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  1. Your first step is to think about where you intend to post your image, as Facebook graphics can come in a variety of sizes while Instagram photos are generally square. Select your format carefully so that your graphic doesn't end up being cut off or looking poorly formatted if you share to a variety of outlets.
  2. Next, upload the two files together as a single Facebook post, just as you would a normal selection of images. Facebook will then detect the pair as a 3D photo and automatically combine them for.
  1. Post By Graphic Image
  2. Astute Graphics 2019

UPDATE: The 2020 Marketing Technology Landscape is now available.

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As Bill Murray would have said in Groundhog Day, 'Well, it's martech landscape day… again.'

It has become an annual tradition at our spring MarTech conference to release an updated version of maybe the most infamous slide in marketing: the marketing technology landscape. We're keeping that custom alive this year again.

What a crazy graphic! We nicknamed it the 'Martech 5000' a couple of years ago. While I like the ring of that — kinda rhymes with the Fortune 500 and the Inc. 5000 — it's a misnomer. Last year's landscape already exceeded 6,829 solutions. Best online gambling websites.

We're now up to 7,040 solutions on the 2019 Marketing Technology Landscape Supergraphic.

For perspective, here's the growth of this project over the past 8 years:

You can still get the original 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018 editions of the landscape. Collect them all!

More importantly, for this year, you can get a free Excel spreadsheet of all 7,040 solutions plus a super hi-res PDF version of the graphic (100MB) — suitable for printing wall-sized, if you're so inclined — in exchange for giving me permission to email you about new content and events I'm doing.

A few important notes, and then I'll provide some initial color commentary:

  1. The team at Blue Green, who did the graphic design work for the landscape last year, stepped up to lead production for the whole effort this year, including our data research. A team of 9 people worked on this for many months! We also built on contributions from Anand Thaker in 2017 and 2018. I am deeply grateful for the magnificent work they did.
  2. I expressly grant permission to reproduce copies of this graphic in full and 'as is' in any slide presentation or website, up to a resolution of 1,600×900 pixels. (Or embed the graphic from my CDN). For higher resolutions or uses, please ask first. A backlink to this post would be greatly appreciated.
  3. This graphic is only our personal approximation of the marketing technology space and is surely rife with errors and omissions (our apologies). It is intended only to stir discussion. You can publicly identify or clarify your company in the comments section below.
  4. Key resources used in our research to build this graphic: CabinetM, Capterra, G2 Crowd, Google, LUMA Partners, Siftery, and TrustRadius. We used these services to discover new companies and to triangulate our categorization. As always, a debt of inspiration is owed to Terence Kawaja, the godfather of vendor LUMAscapes.

Have we reached 'peak martech?' (gasp)

Ever since I started this project, the martech landscape has grown year-over-year by double or, originally, triple digits. The 2017 edition had 39% more solutions than 2016. The 2018 one had 27% more than 2017. Its growth has been slowing, a kind of law of large numbers inevitability. But when you're talking thousands of solutions, double-digit growth is still pretty massive.

The 2019 edition, however, only grew 3%.

That's not so much a slowing down as a flattening out, a plateau. At face value, it would seem that, indeed, we have achieved 'peak martech.' (pause for dramatic effect)

Now, for those industry consolidation hawks who have been heckling me for the past 8 years, you might be tempted to declare victory at this moment. 'Ah, ha — I told you so, Brinker!' But before rolling out your editorial parade, you might want to take a couple of things into consideration:

  1. 7,000 marketing technology solutions isn't exactly a 'consolidated' market. We'd have to compress the industry by an order of magnitude or two — to 700 or even 70 — before that adjective would apply.
  2. It turns out that this isn't so much 'peak martech' as it is 'peak martech landscape.'

See, there is a limit to how much time is reasonable to invest in producing this graphic. One could argue that I should have hit that limit several editions ago. But this year, having 9 people working on it for 3-4 months was as much as even I could justify (or afford).

Yet we know there's a ton more marketing technology solutions out there. Not hypothetically speaking. I can actually point you at hundreds to thousands of martech products that aren't on this year's marketing technology landscape.

Let's take a look…

Martech Beyond the Martech Landscape

These are five buckets of martech apps that are not fully represented on my landscape:

  • Regional martech apps
  • Vertical industry martech apps
  • Martech apps built for specific martech platform ecosystems
  • Martech apps build by services companies (but packaged as products)
  • Martech apps built with low-code/no-code citizen developer platforms

Starting with regional martech apps, I've been amazed over the past couple of years by the number of people who have created 'national martech maps' for different countries, charting all — or as many as they can find — marketing technology companies headquartered there.

There's the Canadian martech landscape, the Finnish martech landscape, the United Kingdom martech landscape, the Chinese martech landscape, the German martech landscape, and just released this week, the Swedish martech landscape. It's impressive. I think of it as the Martech Olympics.

Since I've been so impressed with these, I'm embarrassed to say that we didn't think to cross-reference this when we were assembling our global landscape this year until after it was off to press. We missed hundreds of regional martech companies. And that's just considering the handful from countries with a published landscape.

Similarly, while we've certainly incorporated many vertical industry martech apps into our landscape, we know we've barely scratched the surface of what's out there — companies like LabWorthy in the dental industry or ChurchCRM, neither of which are on our landscape. Just finding these companies, without going deep in every industry ourselves, is a Herculean task.

But where things get particularly interesting to me is the explosion of martech apps that are a result of the 3 trends driving the Second Golden Age of Martech. (You can read that article, or you can also watch this 40-minute talk of mine.)

Each of these trends — the growth of platform ecosystems, the blending of software and services businesses, and the rise of citizen developer platforms — are birthing whole new galaxies of martech apps.

The major marketing suites have all embraced becoming true marketing platforms, with ever more open APIs and official marketplaces for third-party apps. Here are just a few of these martech ecosystem marketplaces, each with hundreds of apps:

While many of the products listed in these ecosystem marketplaces are included on our marketing technology landscape — primarily those that operate across multiple marketing platforms — there's a growing number that are uniquely built for an individual platform's ecosystem. They aren't as easy to discover outside of those ecosystems, but within them, they can be apps greatly loved by those communities. And some of those communities are quite large.

As one example, check out OrgChartHub, a product built specifically for HubSpot's platform.

For the extreme end of the ecosystem app spectrum, consider the fact that WordPress has more than 54,000 plugins that have been created for it. Cyber like powerdirector. Each of these plugins is a kind of mini martech app. (Some of them actually have quite a bit of scale.)

I have no idea exactly how many of these aren't on our marketing technology landscape, but mathematically, I know it's more than 47,840.

Forget the Martech 5000. Are you ready for the Martech 50,000?

Now, I'm not saying all these martech apps and platforms are equal. There are many orders of magnitude difference in scale between a major marketing platform company like Adobe and a WordPress plug-in such as Social Warfare.

That's not a knock against Social Warfare by any means. In fact, I just installed them on this blog, and I absolutely love their product. They don't need to be a $120 billion public company to delight me as a customer.

Marketing technology is long, long, loooooong tail:

But all along this continuum, useful martech apps are thriving. In context, each has value and purpose — however broad or niche — to the marketers they serve. Indeed, this is one of the most compelling arguments for major marketing platforms to embrace an open ecosystem strategy: the splendid diversity of specialized apps that can flourish on that foundation.

That's where the magic happens, where the energy and intelligence of engineering teams within platform companies is multiplied by all the energy and intelligence of hundreds or thousands of imaginative, third-party app developers. That massively distributed engine of innovation serves the myriad of needs and desires across different customers.

The blending of software and services business models is another rich source of martech apps that we've had a hard time cataloguing. Major consulting firms such as Deloitte, Accenture, and PwC all have their own martech products now, lending credibility to the model. But a large number of services-developed martech apps are emerging out of smaller firms too.

Blue Green, who produced this year's landscape, is a great example with their Blue Green Analytics product. Their experience with conversion optimization engagements as a services company helped them identify a gap in the martech tool universe that they could uniquely fill. And because it plugs in to major marketing platforms, it's easy for customers to adopt.

Finally, there's the category of 'citizen martech' — apps that non-programmers can create using low-code or no-code platforms. Airtable is one of my favorite: if you can work with a spreadsheet, you can build a martech app. Family feud official website. Seriously.

This democratization of development in marketing technology dramatically expands the number of people who can create martech apps. As a result, a lot more martech apps are produced — even if they're relatively small and serve a highly specialized function.

Now, you might be saying, 'Yeah, Scott, but those are just little custom apps built for use within a single organization. They're not apps available to other marketers.'

Ah, but not so fast. Because many of these low-code and no-code platforms have now created marketplaces where users can contribute — and in some cases sell — their apps to others. A great example is the Airtable Universe:

The long, long tail of martech apps just got even longer.

A Representative Sample of the Marketing Technology Industry

So, I think we can safely say we're not at 'peak martech' — even if, at least for this year, we've reached peak martech landscape.

The truth is that marketing and marketing technology are changing. The challenges of trying to chart all these different martech apps — and running into philosophical debates about what qualifies as an 'app' in a world of tens of thousands of pieces of software that could each claim to belong in that collection — is actually a pretty good reflection of the underlying evolution of software in general.

While individual categories on the marketing technology landscape — and the larger vendors operating within each of them — continue to jockey between expansion and consolidation, all of this is happening against a backdrop of ever more apps, platforms, components, and services steadily expanding for the foreseeable future.

So this year's marketing technology landscape is less complete than ever. But still hopefully a visceral representation of just how expansive and varied the field of martech software is.

Displaying images as attachments is a common problem. The solution is not so obvious, because there can be many reasons for that. The problem may occur if the message gets converted to the plain text format or if there are issues with the HTML code of an email signature. Finally, it can be caused by a specific Outlook configuration. In this article, I will show you how to make sure images are not displayed as attachments in each of those situations.

Make sure the email format is set to HTML

The most common reason for images displaying as attachments is that some messages are sent in the plain text format instead of the HTML format. As the plain text format does not support embedding or viewing images, all images are automatically attached to the message.

Automatic format change can happen either because of Outlook or Exchange Server settings:

Outlook

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In Outlook 2010, 2013 and 2016 you can set all messages to be sent in HTML by default.

Just go to File > Options > Mail > Compose messages and set Compose messages in this format option to HTML.

For Outlook 2007, go to Tools > Options > Mail Format. Then, from the list which is next to Compose in this message format, choose HTML.

Remember that in the case of replies and forwards, the default message format is the same as in the original message. As a result, if you want to respond to a plain text message, you have to change the message format manually by clicking Format Text tab on the ribbon and choosing HTML.

If you compose a message in the reading pane, be sure to click Pop Out button first:

Note that in Outlook there is an option to receive all messages in the plain text format. The side-effect of setting this option on is that all replies and forwards are also in this format by default. If you want to know how to turn this option off, go to The receiver converts all messages to the plain text format.

On-premises Exchange Server and Office 365

Your Exchange Server might convert outbound messages to the plain text format. It can happen on every on-premises Exchange Server, as well as on Office 365 with Exchange Online. By default, all messages are converted to the HTML format, unless they are originally in the plain text format – in which case they continue to use simple text formatting. However sometimes, especially in Office 365, some HTML-formatted messages are converted to plain text anyway. As it happens on the server level, it cannot be influenced by Outlook. Luckily, there is a PowerShell cmdlet which lets you change this Exchange policy quickly:

Get-RemoteDomain | Set-RemoteDomain –ContentType MimeHtml

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This cmdlet should work on all emails sent outside the organization, converting them to use HTML formatting.

The receiver converts all messages to the plain text format

Another option is that it is the recipient's fault. MS Outlook and some security programs may convert all messages to plain text automatically. If it is Outlook, above the message there will be a note that 'This message was converted to plain text.' The message can be converted to HTML format by clicking the Infobar and choosing Display as HTML:

Automatic email conversion can be turned off in Trust Center settings under E-mail Security tab, Read all standard mail in plain text, by checking off the checkbox:

However, if you are the sender of the message, you do not have much influence on those settings on the recipient's side.

Match the HTML display size and the actual image size

First of all, Outlook is known for having a unique way of interpreting HTML code. One of the effects can be displaying images as attachments, and not showing them in the message. This may happen if the width and height parameters of an image are not the same as actual image size. Because of that, you have to make sure that your HTML email signature does not have such differences. Ensure your pictures have the right resolution and resize them if necessary (You can use any image editor, like Paint, GIMP, or Photoshop). Then, add the width and height tags corresponding to the dimensions of the image.

How to edit the HTML file of an email signature

Best online casinos in usa. Email signature editor in Outlook does not let you modify the source HTML code. There is an easy way to edit Outlook email signatures, though:

  1. If you have a signature created in Outlook, go to mail options and click Signatures… while holding the Ctrl key:
  2. A window with your defined signatures will open. To edit the one you want, right-click it and choose a simple text editor like notepad. (For your convenience, you could also use a more advanced code editor, like Notepad++).
  3. Now all that is left is to find your img tag and change width and height attributes, if necessary.

Linked images are sent as embedded

This problem occurs mostly in the older versions of Outlook (Outlook 2007 and Outlook 2010), but can also happen in Outlook 2013 and 2016 if some settings were migrated, or if someone changed the Outlook configuration.

Post

This cmdlet should work on all emails sent outside the organization, converting them to use HTML formatting.

The receiver converts all messages to the plain text format

Another option is that it is the recipient's fault. MS Outlook and some security programs may convert all messages to plain text automatically. If it is Outlook, above the message there will be a note that 'This message was converted to plain text.' The message can be converted to HTML format by clicking the Infobar and choosing Display as HTML:

Automatic email conversion can be turned off in Trust Center settings under E-mail Security tab, Read all standard mail in plain text, by checking off the checkbox:

However, if you are the sender of the message, you do not have much influence on those settings on the recipient's side.

Match the HTML display size and the actual image size

First of all, Outlook is known for having a unique way of interpreting HTML code. One of the effects can be displaying images as attachments, and not showing them in the message. This may happen if the width and height parameters of an image are not the same as actual image size. Because of that, you have to make sure that your HTML email signature does not have such differences. Ensure your pictures have the right resolution and resize them if necessary (You can use any image editor, like Paint, GIMP, or Photoshop). Then, add the width and height tags corresponding to the dimensions of the image.

How to edit the HTML file of an email signature

Best online casinos in usa. Email signature editor in Outlook does not let you modify the source HTML code. There is an easy way to edit Outlook email signatures, though:

  1. If you have a signature created in Outlook, go to mail options and click Signatures… while holding the Ctrl key:
  2. A window with your defined signatures will open. To edit the one you want, right-click it and choose a simple text editor like notepad. (For your convenience, you could also use a more advanced code editor, like Notepad++).
  3. Now all that is left is to find your img tag and change width and height attributes, if necessary.

Linked images are sent as embedded

This problem occurs mostly in the older versions of Outlook (Outlook 2007 and Outlook 2010), but can also happen in Outlook 2013 and 2016 if some settings were migrated, or if someone changed the Outlook configuration.

Astute Graphics 2019

Usually, linked images should not become attachments – that's one of the differences between linked and embedded images (More differences in Images in email signatures – linked or embedded?). However, sometimes Outlook automatically downloads linked pictures and embeds them in the message. To change that behavior, you have to make some changes in the registry.

Note: Be careful when editing the registry, as it is easy to harm your computer or programs you use if you are not sure what you are doing. Be sure to always backup your registry before applying any changes.

  1. First, start Regedit with 'Win + R' key combination and typing in Regedit.
  2. The path you need to access is:

HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftOfficeXOutlookOptionsMail

Note X stands for the Outlook version you have, e.g. if you have Outlook 2016, it would be 16.0

When you access this location, you either have to find or add Send Pictures With Document REG_DWORD key and change its value to 0.

Thanks to that, the pictures will not be downloaded by your Outlook before the message is sent.

A different approach

If you find troubleshooting troublesome (and, by definition, it usually is), you could take a different approach, which makes images display correctly in email signatures every time. Images are not blocked by the recipients' Outlook (unless they view emails in plain text only), nor are they displayed as attachments. The solution is a third party tool for Office 365 or Exchange Server.

Regardless of the platform, email signatures are added on the server level, which renders issues with email clients irrelevant.

You can add images with a single button and decide whether you want to embed them, or add them as linked pictures (see this article for differences between linked and embedded images). Either way, the images will not be displayed as attachments.

Ortelius 2 2 3 0. To learn more about those third party tools, click on the links below:

  • For Exchange Server: CodeTwo Exchange Rules
  • For Office 365: CodeTwo Email Signatures for Office 365

Further reading:





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