Sentiment analysis

Ad targeting illustration featuring a large magnet pulling hearts, likes and money towards it. One person is sitting in the bend of the magnet with a laptop, another is standing next to it with a bow and arrow. Another is nearby with a clipboard. Images of a clock, a target with an arrow in it, and a video play icon surround the magnet.

The contextual advertising boom: What is it, and how can brands take advantage?

In an increasingly privacy-conscious web, contextual ad targeting is having a moment. Discussion website and self-proclaimed ‘front page of the internet’, Reddit, recently announced the acquisition of Spiketrap, an audience contextualisation company. As well as further building out Reddit’s advertising offering, the move to acquire Spiketrap highlights Reddit’s intention to capitalise on advertising that matches […]

analytics

Analytics approaches every marketer should know #3: Predictive analytics

According to many of today’s advocates for data-driven organisations, predictive analytics sounds the most exciting. It apparently lets us ‘predict the future using data from the past’.

While being able to see the future sounds great, the reality of predictive analytics is a bit more mundane. It does, however, still have the potential to make real business impact in the present.

Expanding your marketing playbook with predictive analytics

In the Mad Men era of marketing, appealing to the customer’s emotional drivers was the standard – the “go-to” play.

Appeals to the heart won the wallet. Take a more recent example, from a category with a very emotional appeal: the Budweiser Clydesdale horse campaign.

Is Twitter getting too noisy for high-profile users?

Celebrities and athletes often turn to Twitter to interact with their fans, but for one of the National Basketball Association’s biggest stars the popular platform became too noisy.

As his following grew into the millions, Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors started using Twitter less and less, something his former university roommate, Bryant Barr, noticed.

Quicken Loans shows the perils of Super Bowl ads

Last weekend, well-heeled advertisers spent $5m for 30-second ads during Super Bowl 50.

With more than 110m viewers tuning in to watch one of the sporting world’s largest single events, the justification is clear: Super Bowl ads deliver reach few other televised events can.