YMS Rocked
Pretty much the whole team at BAM attended this year’s YMS conference, held by Voxburner, and we can safely say that the 2016 event smashed it out the park. The Youth Marketing Strategy 2016 played host to 1000 delegates, 120 speakers, 43 exhibitors and lots of great insight into the motivations of young people, how they take in marketing and what works for them.
As a Silver Partner, we were among great company as main sponsors, but the speaker and panel line-up itself was out of this world with the likes of Boohoo, Arsenal, NCS and many more wowing attendees. The venue was buzzing with chat, ideas and creativity; we enjoyed making some new connections and friends, and we were especially happy with how people reacted to our exhibition space that got loads of love on social media throughout the conference.
Making a Scene
In true BAM style, we couldn’t go to YMS without making a scene, so our stand wasn’t just any old stand; it featured an incredibly large and fun fruit machine which gave players the chance to win lots of great prizes. It really helped to draw attention from attendees with over 300 spins played. It also helped us demonstrate just how effective gamification is, especially when attracting the youth market. Participants won over 40 Amazon vouchers between them, as well as some of our larger prizes – two iPads went to lucky winners, Burcak Kilicoglu from Philip Morris Ltd and Oliver Brann from student.com. Georgina from Real Gap Experience won a free advert in the Guardian and Natalie from Boost won an email campaign with us. Congratulations to all the winners and thank you to anyone who came along to say hello and for taking part.
Capturing our Audience
We also held a competition with the chance to win coveted tickets to the Crystal Maze experience that is taking place in London soon. We put a bag of sweets on each chair in the hall, and also gave away bags at the stand. Sugar always goes down well at these kind of events so they were obviously loved by all, with some people even giving us shout outs on Twitter for our sugary generousness.
Instant Insight
Whilst we were at YMS we held a workshop event called ‘Ask the Student’, which was a sort of ‘speed dating’ format which allowed marketers to get into a room and ask real students, all at different points in their education, whatever they wanted. There were two international students, two pre-university students, two first years, two second years and two final year students available to answer any questions. For example, some marketers asked about their current marketing struggles, what appeals to them as a student or what they hate.
Many brands attended the event with the likes of Hostelworld, Apple and Redbus among the brands that were keen to get in on some raw student insight. We’ve been busy putting together the findings from this workshop session and collating them into a report that will be shared by us very soon, so watch this space!
New Research: Freshers’ Unplugged
BAM held a talk along with three representatives from brands that had recent success with targeting students for their campaigns. Alex Rossi a Senior Account Director at the Guardian, John Watts a Network Development Director at Doddle and Claire Bright who is a Local Store Marketing Manager at Greggs. The session was called ‘New research: Freshers Unplugged’; BAM presented new insight, which was followed by a panel discussion on what this research means for brands who want to tap into the student market with their campaigns.
Here are some key takeaways from the talk:
- “Of the 5.8 million 18-24 year olds in the UK, 1.9m are in full time education, that’s roughly a third. Additionally if we look more specifically at the undergraduate market of the 1.8m undergrads, 1.3m are under the age of 24, that’s roughly 75%.”
- “We have found that with the right approach the student market can be very receptive to (face to face promotion), even something as simple as gamifying a campaign rather than just handing out freebies can actually double the campaign results.”
- “We recently asked a selection of organisations to sum up their experience of the student market and there was the usual positive terms such as fun, dynamic, lucrative, brand loyal but two of the most common words were difficult and challenging, there was also a feeling that the marketplace is overcrowded and that brands can get lost. If your campaign is engaging, relates to the market and connects with the individual, you won’t be forgotten. You’ll be loved and talked about.”