Digital Marketing Strategies in an Economic Downturn
- By Charles Brodeur
- April 8, 2020
- 7 min read
This period of uncertainty isn’t going to last forever. But while it’s here, business owners and marketers need to protect their businesses, plan for the future, and explore new opportunities to serve their customers.
If you are in charge of your business’ marketing, you need to answer these two questions in an economic downturn:
Your business needs to stay informed on customers’ changing preferences and make decisions in a timely manner. Everything is changing so fast, but with data and direction you can make informed decisions. First, evaluate what parts of the business should be reigned in and then prioritize marketing programs that support changing customer preferences.
Here are some overall consumer statistics that you probably could have guessed:
Up to 70% are delaying major purchases until the outbreak decreases or ends, but:
95% of global consumers say they are spending more time at home consuming media
67% are watching more news coverage
51% are watching more streaming platforms like Netflix
45% are spending more time on social media
35% are listening to more streaming services
Source: Coronavirus research hub: the latest on global consumer impact
Businesses that are able to balance timeliness with effective marketing campaigns will have a faster recovery time and better customer relationships over the next few years.
We’ve compiled this to-do list to help businesses understand existing customer data to positively impact bottom lines now and lay the framework for a quicker road to recovery.
Get a snapshot of where we are today and what’s trending. It’s best to have this for all marketing campaigns on all marketing channels & platforms:
Then, put together a plan to leverage your existing team. Build a reporting framework with the data they need to positively impact the business now and to lay the framework going forward.
How are you using the marketing data to help make smart changes to your budgets?
Common reactions we have seen to the economic downturn is to start cutting budgets across the board by a certain percentage or stop advertising altogether. Marketers are being asked to cut the budget in order to protect the business from potential cash flow issues. I get it. Smart move. But where do we go from here?
In a recent example with one of our clients, the business asked to cut their spend by 50% across the board, and while the change would give a sense of comfort in terms of freeing up funds, the lack of data to back up the decision made it hard to understand if 50% was the right amount. We recommended pausing the advertising until we had time to review the existing campaigns and to prepare the strategy moving forward.
Using a structured framework for making advertising budget decisions is more important now than ever before. Combine a retrospective view of the last 13 months of data with an increased weighting on recent performance to build a spend analysis and make decisions around budgets that will help guide your business into the next phase.
A framework of short-term, data-driven decisions will have a long-term impact on your business.
How is your website being affected by the downturn? Has the traffic completely stopped or are there some interesting changes to explore? How does today compare YOY, Month over Month, Week over Week, etc.?
We typically look at weekly and monthly trends, but how often do we need to look at the data now?
Many businesses are looking for an up-to-the-minute way to assess the impact of the downt on their business and to help inform stakeholders with a mechanism to report back. These insights empower stakeholders with speed and understanding so they can make quick, data-driven decisions. Speed to insight is of the essence. One simple but powerful way to inform critical business decisions is to create a daily and weekly dashboard that alerts stakeholders to critical issues and trends online.
We use a service called Google Data Studio to create daily and weekly performance dashboards and set up automatic email alerts every Monday and Thursday morning. During the downturn we are suggesting that twice a week is enough for most businesses. Mondays we get to see what happened over the weekend and plan to make necessary changes for the rest of the week. Thursdays we see what changes are making an impact to our website conversions.
We like to track the following data on our dashboards:
This regular reporting on your online marketing gives insight to make adjustments and keep the stakeholders informed. It also allows you to free up time from building endless reports and helps you focus on strategic decision-making during this period.
Did you know that you can track all your digital marketing campaigns in one platform?
Google Data Studio is an excellent, free business intelligence and data visualization tool that can connect to most marketing platforms and, when needed, it can connect to MS Office, G-Suite, SQL Databases, DataLakes, etc. With a tool like this, you are no longer required to log in to multiple platforms and manually compile the necessary data to track your marketing campaigns. Having all your marketing data in one dashboard that automatically updates is now available for small and medium-sized businesses, and no longer restricted to enterprise-level organizations.
However, with that said, we need to normalize the campaign tracking data to get accurate results. When was the last time you updated your campaign tracking & tagging, if ever? The task of updating campaign tagging and the naming convention processes is critically important and not something you can afford to put on the back burner until the world is back on track again. Be sure to set up campaign tagging to support all marketing channels.
This is a fundamental aspect of a data-driven digital marketing program and is necessary for understanding performance from the platform to campaign, keyword to creative. Campaign tracking is the main tool to help us understand performance by channel, budget, and tactic.
This little, but important framework will let you know which platforms are driving traffic to your website, which campaigns are driving conversions, and the cost per acquisition for each.
There are lots of systems, tips, and tricks out there for getting started writing, which is great! Because you’ll have lots of options to find one that works for you.
The important thing though, is that you are writing and communicating with your audience. What works for you will change over time, but find something that will help you get started today.
Happy content creating!
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We are a Digital Marketing Agency in Vancouver, BC, Canada. We specialize in Google Ads, Social Media Ads, and SEO (Search Engine Optimization). What makes us different from other agencies is that we place a heavy emphasis on marketing analytics to help connect the dots between marketing costs and revenues generated.
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