What newer, technology-fueled small business marketing practice do you think is going to make the most buzz in 2013 and why
The following answers are provided by the Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC), an invite-only nonprofit organization comprised of the worldâs most promising young entrepreneurs. In partnership with Citi, the YEC recently launched #StartupLab, a free virtual mentorship program that helps millions of entrepreneurs start and grow businesses via live video chats, an expert content library and email lessons.
1. Photos
With visual platforms like Instagram and Pinterest getting so much attention, businesses are going to want to know how to use these to connect with their audiences in more sophisticated ways. This means that marketers will begin posting âhow toâs', hosting webinars, and selling packages to help them with demand for better brand imaging.
- Caitlin McCabe, Real Bullets Branding
2. Metric-Based ESPs
Metric-based email service providers have really started to come into their own and have become much easier to implement as of late. Iâm not talking about just sending emails, Iâm talking about sending an email based off of actions your users take. So if they havenât been visiting your site for a week you can email them saying, âHey come back!â
3. Data-Driven Markteting
2013 will be looked at as the year that marketing became less about the anachronistic âMad Menâ creative types and will instead be driven by the âMath Menâ who relentlessly optimize their messaging. Much the way Billy Beaneâs stats driven culture change the way baseball operates, you can see the roots of similar transformation in marketing all around.
- Erik Severinghaus, SimpleRelevance
4. Gamification
Forget search engines, social marketing, and paid advertisements. Itâs now all about how to influence consumer behavior through game mechanics. Gamification leads to more loyal customers, more customer referrals, and positive brand association, which are current challenges that many brands face. I expect 2013 to be the year Gamficiation consultants become the new âitâ title on LinkedIn.
5. Localized Content
When we think âlocalizedâ content today, we think global websites that customize their offerings for each country or market. What marketers will be doing soon is refining that same process for more specific geographic regions. For example, businesses will not only create landing pages for their advertising campaigns, but may deploy IP logic to serve up different versions for each city and state.
6. Hypertargeting
Hypertargeting is here, and itâs here to stay. While the Romney campaigns âOrcaâ system didnât make the big splash they hoped it would â" others are faring much better. Companies like Gil Elbazâ Factual are a testament to this- serving up rich, accurate data to thousands of business eager to understand their customers better.
7. Things That Can Be Meme-fied
Major brands will successfully release ads and images with the express purpose of remixes, memes, and more coming from them. Itâs an increasing lack of control â" but, for the right product/campaign, lack of control can lead to enormous reach.
8. Personalization
Personalization, the practice of tailoring messaging and choices to consumers based on their unique characteristics or purchase histories, is going to be the shining star of marketing in 2013. Not only does personalization promise higher ROI on advertising spends, now more than ever, there are also new technologies that marketers can deploy for personalizing emails, sites and in-store experiences.
9. Mobile Tools for Small Biz
Iâm anticipating an explosion of mobile tools, especially brandable and customizable mobile apps, to help connect and provide selling opportunities to the digital communities and blog readers of small businesses and independent entrepreneurs in 2013. But whether its big or small biz, mobile will remain a major focus of marketing and business innovation throughout 2013 and beyond.
- Dave Ursillo, The Literati Writers