3 ways to engage your audience through contest marketing

Now more than ever, brands across all industries are trying to remain relevant to their customers. With the digital space becoming filled with brands promotions, it can be difficult to find ways to stand out amongst your competitors. Luckily, contest marketing is an easy way for your brand to remain top-of-mind while engaging with an audience.
Contest marketing is a powerful tool that uses social competition to drive brand awareness, increase user engagement, and create new and relevant leads. If your brand isn’t taking advantage of contest marketing, it is time to start!
Here are three examples of contest marketing that your brand can utilize right now.
1.Giveaway: Who doesn’t love free things?! As simple as it sounds, giveaways are a contest marketing option in which participants enter for a chance to win a prize. With tons of participants entering to win, this is a simple way to increase website traffic and grow your audience (and email!) database.
2.Quiz or Trivia: A fun way to engage with your audience and educate them about a certain topic. There are several options with quizzes, from personality to educational and anything in-between. The options are endless!
3.Photo Contest: Allow your audience to share more about themselves by submitting photos relevant to the contest, and by allowing the participants to vote. This is a simple way to increase engagement and reach by getting participants excited, and thus sharing their entries with family and friends.
Want to utilize contest marketing and promotions but don’t know where to start? Phase 3 Digital has the expertise and creativity needed to start up your contest, placing engaging contesting in front of your target audience.

If you've been orbiting the digital marketing world for long, you'll know all about Google's plans to abandon the third-party cookie by 2022. The rules for cookies have already started to change thanks to the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). Visit any website, and you'll get a "do you accept this cookie" pop-up. The fight for privacy and owning your data on the internet is just beginning. But what does it mean for marketers?
First, this only affects third-party cookies. Websites that track abandoned shopping carts or where you have chosen to log in will still be active and working. ( x) Those effective ads that follow you around to remind you to come back and buy? They are here to stay!
Second, even though we're losing access to visitors’ individual data, Google already has a plan in place to target ads effectively. Google created the Federated Learning of Cohorts (FLoC)for this very purpose. The goal of the FLoC is to "provide an effective replacement signal for third-party cookies." ( x) Any Google device or product you use will still file away your internet habits for advertising purposes; it will just be less precise. The idea is to shift people from individuals into broader categories. Those categories are what marketers will be targeting moving forward. If you're looking up how to replace a car battery on YouTube, you'll most likely be shifted into the "repairs vehicles" category and served ads accordingly. If we've learned anything from Facebook's targeting practices, it's that they can get very granular with those categories.
The main takeaway from the loss of the cookie is that marketers everywhere will have to be more strategic about their targeting plans. Utilizing advertising avenues that never relied on cookies is a great place to start. Paid search, emails, and social media are just a few areas of focus that generate clicks and customers while not relying on cookies. Leveraging traditional media alongside digital will also be vital to help grow your audience and brand awareness. As always, you can reach out to our digital marketing team of experts to help you navigate the change.
The cookie might be dead, but personalized digital marketing is still alive and well.







