Retargeting Consumers In The ‘See’, ‘Think’ & ‘Do’ Stages

A road map of how to tar­get con­sumers in the See, Think and Do stages.

George Gutierrez By George Gutierrez from Acronym. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Retar­get­ing (or remar­ket­ing) is one of the most com­mon­ly used tac­tics for direct-response dis­play cam­paigns because it seeks to engage with con­sumers who have already expressed inter­est in a brand. How­ev­er, not all retar­get­ing should be employed in the same man­ner. For exam­ple, a user who has expressed slight inter­est in the brand shouldn’t be approached in the same man­ner that a user who has shown sig­nif­i­cant inter­est. Keep­ing this in mind, a use­ful tem­plate for retar­get­ing should have as its bedrock prin­ci­ples the mantra of Google’s Avinash Kaushik, the company’s Dig­i­tal Mar­ket­ing Evan­ge­list, as it relates to engag­ing con­sumers in three sep­a­rate stages of the their pur­chase path: See, Think and Do.


To ensure you are max­i­miz­ing impact with your tar­get, you must build your retar­get­ing strat­e­gy by seg­ment­ing audi­ences, bid­ding strate­gies and cre­ative mes­sag­ing accord­ing to the lev­el of brand inter­est a con­sumer has expressed.

You want to bid aggres­sive­ly and pro­vide high­er incen­tives to users who have demon­strat­ed the most inter­est.

How­ev­er, don’t neglect users who have demon­strat­ed slight inter­est. Be sure to engage them with per­son­al­ized mes­sag­ing as a reminder and, as the user express­es more inter­est in the brand, adjust the bid­ding strat­e­gy and cre­ative mes­sag­ing to dri­ve them down the path toward com­plet­ing a trans­ac­tion. This strat­e­gy can help nur­ture some­one who has expressed slight inter­est in the brand into one who has con­nect­ed with your brand and is ready to trans­act.

Also, it is cru­cial to build long-term rela­tion­ships, brand loy­al­ty, and reten­tion by active­ly engag­ing with users who have com­plet­ed pur­chas­ing and incen­tiviz­ing them to return.

Deliv­er­ing mes­sag­ing that is rel­e­vant to the user is essen­tial to run­ning a cam­paign that is both effec­tive in achiev­ing mar­ket­ing goals and is a favor­able expe­ri­ence for the con­sumer.

Addi­tion­al­ly, ensure that you’re set­ting fre­quen­cy caps — based on per­for­mance data that acknowl­edges the opti­mal fre­quen­cy at which a user con­verts — so that you don’t turn off peo­ple by over­sat­u­ra­tion.

Here’s a basic road map of how to tar­get con­sumers in the See, Think and Do stages.

See: “Quick Visitor”

Employ a Dynam­ic Retar­get­ing strat­e­gy to a low-lev­el inter­est seg­ment (users who have briefly vis­it­ed the site once) as a reminder to return to the site because there are products/services on the site in which they have demon­strat­ed inter­est. Make the mes­sag­ing par­tic­u­lar and cus­tomized to that user’s expe­ri­ence based on the con­tent browsed.

Employ dynam­ic mes­sag­ing spe­cif­ic to prod­ucts or ser­vices the user has browsed. The bid­ding for this user should not be as high as some­one who is a fre­quent vis­i­tor a cart aban­don­er.

If the mes­sag­ing has impact­ed the user to think/consider the brand once more by revis­it­ing the site and engag­ing with a length­i­er brows­ing ses­sion, then adjust the cre­ative mes­sag­ing and bid­ding strat­e­gy accord­ing­ly.

Think: “Frequent Visitor Or Cart Abandoner”

A “Fre­quent Vis­i­tor” who has vis­it­ed the site on sev­er­al occa­sions or has had a lengthy brows­ing ses­sion — perus­ing sev­er­al pages/products/services for an extend­ed peri­od of time — has clear­ly demon­strat­ed a lev­el of inter­est high­er than a “Quick Vis­i­tor” and is thus far­ther along the con­sid­er­a­tion stage and clos­er to a trans­ac­tion. They are in the “Think” stage.

These users should be pur­sued more aggres­sive­ly — plac­ing high­er bids to serve them — than a “quick vis­i­tor.” Also, because there was like­ly a delib­er­a­tion that pre­vent­ed them from tak­ing an action, an incen­tive should be pro­vid­ed to guide them far­ther down the path and con­sid­er trans­act­ing.

Deliv­er­ing mes­sag­ing to the “fre­quent vis­i­tor” with a spe­cial offer that is par­tic­u­lar to this audi­ence seg­ment (a dis­count, for exam­ple) can help quell the user’s delib­er­a­tion and make them more com­fort­able in com­plet­ing a trans­ac­tion.

A user per­haps far­ther along—though still very much con­sid­er­ing and still in the “Think” stage — is clos­er to the “Do” stage, hav­ing not only vis­it­ed the site and delib­er­at­ed between products/services but com­plet­ed cer­tain lev­els of engage­ment lead­ing to an pos­si­ble trans­ac­tion (a cart aban­don­ment is an exam­ple for a retail adver­tis­er).

For this audi­ence seg­ment, the bid­ding strat­e­gy should be the most aggres­sive of the three audi­ence seg­ments that have not yet con­vert­ed. This user should, sim­i­lar to the “fre­quent vis­i­tor,” be pro­vid­ed spe­cial offers to incen­tivize a con­ver­sion.

Do: “Site Converter”

Pro­vide incen­tives to the con­vert­ing user to make repeat con­ver­sions and become a loy­al cus­tomer. Serve spe­cial pro­mos spe­cif­ic to users who have already con­vert­ed on site. Be sure to lessen the fre­quen­cy at which a user is served an ad — com­pared to the fre­quen­cy used for non-con­vert­ing users — so as to not com­pro­mise their expe­ri­ence with the brand.

Rec­og­niz­ing audi­ence seg­ments — and how they apply to the See, Think, Do mod­el — and cus­tomiz­ing their adver­tis­ing expe­ri­ence to pro­vide the utmost rel­e­vance is a great way to max­i­mize the impact of your retar­get­ing cam­paign. Apply­ing a retar­get­ing strat­e­gy that incor­po­rates insights from user site behav­ior, effec­tive bid­ding, dynam­ic mes­sag­ing, and rel­e­vant cre­ative incen­tives can help dri­ve users from the “Think” stage to the “Do” stage.

Conclusion

Retar­get­ing should be a com­ple­ment to a holis­tic strat­e­gy that involves bring­ing aware­ness to your brand through prospect­ing. Once exposed, use retar­get­ing to nur­ture the new vis­i­tor.


Are you tar­get­ing con­sumers in the see, think, and do stages?

George Gutierrez

Written by George Gutierrez

Digital Display Strategist, Acronym

George is Digital Display Strategist at Acronym and is responsible for all elements of Display media strategy and campaign management. George is a huge proponent of innovation and staying ahead of the curve; as the Display landscape continuously evolves, he is always seeking ways to leverage new ideas” both on the technical and creative side" to help guide client initiatives to experience great success. Prior to joining Acronym, George was Senior Digital Associate at MEC, working on the AT&T Business Solutions account. While at previous agencies, George has worked across several industries and verticals with clients such as Dell, Clarks, Travel Channel, National Geographic, Univision Network, Sara Lee, and Smashburger. George's experience has fostered deep knowledge of the Display industry, having partnered with many of the top publishers, programmatic vendors and data providers in the industry.

Inked is published by Linkdex, the SEO platform of choice for professional marketers.

Discover why brands and agencies choose Linkdex

  • Get started fast with easy onboarding & training
  • Import and connect data from other platforms
  • Scale with your business, websites and markets
  • Up-skill teams with training & accreditation
  • Build workflows with tasks, reporting and alerts

Get a free induction and experience of Linkdex.

Just fill out this form, and one of our team members will get in touch to arrange your own, personalized demo.