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Showing posts with label Advertising. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advertising. Show all posts

Monday, March 13, 2023

How to Run Ads on ShareChat

 

Social media is the most efficient way to reach your target consumers and establish a personal relationship with them. But to communicate the value of your products and services, you must engage them in the language they’re comfortable with. ShareChat Ads can help you with that.

ShareChat is an Indian social media platform which supports (only) Indian languages. It helps users to interact in Hindi, Marathi, Telugu and 11 other languages, but not English. And with ShareChat Ads, you can reach that vast majority of users that don’t use English as the primary language.

So, today we are digging into the benefits of running ads on ShareChat, the steps involved, and the varied targeting options it provides.

Let’s begin.

Who is ShareChat Ads best suited for?

ShareChat Ads is suitable for every brand which wants to reach a digital-first customer in India. Whether your goal is to build brand awareness or increase website traffic, ShareChat Ads will come in handy.

Check the results from a small campaign we ran on ShareChat Ads. The client wanted brand awareness in the Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities. And with an ad spend of only ₹454, the campaign received 64K+ impressions. It also registered 227 clicks from the target audience.

So, ShareChat Ads would be the most effective for those brands wanting to reach customers in the non-metro cities of India. After all, 53% of the non-metro users prefer regional language content on social media platforms. And they would be the most active on ShareChat.

Why should you advertise on ShareChat?

  • Reach customers across India:
    ShareChat claims to have over 340 million monthly active users. You can leverage that reach and build a connection with those users by advertising in their language.
  • Discover new audience:
    The user base of ShareChat is the population from the Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities and rural areas who prefer regional languages. And new users are signing up regularly. This rural audience size registered a growth of 13% in 2020.
  • Target who matters the most:
    ShareChat offers multiple targeting options, including user demographic, devices they use, and their content consumption interests. You can also target users based on the apps they use and products they’re searching on the Internet.
  • Set different goals:
    Whether your goal is to generate interest in your product and service, or get more traffic, ShareChat Ads can help. You can also set up lead generation campaigns to improve conversions.
  • Get started quickly:
    ShareChat Ads Manager comes with a clean user interface and a straightforward set up process.

Steps to run ads on ShareChat

1) Sign up for ShareChat Ads Manager

To run ads on ShareChat, create an account at ads.sharechat.com.

Once you’ve your account set up, the Overview page opens. From this page, you can create a new campaign, manage existing ads, and add funds to the Ads wallet.

Click on “Create Campaign” button to set up and run a new ShareChat ad.

2) Determine your goals

Now, give your campaign a recognisable name and pick the right objective for your ads.

The available options are:

  • Brand Awareness: to make your audience aware of your product/service
  • Traffic: to encourage people to visit a landing page
  • Conversion (coming soon): to get your audience to buy your product/service

3) Select the ad format

Select the ad placement you would like to use, and click “Next” button.

ShareChat offers three different places to display ads:

  • Native In-Feed Ads: on the main feed of the users
  • Full-Screen Video Ads: auto-playing video ads, on the dedicated video feeds
  • Exit Interstitial Ads: interactive full-screen ads, when a user exits the app

4) Schedule campaign and set budget

On the next screen, select campaign start date and time, and end date and time. Then, choose the preferred pricing model (Cost per 1000 impressions or Cost per Click) and set the budget for the campaign.

5) Set targeting options

After setting the campaign dates and budget, pick your target audience.

ShareChat Ads Manager has the following targeting options:

  • Age and Gender: to target users according to their age group and gender
  • Location: to target users according to their city/state of residence
  • Device and Operator: to target users according to their device and mobile network
  • Usage: to target users based on their content consumption and apps on their devices
  • Interests: to target users based on the products they’re searching online

You can fine tune your target audience using a combination of AND/OR operations.

Next, set the rotation and frequency for your ad creatives. The rotation can be set to either Evenly or Click Performance. And the frequency capping per user can be set for a week, days or lifetime.

6) Upload the creatives

On the last screen, set the language attribution and add the files (images and videos) for your ad campaign.

ShareChat Ad Image Dimensions and Specifications:

  • Width:                  500px to 1080px
  • Height:                 500px to 1080px
  • Aspect Ratio:       1:1
  • Max Size:              250 KB

ShareChat Ad Video Dimensions and Specifications:

  • Max Width:              1920px
  • Max Height:             1920px
  • Aspect Ratio:           9:16, 16:9 or 3:4
  • Max Size:                  20 MB

At last, set the target URL, CTA text and button colours, and impression tracking URL (if any).

7) Launch the campaign

Now that you’ve set the budget, picked the target, and uploaded the content, click the “Submit” button. Your part of work is done. Wait for the ShareChat team to review the ad and make the campaign live.

Wrapping up

ShareChat is the ideal platform to reach the growing user base in non-metro areas of India. So, if your target audience is in those towns, use ShareChat Ads to advertise your products and services.

Need some help?

Get in touch to know more about ShareChat Ads, set up ad campaigns, and get the best ROI.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Targeting Mobile Users Through Google AdWords

“Know your audience” has stood as a fundamental marketing principle since long before the web. When advertising online, you need to take into account one of the most basic factors of the audience you are reaching: what devices they are using.
The most popular online advertising platform, in use by marketers of all sizes, is Google AdWords. Up until early 2013, AdWords allowed advertisers to set up separate campaigns to target mobile devices. Best practice generally entailed targeting mobile, desktop and sometimes tablet users in unique campaigns.
Then, in a bold move to push the importance of mobile usability (some would say to drive up its own revenue), Google announced it would no longer allow campaigns to target by device, as part of what it called “enhanced” campaigns. Pay-per-click (PPC) managers made outcries about Google’s forced decision to remove control from advertisers, even cautioning people against upgrading immediately as the option became available to do so.
A year later, the dust has settled somewhat as advertisers have adapted to the new campaign format. With the ability create device-specific campaigns gone, they’ve modified tactics with their campaign structure and bidding strategy to best reach people across multiple devices.
Why should you care about who’s using a mobile device and who’s not? First of all, people often behave differently when browsing on a phone versus a desktop. In reviewing data from a site that received just over three million sessions over the past year, users spent an average of 2:42 when coming from desktop and 1:16 from mobile. That shows mobile sessions dropping off after about half as long as desktop sessions. A smartphone user might not care to spend time sifting through an extensive product inventory, instead just wanting a number to call or immediate directions to a location.
Secondly, costs can vary widely by device. A study by Marin Software shows that the average cost per click on mobile was 26% lower than the desktop average in 2013. Also, the average cost per lead or sale might be more or less on mobile. Advertisers who take this information into account will see the need to control bids by device in order to maintain their target costs for leads.
Thirdly, visits from mobile might provide more or less value to a particular advertiser. For example, the owner of an e-commerce website might find that desktop users put more items in their carts and spend more on average.
Fourthly, you might want to drive mobile users to different pages than desktop users. Especially if your website is not responsive, you might have separate URLs for mobile. While a responsive website is ideal, your agency might be forced to work with a client’s existing website when running an ad campaign.
So, how do you build a campaign that targets only mobile devices via AdWords? The short answer is you can’t. However, a number of workarounds are available.
First, let’s look at a couple of AdWords features that focus spending on mobile: bid modifiers and mobile-preferred ads.

AdWords Features To Target Mobile

Use Bid Modifiers

Enhanced campaigns introduced a feature called bid modifiers, which allow you to increase or decrease bids by a percentage for ads appearing on mobile devices. A number of PPC professionals have suggested using bid modifiers to focus a campaign’s spend on mobile placement. You could set a low general bid and increase the mobile bid modifier to 300%, the maximum percentage allowed.
To set a bid modifier, go to the “Settings” tab in your desired campaign and select “Devices.” You’ll then see statistics broken down by device and the option to change the percentage for mobile.
However, this technique will not completely exclude desktop searches. In a test across multiple accounts, Brad Geddes found that about 19% of searches still end up occurring on desktop.

Create Mobile-Preferred Ads

Another option is to create mobile-preferred ads. When you build an ad in AdWords’ interface, selecting a check box enables you to mark the ad as mobile-preferred. Such ads are an opportunity to customize messaging specifically to people on mobile devices. We’ve improved both clickthrough rates and conversion rates by using phrases like “Call now” in mobile-specific ads, because searchers can click-to-call from a phone.
To create a mobile-preferred ad, just click the check box for “Mobile” under “Device preference” when making an ad via the web interface.
However, even these ads are not guaranteed to appear only on mobile or to prevent standard ads in the same ad groups from showing up on mobile. PPC Hero put this to the test and found that a number of desktop impressions still occurred with mobile-preferred ads.

Use Smartphone-Specific Ad Sizes

When running display campaigns, the 320 × 50-pixel mobile leaderboard ad size will appear specifically in a smartphone browser or app. You can even create animated ads in this format to get more attention. If you want to run them on mobile devices that don’t support Flash, AdWords offers an option to convert the Flash files to HTML5 when uploading them.
This ad size is great for driving branding, because it takes up an extremely visible portion of a mobile screen, often on top. Clickthrough rate tends to be high. In one campaign, I saw an average of a 0.5% higher clickthrough rate on these mobile ads than the standard desktop sizes (a pretty significant difference for display ads). Be aware, however, that people often unintentionally tap these ads on a touch device, especially while playing games. If you are encountering a high bounce rate from these ads, then consider excluding mobile apps. Bryant Garvin has written about a quick and easy way to do this.
We’ve looked at some options available in AdWords to focus on mobile. Next, let’s consider another platform that allows for more granular targeting at the device level than AdWords.

Direct People To Proper Pages

While a responsive website is the ideal option, if you do have a separate mobile website, make sure that users who are coming from mobile devices will see the proper page. One of the worst mistakes you could make is to forward all mobile visitors to a generic home page. I’ve audited campaigns whose ads were set up to very carefully link to very specific inventory items, only to completely lose all of that value because no equivalent pages existed on mobile. Make sure that individual product and service pages forward to their respective mobile versions.
AdWords also lets you use ValueTrack parameters in ad-destination URLs to specify mobile and desktop versions. People who click on ads will be directed to the proper page based on the device being used.

Try Bing Ads

While Google might have removed the capability to target separate campaigns at mobile devices or tablets, Bing still allows you to segment by device; you can still create a mobile-only campaign to reach searchers on Bing and Yahoo. While Bing-powered search accounts for a much smaller volume than Google, I’ve found that allotting a portion of spend to Bing Ads to be valuable for many clients, with less competition, as well as a generally lower cost for leads. For one particular client with a limited budget, we found that the cost per lead averaged about $20 less in Bing Ads than AdWords; so, we shifted money over, resulting in a stronger return on investment from their ad spend.
To set a Bing Ads campaign to serve only on mobile, go to the “Campaign Settings” tab. Under “Advanced Targeting Options,” select “Device” to choose the devices on which to run your campaign. You can also set bid modifiers here, as in AdWords.

Don’t Forget The Experience After The Ad!

Getting the right people to click on your ad is only the first step. Their experience on your website after the click is crucial to whether they actually contact you or make a purchase. Also, realize that landing-page quality contributes to AdWords’ quality score, a factor that affects how high you have to bid for clicks and where your ads show up in search results.
A responsive design will adapt your website’s size to mobile devices and is, in fact, Google’s stated preference. Make sure that your website’s design takes into account which devices users are on, how they arrived on a particular page and what paths they need to take to convert.

Start Reaching Your Audience On Mobile

By using the techniques mentioned, I’ve succeeded in keeping costs per lead down, as well as focusing spend on areas where a campaign is seeing the best results. While we do live in a cross-device world, paying attention to the results from different devices leads to smarter PPC campaign management. For example, in the same AdWords account, I’ve seen campaigns in which mobile costs per lead average higher than on desktop, along with other campaigns in which mobile costs per lead average lower. Taking this information into account, we can customize the bid modifiers for mobile by campaign, instead of keeping them at a generic number across the board, to help control spend.
Working with businesses that provide local services, I’ve also seen immense success both in including a click-to-call extension as well as using mobile-preferred ads to focus messaging on calls. Some clients I’ve worked with see just as many leads come from phone calls directly from ads as through website form submissions. Again, the fact that a user on a phone is likely to take advantage of a simple click-to-call option gives us the option to customize an ad campaign targeted at mobile searchers.
Ultimately, there is no one-size-fits-all solution to targeting your audience by device. But whether you’re just starting to advertise online or are a veteran AdWords user, you can likely do more to reach the ever-growing pool of mobile users. Take the time to segment messaging, and target with the knowledge that people behave differently on different devices. Keep track of the value of leads received based on device to determine how much spend to allot to mobile and how much to desktop. Of course, test these tactics to see what works best for you and your brand, and tailor advertising to your users when they visit from mobile devices.

Additional Resources

Saturday, November 19, 2011

The Path To Advertising Nirvana

With advertising, a curious thing happens: most people want its benefits but are rarely willing to put up with its hassles. Those who run websites and applications have enough on their plates without having to worry about handling transactions, putting banners across their website or hearing requests from advertisers. Moreover, users have little to no interest in even looking at advertisements that flank a website’s content, some going so far as to block ads before they’re delivered. So, what’s a website owner to do?
Advertising hasn’t always been this way. Some people even enjoy them. Scary thought, I know, but stay with me. You know those previews shown before movies and those signs outside of gas stations announcing fuel prices? Those are rarely seen as advertisements at all. That’s because people find them informative, helpful and engaging. Heck, some people say they watch the Superbowl for the advertisements themselves. So why are websites any different? What has changed online that people (apparently) find less acceptable than offline? Not much, really… well, not much unless you count that whole “Internet” thing.
As a general rule, when people surf the Web, they’re in control of the experience. If someone wants information about a particular topic, they might query Google or look up an article on Wikipedia. Regardless of what they do, they choose how to obtain the information they want. The traditional advertising model — shout at your audience until it listens (as Groundswell would put it) — is diametrically opposed to this.
So, if advertisers are working against the model, can’t they just leave us alone? The answer is almost universally no; not until we come up with a better solution. Just as user experience designers carefully craft experiences throughout a website, advertisers must pay attention to how they affect the perceived value of the publications in which they appear.
The subject of “advertising experience” itself is too broad to cover in one article, so I wouldn’t suggest that this is final word on it. Instead, I’ll attempt to provide an overview of how our website, the UX Booth (a user experience design publication), has approached advertising in the past 18 months, an approach that has been evolving with our understanding of the advertising model.

First Things First: Why?

A good question to ask yourself when first considering whether to put advertisements on your blog or website is, why are you advertising in the first place? Some of the major reasons that we’ve heard of (at meet-ups, conferences and from other publishers) follow.

1. Quality Content Costs Money.

The most common argument. When a website owner creates and manages content, they’re providing a service; and they have to spend time continually maintaining it. No surprise then that they want to be compensated for that time. Unless the owner is marketing a salable product, this almost inevitably leads them to consider advertising as their chief source of revenue. Erin Kissane recently reflected on this, the content conundrum, after taking part in SXSW’s publishing panel:
Content isn’t free. If it’s good, it’s very expensive to make. We can subsidize its production and maintenance in any number of ways, but we have to start being honest — with ourselves, our clients and sometimes our readers — about its true cost.… Publishing requires resources: planning, big doses of both creativity and disciplined analysis, writing, editing, design, project management, production, ad sales and so on. It doesn’t usually require a separate person for each of those tasks, but it still tends to be a lot of work — more than most readers and clients tend to imagine.
Jeffrey Zeldman, who manages Happy Cog, the consultancy that publishes A List Apart, corroborates this in his post “Content Wants to Be Paid For.”

2. Advertising Builds Credibility.

This point isn’t as straightforward, so let me explain. People like the familiar, and ads are certainly familiar. Not only can the mere presence of ads build trust (as ironic as that may be), the companies that do the advertising can lend credibility to the website. Consider a website that is sponsored by Adobe and that puts Adobe’s logo next to some of its content. The presence of this established brand sends two distinct yet related messages: first, this content is supported by money from Adobe (and all the good or evil that that entails), and secondly (perhaps more importantly), Adobe essentially endorses this website’s content. Having a major brand as a partner gives the website authority.

Although Delve:UI was Fritz Desir’s first event, the support of so many well-known sponsors lent it credibility.

3. Advertising Supports the Community.

Websites aren’t run in a vacuum. They exist in an eco-system, a niche. Relevant advertising beside content can introduce readers to products and services that are of interest to them. If similarly targeted websites follow the same logic, the community as a whole is strengthened. Remember webrings? (… No?)
Whatever your reasons, understand first why you’re advertising. This understanding will inform future decisions that you make throughout the advertising process.

Second Things Second: Who?

Now that you’ve decided that advertising is for you, it’s time to meet the individuals who are a part of the advertising equation. Unlike traditional user–centered design, which involves a complex interplay between two parties (stakeholders and users), advertising is a three-way conversation: between stakeholders, readers and advertisers.

Advertisers

Know them, love them, cherish them. Advertisers are the people who want to show their products to the people who visit your website. To do this, they start at the top, contacting publications that interest their target demographic.

In lieu of a dedicated sales team, UX Booth gives advertisers a sponsorship page as well as a single point of contact on staff.
Anyone interested in advertising on your website will thus need a way to get in touch with you. While you might have a general contact form, does that page contain details about your advertising opportunities? If not, consider making the process easier for interested companies by creating a dedicated page. This is the solution we ended up going with.
If creating an “Advertise with us” page sounds like too much work, consider using a service like BuySellAds.com. BuySellAds.com does something equally effective, putting your website in an advertising database. Advertisers that are interested in buying a spot can quickly compare their options across various websites and make an informed choice in just a few clicks.

Using BuySellAds.com is a great way to kickstart your blog’s advertising presence.
When a company expresses interest in advertising in your publication, give them a single point of contact with your organization. When it’s time to renew, include a kind note thanking them for their support and asking whether you can adjust anything to improve their stay on your website. A mutually beneficial relationship will emerge over time. Remember that, like readers, advertisers are people, too.

Readers

Because advertising is such a touchy subject for readers, listen to their feedback. If something’s not working and you’re listening closely enough, you’ll know it.
When the UX Booth launched, we attracted advertisers that were used to targeting visual designers. (Note that UX design is commonly mistaken for UI design.) Although this worked well for the first few months, we eventually surmised that readers weren’t engaged with our advertisers’ products. The discussions in our comments section, Twitter stream and Facebook fan page weren’t about PSD-to-HTML services or CSS galleries, so why would we advertise products related to them?

Facebook allows publishers to look at their reader demographics.
If possible, check your Facebook fan page for demographic information. If all else fails, just ask your readers directly. Facebook has seen marked success with its own advertising network because of the context it derives from the profiles and explicit preferences of users. Google, too: it targets advertisements in Gmail based on the contents of email messages.

Okay Then, How?

Once you understand your reasons for advertising and have a basic grasp of the users in your niche, how do you marry the two? Well, with design, of course. But doing this is far from straightforward. Essentially, we’re designing for opposing goals: advertisers want users to give more conscious attention to their products and services, while usability-minded interaction designers want them to give less. (Steve Krug’s popular book is called Don’t Make Me Think for a reason.) Thankfully, UX luminary Karen McGrane spells out all of the idiosyncrasies of this space in her (aptly titled) presentation “Designing For, With and Around Advertising.”

Delivery

As mentioned, the online advertising space is littered with faux pas. What kind? Consider the following behavior:
  • Pop-up ads,
  • Pop-under ads,
  • Overly-busy animated ads,
  • Ads with unsolicited sound.
All of these kinds of advertising have a bad reputation for a reason: they distract readers from what they intended to do. Consider carefully whether the reward of displaying these kinds of ads is worth the negative impact it could have on the user experience.
If you do allow animated attention–seeking creatives, then set clear boundaries. Give advertisers a media kit that ensures that everyone agrees on what kinds of advertisements are acceptable and what kinds are not. For example, for ads that hover over the page, what are the requirements on how long they can appear and how users can close them?
The state of online ad delivery methods leaves much to be desired. The only universally well-received options are static text-based ads and static banner advertisements. Banner ads are good because they’re usually discrete, but they’re also bad because readers usually ignore them. This well-documented phenomenon is known as banner blindness. Web usability professional Jakob Neilsen confirms that “Users almost never look at anything that looks like an advertisement.”
So with “loud” advertising out, and banner blindness being so prevalent, how can we make this work? Perhaps not the way you would expect. Simply placing more ads around your website won’t solve it, as Paul Scrivens recently reminded us. We’ve got to try something new.

While sidebar banners are the most popular form of advertisement, they’re arguably the least noticed.

Engagement: A Sliver Of Hope

To bring readers back into the conversation, we have to figure out two things: what they interact with and why they do it. The answer to the first question is pretty obvious for a blog with a steady readership: readers interact with the articles; they read them. So, what does this mean for advertising? Should blogs “publish” ads, too? Perhaps. Consider the unique approach taken with the location-based game Gowalla.

And Now for Something Completely Different…

Gowalla is a game that allows players to “check in” at various locations. Checking in is an abstract concept that involves “stamping” your passport and adding an item to your “backpack.” Most items collected in Gowalla are useless: teddy bears, lattes, tour buses. Recently, though, Gowalla added a unique kind of item to the system. Thanks to a partnership with Apple and Apple-accessory manufacturer InCase, players can now pick up special Incase items (and coupons) when they check into an Apple Store location. Checking in becomes much more valuable and exciting in an Apple Store because players might win something. The net effect? Because of the clever delivery mechanism, what might otherwise be seen as blatant advertising becomes a fun, engaging game element.

Gowalla introduced in–game advertising in a unique way.
We learn from Gowalla’s approach to advertising that, rather than deliver ad content in a boring, predictable format, everyone wins when the solution is altogether unique. Am I suggesting that each website implement a unique system for delivering ads? Of course not. Custom solutions like Gowalla’s require far more infrastructure and development time than many publications can afford. What I am suggesting is that by taking a slightly different approach to advertising, we can change our audience’s perception (and reception) of advertising entirely.
At UX Booth, for example, instead of displaying a banner ad for a relatively unknown product, we might choose to introduce that product to our readers by way of a blog article. If we think it’s of sufficient interest, we’ll conduct an interview with a potential sponsor to find out how they develop their user experience (which is the subject of our blog). Because these kinds of articles are what UX Booth is all about, everyone wins. Participants view these discussions as being inherently valuable precisely because of their participation. Rein Henrichs echos this sentiment in his article “Conversation Is King.”

Attaining Advertising Nirvana

Now that we’ve covered some of the nuances of advertising, what’s the best way to proceed? Unfortunately for you, after an article as long as this one, I hate to say that “it depends.” The best advertising model for any website is always the one that balances the team’s business objectives with the objectives of advertisers and of readers. In the case of UX Booth, we like to think that we know our audience pretty well, but we’re certainly aware that none of our solutions are perfect. But what I want to know is, how could they be? What would you do in our position?
I’m aware, for example, that inviting would-be advertisers to write blog posts is an extraordinarily fine line to walk; but it’s a path I’m willing to explore. A publication’s credibility comes down to the discretion of its editors. This is my decision to make. It’s up to readers, then, to decide whether or not my decision is a correct one, providing content that they enjoy. Do posts on UX Booth written by product owners come off as information pieces or infomercials? I can’t say. Obviously, I prefer the former to the latter, but the decision isn’t made in a vacuum — I must balance my desire to provide relevant content with my ability to justify (to myself and others) the time we spend maintaining site.
A publisher’s job is to match readers to content they will enjoy (or to interactions they will enjoy, in GoWalla’s case). Our community is capable of caring about content, which is why they show up in the first place. What we need to do is show them why they should care about related content. But wait! Doesn’t introducing people to things they might enjoy sound like marketing? Well, yes… Yes it does.
In this new open-source/cluetrain world, I am a marketer. And so are you. If you’re interested in creating passionate users, or keeping your job, or breathing life into a start-up, or getting others to contribute to your open-source project, or getting your significant other to agree to the vacation you want to go on… congratulations. You’re in marketing. Now go kill yourself.
Kathy Sierra
Even if, upon reflection, we realize that we’re doing the work of marketers, one thing is apparent: the digital advertising industry is mature enough for newcomers to quickly suss out its worst practices… which isn’t a good thing either. The question going forward is, what’s the best way to make marketing more or less invisible? — more like those movie previews we talked about. We need advertising that doesn’t frustrate us. Figure that out, and you’re well on your way to helping us all attain advertising nirvana.

Further Reading