On the importance of multi-channel marketing today…
The customer journey has transformed – it is more complex than ever and marketing methods must shift with the trends. Consumers or prospects generally don’t use a single browsing device anymore. In fact, the customer journey often involves many devices over a period of time spanning hours, days, weeks or months; sometimes even longer. 67% of consumers move between devices while shopping online and 92% of those switch devices in a single day.
That’s not all. We also have the expectancy of immediacy to contend with…
With a staggering 82% of smartphone users turning to their phone to evaluate a purchase decision (while in store!) it’s quite clear that buying habits have evolved.
How can businesses accomplish a successful marketing campaign without consideration of numerous channels? These days, they simply can’t.
(A recent survey from Regalix revealed that over 50 percent of senior B2B marketers consider multi-channel marketing initiative to be ‘very important.)
Mobile users are more inclined to use social media to influence their decision to purchase. We’ve seen the explosion of Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat ads over the last few years. Twitter, is key for rapid customer service – the nation knows this and utilises it to their advantage, particularly millennials.
How does multi-channel affect a typical purchase journey?
A purchase-focused Google search query indicates intent which may lead to an organic or ad click, but that’s just one stage of the journey. That same visitor may leave; their purchase intent fading for a while until the brand in question pops up again on social media. That nudges the potential customer slightly. Perhaps not enough though…
A few weeks pass and all of a sudden a remarketing ad hits them on a niche blog. Bingo! Just the reminder they needed.
The user then pops a product into their virtual basket… but suddenly they get interrupted by a neighbour knocking at the door. The laptop is shut. The purchase isn’t made.
But wait… now they receive a triggered email to remind them about the unfinished purchase. Perfect! The product is finally bought.
Now, if businesses aren’t embracing such a blend of marketing channels and initiatives presented as a seamless omni-channel experience, they are already years behind the curve and missing out on valuable conversions.
I recently explained the necessity of customer journey mapping and unveiled an awesome tool for doing so here.
What about B2B purchase journeys?
Some readers might be thinking, ‘‘That doesn’t apply to me; I sell to businesses!’’
If that’s you, think again…
- 2015 research from Google found 42 percent of researchers use a mobile device during their B2B purchasing process.
- Mobile usage for B2B purchase research has rocketed 91% over the last two years with more than three-quarters of business execs still browsing content on their laptops or desktops – highlighting the trend for years to come.
The opportunity is immense and the brands running such complex campaigns are reaping the benefits.
How much so?
- Potential B2B buyers who feel a “high brand connection” are 60% more likely to consider, purchase, and even pay a premium than “low brand connection” competitors.
- Last year’s findings from Google discovered cross channel customers who shop on multiple channels present a 30% higher lifetime value than those who shop via a single channel.
On the main challenges that business are facing… (“ANCRAS”)
It seems to be difficult for businesses to adopt this new way of thinking for a few reasons:
- Awareness – Smaller businesses perhaps aren’t in tune with the technology that’s now available to us (and things move real fast, making it even tougher to stay on top).
- Naivety – Some business owners may attempt to avoid the inevitable and carry on as they are, regardless of the evident trends.
- Choice – Businesses that are aware struggle to decide which solution is ideal for their particular needs. There are hundreds of marketing automation, CRM, and analytics providers out there, each with varied and often daunting solutions.
- Resource – Both in the form of investment and internal capacity; such integrations require substantial amounts of each.
- Accuracy – Once everything is in place… now what? Do teams know how to implement campaigns, test, measure, listen and act on results across multiple channels?
- Size – Communication across larger teams can become extremely complex to harmonise. Similarly, a business with 3 employees may struggle with the demanding nature of such campaigns.
I’m going to coin that “ANCRAS” – not sure if it’s been covered anywhere else so I’m claiming it while I can!
On who should take the initiative for change…
From experience, it seems ideas don’t always travel in the expected direction – all too often, they derive from senior marketers to directors, then up towards c‑level.
However, for brands to truly embrace holistic marketing, I think this structure needs to change for complete adoption throughout larger brands and corporate companies.
That said, there’s always brands like Apple — Steve Jobs was the top man and influenced the entire workforce to think differently. I guess every business is different and each displays their own unique culture.
On the agency role…
Combining my answers above, it makes a lot of sense to hire an agency these days. It completely minimises risk and maximises profitability.
An agency brings experience and all hands on deck around the clock, leaving businesses to run operations and all other top-level initiatives. It’s just what agencies do, all day everyday and it’s their job to bring their knowledge to the table and take the hard work off the shoulders of internal teams.
Complex marketing campaigns often require intense focus – outsourcing alleviates this pressure and the time required to introduce them into teams.
The downside? Dedicated agency time can become very costly…
Which is why, sometimes a combination of in-house + agency resource can work best!
On whether there is enough understanding and investment in SEO…
Google isn’t going anywhere and there’s no other channel that can boast 40,000 searches per second, right?! Businesses simply cannot afford to miss this audience. Anybody who says SEO is expensive needs to think about the cost of not being found at all.
SEO isn’t an option – it’s a necessity and it will continue to be, even if Google plugs another 3 or 4 ads into the SERPs. Why? Because people trust organic results more than paid results.
There’s always been speculation over ad and organic CTR. Well, check this:
Research this year shows only 4.2% CTR for AdWords ads in position 1… that’s even after the removal of ads on the right-hand rail.
Another data experiment from this year indicates a CTR of almost 23% on the first organic result – even with ads on display for such queries.
If digital marketing is the cake, SEO is flour. Google’s influence is immensely powerful and we all need a slice of that. Organic presence is fundamental to business success – sprinkle effective AdWords campaigns into the mix for competitor obliteration!
To achieve maximum impact and recall, brands must be seen at every touch point possible and also consume the most territory. In the case of Google SERPS; it is ideal to own a ‘blue link’ organic result in addition to a paid result, local pack result and knowledge graph result… or even multiples of these properties for a single search query.
On winning over stakeholders…
I think we reached a milestone not so long ago – everybody seems to know they should ‘do SEO’ now. This has made the whole process much easier…
So today, it’s more the case of proving your methods work.
A few years ago, I would use data-driven CTRs taken from industry research to determine cost-effectiveness of organic versus AdWords clicks, extrapolating the data as if all the possible traffic was paid for through ads.
So, if the monthly search volume was say 3,200 for a given keyword, CTR was 8% for organic position 1 and AdWords estimated CPC @ £6.20, that would provide ‘free’ traffic (256 clicks at position 1) to the value of £1,587 if paid for through AdWords.
This hypothesis always did the trick for me.
SEO also has its part to play in nurturing the end conversion… I described attribution modelling in this article – another string to the marketer’s bow and especially useful when seeking c‑suite buy in.
On how SEO can work in harmony with PR, Social, or Paid media…
It’s all about breaking down silos – these marketing practices must now become a collaborative effort.
An SEO team may be targeting a link on a respected website, or maybe the PR team has an existing relationship with the senior editor. These opportunities are easily missed if internal communication is poor.
Once a link is gained, it’s down to the social media department to slam dunk the feature with plenty of shares across the brand’s networks, potentially leading to further backlinks to that page (indirectly sending compounded ‘link juice’ to the teams’ website).
Every component intertwines and contributes to the customer journey. Each touch point the prospect hits; the closer they are to making their purchase. It’s our job as marketers to intercept and influence that decision as much as possible. The more collective touch points we score, the greater our control on the purchase cycle. That goes for owned, earned and paid media across the board.
Another example can be taken from my website… it’s never been live, only a single page data capture since early 2016. Despite this, I’ve gained 500+ signups and an awesome backlink profile:
There are some great domains pointing to it including Muck Rack, The Huffington Post and IBM.
This is the result of a blended strategy applying social media, informal outreach and guest blogging.
Take a look at my Twitter presence in just 15 months of activity:
(That’s given my Twitter profile a Moz PA score of 68!)
The benefits of using all channels in conjunction with one another are unquestionable. In my case, I have unconventionally leveraged social media to provide SEO value… but it can (and more commonly so), also be applied the other way around. Ranking highly in Google provides more attention = greater chance of your material being included in blogs and consequently shared on social media.
On cross-channel reporting and connecting disparate KPIs…
I firmly believe all bottom line KPIs should be aligned across teams and the smaller steps to achieving these goals synced and promoted in unison – else there’s danger of disjointed marketing campaigns and inconsistent messaging across each channel.
To hit customers at the right time in their buying journey (with precise messaging), everything has to be clear-cut internally too. It should be up to the senior heads to drive this approach in any corporation. It just circumvents tension and everybody works towards the same goals; an ideal scenario!
I know most of us hate meetings…but productive meetings should be made a habit – everybody in a company must be on the same page to squeeze each campaign to its full potential.
Communication is everything.