Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Best Online Planning Tools


Best Resources for Desk Research using online sites, tools and applications:

Professional Insight - the big "traditional" resources that cost a lot of money
  • Mintel - Big, hefty market intelligence reports
  • TGI - Market Research surveys and analysis
  • Forrester - More editorial reports on specific pertinent topics
  • WARC - the bible of marketing and advertising specific insight
  • Datamonitor - business specific insight and intelligence
  • LexisNexis - news aggregation service
  • Nielsen - the mecca of insight. Tools, papers, resources, everything
  • eConsultancy - digital marketing specific insight
If your agency does not have access to these expensive resources, you can access them via:
Industry Information - the "obvious" trade rags and blogs and their wealth of news, articles and commentary
  • BrandRepublic - Central news resource for advertising and media
  • AdAge - Global news resource
  • Creativity - creative led news and opinion
  • Adverblog - great aggregator of great ads
  • Adrants - more advertising stuff from around the World
  • This is an ad - blatant plug for mine and Toby's "alternative" advertising aggregator
  • Planners Blogs - the Plannersphere wiki of all the planner's blogs (not all are active anymore)
Ideas Conferences - source of inspirational presentations
  • TED - the ultimate video resource of truly inspirational speakers
  • GEL Conference - more brilliant presentations from the Good Experience Live Conferences
  • Interesting - Tons of stuff from Russell's Interesting conferences from around the world is online
Business Insight - the kind of planning resource that makes you credible to the big cheeses
  • Economist - don't underestimate the amount of cleverness hidden here. CEO's and Marketing Directors adore it when planners quote economist articles.
Digital Marketing Insight - for when you have to justify that increasing digital spend
  • IAB - Brilliant resource for internet stats and case studies
User Experience Insight - understanding the experience of your brand as well as the messageMarketing Trends - seeing where the market, consumer and brands are heading
  • Springwise - new business ideas from around the world
  • Trendwatching - consumer trends, with brilliant monthly trend briefings
  • PSFK - daily news, ideas and trends aggregator from the lovely Piers Fawkes
  • Contagious - Quarterly intelligence briefing
Advertising resources - when you need to look at what the competitors are up to

Web trends - getting a wider view of activity on the web
  • Google Trends - track any online trends you fancy and plot them on pretty graphs
  • Google Alerts - push delivery via email of every new piece of content around a specified keyword
  • Alexa - slightly flaky competitor website traffic monitoring
Professional Buzz tracking - the essential paid-for tools for any social activity
Free Buzz tracking - the free but slightly dodgy suite of buzz trackers. Good for indicative measures.
  • Trendrr - comprehensive real-time buzz tracking tools
  • Serph - realtime buzz tracking
  • Omgili - Find out what people are saying
  • Trendpedia - buzz tracking powered by Attentio
  • How Sociable? - understanding how well a brand fares in social media
  • Addict-o-matic - brilliant visual social buzz aggregator, using an automated NetVibes-type interface
Search Insight - researching keywords to see what people are searching for
  • Google AdWords - understand search terms around your product and brand
Social Bookmarks research - see what people think is important content around a brand or product as opposed to an "engine"
  • Del.icio.us - The daddy of social bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon - recommendation driven bookmarking
  • Digg - news and content with a tech leaning

Facebook analysis - Seeing how people act on Facebook
  • Adonomics - bespoke Facebook application tracking (see how crap most of them are)
Blog research - for understanding what real people are saying specifically on their blogsBoard Trackers - see what the topics for discussion on forums is around key words
Twitter Research - getting under the skin of what's happening on Twitter
  • Twitter Analyzer - A bunch of insightful ways to look at a Twitter account
  • Tweitgeist - Twitter Zeitgeist
  • #hashtags - real time monitoring and analysis of topics on Twitter
  • Twitt(url)y - tracking URLs inserted into Tweets
  • Twitrratr - automated Twitter analysis tool that sorts Tweets around a term into positive, negative and neutral
  • Twilert - Like Google Alerts, but for Twitter...
  • Tweetbeep - ... as is this
  • Xefer - Pretty way to represent Twitter account usage stats
Researching Video content - understanding what people are watching online
  • Truveo - online video content aggregator (with great top 10's)
  • Viral Video Chart - keeping track of what's hot, with great trend graphs and tools
BEYOND THE INFORMATION DEPARTMENT: Planning is about INSIGHT, not just information.

As he says in the presentation, it is easy to get carried away with all of these resources in your hands and start churning out reams of deckage on any topic. Good planning is not about gathering every last shred of information. It is about selectively searching for the interesting bits and then turning that from information into insight. That's the magic of planning.


via 25 lttrs n th alphbt

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Mobile Intent Index

According to a new survey announced today by Ruder Finn, an independent public relations agency, Americans are spending an average of 2.7 hours on the mobile Internet. Ruder Finn's first-ever Mobile Intent Index studies mobile phone user habits and explores the underlying reasons – or intent – people have for accessing the mobile internet (http://intentindex.com/mobile). Some interesting findings: Social Connector. 91% of mobile users go online to socialize, compared to only 79% of traditional users. They are using their mobile phones "at the moment" to connect with others.

Personal finance tool. Mobile phone users are 1.6 times more likely to manage finances compared to traditional users(62% versus 39%).

Advocacy. Nearly half of mobile users (49%) go online to advocate compared to only 41% of traditional users. In fact, they (67%) are 1.4 times more likely than traditional users (47%) to activate support.

Youth are the target for retailers. Youth (44%) are more likely to shop over their mobile phones than the average mobile user (35%).

Men look at prices but women buy. When shopping, men are more likely than women to compare prices (47% vs. 30%), but women are more likely to purchase (40% vs. 30%).