Plus, how to know when itâs time for a website refresh May 14, 2021 Good morning, Marketer, and do we have a surprise coming for you. On Monday, the newsletter you receive from us is going to look a little different than you are used to. Weâre not going to completely spoil the surprise of our Monday launch, but letâs just say the logo you see at the top will be different and the sending domain will also have a subtle change. There is so much that we canât wait to tell you about ⦠but weâre going to make you wait just a little bit longer. What isnât changing is the daily stream of content focused on the intersection of marketing and technology that you have come to rely on. In fact, there will be even more of that than before. Stay tuned! Henry Powderly,VP, Content Experience How to know when itâs time for a website refresh Your website isnât what it used to be. Conversions are not happening. It has been years since anyone has looked under the hood. B2B marketing woes like this one are common â and itâs often not the marketerâs fault. Quick business decisions propel website design, sometimes with not enough thought given as to how the elements of a web page are supposed to come together as a working whole. Inferior UX hobbles the online effort to sniff out leads and convert them into sales. But matters can be corrected. We reached out to UX experts from digital marketing agencies to get their perspectives on website optimization, and we got some actionable insights: - Customer referral, or word-of-mouth, is a trivial source of traffic in comparison with search;
- Data tells you what happened, but turn to small focus groups to find out why; and
- Load speed is important, but itâs only the start, Companies cannot expect their web pages to remain unchanged while the world changes around them. But expert opinion varies as to how often a refresh is needed â anywhere from once every one to two years, to as long as once every three to five. One factor that can work against redesign: a companyâs size. Some firms may be too big, and their web properties too complex to easily change. Such firms are at a competitive disadvantage since wholesale renovation is daunting. Instead, they tend to concentrate on improving their technology to engage with users, focusing on personalization and market automation. [Read more here](). [How automation can help your sellers sell more (and your marketers market better)]() While many back-office tools such as ERP and supply chain management have already adopted AI-driven automation, the front office (sales, marketing and service) remains the last bastion of non-automated processes. Why? Sales and marketing people have dug in on the idea that their roles are more art than science. And theyâve clung jealously to the idea that their intuition and creativity are what differentiate them â which is true, only not in the ways they think. [Read More »]() Data Salesforce updates its CDP The digital experiences that became a lifeline for many businesses in 2020 are with us to stay. Thatâs the bet Salesforce is making as it announces enhancements to its CDP, launched last October. It will now be known as Salesforce CDP and no longer as Customer 360 Audiences. Two changes relate to high profile acquisitions. Mulesoft, the integration platform acquired by Salesforce in 2018, will enable the CDP to ingest data from any application or data source. Tableau, the analytics platform acquired in 2019, will deliver insights into customer behavior and engagement. Other enhancements include an improved audience segment builder, the ability to append lifetime value and engagement scores to customer profiles, and the opportunity to activate segments across AppExchange apps from participating partners. Why we care. Does slow and steady always win the race? Salesforce was the last of the big CX suites to fully deploy a CDP, and development has been incremental. âWeâre doing it the hard way,â Chris OâHara, VP of Product Marketing at Salesforce, [told us last year](). Of course, that might also be the right way. Webinar: Create Better Digital Experiences for Your Customers With Headless and Hybrid CMS Adopting headless and hybrid Content Management Systems is part of a move toward greater agility in marketing. These solutions give you more flexibility and speed in choosing where content is distributed and how it is displayed. Join a panel of experts moderated by MarTech Todayâs editorial director Kim Davis, and learn the trends driving the adoption of headless and hybrid CMSs and the capabilities these systems provide. [RSVP Today »]() Advertising Google Ads announces privacy-focused changes for Analytics, Tag Manager and enhanced conversions Googleâs VP of Engineering for Google ads announced three new previews for Google Marketing Livestream: - Google is extending their advanced machine learning to behavioral analytics reporting in GA to help fill gaps in data left by privacy changes.
- To make it easier for websites in Europe and the UK to integrate with Consent Mode, Google will soon allow access directly from Tag Manager accounts to modify and customize tag behavior in response to usersâ consent preferences.
- Enhanced conversions allow tags to use consented, first-party data and give a more accurate view of how users convert after engaging with ads. [Read more here](). [Stay ahead of the competition with advanced search marketing tactics]() Join us online, June 15-16, at SMX Advanced â the premier training experience designed exclusively for expert search marketers. Explore the latest SEO, PPC, and user experience topics, trends, and tactics with the Search Engine Land editors. [Register now »]() Data Where seniors meet With the world opening back up again, [brands like Extra]() are anticipating a summer of love. But how have people been finding love in the meantime? The pandemic pivot to digital seems to include dating behavior, suggested by the shifting dating habits of seniors, according to [a new survey]() by life insurance provider Choice Mutual. Dating apps and websites are the second most popular way that seniors are meeting people. A full 13% of people 55+ responded that it was the best way to find romance, behind the top option, being introduced by people they knew (18%). Social media, as a separate option, came in at 7%. Furthermore, the survey found that roughly a third of seniors who have dated in the last five years tried a dating app, and 66% of those using dating apps or sites had a lasting relationship with someone they met there. Here are the top apps where seniors met a relationship partner: - Tinder (35%)
- Match (28%)
- Hinge (25%)
- Plenty of Fish (25%)
- Bumble (24%)
- OK Cupid (22%)
- eHarmony (22%)
- Happn (19%)
- MeetMe (18%)
- Grindr (14%)
- Coffee Meets Bagel (14%)
- The League (14%)
- Other apps (14%)
- Her (13%)
- Clover (13%)
- Zoosk (13%) Why we care. Consumers are turning to technology to enhance highly personal parts of their lives. Targeted channels like dating apps have deeply engaged audiences. Seniors are adopting social platforms and dating apps at high rates because digital channels increase access to users across demographics. Marketers, is there a digital audience out there youâve yet to identify? Quote of the day âDiversity, Equity, Inclusion is no longer a âfringeâ activity. If your business aims to serve a wide range of customers and build the best team possible, being able to work effectively with different kinds of people is a core management competency.â [Jennifer Kim](), startup advisor and HR specialist [Marketing Land] []() Information on Advertising/Sponsorship [here]() This email was sent to {EMAIL}.
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