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Are we failing to create digital impact?

Author's avatar By Danyl Bosomworth 19 Aug, 2011
Essential Essential topic

Creating a balance between sales optimisation and marketing

When did you last run a campaign that sought to engage a market, to really engage and inspire potential customers rather than focusing on selling to those already in buying mode?

We were discussing this several months ago and talked to Imran Farooq, another Smart Insights contributor who also trains marketers. We were saying it seems that many digital marketers today, and marketers more generally, don't seem to run campaigns so much outside of what is really day-to-day optimisation and sales promotion, so prompting the questions why is that? And, are we right?

When we think of campaign planning at Smart Insights, we consider campaigns to be platforms that sit on top of day-to-day marketing where the focus is sales and optimising marketing around generating sales today. The day-to-day activities are what we (and many others) call business as usual (BAU), where we're looking to generate enquirers and potential buyers and then convert them to sale, naturally. So what's the problem?

My issue with the BAU/optimisation approach is this - most of your site users are not looking to buy today, they don't care about you, they care about them. And they care about their problem, question or idea. I'd suggest mobile is only going to drive that trend further. Are you really marketing with that conversation in mind?

The analytics guru Avinash Kaushik highlighted this challenge well.

So what do you think? Do you, or if you're a consultant or agency your clients, get the balance right - please select one option from the poll or add to the comments. Thanks!



Tactical campaigns are just one side of the marketing coin

This natural tactical and promotional obsession, that's inherent in digital marketing is only one side of the coin. The much-needed techniques for BAU, such as link building, email optimisation or improving click-through on a web page most often have a siloed perspective. Even social marketing is most often tactic and technique orientated - "I have to get a Facebook page to get Likes". Delving into the detail for optimisation is great and essential - we love it, but it's sales promotion, and yet we'd suggest that maybe just 10% of your opportunity is in buying mode today, you're missing the connection with the 90% who you need to inspire enough today in order to earn permission to sell to, tomorrow.

My recent post on marketing with the human touch covered this too.

Think about the advice in digital marketing that we read, I'd suggest 90% or more of it centres on sales channel optimisation and channel integration and even the strategic advice remains channel or tool orientated. No wonder then that digital marketing remains the domain of tactical specialists (for now!), this despite it tactically underpinning modern marketing.

I suggest that the digital optimisation mindset is great for those that are ready to buy today and it's mostly sales promotion - engaging and inspiring the large audience looking to solve their own problems is actually marketing?

Channel based marketing and BAU

From a digital marketers' perspective this is where we naturally start. It's critical and cannot be left neglected and unmanaged as it was in the early days of Internet marketing, it needs its own budget line and focus. We're talking measurement, monitoring tactics and improvement. It's a huge space of involving techniques to improve a number of areas with sales promotion firmly in mind:

• Natural search and link building

• Advertising including paid search

• Social interactions (reactions more specifically)

• Site performance and optimisation

• Email and lead conversion

It's not that this is any less needed, I'm suggesting it's simply half the job.

Prior to digital marketing pretty much all marketing was campaign orientated in waves, made up of 'above the line' and then the more tactical 'below the line' for direct marketing and promotions. It seems to me that digital created the potential for a day-to-day sales promotion process, one that is fuelled by the focus on analytics? So, have we lost something because of this?

Integrated campaigns that inspire

These are traditionally the domain of brand managers, PR's and marcomms people. Campaigns are the way to impact a market to create change, they're typically tied to business strategies such as launching a brand into new markets, generating interest around new products (permission to sell!) and even overcoming a threat for a new market entrant. Either way there's a focus on someone, somewhere for a specific reason.

Adapting or updating tactics, such as extending PPC campaigns and updating the creative about a new launch, simply cannot cut-it.

Consider great campaigns that do it well...

  • Old Spice - above the line led with a very small initial push on TV that moved into a very tactical social campaign spanning Facebook and YouTube specifically. The genius beyond that targeted creative is the brand engagement that ran for weeks and months afterwards, that good it cleaned up at Cannes (isn't that traditionall awards for above the line creative - how times change?).
  • Lynx - time and again Lynx know how to inspire their audience outside of the point of purchase, most recently with Fallen Angels, a heavy TV and press campaign that also included experiential marketing in Waterloo train station and a sophisticated Facebook app where the user could become the chosen one for Kelly Brooke, naturally. Loads of Facebook interaction = lots of sharing.
  • O2's guru campaign launched recently off the back of TV and press over a 10 day period, it's plan is to connect tech experts with everyday people to share tips and ideas on using the new fangled technology (smart phones, really), the guru's will be able to at the end of an SMS from O2 with a tip, as well as taking questions via Twitter. It's not so well done as I see it, but the ideas there to integrate at least.
  • Dell, I get fed up of repeating this as a case study, that says it all maybe, but they promote like demons on the one hand, ruthlessly and classically sales promotion, yet they also reinvigorated their brand through social media marketing for customer retention using social media tools and more recently taking it to a whole new level with their command centre.
  • It's not all big-brand TV either, before you say it! Some B2B marketers do an amazing job, software company Eloqua who mix BAU and digital optimisation around their software product with much wider content orientated campaigns that create the inbound effect, using creating info graphics and high quality e-books, their latest (the playbook) drawing industry big-wigs and enabling (as I see it) Elqoua to 'stand on the shoulder of giants'. Clever

The opportunity for digital marketers and companies

Of course, it's integration - to be able to execute year-round bread-and-butter BAU digital optimisation with sales today in mind, and then also change that perspective altogether and consider the needs of a prospective customer, with their the goals and their purpose in mind - a big difference that I cannot stress enough! A focus on people, over tools and tactics.

How do explain this to sales people and your boss? From a pure sales perspective your extending the sales funnel upwards with an inspire and nurture mindset, generating what are cooler 'leads' that we may call fans, for sake of argument. The relationship with those fans is the marketing opportunity, the engagement with them earns the permission to sell later.

You can inter-weave both of these elements together in a communications process, it can be kept really simple, after all campaigns don't have to be world-beaters every-time, you're just focussing on someone, for a reason. I'll post on this next time. Until then - what do you think, do you agree or have I got it totally wrong?

Author's avatar

By Danyl Bosomworth

Dan helped to co-found Smart Insights in 2010 and acted as Marketing Director until leaving in November 2014 to focus on his other role as Managing Director of First 10 Digital. His experience spans brand development and digital marketing, with roles both agency and client side for nearly 20 years. Creative, passionate and focussed, his goal is on commercial success whilst increasing brand equity through effective integration and remembering that marketing is about real people. Dan's interests and recent experience span digital strategy, social media, and eCRM. You can learn more about Dan's background here Linked In.

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