Kinase Briefings
We share Kinase expertise with regular insights into digital marketing.
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State of Digital for H2 2021
Following the sudden Google announcement that third party cookies will be extended until 2023, we have surveyed this as part of our big picture analysis for digital now. What do advertisers need to know for the second half of 2021?
What’s new at Kinase?
We take a look at exciting Kinase developments in 2021 so far. We’ve highlighted a few key changes and exciting opportunities - all of them aimed at ensuring Kinase continues to be the agency people want to work with.
Kinase welcomes two key appointments to drive new business growth
Reflecting the strongest year yet for Kinase, with fast growth and an ambitious plan for lift-off in 2021, Kinase has now appointed two new roles.
Google Marketing Live 2021 - Official Kinase Briefing
Our exclusive rundown of Google’s annual product roadmap and what it means for advertisers now.
How have shop reopenings impacted ecommerce?
Lockdowns ending in the UK and USA have seen a retail and service sector recovery - but the picture for ecommerce in the two markets is diverging. We look at the latest data and analyse what this means for ecommerce strategies, and how the patterns around ending lockdown should guide decisions for the next round of opening up in the UK and across Europe.
Meet Leanne Yates, paid social expert at Kinase
As 2021 shows every sign of further acceleration for the reach and effectiveness of social commerce, we caught up with Leanne, director of Paid Social, to get her take on what’s happening across the channel right now.
Welcome to the new turbulence
For a decade, the received wisdom was that the digital landscape had settled into immovable monopolies, too big and too clever to be challenged. But change has been bubbling away - and now the pandemic has begun to blow the field wide open again. But who will benefit - consumers, advertisers, or the new tech winners?
The future of the high street
Familiar shops are disappearing and shopping is changing - but it doesn’t have to be High Noon for the High Street. Richard Brooks of Kinase outlines why.
Kinase view of the year ahead
Ecommerce saw huge growth in 2020 as it helped people continue to shop and get what they need. Digital marketing now has a huge opportunity in 2021 to sustain this growth and continue to connect with customers in a changed environment. We outline three of the biggest challenges and how to get them right in what will be a transformative year.
Black Friday Essential Briefing
We examine key predictions, emerging trends, unmissable opportunities and the continued rise of Amazon. How big will an online-first Black Friday be?
The Secret Digital Veteran
An acerbic insider’s view of all things digital. A bee in his bonnet? Maybe. Insightful? Definitely.
Six key trends for the Smart TV boom
Which changes from the pandemic era will stick? One emerging answer so far for digital advertising is the jump up in Smart TV viewing and advertising volumes - both remaining higher than pre-pandemic levels.
Going global with Kinase
Are there markets where your business can fulfil unmet demand? It may be that competitors execute poorly, have found their supply chains disrupted, or haven’t yet recognised the opportunity.
Knowing how and when to expand into new markets is the core requirement of all successful export strategies. But collecting the right information to inform those decisions can be difficult.
Four crucial events ahead for digital in H2-2020
Ecommerce needs to plan for turbulent H2
The current position for ecommerce in the UK is one of sales stabilisation combined with new growth, but there are a series of potentially difficult challenges ahead.
The swing to ecommerce seen during lockdown isn’t crumbling away. Both the ONS report for June and new data from the British Retail Consortium confirmed earlier transaction data, indicating that retail sales had almost recovered to their pre-pandemic levels. This countered more gloomy previous forecasts.
An hour with Benedict Evans
Benedict Evans is an independent tech analyst who has spent 20 years analysing mobile, digital media and technology. In his words, “I try to work out what’s going on and what it means.” His annual presentations on macro and strategic trends are key events, and ‘The end of the beginning’ delivered in 2019 at Google HQ in San Francisco impressed Kinases’s directors, Richard and Chris when they attended. So when Google invited us to join Benedict for an ‘Insights Live’ hour, in which he would go through his views on ‘Paths to the new normal’, we were keen to listen and ask him some questions.
Five questions with Richard Brooks
Richard is front and centre of everything at Kinase. He founded the agency in 2010 with Chris Dillabough, and together they have grown it from 2 people to nearly 50.
At a very changeable time for digital, we took a step back to discuss how Covid has impacted the agency, and what current trends Richard is watching in the second half of the year. What will happen next, and where will the agency go from here?
Ecommerce in Lockdown
We look at the latest survey data on new ecommerce adopters and what will make them stay; the publication of the UK government’s Google and Facebook competition report; and the launch of TikTok self service ads.
Tech companies vs regulators - implications for advertisers
Governments are gearing up to take on tech giants. Will corporate breakups occur, and how will these platforms evolve to stay on top of change? We look at the digital advertising implications, and consider what will happen next to privacy, monopolies, and the regulation of online content.
Google Shopping relaunch
Google Shopping is being relaunched to make it a more personalised, unified and user-friendly experience. This isn’t a small change - it’s a substantial step up to enable Shopping to continue competing with Amazon. It is aimed at driving higher conversion rates and at increasing the amount of searches and length of time spent in Shopping.
We believe this change will combine Amazon’s personalisation with Google’s ability to match search queries with revenue driving ads and products.
Beyond cookies
The clock is ticking down for third party cookies, with the IAB predicting that mobile ad IDs will follow. How should advertisers plan for these changes? And how will the architecture of digital advertising be rebuilt?
We have mapped out four key areas which digital marketers need to develop strategies for, and have then picked out key trends and likely next developments.