiled in a visual, simple-language style.

“A video series on reverse mortgages has been the most-requested new library this year,” said Matthew Dunn, CEO of Fast Forward. “We received terrific assistance in research and terms clarifications from associations focused on reverse mortgages, and are delighted to bring this library to market.”

Fast Forward creates pre- and post-roll content, and provides instant branding for companies operating in the mortgage, real estate, title and insurance industries. With the addition to the new series for reverse mortgages, the company now offers over 175 licensable “explainer” videos.

The age-old proverb among marketers is that content is king. This statement is especially true for video marketing, which recent data indicates is the most preferred medium through which consumers learn about a company’s products or services.

“Video is the key competitive asset for consumer attention now, especially on networks like Facebook,” Dunn said.

About four times as many customers would rather watch a video about a product than read about it, and almost 50% of internet users look for videos related to a certain product or service before visiting a store, according to data compiled by HubSpot, a Boston-based provider of inbound marketing and sales software.

Additionally, while 90% of users say that product videos are helpful in their decision process, HubSpot found that nearly two-thirds of consumers prefer videos under 60 seconds. Less than a minute in length, the brevity of Fast Forward’s reverse mortgage shorts fall into this wheelhouse.

“Conventional explainer-video production is slow—a 12-video library could easily take six months,” Dunn said. “We’ve reduced that to less than 60 seconds to brand and deliver the entire set.”

Fast Forward’s 12- video library for reverse mortgages is currently available for mortgage companies and professionals to download at the company’s webpage, with pricing varying depending on licensing.

Written by Jason Oliva

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Microsoft’s online video success

NEW YORK: Microsoft, the tech company, is making effective use of online video to engage consumers – and has discovered that this channel can match the impact of television on many core metrics.

Kathleen Hall, Corporate Vice President/Global Advertising and Media at Microsoft, discussed this subject at Advertising Week 2016.

More specifically, she suggested that digital video offers some distinct advantages for brands when it comes to extending their narratives.

« What I love about online video is that you don’t face the constraints that you face in television – of time, fundamentally. So the depth of the story is the time it takes to tell the story, which gives you a lot of flexibility, » she said. (For more, read Warc’s exclusive reports: Microsoft’s approach to digital storytelling.)

« I think the richness and depth that you can go to in digital without constraints of time, and the sequencing of how you release online video versus what you might do on television – when you’re forced to rely on the timing of the program – has really changed the game for digital. »

One example of Microsoft’s successful use of this medium was « Make What’s Next », an initiative coinciding with International Women’s Day 2016, and drawing on the insight that many girls and young women in the US couldn’t name a female inventor.

Having highlighted the problem of educational bias, the company then created content looking at female innovators like Ada Lovelace, Tabitha Babbitt and Yvonne Brill – and inspiring girls to pursue similar aspirations.

This effort was supported by Microsoft’s owned-media channels, its encouraging of viral enthusiasm for the program, and some tactical paid media. But the underlying story, Hall reported, is always the most important consideration.

« The story is everything, » she reported. « You’ve got to have a great idea [that is] executed well. People aren’t going to pass around crap. That’s not going to happen. »

And the impact of « Make What’s Next » helped prove out the growing power of online video when compared with more traditional channels.

« We measured it in our Nielsen data, » Hall said. « It scored as well as an ad we ran on television in terms of recall. We never put it on television so if you look at the efficiency of that, it’s pretty darn cool. »

Data sourced from Warc

Italian video advertising 30% up in 2016

The OTT and VoD Video Advertising market in Italy will grow above 30 per cent this year, representing one fourth of total online advertising, according to figures published by Interactive Advertising Bureau Italia.

This compares to 2015, when the Video Advertising market was worth €364 million (+25 per cent on 2014) and accounted for 21 per cent of total investments.

Audiweb data reveals a growth of the Digital Audience (+9.1 per cent in two years), particularly on Mobile Devices (+24 per cent).

In terms of content, video platforms are registering increased interest, while TV content on mobile devices grew at a rate of 40 per cent over the past year. Videos are accessed 77 per cent (+24.5 per cent over last year) on Mobile Devices and in 23 per cent of the cases on PCs or desktops.

Figures from IAB Europe indicate that the digital market in Europe was worth €36.4 billion in 2015, beating for the first time the TV market, with video advertising used by 90 per cent of operators.

On the content front, news and sports channels are those that have the most video advertisements.

AT&T’s DirecTV Now online video service to cost $35 per month


NEW YORK ATT Inc’s upcoming DirecTV Now online video service will cost $35 per month, including mobile streaming costs, and target viewers who shun pay-television subscriptions, Chief Executive Randall Stephenson said on Tuesday.

The wireless company’s streaming video service, which launches late next month, will have more than 100 channels, Stephenson said at the WSJ.D Live conference in California.

ATT said on Saturday that it would buy Time Warner Inc for $85.4 billion, as it looks to diversify its business into the media and entertainment market.

The Time Warner deal gives ATT control of cable TV channels HBO and CNN, film studio Warner Bros and other coveted media assets. Time Warner content will be incorporated into the upcoming video service, Stephenson said.

« Thirty-five dollars, you don’t find that for a hundred channels in the marketplace, with wireless streaming, » Stephenson said.

ATT is betting big on mobile video to tap new revenue as the U.S. wireless market stagnates. ATT acquired DirecTV for $48.5 billion in 2015, making it the largest U.S. pay-TV operator with 25.3 million video subscribers.

ATT is entering a crowded market that services viewers who increasingly consume video online rather than through cable and satellite television services. Dish Network Corp’s Sling TV offers about two dozen channels for $20 a month, while Sony Corp’s PlayStation Vue has packages as big as 100-plus channels for $55 a month.

Online video service Hulu will roll out a new live TV bundle of broadcast and cable network channels early next year.

ATT has said that DirecTV Now will have content from partners including Walt Disney Co, Viacom Inc and Scripps Networks Interactive.

(Reporting by Malathi Nayak; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Meredith Mazzilli)

Kamouraska: collision mortelle entre un train et un véhicule

La Sûreté du Québec a reçu un appel vers 16h pour un accident qui s’était produit à un passage à niveau de la route Saint-Germain à Saint-Germain-de-Kamouraska. L’impact s’est produit alors que l’auto se dirigeait vers le sud, tandis que la locomotive circulait en direction ouest. La conductrice, qui était seule à bord de sa voiture, a été transportée d’urgence en ambulance à l’hôpital de La Pocatière, où son décès a été constaté.

Pour l’instant, les circonstances de l’accident demeurent inexpliquées. «On a un policier en enquête collision qui a été mandaté sur place, mentionne la porte-parole de la Sûreté du Québec, Ann Mathieu. Il y a plusieurs personnes qui ont été rencontrées à titre de témoins relativement à cet événement-là. On va colliger toutes les informations qu’on aura recueillies, autant de la scène qui a été expertisée que des différents témoins rencontrés. On pourra ensuite transmettre le dossier au coroner.»

Comme dans tout accident mortel, les enquêteurs vont passer en revue les derniers moments de vie de la victime. «Il est clair qu’on va rencontrer tous les gens qu’elle a pu voir et auxquels elle a pu parler dans les dernières 24 heures, précise la sergente Mathieu. Donc, on va également connaître l’itinéraire de cette dame-là.» L’identité de la septuagénaire, une résidente de Saint-Alexandre-de-Kamouraska, devrait être dévoilée mardi.

Alice au pays du pouvoir

Au-delà de la guerre surréaliste de mots autour de l’expression même de «culture du viol», il reste une société secouée. Secouée par les agressions sexuelles à l’Université­­ Laval et par l’indifférence initiale de sa direction.

Secouée par les allégations d’agression sexuelle d’Alice Paquet contre Gerry­­ Sklavounos­­, député et ex-leader parlementaire du gouvernement Couillard. Secouée­­ par le lynchage virtuel­­ de Mme Paquet­­ dans les médias sociaux.

Pendant ce temps, des questions cruciales sont laissées sans réponses. Comment se fait-il que les comportements connus de «crouseur» «insistant» et «déplacé» de M. Sklavounos aient pu se déployer­­ en toute impunité et aussi longtemps dans les couloirs de l’Assemblée nationale?

Y a-t-il ou non des «cas» semblables dans d’autres partis politiques? Lors­qu’ils­­ harcèlent ou abusent d’une femme, pourquoi le silence persiste-t-il encore face à des hommes de «pouvoir», qu’il soit politique, financier, familial ou bêtement hiérarchique?

Bouclier de silence

Que l’on passe ne serait-ce qu’une seconde­­ à questionner le passé des victimes­­ au lieu de s’indigner du bouclier de silence complice derrière lequel leurs prédateurs se cachent me laisse toujours sans voix.

Et que dire de l’étiquette trop facile de «mononc’»? Cette­­ fausse analogie ne sert qu’à banaliser l’abaissement et le mépris des femmes par des paroles dégradantes, des mains baladeuses non sollicitées ou une agression.

Pendant qu’en 2016 on intime encore aux femmes de «verrouiller leurs portes», de plus en plus d’hommes dénoncent enfin, eux aussi, de tels comportements.

Mais comment combattre la violence sexuelle dans nos sociétés dites avancées? S’il est vrai qu’au Québec on reparle­­ beaucoup d’«égalité hommes-femmes» depuis quelques années, le problème est que nous le faisons en confondant «égalité» et «laïcité».

Or, ce même principe d’égalité est un sujet en soi. Et ce, sur tous les plans – social, politique, sexuel, religieux et économique­­.

À glacer le sang

Vendredi, Le Devoir faisait état d’une recherche universitaire dont les résultats glacent le sang. On y apprend que le tiers des participants – âgés de 21 à 35 ans, dont 40 % d’étudiants –, «pousseraient la séduction jusqu’à l’agression s’ils étaient assurés de ne pas être poursuivis». Le tiers!

Dans les officines du pouvoir, cette donnée doit sonner l’alerte. Nourrie entre autres par un accès direct à la porno­­ sur le web, s’il est vrai que la culture­­ d’objectivation des femmes n’est plus dominante, elle s’avère néanmoins plus tenace que prévu. Voire intergénérationnelle.

Des pistes de solutions existent. On le sait. Y compris de ressusciter le rempart essentiel de l’éducation. Au Québec, les cours d’éducation sexuelle ont toutefois été abolis. Face à sa propre gaffe, le ministère de l’Éducation propose un projet-pilote pour une quinzaine d’écoles.

Il prévoit non pas un cours comme tel, mais des «apprentissages» de «5 à 15 heures par année» du préscolaire au secondaire. C’est mieux que rien, diront certains.

Comme contrepoids urgent à la culture entêtée d’objectivation des femmes, le projet prend soudainement des airs de parent pauvre.

Pakistan : 58 morts dans l’attaque d’une école de police

Trois kamikazes lourdement armés ont fait irruption pendant la nuit dans une académie de police de Quetta, au sud-ouest du Pakistan, semant la terreur pendant plusieurs heures et tuant 60 personnes avant d’être abattus. Ce nouveau bilan, qui remplace un précédant faisant état de 58 morts, a été fourni à l’AFP mardi matin par le porte-parole du gouvernement de la province du Baloutchistan, Anwarullah Kakar. Il s’agit de l’une des attaques les plus meurtrières cette année au Pakistan. Il a également confirmé que 118 personnes avaient été blessées. L’attentat, qui n’a pas été revendiqué dans l’immédiat, a été attribué à un groupe islamiste.

Les forces de sécurité continuaient de patrouiller sur les lieux du drame mardi matin tandis que des proches de victimes commençaient à arriver sur place, en larmes, avant d’être renvoyées vers les hôpitaux. Les funérailles des défunts devraient avoir lieu plus tard dans la journée.

Selon l’armée, les assaillants ont pénétré avant minuit dans le Collège de police situé à une vingtaine de kilomètres à l’est de Quetta, capitale de la province du Baloutchistan. Les vastes locaux abritaient quelque 700 recrues de la police, dont beaucoup ont fui, terrifiées, pendant l’assaut. Une fois l’alerte donnée, les forces de sécurité se sont mobilisées en l’espace de 20 minutes, a déclaré le général Sher Afgan, commandant du Frontier Corps, un corps paramilitaire chargé de la contre-offensive. Sur place, «nous avons découvert que des recrues avaient été prises en otage». «Il a été mis fin à l’attaque environ trois heures après notre arrivée», a-t-il ajouté.

Le général a attribué l’attaque à une faction du groupe islamiste Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, allié des talibans pakistanais. Selon lui, les assaillants «communiquaient avec des cadres en Afghanistan».

Une province stratégique

L’attaque a été menée par trois kamikazes armés, a déclaré à la presse le ministre de l’Intérieur de la province du Baloutchistan, Mir Sarfaraz Ahmed Bugti. «L’homme en poste sur la tour de garde s’est battu très courageusement. Après l’avoir tué, les terroristes ont réussi à entrer», a-t-il relaté, rejetant la notion de «faille dans la sécurité». «Lorsque vous êtes en état de guerre et qu’un kamikaze arrive, c’est une autre situation. Mais quoi qu’il en soit nous mènerons une enquête et les coupables seront punis», a-t-il ajouté.

«J’ai vu trois hommes en tenue de camouflage, le visage caché et armés de kalachnikovs, a raconté un témoin se présentant comme policier en formation, interviewé par une chaîne télévisée. Ils ont commencé à tirer et sont entrés dans le dortoir mais j’ai réussi à m’échapper en passant par dessus un mur».

Le Baloutchistan, la plus vaste et la plus pauvre des provinces du Pakistan en dépit d’importantes ressources naturelles, est l’une des plus instables du pays. Elle est régulièrement secouée par des violences islamistes, en proie à des conflits inter-communautaires ainsi qu’à une insurrection séparatiste. En août, un attentat revendiqué à la fois par une faction talibane, Jammat-ul-Ahrar (JuA), et par le groupe Etat islamique (EI) avait fait 73 morts dans un hôpital de Quetta alors qu’une foule s’y recueillait sur la dépouille du bâtonnier de la province, assassiné quelques heures plus tôt.

Le Baloutchistan est également stratégique car c’est là que débouchent d’ambitieuses infrastructures routières et énergétiques reliant la Chine à la mer d’Arabie. Ce couloir économique sino-pakistanais (CPEC), qui a requis 46 milliards de dollars d’investissements chinois, a été la cible de nombre d’attaques, notamment de séparatistes baloutches, mais la Chine s’est dite confiante quant à la capacité de l’armée pakistanaise à y contrôler la situation.

Les violences islamistes ont fait des milliers de morts depuis l’émergence de groupes armés extrémistes dans la foulée de la décision d’Islamabad de soutenir les Etats-Unis lors de leur invasion de l’Afghanistan des talibans en 2001 après les attentats du 11 septembre.


AFP

Attention Marketers! Your digital advertising and marketing specialists will be obsolete in 2017

As we sprint through the final months of 2016, many of us in the advertising and marketing industry are given over to thoughts of the year ahead. The typical planning process involves amongst other things, sales forecasts, marketing budgeting, go-to-market plans. headcount, and team structure. All of this budgeting is done in the face of a market that’s battling shrinking ad budgets, layoffs and industry consolidations.

In Hong Kong for example, ad budgets have seen three consecutive quarters of mid-teen declines in 2016 and many agree that this will last to early parts of 2017.

I have news for you and you may not like it. I’ll go out on a ledge and make the following prediction: your digital advertising and marketing specialist teams/divisions will be soon be obsolete and 2017 will mark the start of it.

Whether you’re a digital specialist agency or an in-house digital team, you’re going to be obsolete.

The idea of a digital agency and/or its spin offs, in each search, social, content, programmatic, mobile, creative were born out of necessity. While digital was emerging, specialized units were required to capture the consumers increasingly fragmented time spent online and on mobile.

The model worked well in the nascent stages of the industry’s development. At the time, we were at the beginning of the shift to digital and it comforted advertisers to know that their digital brand management were in the hands experts who knew digital platforms like the back of their hands.

We’re now right in the thick of it. Print is dying. Radio is not growing and disrupted by streaming services such as Spotify. TV industry executives are shifting uncomfortably in their seats. Cord cutters are growing. Digital audio platforms such as streaming music and podcasting are taking off. Digital video? That train has left the station and is chugging straight into the future.

Eventually, EVERY form of media will be DIGITAL. Every traditional media company today is transforming itself into a digital content producer. Many are giving specific focus to mobile and online video. As we speak, boardrooms across the world are filled with executives planning when they will stop the printing press and rely solely on digital platforms. As a matter of fact, board room discussions between ATT and Time Warner are happening with Bloomberg predicting that a merger announcement will happen as soon as Monday, valuing the deal at US$86 billion.

*Update Oct 23, 2016: ATT has formally announced they will buy Time Warner for US$85.4 billion.

The discussions centre around how they will re-position themselves as “content companies” rather than newspaper / television / radio companies. Print will eventually lose all consumer mindshare and fade from relevance while the definition of television is blurring with OTT, Mobile Apps, and yet uninvented technologies.

Consumers no longer care where their content lives. It makes no difference to them if a Korean drama is on their phone versus or on free-to-air television or on cable. They just choose to consume media on their platform of choice and at time and place of their convenience. News on their mobile, via Facebook, Twitter versus on print. Ads on the radio or on Spotify. Searching for information online versus the yellow pages… well, yes, the yellow pages directory as we knew it is more than dead.

And therein lies the key question; if consumers, our target audience and eventual customers are platform blind then why are we still placing so much emphasis on platform silos?

While the current specialist model has worked for many years, it’s time to move on. It’s time to reshape your company’s marketing organization structure and get rid of the digital specialist units/persons and make everyone a digital specialist.

This has to start at the top, with a digitally savvy CEO, one with an appetite to continuously tap on digital platforms for the survival of their business.

Soon all content, entertainment and communications platforms will be digital and 2017 will be a key year. The last quarter of 2016 is a good a time as any to push for a change in your marketing team.

Globally, digital advertising is expected to overtake TV and most of traditional advertising by 2017. According to eMarketer, US digital advertising is expected to overtake television as the largest ad platform for the first time becoming the single largest media at 38.4% of all ad spends versus television of 35.8%*.

Closer to home, PWC predicts that in Hong Kong, digital advertising will overtake television as the largest advertising segment surpassing television by 2017 and will be worth up to US$1 billion by 2020 with a CAGR of 10% annually all the way to 2020.

“Hong Kong has one of the world’s highest mobile penetration rates, but advertising dollars have transitioned slowly because of limited applications to support mobile payments compared to China’s mature m-commerce sector. The emergence of social media TV and high video consumption are attractive avenues for advertisers to grow dollars and a captive consumer base,” said Wilson Chow, PwC China and Hong Kong TMT leader. The video segment is growing. By 2020, Hong Kong’s mobile video Internet advertising market will account for 35.7 percent of total mobile display Internet advertising revenue, PwC reported.”

China’s Internet advertising market is already the largest in Asia and the second-largest globally after the US. In 2014, total Internet advertising revenue was US$16.62bn and forecast to reach US$33.55bn by 2019. A CAGR of 15.1% makes China the fastest-growing of the top five global Internet advertising markets.**

And if you believe that digital will be the largest advertising segment in 2017, you as brands, marketers, agencies need to drastically shake up your organization, and in today’s term, be a “digital agency / in-house digital team”.

The fact that most digital media or in house digital departments in Hong Kong agencies and brands are no more than a handful of people simply does no justice to the figures. Digital advertising is is at the cusp of being the largest advertising segments and there are only a handful of people in each agency that truly understand it.

Most brands I have spoken to intend to increase their ad budgets on digital platforms. Some are planning to allocate 50% or more of their budget to digital in 2017. Shouldn’t that warrant a much larger focus on digital in your marketing department ?

The inevitability of digital advertising becoming the dominant form of advertising, even here in Asia and Hong Kong, is happening sooner than you’d like. As brands, advertisers and agencies, you need to be ready to ride on this growth to capture the hearts and minds of your consumers.

That leaves brands and agencies with two choices; either you grow your digital specialist team or kill your digital teams… and make EVERYONE a digital specialist.

I favor the latter approach. Everyone has to be an expert in digital disciplines. In the era of AirBnB, Uber, WeChat, Twitter, YouTube, Weibo, Netflix, Spotify, Facebook and Google, it is everyone’s job to know digital, because eventually, it will all be digital.

Yes, it is by no means an easy task. For most large organizations with hundreds if not thousands of people whose careers blossomed in the golden era of linear television and print this will be a daunting task.

However your business survival depends on it. Your customers are spending more and more time in a digital envroment. If that’s where your customers are, then that’s where you need to be as well. Everyone needs to learn how to leverage digital platforms to reach your next generation of consumers. Without consumers / customers, you will have no business being in business.

As you plan for 2017, it’s time to trade up your skills, experience and knowledge in readership, viewership, GRPs and TARPS for unique users, UDID, Cookies, CPMs, CPIs and CPAs.

Your customers are living in a digital age. It’s time for you to join them. 

 

Written by Kevin Huang, co-founder and CEO of Pixels, and managing director, APAC of Gravity4 Inc.