Limited seats remain

Secure your place at the Digiday Publishing Summit in Vail, March 23-25

REGISTER

France Tourism Rethinks Focus Group

When it comes to ad feedback, brands usually turn to focus groups. But increasingly they’re finding new ways to get feedback without the hassle and expense of gathering a group of strangers in a room.

France Tourism is one such brand. The company works with eMiles, which has 3 million people in its database, to test creative options and travel offers to not-so-popular places. For the most part France Tourism is asking consumers that receive the eMiles newsletter to pick and choose what they’d like to hear about by watching or clicking on ads and answering three to four questions. Once that process is complete, France Tourism pays eMiles. EMiles then rewards its members with points on airlines, hotel groups or Amazon gift cards.

For example, France Tourism tested a video for the island of St. Martin. Consumers were asked to pick between a few different versions of the content, helping France Tourism realize which would likely resonate best with consumers. Another campaign test that France Tourism ran using the eMiles program was aimed seeing how many people would click-thorough an ad to get to a website. The site pulled in approximately 100,000 visitors through the ad, which was 30 percent higher than what the brand expected for this particular effort.

Additionally, France Tourism wanted to see how interested consumers in the U.S. are in visiting the Midi-Pyrenees area. The region isn’t well-known, so before investing in a full-on ad campaign in the U.S., France Tourism wanted to make sure it was worth it. To begin with, France Tourism focused heavily on the spirituality and religious aspects in this area. But based on the reactions of consumers, France Tourism figured out it needed a different approach.

“If you are a subscriber to eMiles, then you are interested in hearing about different ways to gain additional miles,” said Marguerite Richards, manager of e-marketing and publications at the France Tourism Development Agency, the agency which works with France Tourism. “It is really a win-win, because consumers are asked to state their preferences, helping the brand, and the consumer gets to collect more miles.”

Other brands like Audi, Chili’s Grill & Bar, Johnson & Johnson, Hilton, and DirecTV have also used eMiles for advertising.

More in Marketing

In graphic detail: How Anthropic’s Pentagon refusal is paying off in downloads, brand trust and enterprise deals

OpenAI’s Pentagon deal seemed to spark uproar among its users, many of whom were against it. Anthropic’s refusal to agree to the terms was seen by users as the more trustworthy alternative.

How AI could disrupt retail media’s $38 billion search ad market

ChatGPT and other AI chatbots could divert shoppers from retailer sites, putting the $38B retail search market at risk.

‘Brand safety is moving from fear to curiosity’: Zefr’s Raddon on content-level accreditation – and what it exposes about the industry

The threat is no longer a discrete piece of bad content that a keyword list or a domain block can catch. Its volume.