Things
are changing pretty fast in automotive digital marketing, and there are a lot
of things to expect in this realm.
As more
consumers adopted mobile-first lifestyles, auto brands became vigilant to keep
up. Mobile gained about 35% ($2.15 billion) of total digital
budgets
from auto marketers in 2014.
To have
impact in digital marketing, professionals need to reach consumers with a
unified message across display, video, mobile, email and social. In 2014, media
buyers looking to sell more cars were still educating themselves on
cross-channel digital advertising.
More
marketers are expected to act on a cross-channel strategy in 2015. They will
develop greater focus on programs that target users on alternative screens,
connecting with users not just down a sales funnel but throughout what’s now a
24/7 sales cycle.
With
more cross-channel, cross-device campaigns on the horizon, we will see demand
for enhanced analytics that showcase where the consumer converted, proving the
“true” frequency that is required
to
convert.
As the
programmatic push continues, we will see greater collaboration between
technology providers and agencies to create opportunities for big-media deals
in automotive.
More
marketers will test programmatic solutions to increase scale and optimization,
especially for upper-funnel digital campaigns.
To
activate and measure programmatic campaigns properly, auto marketers will make
special considerations based on channel, such as display versus social, to
generate the best results.
For
programmatic to work well for social requires more upfront effort to develop a
strategy that allows for flexible, yet timely activation and careful community
management that ensures the social channel maintains its powerful aspect of
personalization and one-to-one user appeal.
Auto
marketers finally realized Big Data is a big deal. In 2015, making sense of
consumer data across channels will become a priority for auto-campaign
planning, and more marketers will leverage insights to drive consumers to
action.
For
instance, location data can be used to help lead smart phone users to their
nearest dealership and away from competitors.
Or we
can put into play the power of real-time and historical data by combining
behavioral and location data to identify the intent of consumers before they
are labeled as “in-market.”
Expect
continued growth in content ads and video.
Auto
brands will begin building teams and “content studios” internally and on the
agency side to churn out relevant, branded video content for both paid and
earned media opportunities.
The
conversation may begin within the walls of the social or PR teams, but we can
expect more auto marketers expanding that call to other departments, where
creating online video advertising strategies will complement TV campaigns,
extend audience reach and enhance performance.
This is
a monumental shift for auto brands, and a sign the TV-online video gap is being
bridged.
Distribution
models will be a focus in 2015 for both long- and short-form content, going beyond
YouTube placements. Video will play a bigger role within Facebook and Twitter.
This will be a landmark year for the advertising and automotive industries. We’ll see technology drive the conversation forward. Digital-marketing campaigns will continue to prove innovation is alive and well.
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