Digiday Research: The coronavirus pandemic left marks on publishers’ 2021 revenue plans

Publishers have spent years trying to get creative about diversifying their revenues. A deadly, and lingering, pandemic appears to have reshaped those priorities a bit, according to the latest Digiday Research.

For a second consecutive year, Digiday conducted a survey of publisher professionals to ask questions about the coming year. This year’s survey used a sample of 181 respondents; last year’s went to 135.

While the survey touched on several topics, the bulk of it focused on publisher revenue streams, both as they exist now and where they fit into respondents’ plans for 2021. Respondents were asked to choose from a list of six responses to describe how focused they were on building out a particular revenue stream over the next six months, ranging from “not focused at all” to “a very large focus.”

After a year that challenged almost every facet of most publishers’ businesses, publishers enter 2021 with a list of priorities that is largely unchanged from last year’s.

Direct-sold advertising and subscriptions, the two top priorities among respondents to last year’s version of this survey, again topped lists this year, with 56% of respondents saying growing their direct-sold business was at least a “large focus” for this year; 46% said the same about growing subscriptions.

But further down the list of priorities, however, evidence of coronavirus’s lingering effects can be found. The effect on events is most obvious, with the percentage of publishers who said events would be a large focus in the first half of 2021 at 17%, down from 32% the previous year.

Samples: 181 publisher professionals (2021); 135 publisher professionals (2020)
Sources: Digiday+ Winter 2021 Publisher Survey; Digiday+ Winter 2020 Publisher Survey

Similarly, advertisers’ interest in campaigns with shorter turnaround times has made branded content less of a focus. Going into 2020, nearly three quarters of survey respondents said branded content growth was at least a moderate focus; going into 2021, fewer than two thirds of respondents said it was a moderate focus.

Conversely, video advertising showed a large jump in interest. Forty-one percent of 2021 respondents called it at least a large focus, compared to 26% of 2020 respondents.

Interest in affiliate commerce, despite the banner year of growth it delivered for several publishers, was slightly down, dropping from at least moderate focus for 39% of respondents in the 2020 survey to 36% of respondents to 2021’s.

Samples: 181 publisher professionals (2021); 135 publisher professionals (2020)
Sources: Digiday+ Winter 2021 Publisher Survey; Digiday+ Winter 2020 Publisher Survey

Taken in total, publishers appear to largely be shifting their attention away from anything that does not have traction in their own businesses. When the survey’s responses were given numerical value, with 0 representing “not a focus” and 5 representing “a very large focus,” the weighted averages for almost every option were down this year.

Just one choice on the 2021 survey — direct-sold ads — recorded a weighted average greater than 3, and four choices recorded weighted averages lower than 2.

The post Digiday Research: The coronavirus pandemic left marks on publishers’ 2021 revenue plans appeared first on Digiday.

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Awin Group announces strategic partnership with Mavrck to power influencer marketing success

Mavrck’s leading influencer marketing solution now enables Awin and ShareASale clients to effectively track and attribute influencer engagement.

The Awin Group is thrilled to announce a new strategic partnership with Mavrck, the leading all-in-one influencer marketing platform for enterprise brands. With Mavrck, Awin and ShareASale advertisers can now benefit from Mavrck’s innovative technology, reporting, industry experience and track record to successfully power and optimize their influencer marketing activity.

Across 2020 and into the new year, we saw the acceleration of existing industry trends – like influencer marketing – while new platforms and shopping behavior also present new opportunities for partnerships. In fact, when Awin and ShareASale advertisers were surveyed, 87% indicated that influencer partnerships would be a key partner of interest for their program growth strategy.

Mavrck offers an advanced SaaS solution to enterprise consumer brands that automates and scales influencer marketing and social proof programs across customer journeys. Their solution supports campaigns ranging from influencer marketing and brand ambassador programs, to brand advocacy programs and customer referral programs.

Thanks to Mavrck’s powerful discovery and CRM toolset, Awin and ShareASale merchants can easily find, recruit and manage the right creators among the millions of influencers available in the Mavrck Influencer Index across all social media platforms. Additionally, Mavrck’s customizable campaign and communication workflows afford brands maximum flexibility to scale and automate their programs.

Retailers are changing the way they work with influencers, seeking additional data and insights from their campaigns to measure the effectiveness of their efforts. Mavrck’s robust reporting suite demonstrates the unique value creators bring to each campaign by reporting and benchmarking against key data points that prove the ROI and brand lift from brand engagement.

Joris Cretien, Head of Publisher Management US at Awin: “When selecting a SaaS influencer management platform for Awin and ShareASale, we sought to partner with a market leader that would offer our clients the best solutions available to make their influencer partnerships easily accessible through the affiliate channel. With FTC regulations and data privacy a core focus for the Awin Group and the industry, we also needed to ensure the partner offered comprehensive features that monitored all content created in accordance with local and global regulations. Mavrck met our requirements and more. With a shared vision to think about customers, employees and micro influencers as part of a brand’s influencer strategy, Awin and ShareASale are thrilled to be able to now offer Mavrck to our clients.”

Lyle Stevens, Co-founder and CEO at Mavrck:  “Most brands recognize that influencer marketing is an essential element of today’s marketing mix, but they still need to be able to identify exactly how influencer content is driving performance and impact in order to justify their influencer marketing investments. With our partnership with Awin and ShareASale, we’ve taken the guesswork out of the equation and are enabling our customers to quantify how their influencer marketing efforts are providing real business value.”

For more information on how to optimize your influencer marketing activity Mavrck and the Awin Group, including scheduling a demo, please complete our form here.

The post Awin Group announces strategic partnership with Mavrck to power influencer marketing success appeared first on ShareASale Blog.

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