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How To Avoid Common Mistakes in Remarketing - Firebrand
How To Avoid Common Mistakes in Remarketing
by Firebrand Team | Apr 18, 2019 | Blog, Digital Marketing, Marketing, Resources
Remarketing typically includes display remarketing, dynamic banner remarketing, video remarketing, and social media remarketing. It’s a go-to approach in the paid media digital marketing world. But doing remarketing correctly requires thought, strategy and execution diligence – let’s take a tour of the world of remarketing.
What is Remarketing?
Remarketing is the action of re-engaging previous site visitors with ads in order to bring them back into your ecosystem to convert. It’s why those fancy shoes you saw on Zappos three months ago keep following you around the web. It might be annoying and it might seem intrusive depending on your browsing habits but it works.
Remarketing vs Retargeting
One quick point to clear up before we start. Some marketers try to give different definitions to “remarketing” and “retargeting.” Don’t get distracted – these terms have been used interchangeably since the dawn of adtech. Here’s a 2013 blog post saying as much: “_Short answer…there is no difference between these two terms. Retargeting refers to the overall cookie based method of following a user with your ad. Remarketing is simply Google’s version within AdWords_.”
Understand Remarketing Campaign Performance
As a marketer, you define a goal for every campaign and judge performance relative to it – number of sign-ups, cost per sign up, total revenue, number of registrations. There’s a long journey to get there and every step has impact.
Consider the tools a marketer works with to reach and convert an audience: Targeting parameters \> Budget \> Ad engine settings & performance \> Creative & messaging \> User behavior \> Conversion rate optimization (CRO).
To determine if your remarketing program is working, it’s imperative to define a specific remarketing goal first and use it as the north star in all following actions and analysis. Also important is understanding how to analyze campaign performance.
The puzzle has three performance elements: ad engine, user behavior (on site) and business goal (efficiency). All are linked but each has specific levers and metrics.
The following table highlights a few metrics and elements to adjust:
Source
Metric
Ad Engine
Impressions, clicks, CTR, CPC, CPM, bid type, bid strategy, geographic exclusions, time of day settings, audience
User Behavior
\# unique users, bounce rate, time on site, goal completions, pageviews
Business (Efficiency)
Cost per lead, number of leads, lead quality, revenue, ROAS/ROI
Next, diagnosing the problem makes it possible to take the necessary action. There’s quite a bit of nuance here and experience is required. Examples of potential problems and causes include:
Issue
Potential Cause
Poor lead quality
Wrong audience targeting
Misaligned messaging to medium or audience
Geographic settings that are too broad
Incorrect targeting settings
Too few conversions
Wrong audience targeting
Misaligned messaging to medium or audience
Geographic settings that are too broad
Poor site experience
Missing CTAs
Incorrect targeting settings
Budget allocation
Poor campaign timing settings
Low conversion rates
Poor landing page experience
Missing CTAs
Wrong audience targeting
Misaligned messaging to medium or audience
Incorrect targeting settings
Low efficiency (high cost per lead/CPL)
Poor landing page experience
Missing CTAs
Wrong or overly broad audience targeting
Misaligned messaging to medium or audience
Incorrect targeting settings
Wrong bid type
There are limitless permutations that impact performance, positively and negatively, which is the reason an experienced team is essential since they can shortcut troubleshooting.
Common Remarketing Mistakes
Armed with a basic framework and understanding, let’s look at some common mistakes with remarketing programs:
Remarketing Campaign Optimization Strategies
Optimization is a continuous process of improvement and adjustment, a daily action of granular activity and strategic thinking. There is no magic bullet to optimizing a campaign. It requires management, analysis and course corrections.
The best optimization strategies begin with the end in mind (the goal) and from the customer perspective. What content have they seen, what messages have they engaged with, what is the next logical step in their journey to conversion? Then, mechanically, what levers are available to do this.
Done well, remarketing can be the foundational paid media program, driving high-quality conversions. Done badly, it’s that pair of shoes following you around. Hopefully these tips are a step in the right direction.