Recently I came across an article on the Entrepreneur
(http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/243586)
that shares 5ways to optimize your digital marketing budget.
Marketing budgets are usually tight. To maximize
profitability, every dollar must be allocated effectively. Here are five
strategies that can be implemented instantly to get the most out of marketing
budgets.
1. Focus on what works best.
Set up goals in Google Analytics to effectively
measure the source and quantity of leads or sales. By comparing sources such as
paid campaigns, organic traffic and social media channels, you can apply the
Pareto Principle, also known as the 80/20 rule.
You are going to find out what sources generate the
majority of sales to later tune up your budget allocation. Use the Pareto
Principle and identify the top 20 percent of your traffic sources that generate
80 percent of good results. Focus your budget on that. Especially for smaller
budgets, it is often times more effective to allocate it on the 10 percent that
is generating 90 percent of results.
Related: The 80/20 Rule of Sales: How to Find Your
Best Customers
2. Stay in control of budget and targeting.
Not all marketing solutions allow for full control
of how much is spent and who is targeted. Instead of spreading your budget thin
on a large variety of platforms, focus on the ones where you are in full
control of both targeting and cost. Examples are the online advertising giants,
Google, Bing and Facebook.
The more control you have on what you can spend your
budget on, the more you will be able to get rid of what does not work and focus
your limited resources on.
3. Don’t scale until it’s profitable.
Any marketing campaign, online or offline, should be
started on a small scale with narrow targeting. Once it is profitable, the
campaign can be scaled. Scaling can mean experimenting with different campaign
types on the same platform as well as adding other platforms.
The reasoning behind starting small and waiting for
the ROI to come in is two-fold: First of all, the profit from the initial
campaign creates a buffer for potentially unprofitable additional campaigns or
platforms. Secondly, business owners know now exactly what works well. They can
base other marketing efforts on that, or simply put more budget into the
initial campaign, without significantly increasing the risk of missing out on a
return.
You should also consider the importance of having a
statistical relevance in results before deciding on whether to scale up your
investment or not. Always support your decision with enough data insights.
Related: 3 Social Media Marketing Plans for Every
Startup Budget
4. Align marketing efforts across channels.
Every dollar and every minute spent on marketing
should communicate the same message. That includes accounts that have never
been used for paid campaigns such as Instagram or, in some cases, Pinterest and
Twitter. In business time is money. Therefore, social media accounts and
similar branding efforts are never free and should be seen similarly to paid
marketing solutions, such as print collateral and paid online advertising
campaigns.
5. Cross-channel remarketing.
Remarketing or retargeting means that you target
website visitors who did not convert yet on the same platform they were
targeted to begin with. For example, potential clients who clicked on an ad in
Google but did not convert are targeted again on Google with the same or
different ads. Cross-channel remarketing takes it up a notch by retargeting
users on a different platform. For instance, potential clients who clicked on
an ad in Google but did not convert are now seeing ads on Facebook and Twitter
that are tailored to the pages they visited. Cross-channel remarketing will
boost the effectiveness of your advertising campaigns.
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