{"id":39721,"date":"2016-03-02T14:16:38","date_gmt":"2016-03-02T22:16:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/blog\/?p=39721"},"modified":"2016-06-01T17:30:55","modified_gmt":"2016-06-02T00:30:55","slug":"mastering-direct-response-on-twitter-case-studies-for-maximizing-roi-smx","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/blog\/mastering-direct-response-on-twitter-case-studies-for-maximizing-roi-smx\/","title":{"rendered":"Maximizing ROI for Twitter Ads #SMX"},"content":{"rendered":"
Bryan Sise<\/a>, Kayt Zelley<\/a> and Abishek Shrivastava<\/a> — three VIPs from Twitter — share DATA-DRIVEN tips and strategies for maximizing your ROI on Twitter in this SMX West 2016 session. Let’s get to it!<\/p>\n Control studies show that promoted tweets build intent and drive conversions. Twitter found a 3.2X lift in conversion rate for people who engage with a Twitter ad vs. those that did not.<\/p>\n Turn everyday moments into action. Let’s say a woman is looking at her Twitter feed in a caf\u00e9. We know who she’s engaging with, what she’s interested in, etc. Let’s say she says she’s looking forward to her morning coffee.<\/p>\n As you think about mentions of the keyword coffee, what looks seemingly random is actually predictable \u2013 as you might expect on the weekdays and mornings, coffee has high frequency. But surprisingly, it also has peaks on weekend evenings. Know the patterns for your keywords<\/p>\n Let’s say you set up a campaign and target the keywords coffee, Peet’s, and Starbucks to target people who are thinking about coffee. Then, just seconds after the woman tweets about her love of coffee, your tweet will show up in her timeline. All of this happens live \u2013 it’s important that you’re able to capture signals like this live and connect in real time, while they’re thinking about keywords that relate to what you offer. That’s how you connect.<\/strong><\/p>\n Twitter is your live connection to billions of signals of interest and intent. “It’s your live connection to you customer in all the places they go,” says Sise.<\/p>\n Let’s say it’s Paris in the summertime. Your business is Europlore Tours and you offer vacation packages and cultural tours in European cities. It’s March, and only 12 or your 60 slots are booked for the Paris tour. You want to fully book the Paris tour before it starts in May. Here’s how Twitter recommends leveraging ads in this scenario:<\/p>\n Dog Star Adventure is a retail outdoor and sporting goods online and physical store. They’re launching a new store section dedicated to climbing gear and apparel. How can they cost-effectively drive climbing gear purchases and capture market share?<\/p>\n The Do’s<\/p>\n The Don’ts<\/p>\n People are spending more and more time on mobile. People are in a rush on mobile. They use moments of found time: between meetings, on elevators, on a train ride. Flurry data show that people who open an app more than 60 times a day has grown by 123%. People have very brief moments to experience your brand.<\/p>\n The world, however, is not a mobile world \u2013 it’s a multi-device world. Forrester Research shows average U.S. consumer aged 24-25 uses four devices. They switch attention across devices seamlessly. Therefore, you need to determine where they’re most likely to convert. Marketers need to take a new approach to make marketing work. Address short attention spans by turning moments into action with real-time targeting and running native ads.<\/p>\n<\/a>Using Twitter’s Unique Data<\/h2>\n
Performance Marketing Scenarios<\/h2>\n
Europlore<\/h3>\n
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\n<\/strong>When a Twitter user takes to Twitter to muse about an upcoming trip, saying “Starting to plan my family vacation. Should I go to France or Italy?” Your promoted tweet with a website card then shows up with a clear CTA to book a tour with Europlore.<\/li>\n
\n<\/strong>Use your own data (cookie ids, email addresses, phone numbers) to form a matched audience with Twitter users, and then target accordingly. Set up a campaign with that tailored audience. There, you can add additional forms of target such as device or gender.<\/li>\n
\n<\/strong>Use the website tag and cross-device conversion analytics. It’s very common, in this scenario with Europlore, for a user to do quick research on their phone but actually make the purchase on desktop.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\nDog Star Adventure Gear<\/h3>\n
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\n<\/strong>Imagine Twitter user Sheri. She reads parenting blogs, is concerned with the environment, and likes to climb. In fact, she follows @ClimbMagazine. Dog Star can target people following @ClimbMagazine. The ad that is served can show up outside <\/em>chronological order. It can also show up for users that accounts are not following.<\/li>\n
\n<\/strong>In the most valuable minutes after a user has seen a product on your site, you can serve them an ad. Let’s say Sheri is on the Dog Star site looking at shoes. The next time she logs into Twitter, she becomes eligible to see that same product front and center on her timeline.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n\n
Tweet Copy Best Practices<\/h2>\n
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The Future of Twitter ads<\/h2>\n