So, you’ve decided to invest in digital marketing with a recurring monthly budget... It's a big decision that requires some thought. Just doing what your competition is doing is not a good idea – copying their strategy will end up building their position rather than your's.
This blog looks at 5 steps to make sure you deliver on a digital marketing strategy that works to strengthen your position and boost sales.
Before you embark on buying online visibility and go crazy online, it’s a good idea to take a step back and consider how your company's overall strategy translates into digital.
Over the years I have seen companies which, although otherwise investing heavily in strategy creation, dive into online and digital marketing without an inkling of a plan.
Over the years I have seen companies which, although otherwise investing heavily in strategy creation, dive into online and digital marketing without an inkling of a plan. Even now in 2020, I occasionally speak with C-Level managers who, although admitting that online is critical, put very little effort into considering how they intend to play the digital game to win.
A good place to start is to look at your company's objectives and goals. Do they take into account how buying has changed? What opportunity does digital provide? Online will impact how and which goals you set so what needs or doesn't need to change?
To establish whether your goals are relevant, it's illustrative to map out your customers' buyer's journey (i.e. experience) and see how it's changed.
You will probably notice that marketing and sales are more aligned than ever - or should be. In terms of goals, this means you need to establish some shared ones and make sure your digital strategy links marketing to sales and vice versa.
We can aspire to strengthen our brand, or educate the market, or attract new visitors to our website. In the end, however, most of us who work for plain old ordinary B2B companies want to generate new quality leads and grow sales.
Some typical top level goals include:
At some point it has to happen. The fun part. Given that your digital top-level strategy is X, what will your tactical plan look like and which channels will your mix include?
Your choice of weaponry will reflect your strategy. It will most likely cover areas like SEO, Paid Search, Display Advertising, Sponsored Social Posts, Email Marketing, Native Advertising, and Customer Advocacy Marketing, You may decide to use dynamic (Smart) content and make sure all data is captured in your CRM / Customer Database.
For a good summary please refer to HubSpot’s blog here.
In a worst case scenario, management lets a digital team come up with a digital strategy that coexists as an entirely separate entity with its own goals and metrics. It can actually be an expensive recipe for - if not disaster - at least a massive loss of potential.
A solid digital marketing strategy aligns with overall strategy, translating and transferring it into the digital realm. An understanding of your customer's buyer's journey (context) as well as measurable, shared goals help align your marketing and sales efforts starting with first touch online customer engagements, Creating a digital marketing strategy will hence benefit from bringing sales in on the planning process.
What's Your Opinion? Let me know and if aligning marketing and sales is one of your organisation's challenges please feel free to contact me at tomi@hubit.fi