Ultimate Guide To Digital Marketing PDF
Ultimate Guide To Digital Marketing PDF
Ultimate Guide To Digital Marketing PDF
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The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
00
CHAPTER
The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing is full of insights and strategy for
business owners, marketing professionals, students, and anyone else looking to
hone their current skills and get up to speed on the latest in digital marketing.
Read it now to build or refine your digital marketing plan without the false
starts and missteps that come with doing it alone.
It’s how today’s businesses are getting their message in front of their best
prospects and customers.
Rule #1 in marketing is to make the right offer at the right time and in the right
place. Today, your customers are online: hanging out in social media, staying
updated on news sites and blogs, and searching online when they have a need.
Digital marketing puts you in those same channels, so your best prospects can
see you, learn more about you, and even ask questions to learn more about
you and your products or services.
We get that…
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The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
And yes, there are different tactics you’ll need to learn. But they all work
together to create a foundation for your business: attracting prospects,
nurturing relationships, and making offers your audience will appreciate and
respond to.
But digital marketing has replaced most traditional marketing tactics because
it’s designed to reach today’s consumers.
As an example...
Think about the last important purchase you made. Perhaps you purchased
a home, hired someone to fix your roof, or changed paper suppliers at your
office.
The key is to develop a digital marketing strategy that puts you in all the
places your followers are already hanging out, then using a variety of digital
channels to connect with them in a multitude of ways...
…Content to keep them updated with industry news, the problems they’re
facing, and how you solve those problems...
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The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
…Social media to share that content and then engage with them as friends
and followers...
…Advertising to drive paid traffic to your website, where people can see your
offers...
When you put all these pieces together, you’ll end up with an efficient, easy-
to-operate digital marketing machine. And while it looks intimidating to build
that machine from scratch, it’s as simple as learning and integrating one digital
marketing tactic at a time.
Which is why we’ve put together this guide: To help you build or refine your
own digital marketing plan without the false starts and missteps that come
with doing it alone.
• It will make it easier to create awareness and engagement both before and
after the sale
• It will help you convert new buyers into rabid fans who buy more (and
more often)
• It will kickstart word-of-mouth and social sharing—and all the benefits that
come with them
• It will shorten the buyer’s journey by presenting the right offers at the right
time
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The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
The truth is, digital marketing is less about “digital” and more about
“marketing,” largely because digital marketing has come of age. Its
fundamentals have already been established.
As you’ll see in this guide, these 8 core disciplines of digital marketing will
be critical to your business growth today, tomorrow, and for years to come.
Each of these disciplines will be covered in depth in a chapter of this Ultimate
Guide to Digital Marketing as shown below.
The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing doesn’t present hype about the latest
flashy tactics in marketing—digital or otherwise. Instead, this resource covers
foundational disciplines such as content marketing, social media marketing,
and email marketing, always in the context of the goals that businesses care
about.
These goals include acquiring new leads and customers, monetizing the
leads and customers you already have, and creating communities of brand
advocates and promoters.
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The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
• The Methods: the strategies and processes you’ll use to create your plan
and execute it in your own business. This is the bulk of each chapter—
because in digital marketing, how you execute a strategy is key. And in this
Guide, we share the exact methods we use here at DigitalMarketer.
• The Metrics: the numbers you’ll watch to measure your success and
identify areas that need tweaking (or are worth doubling down on).
• The Roles: the people in your organization who will likely have
responsibility for planning and running each digital marketing tactic.
We’ve organized this Guide in a logical progression. Though you can jump
around, learning the tactics in whatever order you feel you need them, we
recommend you read through the chapters in order.
Take your time. Read and study one chapter at a time. Apply what you learn.
And when you feel you’ve got the methods up and running, move on to the
next chapter.
You’ll be surprised at how quickly you can implement these digital marketing
tactics if you focus on them one at a time. Then, when everything is up and
running, you can focus on optimizing and improving your processes for
maximum growth.
Ready to start?
7
The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
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The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
The Customer Value Journey helps you automate the entire customer
acquisition process, so you can sell without overtly selling and promote your
product or service without ever being pushy or creepy.
Learn all 8 stages and how you’ll use them to create a winning strategy for
your business.
Done right, your content marketing will not only attract prospects but also
move them through a marketing funnel to drive more sales and grow your
business.
What do we mean by that? Simply that content marketing can’t do its job if it’s
limited to blogging. It’s so much more than blogging.
To move your prospect through the Customer Value Journey, you’ll need to
create content that satisfies their needs at each of the 3 conversion funnel
stages: Awareness, Evaluation, and Conversion.
You’ll learn all about it—including how to plan your content marketing strategy
and how to create “perfect” content—here.
9
The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
The secret to powerful digital marketing is traffic. If you can master traffic
acquisition, you have a solid foundation for higher sales and growth.
Here, you’ll learn the secrets to crafting a digital advertising plan that actually
works.
“Going social” isn’t simply about being active on Facebook and Twitter. It’s
about being present where your audience hangs out—so you can engage with
them, build relationships, and make offers your followers will love.
But there’s more to social media marketing than simply being on it. Your end
goal isn’t more “Likes.” It’s more sales. Which is why we’ve broken down social
media marketing into 4 stages of the Social Success Cycle.
Learn the Social Success Cycle and how you can use it to attract your fans and
followers, engage them, and even sell to them through social media.
10
The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
Forget any rumors to the contrary. Email is alive and well—and if you know
how to use it, it will help you exponentially grow your business.
In fact, a study from DMA and Demand Metric found that email had a median
ROI of 122%. That’s 4 times higher than any other marketing channel! The key
to generating that ROI, of course, is mastering the foundations. Things like…
Learn the role of email in a growing business and how you can use it to quickly
move prospects and customers through the Customer Value Journey.
Search marketing has radically changed in the last few years. But we see
that as good news! Today, search engine optimization (SEO) can boost your
website’s traffic and visitors’ trust while supporting your other digital marketing
disciplines, as well.
Every year (sometimes, every few months), Google releases another algorithm
update. Search marketers who are “playing the system” often get hit hard,
losing the rankings they’ve achieved.
But search marketers who use white hat tactics and understand Intent-Based
Search Marketing do well. Because they’re optimizing their website for their
users first—which is what the search engines really care about.
If you want to compete in the search channels and attract free organic traffic
to your website, this chapter is for you. Learn the right way to do SEO here.
11
The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
If numbers aren’t your thing, we’ve got you covered. Website analytics is a
powerful tool for helping you figure out what’s working, what’s not, and what
to do next.
And the way to get started has nothing to do with numbers. It’s simply about
asking the right questions...
Once you have the answer, you simply need to follow 3 guiding principles...
• For the things that are hard to measure, give them context
Conversion rate optimization (CRO) may sound hard, but it doesn’t have to
be. It’s a simple methodology that anyone can learn to turn existing traffic into
leads and customers.
For most marketers, CRO calls to mind A/B testing to determine the best
button color or hero shot. But testing is just 1 of 8 steps in the CRO Cycle.
12
The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing
Learn the entire CRO Cycle, so you know how to make small tweaks that
can turn 1% returns into 10%, 25%, or higher returns. Read here to learn our
simple, repeatable framework that helps you consistently improve results on
your website.
The foundations you’ve learned in The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing are
solid and you’re well on your way to mastering digital marketing.
Now, it’s time to refine your skills and get all the gears in your marketing
machine working smoothly and efficiently.
13
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
01
CHAPTER
With a Customer Value Journey that strategically builds relationship with new
prospects and converts them into loyal, repeat customers.
This Journey is the process every prospect goes through to become a new
customer.
It’s how strangers become buyers and, eventually, raving fans of your business.
The hard truth is that marketing is not a one-step process. There are eight
stages you must account for on the path to purchase and promotion.
But, I have great news. If you understand this digital marketing strategy
(a.k.a. the Customer Value Journey), then you can intentionally engineer your
business in such a way that it moves people predictably through the stages in
this template.
15
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
In this chapter, we’ll start with a high-level map of the Customer Value Journey.
Then we’ll dive into each of the 8 steps, talk about the tactics you’ll need to
move people along the Journey, and review case studies so you can see it in
action.
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16
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Now let’s walk through the 8-step process of crafting your digital marketing
strategy:
Step 1: Awareness
Before someone can buy from you, they have to realize you exist—right?
This step is pretty self-explanatory: It’s where the person becomes aware of
you. After all, nobody is born knowing who Apple or Amazon are. At some
point they have to become aware of these companies if they are to become a
customer.
There are any number of ways a prospect could become aware of your
company, products, and services. Here are three possible scenarios:
Facebook ads are the perfect vehicle for driving awareness. In this example,
browsers are introduced to a home security company:
17
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
To improve awareness of your company, the digital marketing tactics you need
to master or hire include:
• Digital Advertising
• Search Marketing
• Content Marketing
18
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
• Community Management
• Copywriting
Step 2: Engagement
Your prospect is now aware of you—they know who you are—but you’re still in
the early stages of a relationship with them. They don’t yet know you, like you,
or trust you.
Step 2, Engagement, is where you start conversing with your prospects. You
engage them through some form of content that provides entertainment,
information, or both.
• A new mother watches a YouTube video from Johnson & Johnson showing
her how to give her baby a bath.
19
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
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Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
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• Content Marketing
• Email Marketing
21
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
• Community Management
Step 3: Subscribe
At this point, your prospect knows who you are and has engaged with you in
some way or another.
However, if you failed to get that person’s contact information, odds are high
you’ll never hear from them again.
Why?
Because people today are inundated with marketing and content, creating
a scarcity of attention. Just because someone reads one of your blog posts
today does NOT mean they’ll remember to revisit your site in the future.
Instead, you need to get that person to progress to Step 3 in the Value
Journey, which is to subscribe.
Here, the person gives you their contact information and, in doing so, grants
you permission to contact them again in the future.
The biggest criteria for your free offer is that your target audience finds it
valuable. Here are some examples from a variety of industries:
• A college girl fills out a form on a blog to receive a free sample of a new
face cream.
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Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
In each case, the prospect fills out a form, provides their contact information,
and is sent information about how to access the offer.
• The young professional is sent the time and URL of the webinar.
• The college girl is sent a thank-you email telling her the face cream is in the
mail.
But it always starts with a form. For example, here’s how Salesforce generates
leads with a whitepaper offer.
In this e·book, we explain how CRM can help you grow your business by
finding new customers faster, winning them over, and keeping them
engaged. But not al1 CRM systems are created equal, so we've also put
together sorne handy checklists to help you decide which CRM system is
best for your business.
23
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
To get more subscriptions for your company, the digital marketing tactics you
need to master or hire include:
• Content Marketing
• Email Marketing
• Digital Advertising
• Community Management
• Copywriting
Step 4: Convert
If the subscribers you gain in Step 3 of the journey remain engaged, some
of them will be ready to increase their level of commitment. They like the
information you share and have begun to trust you, so they’re ready to invest
in one of two ways: either with time or money.
This is a critical stage in the Customer Journey and one that frustrates many
business owners. The key to success in this stage is to employ what we call
“entry-point offers.” These offers are designed to give the new prospect
tremendous value without forcing them to put too much “skin in the game.”
In fact, it’s too early even to concern yourself with profitability. That’s right: in
this stage of the Customer Journey, you might lose money on the prospects
you acquire as buyers.
This is, perhaps, the most important lesson you must learn so it bears
repeating:
24
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
The most valuable businesses in the world all understand that the costliest
marketing activity your business undertakes is customer acquisition. It’s the
reason Sprint is willing to buy you out of your Verizon cell phone contract and
give you a free phone. It’s the reason GoDaddy offers domains for $2.95, and
it’s the reason VistaPrint will sell you 500 business cards for $9.
There are two types of entry-point offers: those that require a commitment
of time, and those that require a commitment of money. Here are some
examples:
• A man takes advantage of a $20 teeth whitening service at his local dentist.
Your goal here is not to make a huge profit. It’s to get customers, to shift the
relationship between you and your subscribers. Because, as you’ll see, once
someone is a customer, it’s much more likely that person will purchase higher-
ticket, more complex products and services and do it more frequently.
Remember, one of the costliest (in time, money, resources) marketing activities
your business will undertake is the acquisition of customers. The good news is
that once you’ve acquired them, you don’t need to pay to acquire them again.
Here’s an example of an offer from GoDaddy that does a great job of acquiring
new customers with extremely low-priced domain registration services:
25
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Getting that initial conversion was the hard part. Now they can build the
customer relationship to create profits down the road.
• Digital Advertising
• Content Marketing
• Copywriting
• Email Marketing
• Search Marketing
Step 5: Excite
At this point, your new customer has had a transaction with you. A small
transaction, sure, but a transaction nonetheless.
26
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Your job now is to make sure the transaction is a good one, that the
excitement of the purchase develops into good will and trust.
The reason for this is simple: if the person doesn’t get value from this
transaction, they won’t move on to the next stage and purchase more
expensive things from you.
So, how do you make sure your customers have a good experience?
Second, the prospect must get value from their last transaction with you. The
Excite stage of the Customer Value Journey is something you must return to
again and again. And every time, it should create excitement.
That being the case, whenever a customer or prospect does what you ask
them to do (attend this webinar, buy this product, hire me for this service), you
should engineer your marketing to maximize the chances they’ll get tangible
value from the experience.
Your goal in the Excite stage of the Customer Value Journey is to make sure
your customer gets value from their transaction. Here are some examples:
• A married couple buys a Keurig (coffee maker) and uses the free coffee
servings and Quick Start Guide to have an amazing cup of coffee within
minutes of opening the box.
27
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
This stage is all about ensuring that your marketing is giving your customer
opportunity to get value from doing business with you—and to enjoy that
value right away.
It could be as simple as an email onboarding campaign, like this one from the
productivity app, Evernote:
Evernote is a cloud-based note-taking app that you can use to sync notes
between your computer, phone, and tablet. It has a lot of useful features, but
Evernote knows that, in order to really hook new users and turn them into
long-lasting customers, they have to make sure new users are successful with
the app.
That’s why Evernote sends you these educational emails when you sign up for
a new account. The emails contain tips that help you to get more value out of
the application, making you more excited about it and more likely to use it.
• Email Marketing
• Content Marketing
28
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
• Copywriting
Step 6: Ascend
At this stage of the Value Journey, you’ve sunk time, money, and resources
into acquiring leads and customers and making sure they get value from doing
business with you.
It’s entirely possible that, until this stage, you have yet to turn a profit. In fact,
if you’re in a competitive market (and who isn’t?) you may be losing money on
the front end of this process to acquire customers.
Always remember that it costs more to acquire a new customer than to sell
to an existing one. That first sales isn’t about profits. It’s about converting a
prospect to a customer, so you can begin a long (and profitable) customer
relationship.
Buying customers on the front end is just shrewd business, but only if you can
monetize those customers on the back end.
The Ascend stage of the Value Journey is where your customer will be ready to
buy more and more often. If your business has a core offer, this is the place to
make that offer. Then once your customer purchases that core offer, it’s time to
present them with other relevant offers.
You’ll notice that the Value Journey worksheet represents the Ascent stage as
a ladder. That’s no accident. This is really a ladder that will hopefully lead to
multiple purchases over time.
• A dating couple rent a convertible in San Diego and pay extra for satellite
radio and GPS.
29
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
• A new dad buys a digital camera for $2,495 and adds a lens kit, camera
bag, and tripod to his purchase for a bundle price of $699.
• A woman with a brand new Mercedes buys an unlimited car wash package
for $40 per month instead of paying for each car wash individually.
Here’s how Southwest Airlines creates ascension by making an offer that will
improve your experience and increase the value of your transaction:
Southwesf•
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When you execute this stage properly, your customers will thank you for these
offers. Southwest airlines customers who want to board the plane early are
happy to pay an extra $15 to avoid hectic boarding.
To improve ascension in your company, the digital marketing tactics you need
to master or hire include:
• Email Marketing
• Copywriting
30
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
• Digital Advertising
• Content Marketing
Step 7: Advocate
You now have a happy customer who has made several profitable purchases
from you. The next stage in the Value Journey is to create marketing that
encourages your most loyal customers to advocate for your business.
These final two stages (Advocate and Promote) are often thought to be
outside of the control of marketing, but that simply isn’t true. You can create
marketing that intentionally generates more advocates and promoters.
• A woman enters a contest to win a new lip gloss from a beauty company
by shooting a video review detailing how much she loves one of their
lipsticks.
Designer Shoe Warehouse knows the value of the Advocate stage in the
Customer Journey. This email is designed to activate advocates by asking for a
review:
31
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
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DSW •
To get more advocates in your company, the marketing efforts you need to
work on include:
• Email marketing
• Search Marketing
Step 8: Promote
Promoters differ from advocates in that they are actively seeking to spread the
word about your brands, products, and services.
32
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
In some cases, the promoter simply had a great experience with your company
and wants to share their story with friends and family. In other cases, they
promote because you’ve created an incentive for them to do so.
This puts your message in front of a new audience, the fans, followers, and
friends of the promoter. And because this new audience is hearing about you
from a trusted source who they already know, they’re much more likely to
become customers themselves.
• A man who runs a podcast about fishing earns a 20% commission every
time one of his listeners buys fishing equipment using his affiliate link.
• A woman attends a conference for free because she arranged for 5 of her
colleagues to go as well.
As you can see, promoters help you get more customers at a lower cost. So
even when you reward promoters, it’s a win-win.
A good example of this is Dropbox. When it was just starting out as a new
company in a new industry, they realized discoverability would be key to
their success. So they initiated a referral program that gave its users a strong
incentive to promote the service to others.
33
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Simply by inviting your contacts to try out Dropbox, you could increase your
own online storage space from 2 GB up to 16 GB. This was such an attractive
offer, thousands of new users recruited their friends and family, helping turn
Dropbox into a software giant (valued at $10 billion in 2014).
To get more promoters in your company, the marketing efforts you need to
work on include:
• Email Marketing
• Copywriting
34
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
How do you seamlessly and subtly move customers and prospects through
each phase of the Customer Value Journey?
• A call to action
• A traffic source
The call to action is what you want people to do. If the marketing campaign
you’re creating is aimed at the Subscribe stage of the Customer Journey, your
call to action might be for people to download a whitepaper, checklist, or
video resource. If it’s a campaign in the Convert or Ascend stage, your call to
action might be to buy a product or service. If the campaign you are creating
is for the Awareness stage, the call to action might be as simple as listening to
a podcast episode or reading a blog post.
The traffic source could be digital clicks from ads, email, social media sites, or
search engines like Google. Offline marketing could include direct mail, TV, or
radio advertising, print ads, or anything else that gets the call to action in front
of your prospects.
35
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Now that you know what a campaign IS, let’s talk about what a campaign is
supposed to DO.
For example:
A campaign might have the goal of getting people to sign up for your email
list (going from Engaged to Subscribe).
Another campaign might have the goal of getting new customers excited
about their purchase (going from Convert to Excite).
Once again, notice that a campaign is intentionally moving people through the
Value Journey. And that word “intentionally” is important.
Anyone who has ever become a customer of a company has moved through
the Value Journey, whether that company made it happen intentionally or not.
For example, imagine that you had never heard of Dropbox before. Then, one
day, a friend tells you that he uses Dropbox to store all his files online, and he
recommends that you check it out.
At this point, both you and your friend have progressed along the Value
Journey. You have moved to Step 1, Aware, and your friend has moved to Step
8, Promote.
36
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Offer rewards for people taking the action you want them to take.
Once you figure out that you can move people intentionally through the Value
Journey using marketing campaigns, you realize that you have the ability to
grow your business by improving the areas where your customers are getting
“stuck.”
At this point I’d like to point out that there’s one common mistake that many
companies make when trying to move customers and prospects through the
Customer Value Journey.
37
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Once a business understands the Customer Journey, they can get so excited
about the possibilities that they try to move people all the way from stranger
to promoter in one step, in one campaign.
This is impossible.
You cannot possibly create one campaign that makes people aware of you,
engages them, gets them to subscribe and convert, excites them, ascends
them, and then turns them into advocates and promoters.
Instead, you need to create multiple specific campaigns that are designed to
move people from one stage to the next. (Or in some cases, a campaign can
probably move people through 2 or maybe 3 steps at once.)
• Call to Action: End the war between sales and marketing... watch this
video!
38
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
We call this video the “Valentine’s Day War on Sales & Marketing.”
But as you know, just creating a video isn’t enough. We also had to decide
how we were going to get people to watch the video. So we chose to run a
Facebook ad campaign (with video views as the goal) to generate traffic to the
video. This made up the “Traffic” portion of our campaign.
39
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
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Because the goal of this campaign is to get people engaged with us, our call
to action was very simple: “Watch this video!”
40
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Call to action: Sign up for ModCloth’s good news and great offers!
The content needed for this campaign was pretty straightforward: it’s a blog
post. When you go to the ModCloth blog, you’ll see many helpful blog articles
like this one:
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ModSty111t Domot1lqu• believes in the power ol a good mix 'n' match. and she graciously shared her
outfltting brillianee with us. The lides are changing in the swimwear world (heh. heh). and below is a proud
presentat10n of her thOuBhtful advice for refreshinB your swimwear game·
•
Styles So Nk:e Youll Wear Them Twice
41
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Because ModCloth has a lot of engaged Facebook followers, they were able
to use free organic Facebook traffic as their traffic source. (Remember, you
don’t always have to pay for traffic.)
So we have content and a traffic source. Now, what’s the call to action?
Well, you’ll notice that while you’re browsing the blog you’ll be greeted with
this popup:
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Slgn Up for ModCloth's
Good N•tN• & Gre•t Otfersl
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Popups have been proven to be an effective tool for a Subscribe call to action.
Now you might not think of this as a campaign, but it totally is. It’s a specific
call-to-action: Sign Up for ModCloth’s Good News & Great Offers! And
anytime someone fills out this form, they move on to the next stage in the
Customer Value Journey.
42
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Here’s an example of a campaign that moves people through two steps in the
Value Journey: from Engage to Subscribe and then to Convert.
Let’s go through this campaign from the beginning. The traffic source here is
Google Adwords targeting the keyword “buy organic diapers.”
..,,
.
...............,¡. ..About 1,050.000restm(071 NOOnc11)
- r....
Attention
When you click on that ad, you arrive on a landing page that asks you to
subscribe.
43
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
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Subscribe
Once you opt in, they’ll send you the following coupon in your email (about 24
hours later, assuming you didn’t already make a purchase):
44
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
-�·
•
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--· e ........
YOUR FIRST
BUNDLE
ROW1«
SAVENOW
Convert
I want you to pay close attention to that call to action: Exclusive Offer! 25%
Off Your First Order. Notice that this discount only applies to your first order.
That’s because the goal of this campaign isn’t to generate repeat purchases;
it’s to get someone to make their very FIRST purchase. It’s a time-tested and
effective tactic for turning someone into a new customer.
45
Chapter 01: Your Digital Marketing Strategy
Template (AKA The Customer Value Journey)
Summing Up
The Customer Value Journey is the foundation for all the tactics you’ll learn
in this Guide. Whether you’re learning about content marketing, digital
advertising, or analytics, or any other topic, keep this concept in mind.
Don’t worry, though. We’ll review it several times so it stays fresh on your
mind. And by the end of this Guide, it will likely be cemented into your
thinking.
Now that you understand the Customer Journey, it’s time to talk about the #1
tactic you’ll use to engage people at every stage: Content Marketing.
46
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•
-
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
02
CHAPTER
But it is possible if you understand how content fits into your overall digital
marketing strategy.
And done right, your content marketing will not only attract prospects, but
also move them through a marketing funnel to drive more sales and grow your
business.
You see, most businesses miss out on a lot of opportunities because their
vision for content marketing is too small.
As a result, they’re churning out content but not getting great results. And
here’s why: content in and of itself isn’t what drives traffic and sales.
Perfect content isn’t about you, your brand, or your objectives. It’s about
delivering the right information to your prospects at exactly the right point in
the customer journey.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
For instance, for the software company Freshbooks, this web page represents
perfect content marketing for a prospect who needs pricing information to
make an informed buying decision.
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Content is any information that helps you keep the funnel full.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
First, let’s get clear on the six characteristics of perfect content marketing and
why it’s essential that you get started.
(NOTE: At the end of this chapter, you’ll get access to a tool we use to make
perfect content planning a breeze.)
I know this is Marketing 101 stuff, but stick with me for just a second before I
get into the more advanced content marketing concepts we’ll be covering.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
3. Conversion – Those that move through the Evaluation Stage are now at
the moment of truth—purchase. At DigitalMarketer, our goal at this stage is
to convert leads into frequent and high-ticket buyers.
A cold prospect cannot evaluate your solution until they are first aware of the
problem and your solution. And conversion is impossible until the prospect
has first evaluated the possible courses of action.
In other words…
Make sense?
To move prospects through the middle (MOFU) and bottom of the funnel
(BOFU) you’ll need other content types.
51
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
Let’s look at each stage of the funnel and the content needed at those
stages…
52
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
You need freely available content at the top of the funnel (TOFU) that…
• Entertains
• Educates
• or Inspires
… and you need to make it readily available using content types like:
• Blog posts
• Infographics
• Photographs
• Digital Magazines/Books
• Audio/Video Podcasts
• Microsites
• Primary Research
Do you need all of these content types at the top of the funnel?
Heck no.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
Most businesses will post content to a blog and to social media channels like
Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest, etc. Once you’ve mastered these two
content types, you’ll want to add more top-of-funnel content to the mix, like a
podcast or a print newsletter.
Remember, the big goal at the top of the funnel is to make prospects
“problem aware” and “solution aware.”
Notice how Whole Foods, using their Whole Story blog, raises awareness for
a sea scallops offer while providing valuable content (recipes and cooking
instructions):
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TOFU content raises awareness of your offers while providing valuable information.
54
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
(Shhhhh… don’t tell anyone, but this VERY chapter is educating you about the
strategy and tactics taught in our Content Marketing Mastery Certification.)
And the good news is it works in any industry for any type of product.
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Unfortunately, the top of the funnel is where most organizations begin and
end their content marketing efforts.
55
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
Smart content marketers know that, with a bit more effort, they can move
prospects from awareness to evaluation in the middle of the funnel.
• Software Downloads
• Discount/Coupon Clubs
• Quizzes/Surveys
• Webinars/Events
This is a Lead Magnet that DigitalMarketer uses to generate leads for our
products surrounding Facebook advertising:
56
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
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When visitors click on the “Download Now” button, they’re prompted to enter
their email address to receive the piece of content.
This piece of content (a white paper) from Cloud Margin generates “solution
aware” leads…
57
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
CloudMargin __
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
What types of content will your new lead need to make an informed purchase
decision?
• Demos/Free Trials
• Customer Stories
• Comparison/Spec Sheets
• Webinars/Events
• Mini-Classes
Your lead may be reading your blog and downloading lead magnets (and it
will help convert her), but you’ll need content that helps her decide between
you and your competitor to move her through to purchase.
Notice how Salesforce supplies leads in the bottom of the funnel with
plenty of customer stories to prove that their product can handle that lead’s
circumstances…
59
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
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the content marketing team.
60
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
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At the bottom of the funnel, prospects are comparison shopping, so
comparison sheets make smart BOFU content.
But Quickbooks could earn some points by comparing their tools to their
competitors’ tools as well. For instance, a Google search suggests that a
comparison sheet between Quickbooks and their competitors (such as Xero)
is another piece of content that should be on the radar of the Intuit content
marketing team.
61
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
Google
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And while we’re at it, look at all the bottom-of-funnel (BOFU) content Xero’s
content marketing team has built:
62
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
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And…
63
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
And…
Absolutely.
But failing to build a full-funnel content plan will leave you disappointed in
your content marketing results.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
In our Freshbooks example, a customer who’s deep in the funnel might have
the intent to compare Freshbooks to Quickbooks.
65
Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
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To come up with valuable content assets, anticipate current and future needs.
And you’ll have to run paid traffic to your content to maximize your results or
you risk leaving money on the table as Molly explains:
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
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The truth is the most lucrative content assets you’ll create (if you have an
existing business) are assets that meet intent at the bottom and middle of the
funnel. Optimize for this existing bottom and middle of funnel intent before
going to work on generating awareness at the top of the funnel with an
expensive and time-consuming blog roll out.
That’s not to diminish the power of a business blog. Over the last 24 months,
we’ve been adding content assets (articles and podcasts) at the top of the
funnel and we’ve increased website traffic (think awareness) by 1053%.
That said, the quick wins in the content marketing game are in the middle and
bottom of the funnel.
For instance, let’s say I’m shopping for supplies to repaint my kitchen…
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
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In our Freshbooks pricing page example, notice that Freshbooks has created a
clear ascension path to a “Risk-Free Trial” of the software.
In blog content, prospects can be given the opportunity to opt-in with their
email address to get more information about a topic.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
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_ ..... --
[Test Results] What You Need to
Know About Facebook Lead Ads
IWtilCMfliMI NI :N&-Ni·MN
They get more information about a topic they are interested in. You get a
lead.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
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When a prospect visits a piece of content (spends time) they have raised their
hand and indicated interest. And, because of the magic of ad retargeting you
can follow up with these prospects with a relevant ascension offer without
even acquiring their contact information.
• Website/blog
• YouTube
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For instance, could that video demo of your product be republished on your
YouTube channel like Cuisinart has done here?
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(If you’re wondering, “Who in the hell would watch that boring video?” the
answer is anyone who is interested in buying a coffee grinder and, particularly,
anyone interested in buying THAT coffee grinder. Anecdotally… I bought that
coffee grinder after watching that demo just a few weeks ago. The grinder
does a great job grinding coffee and that video does a great job at cross-
channel content marketing at the bottom of the funnel.)
Can that article on your blog be repurposed as a webinar? Can that podcast
become a written article for LinkedIn Pulse?
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
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-, .:
6 Trending Digital Marketing Skills
to Put on a Resume
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Our goal for this article was to raise awareness for our marketing certification
programs, so it was targeted to our “Employee” avatar.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
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The Content Campaign Plan is used to align content marketing with business
objectives like generating leads and sales.
It looks like this (I know that’s hard to read, but you can access the template by
clicking here).
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DigitalMarketer’s Content Campaign Plan
Want to create content that converts prospects at all stages of the funnel?
Create a Content Campaign Plan and execute on it. It works.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
Traffic by Channel
At the top of the funnel, design your marketing to raise awareness for your
business, brands, and products. Measure traffic from channels like Google,
Facebook, and Twitter.
Measure the number of leads generated in the middle of the funnel that
require further nurturing before they are ready to make a purchase.
Conversion Rate
Measure the number of leads consuming content at the bottom of the funnel
(demos, customer stories, etc.), indicating they’re ready to buy.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
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Marketing
Sales
According to Harvard Business Review, the average buyer is 57% of the way
through the sales process before they engage with a sales representative.
Instead of contacting your sales team your prospects are consuming your
content. Sales people who understand content marketing can work in
conjunction with your marketing team to create content that closes deals.
Public Relations
The modern-day PR team must understand how the content they produce fits
into the larger content, social, and search marketing strategy.
Content designed to raise awareness for your business, brands and products.
This content is delivered through a number of channels including blogs,
podcasts and video hosting platforms like YouTube.
Content designed to generate leads and move the prospect through the
evaluation stage. Content in the middle of the funnel often takes the form of a
Lead Magnet.
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Chapter 02: Developing a Content
Marketing Strategy
Lead Magnet
Summing Up
Content marketing isn’t restricted to blogging. You’ll probably create tons of
blog posts, but if you’re strategic, you’ll use your blog as just one channel in
your content campaigns.
Don’t forget to download the Content Campaign Plan, which is your best
resource for planning content for every stage of the funnel: TOFU, MOFU, and
BOFU.
Then, once you’ve got your content assets built, you’re ready to learn how to
use digital advertising to drive traffic and conversions.
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You’ll learn:
• The “GC = A” Content Marketing Formula that connects the dots between
content and sales.
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Advertising Plan
03
CHAPTER
How can we easily and affordably get people’s attention, push them to our
websites, and convert them to subscribers and customers?
The secret is digital advertising. And if you understand how to make it work, it
can give you full control over your traffic flow and help you sell more too.
In this chapter, you’ll learn the process for planning, setting up, and optimizing
your ads, including the metrics you need to watch, the lingo you’ll use as a
media buyer, and the people in your business who should be responsible for
digital advertising.
But before we start, let’s get clear about why paid traffic is a smarter
investment than organic.
But as with everything else in life, you get what you pay for.
The easiest way to explain that is with a simple comparison: the water hose
versus the rain.
Paid traffic is like a water hose. You have complete control over the direction
it’s pointed, the amount of water pouring from it, and how long you let the
water flow. You can turn it on and off whenever you want.
If you’re getting more traffic than you need, with paid traffic, you can slow the
flow. You have control of where it’s going, how fast, and when.
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Organic traffic, on the other hand, is more like rain. You aren’t sure when or
if it will come, how consistent it will be, nor how long it will last. Listen to the
weather channel all you want. You have no control.
With organic traffic, you can lose traffic if Google changes their algorithm. If a
competitor has a huge launch, you could lose traffic to them. You also have no
control over where the traffic goes. Even simple things like changing the URL
of your landing page can mess things up.
You can enjoy all the control of paid traffic without it actually costing you
anything. You do that by building funnels that reimburse your ad spend.
So in essence, you can acquire customers for free, and then once your
advertising costs have been reimbursed, use simple tactics to build loyalty and
optimize your customers’ lifetime value.
The better your paid traffic is, the better your organic traffic will be as well,
because good advertising drives traffic—and the pages that get lots of traffic
tend to rank higher in search engines.
But it’s important to be realistic. You just can’t run one traffic campaign and
expect it to magically deposit a million dollars in your bank account.
If you want a constant flow of leads and customers for your business, you must
look at this as a system.
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But to know which one is right for you, you need to know where your
customers hang out and which ad platforms are suited for the type of
marketing you do.
In most cases, you’ll probably start with Facebook and Google. According to
Business Insider, these two sites drive 80% of referral traffic, more than all the
other platforms combined.
19.1%
Facebook and Google are your top sources for paid traffic
Because Google is a search engine, people start there when they’re looking
for information. So it’s a lot like the Yellow Pages.
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To drive traffic through Google, you’ll bid on keywords that will help people
find you and can lead to an ideal sales conversation.
Scrolling through your Facebook newsfeed is a bit like driving down the
highway. As you scroll, you see ads, promoted posts, as well as random
comments.
And if you, as a business, are willing to pay, your message will also appear in
the newsfeed of your target audience.
With Facebook, you can spend as little as you want and still expand your
reach.
Because it’s a social platform, and because they collect data on our behavior
every day, they know a lot about us. All that data makes them the most
powerful ad platform available today.
Target your ads precisely enough, and you’re sure to get the right eyeballs on
your message.
Disruptive, yes, but with YouTube, your ads are always relevant.
That’s because you can target your ads based on the YouTube channels your
audience likes, the types of videos they watch, and what they’re searching for.
So what are the top 3 paid traffic sources? What’s the best place to start with
your paid traffic campaigns?
Facebook, Google, and YouTube: All three will give you quality traffic from
people who are interested in your offers.
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Advertising Plan
Okay, that gives you a good background for the strategy we’re about to
discuss. Let’s dig into the methods you’ll use to execute a winning ad strategy.
NOTE: We’ll focus primarily on Facebook advertising here, but you can apply
this same process to whatever platform you’re using.
How do you know the type of ads you should be running and how to precisely
target those ads? It comes down to 2 foundational concepts: the customer
journey and traffic “temperature.”
The Customer Value Journey, remember, is the path people follow as they
build relationship with your business, from first touch to final sale.
Awareness. This is the top of the funnel, when new prospects first discover
your brand exists and that you can help them solve their problems.
Evaluation. This is the middle of the funnel, when prospects are seriously
considering making a purchase. Their biggest question is whether you’re the
best source.
Conversion. The is the bottom of the funnel, where people take action and
buy something from you.
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You might say, they “warm up to you.” Which is why we refer to this
deepening relationship as “traffic temperature.”
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TRAFFIC TEMPERATURE
COLD
WARM
Cold Traffic. Generally, this is new traffic from people who are in the
Awareness stage. These people are good prospects for your business but
have never heard of you or your brand.
Your goal with cold traffic is indoctrination. You want to introduce your
business to new audiences and get them coming back for more.
Warm Traffic. Warm traffic comes from people who know who you are but
haven’t bought anything yet. It aligns with the Evaluation stage.
Your goal with warm traffic is acquisition, to convert a site visitor into a lead.
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Hot Traffic. Hot traffic comes from people who are at the Conversion stage.
These are your buyers, people who are ready to buy or have already bought
something from you.
Your goal with hot traffic is monetization, to sell a high-dollar product to your
best customers.
Ultimately, your goal is to move people from cold to hot, transforming new
leads into loyal customers, willing to buy from you over and over again.
With cold traffic, you don’t necessarily offer a sale. You’ll spend more time
building relationship. Whereas with hot traffic, the relationship is secure. You
speak more as a friend, and you make offers based on the topics you know
they’re interested in.
Believe it or not, these 2 concepts alone will massively improve your ability to
create successful traffic campaigns. Simply relating to people based on their
temperature, you’ll build trust and engagement.
1. Your Offer
Your offer is not the same thing as your product or service. Your business is
built around a product; your ad campaign is built around an offer.
So what is an offer? It’s the unique combination of your product or service with
other bonuses or add-ons, including all the details of your promotion:
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• The deliverables
• The price
• The schedule
• And more
So you may only have one product, but you can offer it for sale in a variety of
ways, creating hundreds of different offers.
This example, for instance, offers a coupon for big savings on your first visit:
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Advertising Plan
This one, from Survival Life, offers a valuable product for just a penny:
Claim your $19 Everstryke Pro fer just A PENNY! This water-proof lighter is
essential fer any survivalist. lt's yours fer just $0.01 (S&H not included).
Your offer is also the starting point for your ad campaign. Get it right, and
everything else will usually fall into place.
But the opposite is just as true: put together a bad offer, and your ad won’t
convert.
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2. Your Copy
Your ad copy refers to the messaging you use in your ad campaign. It should
be clear and compelling, so the benefits stand out—both the benefits of
engaging with the ad and of taking whatever action you’re asking for.
Good copy has a strong emotional hook. It’s intriguing and persuasive without
relying on hype.
Generally, you want to start your ad by speaking to a pain point your target is
dealing with. Then your offer should be presented as the solution.
This Hired promotion leads with the problem: “counting down the hours until
you get to leave the office.” If someone resonates with that problem, they’ll
be eager to see the solution.
Suggested Post
Hired
• Sponsored ·
lf you're counting down the hours until you get
to leave the office, it might be time for a
change. With over 3,500 companies on Hired,
find one that you're passionate about.
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Advertising Plan
WINC
Sponsored · �
Stop going to the store! We deliver personalized wines to your doorstep. Get
started today - take $20 off your first arder + receive complimentary
shipping!
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If going to the store is a pain point, they hook your interest in the very first line.
3. The Creative
Creative refers to the graphic elements of your ad: the image, video, or
carousel images.
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Advertising Plan
Take this ad as an example. The article we promoted the offer in is on the left,
and the resulting ad is on the right.
11
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92
Chapter 03: Crafting a Digital
Advertising Plan
4. Ad Scent
Because trust is a huge conversion factor. If people feel comfortable that your
offer is valid, they’ll seriously consider your offer. Do anything to create doubt
or fear, and they’ll exit without taking action.
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Ad scent
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Chapter 03: Crafting a Digital
Advertising Plan
Every time we click, we use simple visual cues (or scent) to ensure we’re in the
right place. If we lose scent at any point, we begin to feel we’re in the wrong
place or that we’re being tricked. As soon as that happens, we exit and go
back to where we started.
Your visitors should always feel like they’re on the right path.
• Design: Use similar imagery and colors on each piece of the campaign.
Ad scent is low-hanging fruit in digital advertising. Get it right, and you’ll boost
your conversion rate and lower costs.
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The ad mentions “FREE Instacart delivery,” and when they click, they land on a
page with similar wording in the headline: “Free Delivery Credit.”
If the landing page talked about keeping your fruit fresh or any other topic
unrelated to free delivery, it would confuse people, and they’d click off without
taking action.
That’s why it’s important to create a strong scent between the elements of your
campaign.
5. Targeting
Cold Traffic. Here, you’re just introducing yourself to new audiences, so you
have 3 goals (none of them being to sell):
• Pixelling. When they arrive on your content, pixel them so you run more
ads to them and warm them up.
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• Blog posts
• Content videos
• Podcasts
• Lead magnets
• Quizzes
• White papers
• Infographics
When paying for cold traffic, you’ll pixel people who engage with your ad or
click through to free content. You want to give them value so they begin to like
your brand. So focus on entertaining, inspiring, and educating everyone who
clicks through.
Warm Traffic. Think about warm traffic as acquaintances who have shown
interest in return. It’s not a developed relationship yet, but there has been a
connection. So you’ll target these ads to:
• Leads that opted into your email list. (You’ll upload that list to a traffic
platform.)
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• Generate leads
• Lead magnets
• Quizzes or surveys
• Product demos
• Branding videos
• Free trials
Hot Traffic. These are your buyers. They may be people who have opted
in and are on the fence about buying from you. They may have added
products to the shopping cart but never purchased. They may have purchased
something from you in the past but haven’t responded to recent offers.
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• Events
• Paid webinars
• High-dollar offers
• Done-for-you services
Cold, warm, or hot, getting the temperature right allows you to put your
campaign in front of the right people. And the more precisely you can target
your ads, the better they’ll perform.
Creating an Ad Campaign
How do you put all these concepts and elements together to create a
successful ad campaign?
The idea is to identify in advance the types of people you’re targeting and the
hooks that are most likely to grab their attention, so you can be sure you’re
creating a good marketing/message fit.
You’ll create your ad grid in Excel or a Google Sheet, but it will look something
like this:
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AVATARS
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for every campaign you put together.
Now, with your spreadsheet ready, here are the 7 steps you’ll go through to
plan, implement, and scale your campaign.
An avatar is a profile for one type of person who’d be interested in your offer
(example: entrepreneur, stay-at-home mom, consultant). The avatars for your
campaign may be different from the avatars for your business, and that’s okay.
For each traffic campaign, you’ll have 2-4 different avatars. You can have more,
of course, but the more avatars you have, the more work it will take to plan
your campaign.
To figure out who your best avatars are, look at your offer (e.g., the lead
magnet, blog post, or webinar you’re promoting) and brainstorm several
different types of people who’d want it and benefit from it.
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Each of these will be an avatar for your campaign. Plug them into the top row
of your grid.
What’s most appealing about your offer? Each benefit or outcome of your offer
can be turned into a hook to grab the attention of your audience.
• Have. What will they have if they download and consume your offer? How
do their lives look before & after?
• Feel. How will they feel better, smarter, or more successful for accepting
your offer?
• Average day. How did you change or improve their average day?
Don’t feel like you need to create a hook for all these outcomes. But do be
creative and come up with several benefits or outcomes that will grab the
attention of your avatars.
Okay, now that you have your hooks, enter them in the first column of your
grid.
You need segmented messaging for every cell in your spreadsheet, each
targeting one hook and avatar.
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You can write the ad copy yourself or, because the ad grid clearly
communicates the avatars and hooks you’re targeting, you can outsource it to
a copywriter.
Regardless of who does the writing, though, you want unique ad copy for
every segment: Avatar1/Hook1, Avatar 2/Hook1, etc. And for each segment,
you want the copy for the entire ad: text, headline, description and ad type.
So let’s say you have 4 avatars and 5 hooks, you’ll need to write 20 ads.
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This level of segmentation gives you the best chance of success in your
campaign. Instead of creating generic ads for a few avatars or hooks, you’ll
create highly targeted ads aimed at specific types of people (avatars) with
specific interests (hooks).
With this approach, your odds of getting a good return on your ad spend are
incrementally higher!
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Once your copy is written, it’s time to research your avatars to identify the
interest groups you’ll use in your ads.
For this, research each avatar separately, finding the answers to each of these
questions:
• Who are the authority figures, thought leaders, or big brands in your
niche?
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To find the answers, do a Google search and ask people in your target
audience. It may take time to find the answers, but these answers will help you
get your ads in front of the people who need to see them. So take the time to
do it right!
We call it the “But No One Else Would” trick, and here’s how it works.
Let’s say you’re targeting an ad to golfers. You want to find interests that only
avid golfers would know about, so no one will click on your ad except qualified
prospects.
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Even casual golfers would likely know who Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson
are, but only avid golf enthusiasts would know Bubba Watson. So when setting
up your ad, you’d want to target people interested in Bubba Watson.
This is what you’re looking for in your avatar research: the interests that only
die-hard fans would know about, so you can get the right eyeballs on your ads.
Your creative is the visual element you’ll use in each ad. At a minimum, you
need one creative for each hook.
Do a Google image search of each hook’s keywords, and see what comes up.
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The top-ranking images show you what people think about when they hear
your keyword.
Use that as inspiration. But don’t copy. Design original images or videos that
include the imagery people associate with your keyword—but that also have
your brand’s unique look and feel.
At this point, you have all the assets you need for your ad campaigns. It’s time
to set up your ads. Use the ad grid to help you build each ad:
• Use the copy and creative you’ve developed to build the ads.
• Use your avatar interests to build an audience size in the range of half a
million to 1.5 million each.
Then turn your ads on and run them about a week. Once you start getting
results, you can begin gathering your metrics.
Your best success metric depends on the purpose of your campaign and the
temperature you’re targeting. It might be:
• ROI
Record that metric in your ad grid below the ad copy for each avatar/hook.
Ideally, you’ll collect the metrics at 7 days, 14 days, 21 days, and at the end of
the campaign.
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Step 7: Scale
Scaling is about figuring out what’s working, what’s not, and how you can get
bigger, better results.
• Horizontally: If your results for an avatar are better than average, buy
traffic in on other ad platforms to boost your visibility to that group of
people.
Find your winning avatar and hooks, and scale those. But also refine your
process so you get better results in less time with a smaller investment of time
or money.
To do that, you’ll build campaigns that include ads for all temperatures of your
target audience. The challenge is to stay within your budget while targeting
different segments. Here’s how to optimize your ad spend.
6:3:1
Let’s assume your budget allows you to spend $10 a day. Your daily spend will
look like this:
• $6/day on cold traffic, driving cold traffic to your site with pure content
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That ratio may change periodically depending on your needs, but this is a
good balance, allowing you to target all temperatures while maintaining
control of your spending.
When targeting different temperatures, you need to adapt your ads to the
level of relationship. These templates will give you a good head start.
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When this happens, it usually means ad fatigue has set in. People have seen
the ad too many times and aren’t responding to it anymore.
Traffic Temperature
The classification of the audiences you target with your digital advertising
campaigns as cold, warm, or hot.
Cold Traffic
Audiences targeted with ads that have no prior experience with your brands,
products, or people. Ads targeted at cold audiences introduce the business to
the prospect and establish trust and authority in an effort to build awareness.
Warm Traffic
Audiences targeted with ads that are aware of your brands, products, or
people but have not yet converted to a customer or haven’t purchased in a
long period of time. Ads targeted at warm audiences should be designed to
convince a prospect that you have the superior solution.
Hot Traffic
Audiences targeted with ads that have previously purchased. These audiences
know your reputation and have used your product or service. Ads targeted at
hot audiences should convert a customer into a high-ticket or repeat buyer.
Most ad campaigns to hot audiences will be conducted through retargeting.
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Retargeting Campaign
Frequency
How many times has an ad been shown to the people you’re targeting. Ideally,
you want to keep the frequency below 10. If people to see the same ad too
many times, it becomes annoying and can lead to ad fatigue.
Relevance
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The amount of advertising spend divided by the number of clicks on the ad,
ad set, or ad campaign. Believe it or not, this is the least important of these
four metrics.
Who should own your digital advertising? Where in the company does
responsibility lie?
The paid traffic team (or individual) should have primary responsibility for
setting up and deploying your digital advertising.
They’ll rely on input from other teams and individuals within the organization,
especially from designers for creating the ad graphics and landing pages,
marketing and sales for creating compelling offers, and content marketing for
finding great content to direct cold traffic to.
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Content Marketing
Any team member who is producing content (blogs, podcasts, videos, press
releases, etc.) must understand how that content can be leveraged by a paid
traffic specialist.
Summing Up
Digital advertising is a key tactic for digital marketers because it gives you
control over your traffic flow.
To succeed, though, you need to create different campaigns for each stage
of the Customer Journey—and you need to understand the “temperature” of
each stage. Get that right, and you’ll soon be driving traffic like a pro.
But your digital marketing mastery doesn’t stop there. Not only do you want
to be driving traffic to your onsite content and landing pages, you also want to
engage your audience in social media. And that’s just what we’ll cover in the
next chapter.
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Companies today must have scalable traffic campaigns that produce new,
qualified customers from scratch if they want consistent growth.
In this mastery course, you’ll gain the skills you need to help brands and
businesses leverage paid traffic channels such as Google, Facebook, Twitter,
YouTube and other demand-gen platforms to grow their customer base...
without breaking the bank.
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Media Strategy
04
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If marketing is about putting your message where your audience hangs out
(which it is), then social media is a no brainer.
That said, many businesses fail to fully leverage social media in their marketing
plans. They dabble, sure, but their strategic efforts end with content and
advertising.
Today, 79% of US internet users are on Facebook. Six out of ten Americans
stay updated on news through social media, while 35% have used social
media to look for or research a job.
And these same numbers are reflected worldwide. Is it any wonder marketers
are going social to grow their business?
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Trouble is that “going social” isn’t as easy as it looks. There’s a lot more to
social media marketing than simply posting to Facebook and Twitter.
Keep in mind, there’s a big difference between a social media manager and a
community manager. (Yes, both manage social media efforts, but their focus
is different.) Learn more in our article, Social Media Manager vs. Community
Manager.
• Listening
• Influencing
• Networking
• Selling
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All 4 of these stages are key to reaching social media success. But all of it
hinges on Stage 1: Social Listening.
Listening gives you the insights you need to perform the other 3 stages well.
It helps you develop a strategy that will give you influence, a strong network,
and lots of leads and sales.
The key, of course, is to get your information in front of your prospects and
customers where they hang out online. For most businesses, that includes one
or more of these top social networking sites.
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Social media marketing isn’t about hanging out with your prospects and
customers. It’s about executing the social cycle while minimizing costs—which
means you need to master the methods and metrics for all 4 of the stages.
1. Social Listening
As with any marketing strategy, you need to start with your target audience.
That’s why social media marketing starts with listening.
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Whether you’re paying attention or not, people are talking about you and
reaching out to you on the social web. They’re sharing their experiences with
your products. They’re talking about the things you’re saying or doing. They’re
even asking you questions.
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Some comments, like these, are positive. You’ll want to celebrate them—and
respond with a great big thank-you.
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Negative comments need immediate attention.
Other comments aren’t so positive (and some are downright negative). They
need immediate attention so followers know you’re present and accessible.
It’s a lot like customer support. And in the same way, it can help or hurt your
public perception.
If you don’t answer, it leaves a bad impression. On the social web, it’s a bit like
leaving your customer service lines unattended.
But when you do answer the call, listening and responding appropriately, you
can connect with your fans and followers, find and fix issues you may not be
aware of, and build incredible good will.
The key, of course, is to make listening your #1 priority and use your insights
to inform the other 3 stages of the social success cycle.
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What are you listening for? When tuning in to social conversations, your goals
are to:
• Keep a pulse on the industry, where it’s going, how it’s being perceived.
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• Your brand – Watch for mentions of your company name, your products,
or any other identifying information.
Example: Apple might watch for mentions of the Apple watch or anything
related to iOS.
• Topics relevant to your industry – You want to stay on top of the pulse
of your industry. So listen to the topics people are bringing up, their
questions, and their hot buttons.
• Influencers – Listen for the topics thought leaders and influencers are
talking about, and look at the content they’re producing. They’re all clues
for where the industry is moving.
Example: Mentions of Tim Cook and Arthur Levinson can reveal public
perception of the Apple brand.
Your aim is to tune into the pulse of public sentiment towards your brand, your
industry, and the topics that relate to your brand. In a sense, it’s reputation
management. But it can also help you perform real-time customer service and
identify product or content gaps that need to be filled.
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Listening is only half of the equation. You also need to respond to the things
you see and hear.
What is a feedback loop? It’s a process you create for your teams to use
when addressing issues that arise during social listening. It clearly maps out
the people or departments that issues should be routed to and who has
responsibility for resolving them.
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You put a social media manager (or team member) in place, actively listening.
When your social listener sees a complaint or issue, say in Twitter, they’ll
perform “triage”—responding with an empathetic “you’ve been heard”
response—and then route the issue to the proper team. This happens within
12 hours of the complaint/issue.
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Once the issue has been forwarded to the appropriate person, this specialist
will then respond to the issue, aiming to resolve it completely within 24 hours.
Having a social media listener is well and good, but in the real world, they
often don’t have the specialized knowledge or authority to resolve the issues
that will arise. And sometimes they don’t know who should take care of those
issues, either.
That’s how issues get overlooked and forgotten, resulting in untold damage to
your brand.
But with your feedback loop, that won’t happen. This flowchart clearly maps
out the most appropriate departments for resolving different issues. For
example:
So your social listener knows exactly who to alert when issues arise, and your
social media team is able to quickly respond to anything they see.
For social media marketing to work, you need to make it human and authentic.
Even when you’re dealing with a complaint, your aim is to align yourself with
the person, de-escalate the situation, and provide a compassionate, human
touch.
1. Respond quickly. Social media moves quickly. Make sure you perform
triage within 12 hours and resolve issues within 24 hours.
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This approach demonstrates that you’re listening. It also allows you to express
compassion. And by moving the conversation to a private channel, you make
people feel as if you’re committed to giving them a real solution.
Metrics to Watch
• Reputation score (AKA sentiment level). Are people happy or sad when
talking about you? Is the tone negative or positive?
• Retention rate. Are you retaining customers (and followers)? If not, why?
• Refund rate. Are you able to resolve issues without having to issue
refunds?
• Product gaps identified. What suggestions are people making for new
product features?
EXTRA: Read more about social listening and Feedback Loops here: http://
www.digitalmarketer.com/social-listening/
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2. Social Influencing
At this stage, your aim is to lead and direct your followers’ opinions, attitudes,
and behaviors. And since you’ve been listening, it’s relatively easy. You already
know the trending topics and conversations taking place, so adding your
authority voice is the natural next step.
• You get more engagement – people retweeting or sharing your posts, and
people responding to your posts.
Keep in mind, this stage of the success cycle is influenced by the social
listening you did in Stage 1. But the reality is that you’ll continue listening at
every stage. In fact, once the cycle is going, you’ll perform every stage every
day.
During this phase of the social success cycle, you’re trying to:
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Retargeting is an advanced tactic that can significantly boost your bottom line.
To learn more about retargeting (or remarketing), read The Remarketing Grid:
The Science of Ad Retargeting Audience Segmentation.
Metrics to Watch
How do you know you’re building your social influence? These are the metrics
that matter most:
• Site engagement rates. Are you getting more social shares and
comments?
• Traffic by channel. Traffic from your social media channels should increase
over time.
• Offer awareness. People see and respond to the offers you make in social
media.
Need help boosting traffic from social media? The key is to leverage your blog
posts in social channels. This post gives you a 6-step process for socializing a
blog post.
3. Social Networking
It’s at this stage of the social cycle that you connect with other influencers and
authorities and begin to move the needle.
Social networking is important for all businesses, whether you’re just getting
started, scaling, or expanding into new markets.
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Each time you publish an article on your blog, produce a new piece of
content, or have a new offer, you’ll create social media posts designed for the
channels you’re posting to (think “native” content) that get the word out.
You’ll share valuable content from peers and, yes, even your competitors.
If it relates to your brand’s primary topic and helps your followers, it’s worth
sharing. You’ll also engage with people one-on-one, both asking and
answering questions.
That’s it.
Here’s one of our own articles, which we shared in Facebook and Twitter.
Notice that each post is appropriate for the channel.
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We also post conversational posts, like this one from our Twitter stream:
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But we also want to share content that would help beginning digital
marketers. After all, they may someday become our customers. So we share
back-to-basics content and useful information from other brands.
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Email marketing is one of the core competencies we teach, so this post from
MailChimp is a good fit.
By adopting a similar approach, you won’t just attract happy followers, though
you’ll have plenty of those. By sharing useful content from other brands, you’ll
build good will and strong alliances with the brands you share.
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During this stage of the social success cycle, your aim is to:
• Share content that fills gaps left from your own content. This content may
relate topically or target people at different skill levels.
Metrics to Watch
Getting more clicks from social media requires irresistible headlines. Steal from
this headline swipe file.
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4. Social Selling
The fourth and final stage of the social success cycle is social selling.
This is where social media marketing gets interesting. Finally, after listening
to your prospects, building authority in your space, and establishing a strong
network, you can start putting your offers in front of people—and converting
them.
We know because we're operat1ng blogs in dozens of me hes and we test EVERYTHING.
The short answer is funnels. But you’ll use multiple channels for getting people
into those funnels, from blogging to retargeting to pay-per-click advertising.
So, for instance, you’ll lead with blog content that’s perfectly targeted to
your audience, and in that content, you’ll embed an opt-in offer. Then you’ll
promote the content in social media (leveraging Stages 2 and 3 of this cycle).
Your social promotion will direct traffic to your content, where they’ll see your
offer. If they respond, you’ll immediately make an upsell offer—a low-priced
product designed to convert your new lead quickly into a customer. We call
that entry-level product a tripwire.
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You’ll retarget them with a relevant ad, so they receive multiple touches that
could lead to a conversion after they leave your site. The ad takes them to a
funnel, where they’re offered the same (or a related) lead magnet—and then
an entry-level product.
Of course, you should also try to upsell and cross-sell to existing customers.
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aasier. Stora cushions lndoors and keep trames coverad during the
For example, if they buy a patio cover, they’re probably in the market for patio
furniture. Retarget them with the next logical offer.
The point is this: Don’t simply create one offer. Create a buying path that
boosts the lifetime value of every customer.
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Metrics to Watch
• Offer conversion rate. Are your offers converting? Maybe your offer isn’t
relevant or isn’t close enough to your prospects’ bottom-line desire.
We’ve covered the metrics you should watch for each stage of the social cycle,
but maybe you’d like more information. For a deep dive into metrics and
social ROI, read 7 Ways to Actually Track Social Media ROI.
There’s no right answer. It will depend on your organization and goals. But in
most cases, you’ll find your best solution in one of three departments.
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Marketing
Marketing and social media integrate so closely, it’s hard to tell where one
ends and the other begins. And most marketers are already involved in social
media since it gives them the 3 things they need to do their job well:
• Customer insights.
Sales
That being the case, someone on your sales team may be a good fit for
managing/directing your social media program.
Public Relations
Public relations is another good option for taking responsibility of your social
media. PR is all about creating a positive brand perception, and it’s already
customer centric, which makes it social by default.
Community Manager
One last source to consider is your community manager, if you have one.
Social media is about being present and truly engaging with your fans and
followers. That’s pretty much the definition of a community manager.
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Social media marketing is really just another channel for your marketing, which
means you’re creating an environment where you can make successful offers.
• Valuable content. Link to content that has embedded offers and CTAs.
• Lead magnets, or opt-in offers. These are designed to get cold traffic
into your funnels.
Feedback Loop
You need a system where complaints, praise, and other useful comments
“heard” during social listening are routed to the correct person in your
organization.
This makes it easy to apply the 3-step social customer service plan:
3. Take the issue off public channels and resolve it in a timely manner.
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That’s what we call social media bouncing: A social media follower on one
channel is exposed to your brand on another channel.
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Then you click through to their site or a Buzzfeed post where you see them yet
again.
Your goal is the same—to engage with your followers on all your channels,
fully immersing them in your brand.
Two keys to successful marketing are relevance and focus. Your topic map
helps you stay “on brand” with both. As a bonus, by narrowing the topics you
post about, you actually increase engagement.
Take your brand, the products/services you offer, and your primary message.
Then figure out the topics and subject matter that are “on brand” to discuss
on social channels.
For example, for a health insurance company, the topic map would include the
primary topic, insurance. But it could also include financial management and
health.
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This is the process of earning mentions from lots of small media players
(bloggers, podcasters, etc.) instead of a small number of large media players.
You see, traffic may surge after a mention by a large-media player, but it will
soon return to normal. Smaller media channels, on the other hand, have a
more targeted audience that’s a better fit—and their audiences actually listen
to them.
As a result, a few mentions from these smaller players can give you higher
quality leads that actually convert. You may not get traffic surges, but your
bottom line will get a boost.
The strategy? Figure out who the influencers are in your space, who’s listening
to them, and whether they’re competitors or potential partners. Then build
relationship with the small players who are a good fit for targeted outreach.
Applause Rate
Every social share and mention is a form of applause. Because let’s face it, no
one shares something they don’t perceive as valuable.
Measure the sum total of all social shares (Facebook, Likes, Tweets, LinkedIn
shares, etc.) and comments on a piece of content.
Traffic by Channel
It’s important to know where your traffic is coming from. So use a tool like
BuzzSumo that can measure your social traffic by channel.
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I•••••
ENGIIGEMENTS SHIIRES SHIIRES SHIIRES SHIIRES LINKS
Ideally, you want to know who likes your content and how often it’s being
shared. From that, you can figure out what’s working and where you need to
improve.
Once you know the traffic that’s coming from social channels, the next step is
to calculate your conversions from social media.
You want to know the percentage of visits from social media that take the
action you’re driving on a web page. For that, the formula is:
Ultimately, this is the number you want to impact. The higher your conversion
rate, the more successful your social media marketing is.
Bottom Line
Like it or not, we live in a social world. Your customers are on the social
web, sharing experiences and opinions related to you, your brand, and your
industry.
The approach we’ve shared in this chapter will help you create a strategic
social media plan that helps you keep up with the conversations taking place
online, as well as getting you in front of your customers—and helping you
lead, engage with, and sell to them.
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But there’s another (more direct) way for you to have conversations with your
prospects and customers: email. And it’s a vital piece of your digital marketing
strategy.
Email is hands-down the most effective way to move prospects through the
Customer Journey. It’s also your ticket to loyal customers and repeat sales. So
don’t miss it.
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Successful brands must learn to adapt to these changes, and put plans and
processes in place to listen, influence, network and sell in this environment.
In this mastery course, you’ll learn to assess business goals and employ sound
social media marketing practices to meet those goals.
You’ll also be trained on the most up-to-date social media marketing practices
that work TODAY, and will continue to work TOMORROW.
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05
CHAPTER
After reading the last chapter, we’re confident you understand that we live in a
social world.
Your own experience probably backs that up. Every day, you chat in real-time
with people all over the world.
• Traffic and Conversion Summit launched in 2009 with 258 attendees. Email
marketing was a big part of the launch strategy.
• Using email marketing to promote the event, T&C grew to 4,500 attendees
in just 8 years.
With that in mind, in this chapter, we’ll review the basics of email marketing,
including the methods, the metrics, the lingo you need to know, and who on
your team should own email marketing.
But first, let’s look at the role email plays in a growing business.
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Acquisition
Email
Retention
Marketing
Should
Be Used
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······�··
.
But it’s important to understand why we use email marketing. Interestingly, it’s
not for profit or growth.
The outcome of strategic email marketing is indeed profit and growth, but the
purpose of email marketing is to move your customers from one stage of the
“value journey” to the next.
We talked about the “Customer Value Journey” in Chapter 1. But let’s review
it again.
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EXCITE
$
CONVERT
.,
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ENGAGE SUBSCRIBE
IGITALMARKETER
This is your business. Think of it as a path your customers will travel as they get
to know you.
In the bottom left corner, they’re only just becoming aware of you, but by the
time they reach the top right corner, not only do they know you, they promote
you to everyone they know because you’ve transformed their life.
And it’s through email that you expedite the journey—if you understand the
methods that work.
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·-
• IJI
J/ ¡/ .... •
L •••• . . . __________;,v1 ....
Email marketing is more than broadcasting an email every time you publish
a new blog post. And it’s more than sending email alerts when you have a
promotion or sale.
To master email marketing, you need to understand the types of emails you’ll
use, their timing, and the different campaigns you’ll use to connect with your
subscribers.
There are three types of emails that you’ll rely on as an email marketer.
As you can see in the chart below, each type facilitates a different interaction
with your subscribers.
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TRANSACTIONAL
.,/ .,/ .,/ .,/ .,/ .,/
RELATIONAL
.,/ .,/ .,/ .,/ .,/
PROMOTIONAL
.,/ .,/ .,/ .,/
You’ll use 3 different types of emails to engage with your subscribers.
Here are the 8 types of transactional emails you can use, along with some tips
for raising their transactional value:
1. Order Confirmations
Order confirmation emails have a higher open rate than any other type of
email. That makes sense if you think about it: the recipient has just given you
money and wants to verify the details of their purchase.
Most brands don’t do anything to optimize this email for growth. But look at
what Amazon does.
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amazon
._, Order Confirmation
Helio
Thank you ror shoppmg W!lh us Yoo ordere<l "Tlle Road to Recognltlon • and
2 omer nems We II senda con�matlon when your ltems shlp
Details
Order
-
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Classyt.aa,, Cryslal Sklp Na� OPI Chtf, Sk'I' Nai
Glass Naol fie Pollsh, Poltsh O 5 11 o.z
$1189 ............ os n oz $1395 ...........
This email confirms the purchase, sets expectations, and finishes the
transaction. The customer is excited about their purchase—which means it’s a
great time to add an additional offer or ask for a referral.
2. Purchase Receipts
Receipt emails, like confirmation emails, have a high open rate, but they’re
rarely leveraged for growth.
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.
See what I mean:
Des.cr,pt,on
,�, S9.95
Have a quesbOn °" need help? Vis� our support ene, seod usan emal
°" give us a can at (208) 323-9451
In this example, the template provides space for a “contact us” message. Why
not make an offer as well?
3. Shipping Notices
Another email that excites your customers is your shipping alert email, telling
them their purchase has been shipped and when it will arrive.
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Thank you foryow order from Payback Gih 00! We wan1ed 1o i..1 you know that yow order (P3n45)wa shipped Yia USPS
USPS Firsl aass Mail on 512Jl2017 You can trri yow ""°'ªge a1 any tome using !he link�
Shipped To:
hem • Clffc1iplion
SNll42 AmROMe M;,I• B�;,.c:e. 8 mm • 1()8 beads I Amuonite M;,1, 1 Blue
PlnkAvenium&M;,li Br�Neo:J;,.c:e -8 mm• 1()8 budsl PinkAvenium&
SNl229
M;,11 I Plnk
Thank you lor your buslnH11nd we loolt fofwud to servlng you In the hnure!
As you can see, there’s not usually anything in this email that could expedite
the customer journey.
But you’ve just reminded your customer of their purchase, renewing their
excitement about getting it in the mail. What could you add to leverage that
excitement? Could you ask them to tell their friends? What about a social
share?
4. Account Creation
This email goes out when you create an account for new purchases, providing
customers their login information.
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Boom•
Welcome to the Get 10,000 Subscribers lam1lyl
Below you will fmd your username and password so you can logm to access
everythmg (Also, make sure to keep thrs emaa m a sale place)
Username
Password
Once you login, take a look at the very srcn video on man paga wtuc:h will
welcom& you and pcnt you around the sne
-Bryan
As with most transactional emails, this email is rarely leveraged. But getting
access to a closed group is a bit like getting a present. Your customers are
feeling excited and happy. Why not ask them to do something—say, to share
their excitement with their friends in social media?
5. Return Confirmation
For example, you might double the refund amount on another purchase. Or
for a SaaS product, you could offer to provide whatever help is needed while
lowering the price if they stay. Here’s an example of that approach:
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Thank you for connecting with me today and providing me some details about your concems
am sorry that we le! you do'Ml arn:11 thank you for being a long time customer lf you are
willing to give us another chance here is whal I can do.
Please let me know how you would like to proceed arn:11 will e1ther get your cancellation or
aedits taken care of
Thanks,
6. Support Tickets
As with Return Confirmation emails, support ticket follow-up emails give you
an opportunity to add tons of value. If someone received great support, you
can easily ask them to share their experience or extend their happiness by
giving them a coupon.
7. Password Reminders
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8. Unsubscribe Confirmations
This email is a standard automated email. But what if you could figure out an
offer that would be appropriate for these emails? How much growth would
that add to your business? How much more movement would you get through
that customer journey?
You see, with email, you don’t have to make big changes to see big
movement. Small tweaks can have very big effects.
Think about the emails you already send. As you’ve seen, a lot of them are
system-generated, which means they contain nothing more than generic
messages.
• What could you do with these emails to move people through your
customer journey?
Here are 8 types of relational emails you can use to get these results for your
own business—whether it’s digital or brick-and-mortar.
Here’s an example that not only sets expectations but also adds value.
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This automated email delivers the content that was requested, successfully
concluding that transaction. But as with transactional emails, there’s lots of
room to creatively increase their value.
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Notice that Bob Bly’s email (above) tells people how to access their gated
content while selling the value of being a subscriber. This gets people excited
about opening his emails and helps him retain subscribers long-term.
3. Newsletters/Blog Articles
Whenever you create content, you should use email to distribute it to your
subscribers. These emails can be short and simple, introducing your topic and
-.
providing a link to access it.
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to Kathryn
'Nhat's � e:,operience wilh P01tere,;I mar1<e11r,g? Do you think Pimerest can be a good source
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an expemlent and gel sorne traffic fmm P1n1ere,;11o oor blog
c,n Yw Get Good Iraffic Erom PinJtcttJ to Your Bloo In o Sboo Bun? fC1H SrudYI
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cid some1hlng V>T0"'9
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4. Webinar/Event Confirmation
This type of email is both relational and transactional. You’ve asked someone
to block off some time to put you into their schedule. They’ve made a
commitment to you. You need to confirm that commitment.
That’s the transactional side of things. You need to send them a confirmation
email that spells out the date and time of your webinar, plus any other
pertinent information.
Here’s a good example from one of our webinars. Notice that we review the
information that will be shared in the event, so attendees’ interest will stay
high.
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�IGITALMARKETER
Dtat Kalll)'n
WOl1dnO Now) MonelZlnQ • Webinaf"
Than� you lof r.olste�no lof 1'Ml1t's
w.·.,. D9tn 11sano , new webin11 sn!eO', Cllded Tht No-Pllcfl WtDlnar
lttllow1 you 10 montO.Zt I webin11 """out hlWl\l IO pilCft 1t llt tnd Don 1 gtl unnorw¡ lllt Pl1dl
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And ,t workt lof """''lly any lndusry....,, 1ny bu-SI modtl S.rlouJly you woold bfl SHOCKED by
tlt dllertnt buslnesse, tiat ,re usln',l weblnars (flty may not t11I llem webinars, 001 lley &rt) 10
""'�' olers
On tih 'Mla!'s Worung Now c.l you'I bfl r;,,n.,;I by Rldlilrd, Molly 1nd Russ on
• How 10 H! UP 1 'No,Plldl Wlblnar" klnntl (wt'I show YOU ..... PaQH YOU I nnd)
• How 10 dloose lle IOpic (Run WII $hare h1s 6 'Mag,c Outnons· he use, IO crea!& valuable oo-nt&nl
1hat na11Jralty Hlls)
• How 10 111 lhe welMna, (Wo'I cover lhe ema� HQUtllC8S and lle ads we use IO put'bu!IS "' Hats')
• How 10 �low up (The ema� and ad lollow-up 1$ lle s&r1et saUC& IO tus lmnel)
Th0< 'Mlars v.tlrklno Now ..a ta�, pla<:8 Tuesday, .kme 21, at
7pmGMT
3 pm EastQm
2pmCennl
1 pm Mounta,n
12 pm Paalc
Ple ase send your quesaons, commt!nts and leedback ID web,nars@cbg,talmarl<ell!r com
As with gated content, webinar or event confirmations give you the chance to
prove that you can be trusted to deliver what you promise. If you develop a
reputation for following through on free transactions, it’s easy to believe you’ll
be trustworthy in paid transactions as well.
The next 4 types of relational email are used less often, but they can still help
you engage with subscribers and move them through the customer journey.
They are:
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5. Survey/Review
Surveys can help you learn more about your customers’ interests. It can also
help you segment them so your offers will be precisely targeted to their
needs.
6. Social Update
Update your followers on changes in your company or your product. This can
help you build excitement as well as preparing them for what’s coming up.
7. Contest Announcement
Contests build excitement and attract new subscribers. Your current email
subscribers should be the first to hear the news, though. After all, they’re
probably your most avid fans.
8. Referral Request
After any positive interaction with your subscribers, it makes sense to ask for
a referral. Think new purchase, resolution of a problem, or just a friendly email
with a kind word.
So let’s talk about the 8 types of promotional emails you should be sending,
including examples from the DigitalMarketer archives.
1. Promotional Content
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You can see this dual purpose in action in the example below.
lt's no 1tasy f1t3t 3sking to sp,end som1ton1t 1tlse's mon1ty-----especral/y when rt comes to
aneod1ng a coofereoce
The ticket cost, entere, hotel, arod other expenses qmckly start to add up, and you're heanng
a g1ant NO before you've even gotten the queshon out
But don't lose hope yet Jpday we're QIVIDQ vou evervtb1r,g vou oeed to corwmce vour boss
to seod vou to Trame & Conversoo Summll 2017 lt all comes down to the bottom hne
Wllh th,s template we've wbpoed up, you'II drop in thit tracks and strat1tgy you plan to
impl1tm1tnt imm1tdlat1tly that w1II tum your company's blggest marketing fa1l 1mo a grant
matketmg w,n
CIK:k here to sw100 our ema11 temP!ate to send vour boss and we'U see vou 10 San p,eoo1
-- , __ ..,...l'I-�· ---- - -----�
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-
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The value to the recipient is a free template, but its goal is to promote the
Summit.
Gated content aims to attract new subscribers, but existing subscribers are
likely to want it as well. Why not send it to your email list to get them re-
engaged and move them along the customer journey?
This example has the subject line, “[CHECKLIST] Get up to 20% better email
deliverability,” which is sure to get noticed. Make sure your subject line is just
as compelling.
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New gated content, sent to your subscribers, can get them re-engaged.
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3. A Sale Announcement
Sale announcements get more engagement than any other type of email.
Clearly, if you want to make a bunch of sales, have a sale.
But you need to use a subject line that’s guaranteed to get noticed.
Like this one: [Flash Sale] 7 PROVEN Blog Post Templates (85% off)
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Your goal as an email marketer is to take new subscribers all the way through
the value journey, transforming them into promoters.
Why?
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IGITALMARKETER
lf you have a blog aran authonty sita then you need to mee!
me here:
... out if you Kr,vw you want to vd there \ ... ,1oryOL.>1e aireec,
familiar with our events. so you know they're second-to-none)
then l'd like to give you a chance to reserve your "Super
Early Bird" ticket and save 70 percent!
Don't delay - once the event page is ready, !he price will
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Ryan Deiss
Co-Founder & CEO
DigitalMarketer
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Always produce new content to support hyper-buyers.
In the same way, use these last 4 types of promotional emails to let your
subscribers and hyper-buyers know what you’re doing to solve their problems.
5. Webinar Announcements
6. Event Announcements
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7. Trial Offers
8. Upgrade Offers
Now let’s talk about the difference between broadcast and triggered emails.
• Broadcast emails are sent manually to your entire list or a segment of your
list. They work well for promotions and content emails.
Keep in mind, though: Just because you CAN trigger a message, doesn’t
mean you SHOULD!
But just as you can under-automate, you can also over-automate, creating
long, complex campaigns that keep your subscribers stuck in a particular
phase of their value journey.
The goal, remember is to expedite people’s customer journey. And the more
emails you create for each stage of their journey, the greater the odds that
you’ll entrench them in that stage, slowing their overall journey.
1. New Subscriber
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Most new subscribers will join your list when they opt in to get a lead magnet.
Automating delivery ensures they get it within minutes of their request.
3. Event Registration
If someone registers for an event, set up a confirmation email that gives them
the details they’ll need, including date, time, and any access information.
4. Purchase
Similarly, if someone makes a purchase, they want confirmation that their order
went through. A purchase receipt does just that.
7. Cart Abandonment
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One of the easiest ways to increase customer value is to move people off the
fence just prior to a purchase. When someone adds products to their cart but
doesn’t complete the transaction, that should trigger a reminder email.
Each of these triggers should set off an automated email campaign designed
to follow up the triggering behavior and encourage people to take the next
step in their customer journey.
There are two approaches you’ll need to take to make that happen:
segmentation and timing emails to coincide with the customer journey.
Segmentation allows you to send emails to the people who will be most likely
to respond favorably. No one sees a promotion they aren’t interested in, and
people feel like their emails are tailor-made for them.
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When you understand the phases of the customer journey, it’s easier to send
the right message at the right time. So let’s talk about the 5 phases of email
marketing and the stages of the customer journey they align with.
• Tell them what they need to do next to get the biggest benefit from you
and your brand.
This campaign is sent to new subscribers to establish your authority, help them
understand the value you’re going to provide, and get them excited about
you and your brand.
Storyboard It
Step 2: Re-state in 3-4 bullet points the benefits they’ll get as a subscriber.
(This is important. If you can’t articulate the benefits of subscribing, how do
you expect them to understand the benefits of buying from you?)
Step 3: Tell them what to expect, using this framework: here’s what we’re
going to do; here’s what you need to do after we’ve done it.
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For example:
Two to three times a week we’re going to send you brand new content and
strategies on digital marketing. [Here’s what we do.]
When you get that email, read it and save it—because when you’re looking
for a strategy that works, you’re going to want to be able to access this
information. [Here’s what you need to do after we’ve done it.]
• Don’t auto archive any of them. (Read them and use them to grow your
business!)
Step 5: Put your best foot forward. Send them a “best of” campaign, listing
the content your existing subscribers have engaged with the most. For
example:
Think of your indoctrination emails as a first date with your new subscriber.
Show up in your best clothes, tell your best stories, and focus on building
relationship with your new subscribers.
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• Turn subscribers into buyers by prescribing the next logical step based on
what you know they’re currently interested in.
This campaign targets subscribers who have just engaged with your brand. For
instance, maybe they visited a page or downloaded a lead magnet, but they
didn’t take the next action you presented.
The goal of this campaign is to engage with the subscriber, reference the
positive action they’ve taken with you, and tell them the next logical action
that will end in a purchase.
Storyboard It
Step 2: Try to overcome the objections you know they’re experiencing. Don’t
just talk about the tactical, lever-pulling features. Address the thoughts and
feelings that keep them from taking action.
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• Turn new buyers into multi-buyers by prescribing the next logical step (or
nurturing them until it’s appropriate to take that step).
In many cases, it fills the gaps in your funnel, improving your results.
You see, each additional offer is a stopping point where customers might
decline and exit your funnel. This sequence is designed to follow up that offer,
provide extra incentives to buy, and overcome any objections for not buying.
Storyboard It
Step 1: Start by referencing the action they just took. (Don’t address the
action they didn’t take: “We noticed that you didn’t buy our core product,
so I’m sending you this email.”) Congratulate them. Acknowledge their
excitement. Build on that positive energy.
Step 2: Address and overcome the objections that might be keeping them
from taking the next step.
Step 3: Clearly spell out the next logical step, so they know what they need to
do.
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Your goal is to turn one-time buyers into multi-buyers. To do that, you must
articulate the value you’re providing, remind them of the benefits they’ll
receive, and increase their interest and excitement.
But before you immediately start pushing a sale, ask yourself two important
questions:
QUESTION #2: Do I have any reason to believe they are ready to take that
next step?
These questions are important because (believe it or not) it can hurt to ask!
Your offer must be appropriate for the stage of the relationship. If you move
too fast or push too hard, you’ll make your subscribers uncomfortable, and
they’ll leave.
If they’re not ready to take the next step in your value ladder, don’t ask.
Nurture that subscriber until the time is right, and then make your offer.
4. Segmentation Campaign
Definition: A manual promotional campaign sent to your entire database
with the goal of segmenting your subscribers by interest.
• Pique the interest of subscribers who are “stuck” in their value journey.
This is one of the only email campaigns that isn’t automated and triggered
by a subscriber’s behavior. Instead, you broadcast this promotion to your
entire database (or a large segment of it) with the goal of segmenting your
subscribers by interest.
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You want your subscribers to raise their hands and say, “Yes, I’m interested
in this topic.” And when they’ve done that, you should have an engagement
campaign set up to continue speaking to them about it.
The goal is this: to send more emails to the people who engage with your
campaign and fewer emails to the people who don’t.
• If you listen to what your subscribers are saying, they’ll give you more
money.
• If you listen to what they want, they’ll engage with your brand more.
Idea 1: Use content to segment your list: blog posts, video, or gated content.
Then, when someone engages with that content—indicating interest in the
topic—send them an engagement campaign with promotional content based
on that topic.
Idea 2: Use special offers: coupons, flash sales, or special promotions. High-
value, time-sensitive offers give people a good reason to take immediate
action, which can help you expedite their value journey.
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• Call out inactive subscribers and get them to start engaging with your
emails again.
The reality is that not everyone will engage with your emails. Their interests
or circumstances will change. And no matter where they are on the customer
journey, they can become inactive.
What then?
Storyboard It
Step 2: Give them a reason to re-engage with your emails. For example, you
could take the direct approach, and ask if everything’s okay:
I noticed you haven’t been opening or clicking my emails, and I just wanted
to send an email and ask, “Is everything O.K.?”
If this campaign works, you’ll have re-engaged your inactive subscribers and,
hopefully, put them back on their value journey.
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Inactive subscribers raise your costs and hurt your deliverability. They’re also
the ones most likely to complain when they see your emails in their inbox. So
there’s no need to feel guilty. Clean your list on a regular basis.
Email marketing is about quickly move your subscribers from one stage of the
value journey to the next.
Typically, that journey begins when someone becomes aware of your brand
and decides to subscribe. Once that happens, your job is to:
The 5 campaigns we’ve reviewed will help you achieve each of these goals—
and quickly turn new subscribers into active promoters.
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Sending the right emails to the right people at the right time is only one
aspect of email marketing. To optimize your efforts, you also need to measure
your results.
Here are the top performance metrics that will help you manage your email
marketing.
List Growth
For this metric, you want to watch the number of new subscribes as compared
to the number of unsubscribes. As you might expect, you want the ratio to be
positive.
Delivery Rate
Open Rate
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The percent of email messages clicked relative to the number of emails sent
or, in some cases, relative to the number of emails opened.
Unsubscribe Rate
Complaint Rate
The percent of emails marked as Spam relative to the number of emails sent.
TIP: Your email delivery rate will go up if your open rate and click-through
rates go up and unsubscribe rate goes down.
Customer Journey
Broadcast Email
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Triggered Email
Promotional Calendar
The 30-day and 90-day calendars containing the planned email campaigns
that will intentionally move a prospect through the customer journey,
Email Storyboarding
Relevant Roles
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Marketing
Sales
Editorial
Your editorial team will use email to distribute the content they create and add
value to subscribers on an on-going basis.
Bottom Line
Email marketing consistently generates the highest ROI of any marketing
activity, but sadly most businesses are doing it wrong (or ignoring it
completely).
Email is most effective when you coordinate it with your content and
advertising campaigns—to indoctrinate your new subscribers, nurture those
relationships, and move them quickly through the Customer Journey.
It may take you a while to master the tactics we discussed in this chapter,
but the effort is well worth it. Email marketing will drive growth as no other
strategy can.
The next step in mastering digital marketing is search marketing, and we’ll
cover that in the next chapter.
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In this chapter, we’ve covered the basics, but you may still have questions. If
so, let us know in the comments.
Or, for more in-depth answers, consider becoming a certified email marketer.
In our Email Mastery course, you’ll learn the three types of email campaigns,
as well as HOW and WHEN to use them. You’ll also learn how to architect the
perfect promotional calendar and how to use automated email marketing to
literally “sell while you sleep.”
By the time you finish, you’ll be able to effectively monetize any email list,
while simultaneously increasing engagement with your subscribers.
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06
CHAPTER
One thing’s for sure: search marketing ain’t what it used to be!
Luckily, all these changes are good news for digital marketers like us. Because
we’re not trying to game the system…
And when you’re an honest marketer trying to deliver real value, you’re
building a solid foundation for search marketing success.
That being the case, search marketing can help you boost your website’s traffic
and visitors’ trust while supporting your other digital marketing disciplines too.
In this chapter, you’ll get an overview of the methods that are working now,
including the lingo you’ll use to talk about it, the metrics that will measure
your success, and the business roles that should own your search marketing
strategy.
Before we dig into the details, though, let’s cover a few foundational
principles.
2. The content side of things. People in this camp know how to create well-
optimized content, build links, and boost social shares.
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There’s no contest. To succeed at search marketing, you need both. When you
need to create link assets or get more backlinks, you need an SEO content
specialist. But if Google doesn’t seem to see those assets, and you’re not
ranking, you’ve likely got structural issues. You need an SEO technician.
Hundreds and thousands of websites are constantly battling for the #1 spot in
search engines for their target keywords—and securing that spot is kind of like
playing the kid’s game, “king of the mountain.”
You may knock off the guy who’s sitting there now, but someone is coming
behind you, trying to knock you off as soon as you get there.
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Finally, search constantly changes. Google’s algorithm isn’t static. It’s based on
artificial intelligence, and it’s learning more every day.
As a result, the rules change too. The tactics you use today won’t be the ones
you use next month or next year. And that’s okay.
Expect to continue learning and adjusting the tactics you use. Don’t resist; just
accept it as part of the process—because the only way to win at this game is
by following the rules.
So let’s start by reviewing the methods that are working well today.
People are conducting searches from their mobile devices. That means your
pages must be easily accessible from phones and tablets as well as computers.
As mentioned above, if your site isn’t set up right, Google won’t even see you.
But once your structural issues are resolved, you’ll focus mostly on content and
basic on-page optimization.
The key to SEO is simply to build a better page than anyone else on the web.
For each search query, Google wants to put the absolute best page at the
top of the SERPs. So your page needs to be the most relevant and the closest
match for searchers’ intent.
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You research what’s already ranking for your target keyword and build
something 10x better than those pages.
That’s it.
But on a positive note, if your content is 10x better than anything else on the
web, your pages will rank.
Gone are the days of keyword stuffing. You must do what Google wants—and
what they want is to provide a superior experience for their users.
Old-style gray-hat and black-hat SEO tactics were borderline illegal, and
they’re definitely unethical. So that’s NOT the approach we’re going to take.
The tactics we cover will give you a sustainable business that’s reputable and
trustworthy. And honestly, it’s the only way to grow your business long-term.
What comes to mind when the topic of search marketing comes up?
Google, right?
They’re the premiere search engine, but be aware, they aren’t the only search
engine in town.
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Google
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Google is just one of many search engines you can optimize for.
Today, every channel that uses search has an algorithm that you can learn and
leverage for success.
That means you aren’t limited to optimizing for Google. It may be more
lucrative for your business to focus on Google Maps or iTunes.
Let me explain…
Google’s search bots are incredibly smart, which makes it hard to rise to
the top of their SERPs. But most other search bots—think Amazon, Yelp, or
Pinterest—are less complex and easier to understand. Not only that, there are
likely fewer people competing for their top spots, so it’s an easier game to
win.
We tend to equate search marketing with Google. But there’s a lot more
to it than that. Search marketing is about producing the right content and
publishing it on the right channels to attract the right customers, then doing
what it takes to make your content rise to the top—whether that’s for Google
or any other channel.
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Approaching it this way, you’re taking the search game to a smaller playing
field. While there may be fewer people searching those other channels, you’ll
create content that’s optimized specifically for them.
When it comes to SEO, we talk about winning, ranking, and beating out
the competition. You’d think that ranking at the top of Google (or whatever
channel you’re using) is your top goal for search marketing.
You can’t pay your bills with rank. And you can’t take traffic to the bank. In
reality, those metrics are fluff. The real question is this: Are you making money
from search?
The reason we do search marketing is to get more leads and sales, right? So in
the next section, we’ll talk about a simple 6-part model for doing just that.
Wondering how your site is doing in search? Perform a DIY SEO Audit:
High-Impact SEO in 5 Minutes or Less and find out.
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Essentially, everyone who types a query into Google’s search bar is looking for
something. Regardless of the keywords they use, they have a specific intent.
But that intent exists within the context of what they’re doing and what they
want or need. Both the intent and the context are critically important for you
to understand.
If you’re targeting a keyword, you must understand the user intent and the
context that’s behind the search.
Ask yourself: What is the prospect searching for? Why do they likely want this
information?
For example, if they’re typing in “historic bed and breakfast,” here’s what may
be going on:
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Google
historie bed
The context is vital information, and you need to ferret it out, because it will
help you know what information to provide in your content.
Fortunately, the best research tool on the planet is easily accessible. It’s your
own brain. Think about your customers. What searches are they performing
when looking for or using your product? Why are they searching for that
information?
Identify the keywords they’re likely using, then try to understand the intent and
context around those searches. The idea is to anticipate their needs.
To help, do a quick Google search. Begin typing the keyword into Google
and look at the autosuggestions Google provides (see the image above for
an example). These suggestions are the most common searches related to the
words you’re typing in, and from them, you can guess what people are looking
for.
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Once you know the information people are looking for and why they likely
want that information, you need to build a unique asset for each of those
needs.
This stage of the process is all about content creation. Before you start, ask
yourself these questions:
Let’s say the query is, “start a vegetable garden.” The asset could be a blog
post. Since people search for blog posts in Google, that’s the channel you’ll
optimize for.
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Or maybe they want to create the best garden in their community and want
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Your goal is to choose an asset that will best answer the intent/context you’ve
identified, then choose the channel the asset will live on.
Once you’ve done that, you’re ready for the last stage of the optimization
process.
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At this point, you’ve created the assets to address specific search queries, and
you’re ready to upload them to their appropriate channels.
Now it’s time to optimize it for each channel’s search algorithm and develop
your customer ascension plan. For this, you’ll need to answer these questions:
Traffic isn’t your end goal, remember. Your ultimate goal is to create leads
and sales. So you always need to tell visitors what their next step is, and those
directions need to be built into the asset.
We’ll start with our vegetable garden search. Notice in this image that the
asset is a blog post and its title tag is optimized for Google.
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The asset is a blog post, and the title is optimized for Google.
Want to learn more on-page optimization for blog posts? Read How to Do
On-Page SEO in WordPress.
If we click through to that blog post, we can clearly see the ascension path.
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Notice the button embedded within the content and the product offers in
the sidebar. Clearly, this site has developed an ascension path that looks
something like this:
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They aren’t merely optimizing for search traffic. They’re optimizing for sales.
That’s what you want to do as well: pull traffic in and convert it. And here’s how
you can get started now.
Go onto Google Analytics and find the pages on your site that get the most
traffic.
Think about the logical next step for the traffic on those pages.
Put a call to action (CTA) somewhere on the page leading visitors to that next
step.
This is what search marketing is all about. It’s organic, so it’s free money. And
all you need to do is put an ascension path on your high-traffic pages.
It’s the same on YouTube. In this example, the video title is optimized for the
keyword, “save money on groceries.”
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Marketing Strategy
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You can see the ascension path is both in the video and under it. Within the
video are links to a fat-burning workout product. Below the video is a link to
her new book.
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Marketing Strategy
on Sep 2, 2014
• New videos every Tues & Thurs! http://bit.ly/SarahFitYT
• Check Out My Book 'Get Skinny Again' http://amzn.to/195FOTS
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COMMENTS • 57
Most SEO training focuses solely on traffic. The goal is primarily to rank at the
top of Google.
But as you can see, people are searching for information in multiple channels,
so there’s no reason to limit yourself. If ranking on Page 1 for Google isn’t
possible, ranking #1 in Pinterest or YouTube might be a better option.
And traffic isn’t the end goal. Conversions are. So think beyond traffic. Clearly
promote your ascension path within your assets, spelling out what they should
do after consuming your content.
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Marketing Strategy
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As you can see, this isn’t hard. In fact, it gives you a logical workflow that
will help you create better content that meets the real needs of your best
customers.
You simply need to figure out what you want to rank for, look at the top-
ranking content, and create something better. Then optimize and create your
ascension path.
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Technical SEO
This is a smart focus if you’re technically minded. Technical SEOs are skilled at
tweaking code, setting up servers, and finding the technical issues that keep a
search-engine spider from understanding what your site’s about.
But as a site gets bigger, especially if more than one person can make changes
to the site, it’s almost guaranteed it will develop technical SEO problems at
some point.
Site hacks are another issue that technical SEOs can help with. Google won’t
send you traffic if your site gets hacked, and they’ll put you in the penalty box
until the issue gets resolved.
That’s just two scenarios, but there are countless technical issues that can keep
your site from performing well in search engines. That’s why technical SEO is
so important. When you remove the tech problem, your search position can
get an immediate boost.
Intent
A person’s goal when typing a search query on the web. What information are
they looking for? What are they hoping to achieve with that information?
If you know your customers’ intent, you’ll be able to find the keywords that are
most relevant to your business. Make a list of the reasons people might buy.
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Asset
Once you know the intent of a customer’s search, you need to design an asset
to satisfy that intent.
Channel
Metrics
What are the metrics that will help you track and improve your search
marketing? Here are 4 to start with.
In Google Analytics, this is the first report we typically look at when we get
access to a site. It tells you a lot at a high level: Where are we hurting? Are
your traffic sources relatively balanced or does traffic come from just one or
two channels?
Top Channels
• Paid Search
• Organic Search
• Email
Direct
• (Other)
• Social
• Referral
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When sites don’t do search marketing, their traffic tends to come from Direct
or Email. Once search marketing has been implemented, though, you’ll begin
to see more balance.
Quantity/Quality of Backlinks
Here at DigitalMarketer, we use Moz Open Site Explorer for this metric. But
you can use other free tools, such as MonitorBacklinks, or paid tools, such as
Ahrefs.
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You want to track how many websites are linking to your site.
You want to run this report monthly or quarterly to track how many websites
are linking to your site. That number should be trending upward, with more
and more quality sites linking to you.
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Keyword Rankings
Once you’ve identified the keywords you want to rank for, you need to track
your position for those keywords.
For this, you can use the SERPs Keyword Rank Checker. Just type in your
keyword and see where you rank.
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In this example, we typed in “email subject lines,” and as you can see, we rank
#4 for that term.
You can also see who’s outranking you. To make your page rank better, review
their content and update yours to be 10x better.
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Marketing Strategy
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Search and content go hand in hand. Understanding SEO will help your
content team bring in more organic traffic from multiple channels.
Technical SEO is your tech team’s domain. If they don’t have training in
technical SEO, they’re probably throwing up some speed bumps that keep
you from ranking well in search.
Public Relations
As with the content team, your PR team need to understand search marketing
to achieve their goals.
Summing Up
Search marketing doesn’t happen in a bubble. Ideally it will integrate with
every aspect of your marketing, from customer research to content creation to
customer value optimization.
We’ve provided a good overview of how you can do this—but it’s a lot to take
in at once. The good news is you’ll get better over time. Just start where you
are, and over time, you’ll see improvements in your page rank and traffic.
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The next chapter will help as well—because SEO and analytics go hand in
hand. And you’ll appreciate our down-to-earth approach to analytics. (It takes
the fear—and a lot of the pain—of numbers out of the equation.)
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With all the “noise” in today’s world, it’s critical that brands and business get
found when a customer or prospect is looking for them.
It’s also critical that your brand is shown in a positive light when the right
person is looking for a solution that YOU provide.
And that’s exactly what you’ll learn how to do in this mastery course:
How to leverage search channels such as Google, Amazon and even local
channels such as Yelp.
And when it’s found, how to ensure the message your prospects see is a
positive one.
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Chapter 07: Applying Website
Analytics to Your Digital Marketing
07
CHAPTER
What’s your emotional reaction when you hear the word, data?
Fortunately, data and analytics don’t have to be scary. In fact, it can be fun (or
at least interesting) if you know how to turn all those numbers and reports into
actionable intel you can use to grow your business.
In this chapter, you’ll learn the methodology for doing analytics and data in
your business, the metrics that matter most, the lingo you’ll use to talk about
it, and the teams or roles that should be responsible for it.
But first, let’s talk about why data and analytics are so important to a successful
business.
The challenge most people struggle with is how to turn numbers into
meaningful decisions. Static numbers, in and of themselves, are meaningless.
Billy Beane took over as the General Manager of the Oakland A’s in 1997.
There, he applied statistical analysis (known as sabermetrics) to players,
radically changing the way they acquired players.
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Beane’s approach was to focus on specific metrics, such as batting and runs, to
find undervalued players no one else was noticing. This approached made the
Oakland A’s one of the most cost-effective teams in baseball and carried them
through 20 consecutive wins, playoffs, and even the world series.
Essentially, data made the A’s competitive with much bigger clubs while
working on a budget a third of the size.
Netflix
Netflix’s core belief is that customization wins customer loyalty, a belief that
puts data at the center of their corporate strategy.
When they were still a DVD rental company, Netflix invested heavily in data
mining technology to develop a movie recommendation algorithm, leading
the way in using data to provide a great customer experience. And it worked.
Recommendations drove 50% of their traffic.
After adopting a streaming model, this data-first approach continued, and it’s
made them one of the top streaming video-on-demand services available.
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Today, it’s giving them the customer insight they need to create massively
successful original content like Daredevil, House of Cards and Orange is the
New Black.
DigitalMarketer
We’re no strangers to data either. I’ll get into more detail later in this chapter,
but here at DM, we rely on data to help us make business decisions that are all
but guaranteed to work.
Our belief? Gut instincts may be good, but data never lies.
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• Give data a job. This is the foundation of data analysis. Every piece
of data you gather should help you answer questions and make smart
decisions.
• Apply context to account for the unmeasurable. Some things are hard to
measure. For those situation, you need to contextualize the data.
Analytics and data shouldn’t be stressful. But it’s easy to feel that way when
there are so many sources to draw from, each formatting the data differently,
sometimes even giving different numbers for the same metric.
Where do you put your attention? How to compare the data from different
sources?
One of the easiest ways to understand data is to think of the marketing funnel.
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For sales, that’s a good model, but we need to tweak the funnel to work as
well for analytics and data.
This model is a funnel metrics flowchart that not only maps the stages of a
customer’s journey, it also lists the metrics that should be measured at each
stage.
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FUNNEL METRICS
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like this:
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Chapter 07: Applying Website
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But we don’t want to stop there. We also need to measure what happens after
someone becomes a customer.
This is how you give your data a job. You don’t look at all your data at once.
You assign different metrics to each stage of the funnel.
Rather than measuring your business’s health only by its bottom-line numbers,
you measure its health at every phase—identifying leaks in your funnel, finding
strategic ways to plug them up, and making it easier to convert.
To begin, let’s identify the funnel metrics you need for each stage of your
customers’ journey.
) KEY METRICS (
• New Visitors
• % New Visitors
• New Direct Visitors
TOFU
• Total Pixeled Audience
Retargeting Lists
Top-of-the-Funnel metrics
The key question when choosing metrics for this stage is this: Does this metric
give me insight into brand-new visitors?
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Direct new visitors is the number of people who are typing your website URL
directly into Google? It can measure the effectiveness of online and offline
advertising:
If you’ve been running awareness ads, you should see spikes from people
trying to learn more about you.
If you have billboards that include your URL, you should see a spike in the
geo-areas surrounding the billboard as they visit your site.
MOFU
Middle-of-the-Funnel metrics
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Your guiding question when deciding whether a metric is right for the middle
of the funnel is this: Does this metric give me insight into how well I’m getting
visitors to commit?
• People subscribing
It’s about people giving you permission to reach out to them and offer more
value.
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If you have a blog post with a banner to learn more about one of your
products. You need to know how many clicks that banner is getting and what
percentage of your blog visitors are clicking so you can evaluate how well your
content is converting visitors into leads.
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BOFU
Bottom-of-the-Funnel metrics
Your guiding question when choosing metrics for this stage: Does this metric
give me insight into how well prospects convert into customers?
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Your goal for this stage? Customer satisfaction. You want to increase
membership, traffic ROI, retention, and customer lifetime value.
Post-Conversion metrics
You’re looking for metrics that describe real results from using your product.
Something like this:
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Chapter 07: Applying Website
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This data isn’t waiting for you on Google, so it’s harder to come by, but
satisfied customers are usually willing to share them. Here at DM, we look for
positive reviews from people in our membership area. That tells us how well
we’re helping people reach their goals.
Keep in mind, these aren’t vanity metrics. They help us know what it takes to
keep people in DM Lab and encourage them tell their friends about the Lab.
Weekday Members Added Cancellations Payment Fails Total Members Removed Net Change Total Members
Totals 150 86 82
1/4/2016 2 43 22 7 29 14 517
1/3/2016 1 40 35 12 47 -7 503
1/2/2016 7 25 5 10 15 10 510
1/1/2016 6 20 3 7 10 10 500
12/31/2015 5 22 5 6 11 11 489
12/30/2015 4 25 3 7 10 15 474
12/29/2015 3 15 2 5 7 8 466
12/28/2015 2 28 5 4 9 19 447
12/27/2015 1 15 6 7 13 2 445
12/26/2015 7 16 5 6 11 5 440
This report tracks how many people we’re adding to a subscription product,
how many people we’re losing, and how we’re losing them.
These metrics tell us how healthy the product is, and when they’re combined
with other reports, we can see the things we do that drive cancellations or
boost membership. This information is critical for a membership product
because member retention drives profits.
Key metrics dictate overall health. These metrics are like a thermometer for
your business. For a metric to be key, you need to be able to look at it and
know immediately whether your business is doing well or not.
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Drill-down metrics answer big questions. These metrics are more granular
and help you understand what’s going on in specific areas of your business.
Typically, you use both types of metrics together, not one or the other. If key
metrics tell you things are going well, you use drill-down metrics to help you
understand why, so you can replicate your success.
For example:
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To help us understand why the click rate is 3.25% and how we can improve
that number, we need a drill-down metric: How likely is a visitor to click on a
banner ad in one specific article?
Not long ago, we did this for the DM blog. After reviewing all our blog posts
and drilling down for specific metrics, we were able to identify the factors that
impact the click rate. After applying our findings, we improved the banner ad
clickthrough rate by about 2% across the blog.
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Here, you’d compare how much search traffic you’re getting for a keyword to
how much your competitors are getting from that same keyword. This would
allow you to find areas where you can compete with much larger businesses
because you own the keyword. Alternatively, it will tell you which keywords
you need to put some work into.
Improving Ecommerce
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.
And in this example, the key metric is Average Order Value. To drill down,
you’d need to look at actual orders.
You want to know where the bulk of the revenue from your Average Order
Value is coming from. This could reveal that you need to move things around
in your sales funnel or that you need to push one promotion over another
because its average order value is much higher.
As you can see, there are 2 ways you can give your metrics a job.
• You can assign them to a specific stage of the funnel: TOFU, MOFU, OR
BOFU.
• You can use them to measure the health of different areas in your business
and then answer deeper questions about how and why.
Once you understand the overall health of your business and where things are
working (or not), you can begin to use metrics for problem solving.
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7j PROVE OR DISPROVE
HYPOTHESIS
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�IGITALMARKETER
This process works a lot like the scientific method, except it’s based on
metrics.
In the scientific method, you start with questions and hypotheses, and
then you make predictions about what might happen if you test different
hypotheses.
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It’s the same with data and analytics. You review your data and start asking
questions about it. You make hypotheses about what might happen if you
could impact any of those numbers. And then you devise a test to see if you’re
right.
Simply by reviewing the results, you can clearly see what needs to be done to
improve your business. Making decisions is no longer about your gut instincts,
but about what the data is telling you.
Step 1. Start by Reviewing Your Key Metrics. Identify the places where your
performance is better than expected or, perhaps, trending downward. In many
cases, this will inspire questions.
• This blog post’s traffic is double most other blog posts. What made it
perform better?
• We’re getting new subscribers every day, but our total subscriptions are
staying the same. What’s happening? Where are we losing subscribers?
Why?
• Every time writer SM writes a blog post, traffic and shares are higher than
normal. What makes her blog posts better than anyone else’s?
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Some weeks, we’d add 131, 112, or 106 new members. In other weeks, we’d
only add 11 or 21. After seeing these numbers, some questions sprang to
mind:
• The $1 trial is a better offer because it converts more visitors for all traffic
sources.
• People keep restarting the $1 trial offer after their time expires, inflating
conversion percentages.
Hint: Don’t settle for just one hypothesis. It’s best to consider multiple
explanations—ideally 5 to 7 hypotheses—and test them all. Otherwise you
limit your ability to learn what’s going on.
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You see, in most cases, there isn’t just one reason for the issue you’re
seeing. Several factors may contribute to the success or failure you want
to understand. The more hypotheses you have, the better your chances of
isolating all the factors involved.
Step 3. Use Drill-Down Metrics to Test Hypotheses. For this, you’ll use more
detailed, granular data to figure out what’s causing the issue you’re trying to
understand.
This data isn’t usually reviewed on a daily basis, but it exists, and you know
where to find it. It’s also the data that helps you answer these kinds of
questions.
For this particular question, we used cohort analyses to test our 3 hypotheses.
We developed 7 cohorts, or different ways you could group the people in DM
Lab, including cancellation date, average percentage paid, how long they
were active, and more.
After reviewing all that information, we realized that the $1 trial was a better
front-end offer than the full-pay offer.
Step 4. Take Action Based on Your Findings. The conclusion of our data
analysis was that the trial offer generates more paying customers than
average. For every 100 people we put into DM Lab, 21 came from the trial,
while 20 came from the full-pay offer.
While that’s not a significant difference, over time, it can add up. So we
changed our front-end offer. The $1 trial offer is now our primary offer, and so
far, it’s yielded an extra 1,000 Lab members.
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For instance, let’s say you’re reviewing your data and you see a trend. Why
is that trend taking shape? Maybe you ran a campaign during that period.
Maybe your competitors did something unique. Or maybe you had a
technology problem that skewed the data.
If you don’t consider these factors when evaluating your data, you’re likely to
make an assumption based on a false set of data. Your conclusion won’t be
valid.
In these situations, context helps you account for variances in your data. And
there are 4 contexts you need to consider.
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Chapter 07: Applying Website
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Historical Contexts
What does history tell you to expect? By reviewing data through a historical
lens, you can understand trends and typical behavior among your customers.
For instance, at DigitalMarketer, we’ve noted that sales dip in the summer.
Consistently. Every summer.
So rather than worrying about lower numbers, we’ve come up with strategies
for boosting sales in late spring. We also reduce ad spend in the summer
because we know the ROI won’t be as good.
External Contexts
What changes outside our control have influenced our metrics? Maybe a
new competitor has entered the market. Or maybe technology has changed,
necessitating major changes in the way you do things.
External factors may be outside your control, but you need to keep them in
mind when evaluating performance.
Internal Contexts
Have you made changes to your strategy that impact your performance? Have
you made changes to your site or launched a campaign?
This is more of a self-review. Think through the changes you’ve made internally
that might have affected your numbers.
Contextual Contexts
This has to do with how you’re pulling the data. Are you comparing raw
numbers or percentages? Are your numbers skewed by outliers? Do you have
data that doesn’t make sense because of an internal or external factor?
Together, these contextual factors help you account for the immeasurable
things, the things you can’t foresee or explain in your data. And they help you
evaluable the validity of your data.
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Chapter 07: Applying Website
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You need to assign roles to your data so you know the stage of the funnel they
relate to and whether they help you know something (key metric) or give you
information to answer a question (drill-down metrics).
You also need to use data to make smarter decisions for your business. Use
it to test your ideas about what’s working and what’s not and how you might
improve results. When you review the numbers to answer a question, you
know what you’re trying to prove or disprove.
Then finally, you need to put your data into context by evaluating the factors
that might be driving numbers up or down. By tying data to the real world,
the numbers will make more sense and it will be easier to use them in your
business to drive growth.
This refers to the data scientist’s scientific method. It’s the process you’ll use
to identify the questions you should be asking and the best methods for
answering them.
Analyst’s Toolkit
These are the tools, templates, and resources you’ll use to turn concepts and
ideas into data and reports. Your toolkit will help you ask the right questions
and develop a process that makes data analysis easier.
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UTM Parameter
This refers to the code you can append to a URL to give you more information
about where your traffic is coming from.
www.digitalmarketer.com/?utm_source=house-
list&utm_medium=email
&utm_campaign=data-cert-1-1-2016
In this example, the yellow highlight shows you the actual link. Everything after
that is a UTM parameter. It’s this extra information that helps you track your
traffic sources.
• Green highlights the source, which tells you the audience or referring site
(house list).
• Pink highlights the medium, which tells you how this traffic was referred
(email).
• Blue highlights the content, which is your ad/content identifier (data cert
launch email1).
When you add UTM parameters to your links, anyone who clicks on those links
will be tagged, and you can track those tags in Google Analytics.
This allows you to see which sources and communications are giving you the
best traffic.
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KPI is another way to refer to a metric in general, and it’s usually used to talk
about a metric that someone thinks is driving their business. KPI is another
way to talk about a key metric.
Dashboard
A dashboard is a web page that collates your metrics from a particular source.
You’ll likely have a dashboard for each data source: Google Analytics, your
email service provider, your social media platforms, and more.
Most dashboards also provide graphs that turn your data into visuals, making
it easy to see how well you’re performing.
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The analytics team (or individual) should have primary responsibility for
gathering, vetting, and interpreting your data and analytics.
Larger teams may also have a data implementation manager, who aggregates
all this information and turns it into a beautiful dashboard that’s easy to
understand.
Marketing
Every marketer worth their salt needs to know a little about analytics and data.
Whether you’re running Facebook campaigns, tweeting 50 times a day, or
posting articles to your blog, you need to know what’s working and what’s not.
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The people who run tests to optimize your marketing rely heavily on data to
develop their hypotheses, set up tests, and measure performance.
Summing Up
Analytics doesn’t have to be scary or overwhelming—even if you’re not a
numbers person. You simply need a process for dealing with the numbers, a
way to figure out which ones will help you identify opportunities and which
ones to ignore.
Once you’ve got your process in place, you may actually find you enjoy
analytics. There’s no better feeling than knowing without a doubt that
your marketing plan is working—and it’s the metrics that will give you that
confidence.
We’re nearing the end of our digital marketing overview. The next (and final)
lesson is conversion rate optimization, which is a simple process for improving
your marketing results over time.
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To succeed today, you need to master the 3 principles covered in this chapter
and develop an effective process for organizing all your data, evaluating it,
and turning it into smart business decisions.
DigitalMarketer’s Analytics & Data Specialist Mastery course gives you the
training you need to:
• Build a compete analytics dashboard that reveals the overall health of your
company in one glance.
• Turn raw numbers into meaningful action, using an 8-step flowchart that
guides you step-by-step through the process.
• Identify the traffic sources that are most valuable to your business, so you
get the best possible ROI from your marketing.
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Chapter 08: Leveraging Conversion Rate
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CHAPTER
One fifth!
Conversion doesn’t just mean a sale. It’s whatever you definite it to be. And
unless you define what you mean by “conversion,” you can’t improve the
experience.
Here’s the bottom line: if you want to improve your conversion rates, you
must learn to articulate things better and improve the experience so people
can perform the action you’re asking them to take.
But to succeed as a digital marketer, you also need to know how to optimize
your marketing over time—making small tweaks that can turn 1% returns
into 10% or even higher returns.
In this chapter, we’ll help you do just that. We’ll talk about the optimization
methodology, a repeatable process you can go through to improve
results on your website. We’ll also cover the lingo you need to know as an
optimizer, the metrics you need to be measuring, and the roles within your
organization that will be responsible for it.
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The main goal of optimization is to improve conversion rates of the traffic you
already have, and generally, with the assets you already have.
ID Goals
Analyze Gather
Results Data
Test Analyze
Data
lmplement Create
Tech Hypothesis
Design
Variants
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You start by identifying your goals. You gather relevant data, analyze it, and
create a hypothesis. You design your variants, implement technology and test
your hypothesis. Then you analyze results, which will give you new insights and
ideas for new tests.
Then the process starts all over. With optimization and testing, this cycle never
ends. At least, not if you’re doing it right.
Now let’s talk about what you’ll do at each stage of the cycle.
The process starts with a clearly articulated goal. Remember, without clear
goals, you can’t optimize anything. You must know what you’re trying to
achieve.
So let’s say you’re trying to optimize your homepage. We’ll use the
DigitalMarketer homepage as an example.
Keep in mind, though, homepages are actually one of the most difficult pages
to optimize because they’ve got to perform so many different tasks—and
everyone wants to prioritize their own goals. The sales team is looking for
qualified leads. The acquisition team is looking at how they can convert the
traffic into emails.
You get the idea. Everyone is competing for shelf space on the homepage.
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But here’s the bottom line: A homepage is your “you are here” message for
new visitors. They’re trying to figure out if your business is relevant to them,
and if so, where they are and where they need to go.
To optimize this experience, you’ll need to set one or more of 3 goal types:
Looking at the DM homepage, you can see our top goal is the first type, an
immediate goal. We want to get people to give us their email address.
But we need to optimize the entire experience, so let’s look at the page they
land on when they click the “Get Your Invitation” button.
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This page achieves the 3rd type of goal, a long-term goal, and it helps us on
the front-end and the back-end. The information we gather here lets us qualify
people for the right product, either DM Lab or HQ.
For us, this is important because it helps us gauge the quality of the leads
we’re generating, and it helps us drive new subscribers to the product that’s
best for them.
Gather Data
Once you’ve set your goal, you need to set a baseline for your metrics. For
each, log your current number, your aspiring number (the number you’re
aiming for), and your user data.
Which brings us to rule #1 for optimizers: leave all assumptions at the door.
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You and everyone else in your business have ideas about what works, what
doesn’t work, what your visitors are looking for, and more. But those ideas are
merely assumptions.
You must never make decisions based on assumptions. Test your ideas, and let
your visitors tell you what works for them.
• For customer and email data, use the data provided by your email service:
ConvertKit, Infusionsoft, Aweber, etc.
• For payment data, look at your payment processor: Stripe, Paypal, etc.
Different types of data are shared in reports like this one from Google
Analytics, which tells you about the traffic on the page you’re trying to
optimize.
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User behavior reports might look like this one from TruConversion. It shows us
where people are clicking when they’re on the page, uncovering areas where
we could improve the user experience.
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The key to CRO success is to use relevant data (which you just gathered) to
develop meaningful optimization campaigns.
• What’s hurting my conversion rate? Use the user behavior data to figure
this out.
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Develop Hypotheses
If you don’t have a hypothesis, you can’t optimize because you don’t know
what you’re trying to improve.
At this stage of the process, you have your data and you’ve identified the
elements that are likely hurting your conversion rates. Now you need to make
some guesses about how you could fix the issue you’ve identified.
We believe that doing [1] for [2] will make [3] happen
Notice that your hypothesis is about your intent. You need to be very precise
about the outcome you’re aiming for. You also need to be sure it’s something
you can measure and will improve your results in a specific way.
Design Variants
You’ll use your new hypothesis, along with your data, to create the variations
you’re going to test.
Keep in mind, testing takes time—not just to create the set up the tests, but to
run them.
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And while there’s no limit to the number of tests you can run on a site at
any given time, if your site doesn’t get a lot of traffic, you’ll need to limit the
number of tests you run—it simply takes too long to run a test and get valid
results if your site is small.
That being the case, if you don’t get a lot of traffic, plan to run no more than
about 29 tests per year.
Which means you need to pick the right tests to run. You’ll need to hone your
ability to identify and justify the page you want to optimize.
Notice Step 6 is to monitor your test. Once a test is running, you want to
monitor it carefully on the first day it’s live. In particular, look for anything that’s
broken or isn’t working as planned.
If you’ve designed a simple test and nothing’s broken, it will take 9 to 11 days
to get it up and running. But hiccups happen, so be prepared for tech issues
and other glitches that could add a few days to this timetable.
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Now let’s look at how that might play out in real-life testing situations.
This test is braindead simple. It only involves a few copy changes, which
means it could be set up quickly. But it’s not very meaningful, and it’s not
scalable at all. What you learn from this test won’t impact other tests in a
significant way.
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This test, for the DigitalMarketer site, is a lot more complicated. Because it’s a
major redesign, it will take longer to set up and to implement. But we’ll learn
a lot more, and our findings can be applied across our other tripwire pages, so
it’s very scalable.
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TIP: For a complicated test like this one, you’ll want to create a mockup, then
build it in a landing page builder. Once your variant has been tested and
proved, you’ll then want to scale it across all similar offers, so the results you
gained from this test can be applied to all related pages. In this case, it took a
month to do that.
Once your variant is made, you want to implement all the necessary
technology to make the changes you’re testing.
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You can’t do this without the right technology. You’re going to need some
tools like Visual Website Optimizer, Google Analytics, and TruConversion.
It’s as important to know when and when not to run a test. For that, you need
to qualify your test.
29 43 58 72
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The length of your test depends on the number of variants being tested and
your conversions/day.
What is “statistical relevance”? It’s how you mathematically prove that your
test’s outcome is reliable. If you end a test too early, you won’t have enough
data from the test to verify that your hypothesis was true. It might not be—and
if you had run the test longer, the numbers would have proven it.
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But statistical relevance is hard to get when you don’t have much traffic. No
traffic means no data, after all.
So if you’re testing 2 variants in your test, and you get 5 conversions per day,
you’ll need to run your test for 49 days to be able to trust your test’s results.
(See the chart above.)
If you’re testing 3 variants and get 3 conversions a day, guess what? You’re not
on the chart. You’ve got to ask yourself: should you run the test.
Once you’ve set up your test, if you see indications that it’s broken or
obviously failing, you can pull the plug. (It’s okay. Really.)
For instance, on Day 1, if your results tank, something is broken. Stop the
test and diagnose the problem. If, on Day 12, your numbers are still 80%
down, the test isn’t working. You need a pragmatic approach to know how to
respond.
As a CRO, your goal is to mitigate risk while testing new ideas. So if a test is
performing badly and the traffic source is organic, you can probably afford to
keep it running. If it’s a paid traffic source, you’re losing money the longer a
failed test runs. You should probably end it sooner than later.
• Is this a functional issue with no ambiguity toward the solution? If it’s just a
functional issue, you don’t test.
• Does this page directly impact long-term or campaign goals? If yes, run
the test.
• Is there something else you can test that will have a bigger impact? If so,
do that instead.
• Are these learnings scalable to other parts of the site? If not, tread
carefully. You’ll get more value from a test whose results impact multiple
pages on your site than on a test that only tells you one thing.
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After running a test, you need to analyze the results. This gives you the “why”
and fuels your next campaign.
• Write a report
In your report, you want to include the name of the test, the timeline, metrics,
visually, show the variants, and break down the long-form numbers. Then
move into what you learned from the test and what needs to be done as a
result.
Now, use these findings to set new goals and begin the process again.
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Conversion
The visitor action you’re hoping to improve with the campaign (e.g.,
registering for a webinar, adding a product to the shopping cart, etc.).
Be aware, you must define your conversion actions. Clearly identify what
you’re testing, what you’re aiming for, and the metric that matters most in
measuring your results.
Control
The page in the experiment that does not receive the treatment. In conversion
testing, the control is the version of the page that currently converts best. Any
new variation is tested against the control.
So in an A/B test, the control is A. Your test version, or variation (see below), is
B.
Variation
The page in the experiment that has received the treatment you’re testing. For
example, the variation page might have a shorter lead form than the control
page.
TIP: Name your variants in the test so it’s easy to identify the key element in
each. Something like this:
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Quantitative Data
This is any data that can be measured numerically. The “number stuff,” such
as:
• Unique visits
• Sign-ups
• Purchases
• Order value
• Qualitative Data
This is the descriptive data. The “people stuff” that’s more difficult to analyze
but often gives context to your quantitative data. This would include:
• Heatmaps
• Session recordings
• Form analytics
The Metrics
Optimizers live and die by the numbers. So what are the numbers that matter
most when you’re testing?
Conversion Rate
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For example:
Leads Generated
Unique Visits
Lift Percentage
The percentage change between two variants (not the difference between the
two numbers).
100( 10°/o
1 - -)
11 °/o
In this case, while the difference is 1%, the lift percentage is 10%.
Confidence Rate
In layman’s terms, you’re trying to avoid false positives. So the confidence rate
shows how sure you are that your test is accurate.
For instance, let’s say your confidence rate is 95%. That would indicate that
if you were to run the campaign 100 times, 95 of the tests would show your
variant a winner.
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A common mistake is to interpret this as the “odds” of you getting your same
results. As if a 95% confidence rate meant there’s a 95% chance you’ll get the
same results from another test.
We’re not talking odds. We’re calculating the accuracy. In every test, you’ll see
slight differences. The confidence rate indicates you’ll see difference but not
the degree of difference.
Conversion Range
“Conversion rate” is a misnomer. It makes it sound like your tests will give you
one precise number that you can call the “conversion rate.”
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Notice that the two tests overlap slightly. Your goal is to break the overlap, so
your winning variant is a clear winner.
Acquisition
Anyone responsible for acquiring new leads and customers should know how
to optimize for more conversions.
Even when this role doesn’t do the actual optimization, they need to be able
to identify whether lower-than-expected results are from poor targeting or on-
page issues.
Marketing
They need to understand the basics of optimization (at the very least), so they
can identify the source of whatever issues arise—whether they’re a problem
with optimization, acquisition, or qualifying.
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Conversion rate optimization often has technical elements that require the
assistance of the tech team members who build web pages.
Be sure these people know what your tests are about. Sometimes, the
changes you’re asking for aren’t best-practice from a designer’s point of view,
and it helps them to understand what they’re creating and why.
Also, if you’re using optimization tools that allow you to make changes on
your own, give all stakeholders a heads up about your test. Otherwise, they’ll
see the changes on the website and wonder why the “approved” language or
design has been changed.
Bottom Line
If you don’t want to be one of the marketers who are unhappy with their
conversion rates, you’ve got to change your approach to digital marketing.
The only way to raise your conversion rates is to begin testing and optimizing.
So what’s next?
Click through to the final chapter, and we’ll give you your next steps.
*NOTE: The study revealing that a 4 out of 5 businesses are dissatisfied with their conversion rates
can be found at Econsultancy.
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The critical pages that need immediate optimization—in most cases, the well-
performing pages would perform even better with a little optimization.
The 3 most effective tools for collecting user data (and how to use them).
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09
CHAPTER
Congratulations!
You’ve completed The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing, which means
you’re part of an exclusive group of marketers who know how to attract,
engage, and convert your customers in a social, digital environment.
Simply by applying the lessons you’ve learned in this Guide, you’ll have a
huge advantage over your competitors.
So what’s next?
The foundations you’ve laid as you’ve gone through this Guide are solid—
they’ll help you grow your business and start making headway to meet your
goals.
We can say with utmost confidence you’ll likely see improved metrics across
every area of your business.
But the wonderful thing about digital marketing is that there’s no limit to
what you can achieve. Your next step is to develop your skills in each of these
areas, so you can outpace your competitors and anticipate the needs of your
customers.
That’s how you achieve real growth as a digital marketer: creating and
optimizing your Customer Value Journey.
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• Improve retention
You’ll rest easy knowing your marketing is being done right. We’ll make sure
your teams stay up to date on what’s working now.
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Your next step is to become certified in the marketing discipline that’s you use
most.
270