Digital Marketing Strategies for Businesses – Part 1

digital marketing strategies

The digital arena is always changing and marketing efforts have to keep up with the constant flux. Every business, no matter the size, should have a well organized and robust marketing plan. As the digital landscape changes, businesses and their marketers can more easily adapt and adjust with clever solutions that can strengthen and help future-proof the business.

Digital marketing can help to generate more clients and bring value to the businesses you cater to. It’s important to know what strategies are most effective. Here are some of the best strategies to get businesses remarkable results.

Paid Media

You can market your services without having to shell out a budget, but not all the time. By using paid media, you can target your desired audience directly through advanced tools, making it one of the best ways to land a client.

Pay-Per-Click (PPC)

PPC advertising is when you pay to have a search engine display your ad when a user searches for related keywords. Through an auction-based system, PPC works when you bid on keywords that you want your ads to show up for. When a user types in the keyword, it triggers your ad to appear above organic listings. Once a user clicks, you pay for that click.

Paid Social

With paid social media, it is easier to market any content as soon as it goes live on the platform. Social media channels also let you determine and control your message frequency. Low pricing for social media ads allows campaign sustainability even when it runs for a while, unlike other digital advertising strategies that may need more significant funding.

Earned and Owned Media

Earned media is also called word-of-mouth marketing. This includes testimonials from customers, influencers and fans who turn into brand advocates for your product or services. On the other hand, owned media is the content you can publish for free. You have full ownership of this content and can edit it whenever you desire.

SEO

SEO revolves around making your website and web pages rank higher in search engine results pages organically. It starts with creating valuable content with the right keywords. SEO also requires making your website fast-loading and user-friendly for a better navigation experience.

Email Marketing

When creating email campaigns, always keep in mind your audience. Know their behavior and adjust your strategies from the insights you get. Find out if they value simple and plain emails more than those with moving illustrations or interactive features. From here, you can make campaigns that yield better engagement.

When it comes to content, start with a subject line that is short and catchy. Try descriptive lines with a touch of creativity. For the main message, always present them with benefits rather than irrelevant information they may not need in their businesses. Avoid using highly technical terms that you, may only understand. Keep your emails short, easy to digest and brief.

Remember that your clients are busy with their own business and only have a short time to check their emails. Grab this opportunity to capture their attention, or you may lose their interest.

Five Optimizations to Improve Lead Generation

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Lead generation is one of the primary reasons that businesses conduct digital marketing campaigns. In fact, lead generation is a pillar of many successful businesses, both offline and online. Every marketer running a lead generation campaign struggles with how to best optimize the campaign within a limited budget. Here are 5 tips on how to optimize for lead generation campaigns.

1. Become data-obsessed

As marketers, we have access to a lot of data. But too much data will only lead to more questions than answers. Becoming data-obsessed is not about collecting as much information as possible, it’s about collecting the right, high-quality information to serve your purpose – to better engage your audience, for example.

The first step towards optimizing lead generation activities is to therefore consider what data is being collected and why. There should be two main focuses when collecting data: demographic and behavioral.

Demographic data is important to truly understand the ideal customer profile for your business. This could include what the organization looks like, the size of the business, the industry it operates in, where it is located, and the people within it (your core personas, job roles, seniority levels, interests, and whatever you feel is relevant for better targeting and segmentation).

Behavioral information is also key and this includes what your prospects and customers are doing, how they are engaging with you and your content, what channels they are using, and what topics are resonating with them.

The combination of both demographic and behavioral information becomes extremely powerful. It can be used to take personalization to the next level, and it allows tailoring of communication during the qualification process and beyond to ensure relevant and timely outreach.

2. Grade and score your leads

Not all leads are created equal. Does a lead sit within your target audience and is it right for the business? Is this contact ready to engage with sales or is it too early? The quality of the lead may not always be good enough and this is often the main source of tension between sales and marketing departments. The sales team may feel leads are lacking in quality, while the marketing team say leads are not being qualified or followed up on in an effective, timely manner. Lead scoring and grading can address this and add value.

First, sales and marketing teams must work together on the rules and principles that help to define a “good lead”, and ensure time is being spent targeting those of most value to the business. A lead must be graded directly against what your business’ ideal customer profile looks like. Upon collecting data, it is easier to make a direct comparison of the two, and ensure a focus for both sales and marketing teams on those closest to the ideal profile.

The second element is to score leads on behavioral information. If a prospect views a blog, it shows some engagement. However, if they also visit the pricing page, this demonstrates greater intent and higher scoring, and – if attending webinars – even higher points can be awarded, as it shows commitment.

Grading leads creates opportunities to nurture them in a bid to upgrade their status. Score them and get them to engage until sales-ready, approaching them differently to those who have shown more interest and intent.

3. Work collaboratively with a common language

The relationship between the sales and marketing departments is often not the easiest to manage. The reality is that without a solid understanding between sales and marketing, the ability to generate quality leads is vastly limited. Is there a common understanding and agreement around what constitutes a sales qualified lead, a marketing qualified lead, and an opportunity entering your pipeline?

Both marketing and sales teams must work on building this relationship by having regular meetings to ensure there is a shared agreement on goals and approach, and that a consistent language is used across departments. Without agreed definitions or consistent management of leads through the sales funnel, the business will be held back. The two departments must not simply co-exist. When collaborative working processes are introduced properly, that is when value will truly be created and the quality of leads will increase.

4. Track everything

As a marketer, you should track everything you do. In a number of organizations, marketing is still perceived as a cost, and it’s essential to shift this perception and become known as a revenue generator in your business. Often, marketing budgets are in the firing line when cuts occur, but once you track and demonstrate value it allows the marketing team to be seen as an equal contributor. This will result in more trust and, potentially, access to a larger budget for future activities.

The whole prospect and customer engagement process should be monitored and tracked, from the first click on the website, to the sales funnel, and the final closure. Visibility of when a deal closed and where marketing contributed to initiate or further the engagement and move the opportunity along the sales funnel demonstrates value to your organization and changes perceptions. This can help to fuel better relationships across departments and improve sales figures as teams work together.

5. Test, test, test!

The importance of testing should not be underestimated – refining your activities will maximize their value. For example, using AB testing on email layouts to see the impact on click-through rates can help to optimize the best email format, subject headers, and sender information. The same for landing pages on your website. Again, this comes back to data collection. The more data you collect and the more this is analyzed, the better the return on marketing activities. In fact, testing should be an ongoing process that never stops in any professional lead generation campaign.