Skip to main content

Morning Brew... for setting us up for the day: The Drum editorial team’s best of 2020

It’s that time again, when we look back at the agencies, the brands, the organizations, movements and trends that have shaped the past year. In 2020 – a year so many of us would like to forget – our industry of problem solvers proved time and again that they have what it takes to muck in, help out, ask questions, shape cultures and change the world. It is them that we celebrate in our New Year Honors.

A year ago, few would have believed it if we said email was going to be the hot new niche in media. Of course, we made no such prediction. Because that would have seemed silly.

But with the pandemic driving media titles to reassess their utility to readers in lockdown, email media staple Morning Brew has been making a name for itself.

It enjoyed a buy-out from Insider Group, valued at $75m, and rode (or caused) a wave of people to realize that the best place to catch business professionals is in their inboxes rather than across Google or on social media.

So how did the company build such a buzz with a humble newsletter? You’ll recognize it from its snappy copy, incise insights and sprinklings of coffee emojis that ensure it stands out in the inbox. It’s a good product that checks to ensure you are engaged and makes you feel guilty when you’re not.

Co-founders Alex Lieberman and Austin Rief started the Brew from a dorm room at the University of Michigan in 2015. It was initially designated to talk about local events. But it hit on a winning formula.

Open rates were driven with inquisitive riddles, quotes and, later, promos. The emails were bullet-pointed, providing a shallow but broad view of what modern business leaders (MBL) need to know. Lieberman told The Drum that the goal was simply to write newsletters that the pair themselves would read.

They designed what a media org’s email should look like from the ground up. They didn’t have to worry about a website or any legacy media. Their stable now encompasses The Emerging Tech Brew, The Retail Brew, The Marketing Brew and The Turnout newsletters. For its efforts, it has $13m annual revenue – mostly from advertising on its daily email – to show for it.

So the reason the honor goes to this 33-person startup is that it influenced an entire industry. With publishers already rallying around first-person data frameworks and some prominent writers peeling off to go independent on Substack, it helped many realize that they had everything they need to build an engaged audience and reading habit.

Morning Brew is driving a new wave of newsletter media that threatens to be the next big so-called ‘pivot’ in the sphere. As far as habit building goes, email is probably the way forward. But many will need to realize that it has to be the destination, not a portal of links, if it is going to be worth opening.

The title deserves respect for honing in on that basic truth, at the right time and the right place and in enviable style.

It is on stable footing for the year ahead too. The Brew will remain fully intact and the business will operate completely independently within Insider. But it is also looking to expand into podcasts and shows in the coming year.

We’ll be celebrating all our favorite things about 2020 on thedrum.com between now and early January. Keep an eye on our New Year Honors hub to read more.



from News https://ift.tt/2KLqfM5
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Keala Kanae – Net Worth, Courses, Scam?

Keala Kanae net worth : Keala Kanae is an internet marketer with a net worth of approximately $3 million dollars. Digital marketing seems like a perfect way to make money from home at this time when the world hits a global pandemic. There are tons of internet gurus to teach you how to make a 6-figure income monthly. Take it from Keala Kanae of Fullstaq Marketer – the same guy behind AWOL Academy. At the same time, you’ve heard some reviews from past customers before and would like to know whether diving with Kanae is a good idea. Is it worth the time, effort, and investment with him? Will your expertise and income expand given the tricks mentioned in their books? Keala Kanae Net Worth According to Forbes and Huffpost , Kanae earned his first $1 million in AWOL’s first year. In 2017, his net worth grew to a massive $30 million. Keala Kanae’s net worth is somewhere between $30 million to $50 million. Who is Keala Kanae? Probably you’ve come across his ads on Facebook and YouT...

What is a Local Citation? Local SEO

In simple SEO terms, a local citation refers to any mention of your company online. This could be in a business directory, or on an industry-specific site, a blog or any other local website. Although local citations can help you rank in local search results, they are no longer a major ranking factor . However, they are still worth considering in order to promote your business. Common citations you are likely to already know of include listings on business directory websites such as Yell or Thomson Local . A complete citation should include the name, address and phone number of your business. Local citations do not always include a link to your site although they are more valuable if they do. What do they do? Citations help rank your Google Local Pack listing (this was formerly called Google+ Local map) by providing Google with credible sources of information about your business. Citations tell Google that your business exists, is legitimate and that what you say about it is accur...

The beginner’s guide to semantic search: Examples and tools

Ever since Google’s Hummingbird, the term “semantic search” has been thrown around a lot. Yet, the concept is often misunderstood. What is semantic search and how it helps SEO efforts? When people speak to each other, they understand more than just words. They understand the context, non-verbal cues  (facial expressions, nuances of the voice, etc.) and so much more. It comes naturally, so we don’t really appreciate how difficult it is to explain what is being communicated without the help of all “beyond-words” signals. Factors that make the lives of both Google and SEO so difficult Google is trying (and often struggling) to understand what it is that their users want (without actually seeing or hearing them) SEOs are trying to reverse-engineer what it is that Google managed to understand from their users’ queries and how to build pages that meet those mysterious criteria. As Google’s algorithm is getting more mature, it is becoming even more difficult to decode what...