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Post-Click!Marketing!

Ron  Verheijen  Ph.D.,  MSc  Founder  

Damian  Bo8  MSc,  BA  

Co-­‐founder  

Jadran  Braber  Business  consultant  

Joris    van  Eil  

Technical  consultant  

Judith  Herrewijn  Sales  

consultant  

Alliance  

The  Online  Marke-ng  Universum  

PPC  

SEA  

Banners  

SEO  

AdWords  

AdSense  

Lead  generaKon  

E-­‐commerce  

Landing    page  

E-­‐mail  

Search  Engine  

Affiliate  

AnalyKcs  

PCM  

Design  Layout  

B2B  

B2C  

TesKng  

Website  

Homepage  

Online  MarkeKng  Pre-­‐Click  MarkeKng   Post-­‐Click  MarkeKng  

Click  

Search  engine  op-miza-on     Pay  per  Click  

•  25%  -­‐  30%  of  clicks  

•  Costs  per  click  

•  More  control  (adverKser  decides  posiKon  due  max.  cpc)  

•  AdverKser  controls  the  link  

•  Campagne  based  

•  Results  will  be  achieved  fast  

•Making  adjustments  doesn’t  effect  the  posiKon  of  your  ad  that  much  

•  70%  -­‐  75%  of  clicks  

•  Clicks  are  free  

•  Less  control  (search  engine  algorithm  decides  posiKon)  

•  Search  engine  controls  the  link  

•  Structural  based  

•  Results  will  be  achieved  slowly  

•Making  adjustments  can  have  effect  on  the  posiKon  in  the  search  engine  

Pre-­‐Click  Marke-ng  

Pay  Per  Click  (PPC)  –  Digital  Adver-sing  

Search  Engine  AdverKsing  

Banner  

Email  

Digital  adverKsing  -­‐  Ad  chain  

Displays  (#)  

Click  through  rate  (CTR)  

Cost  per  Click  Cost  per  Mille  

Webpages  

Pages  visited  

Time  on  page  

Conversion  rate  Exit  rate  Abandon  rate  

lead  or  online  purchase  

Cost  per  lead  

Cost  per  acquisiKon  

Cost  per  sale  (e-­‐commerce)  

Conversion  (customer)  

Success  rate  

Cost  per  sale  

€ Conversion  Webpages  Post-­‐

Conversion  Ad   €

Ad  chain  –  Where  to  opKmize?  

Click  through  rate  (CTR)  

Due  to  external  compeKKon  between  2  and  10%  

Webpages   Conversion  Ad  

Conversion  rate  

Currently  industry  avarage  3%  -­‐  4%  

This  means  there  is  sKll  97%  to  convert  

You  have  full  controle  

Views   100.000   100.000   100.000   100.000  

CTR   2%   3%   5%   10%  

Visitors   2.000   3.000   5.000   10.000  

Conversion   2%   2%   2%   2%  

Leads   40   60   100   200  

Views   100.000   100.000   100.000   100.000  

CTR   2%   3%   5%   10%  

Visitors   2.000   3.000   5.000   10.000  

Conversion   4%   8%   12%   16%  

Leads   80   240   600   1600  

Where  to  opKmize?  Example  

Post-Click Marketing!Post-­‐click  markeKng  [1]  is  a  term  that  refers  to  Internet  markeKng  iniKaKves  directed  at  respondents  who  have  just  clicked  on  a  search  engine  link,  paid  keyword,  banner  ad,  or  a  "call-­‐to-­‐acKon"  link  in  an  email.  These  iniKaKves  include  landing  pages,  microsites,  and  conversion  paths.  

The  focus  of  post-­‐click  markeKng  is  usually  on  increasing  the  conversion  rate  of  respondents  (where  a  "conversion"  may  mean  subscribing,  becoming  a  qualified  lead,  or  making  a  purchase).  

2010  is  the  Year  of  Conversion  Rate  Op-miza-on  

“If  I  were  doing  another  startup  today,  it  would  focus  on  sonware  for  conversion  rate  opKmizaKon.  I  think  this  is  sKll  the  most  under-­‐uKlized  and  highest  ROI  acKviKes  in  the  markeKng  department,  but  more  awareness  is  on  its  way.  CRO  isn't  just  about  tesKng;  it's  about  building  a  process  for  improving  conversion  over  Kme.  Online  businesses  can  generate  so  much  revenue  from  this,  yet  few  invest.  I  think  2010  is  the  year,  simply  because  it's  an  inflecKon  point  for  companies  to  assess  their  spend  and  where  they  derive  value.”    

Rand  Fishkin  SEOmoz's  CEO,  and  co-­‐founder.  

Is  2010  the  Year  of  Conversion  Rate  Op-miza-on?  Bryan  Eisenberg  asks  the  quesKon  to  ClickZ  readers,  and  

we’re  answering  with  a  resounding  “YES!”  

Bryan  Eisenberg  is  coauthor  of  the  Wall  Street  Journal,  

Amazon,  BusinessWeek,  and  New  York  Times  bestselling    

Books  Call  to  AcKon,"  "WaiKng  For  Your  Cat  to  Bark?,"  and    

Always  Be  TesKng.”  

“2010  is  the  year  of  Conversion  Rate  Op-miza-on”  In  a  follow  up  to  Rand’s  post,  conversion  opKmizaKon  expert  Raquel  Hirsch  of  WiderFunnel  describes  how  she’s  witnessing  the  industry’s  growing  investment  in  conversion  opKmizaKon.  “We  are  seeing  not  only  greater  investment  in  conversion  opKmizaKon  but  a  greater  realizaKon  on  the  part  of  marketers  that  this  is  a  business-­‐model  changer  for  their  companies,  here  to  stay”.  

 “I  think  2010  is  the  year,  simply  because  it’s  an  inflec-on  point  for  companies  to  assess  their  spend  and  where  they  derive  value.”  

Raquel  Hirsch  co-­‐founder  WiderFunnel  MarkeKng  Inc.    

Current  situaKon  

SKll  ads  are  linking  to  the  homepage  or  to  a  page  deep  in  the  website  

So  what  to  do?  

The  current  situaKon  regarding  to  landing  pages  (1.0)  

“Everyone  seems  to  repeat  the      same  factoids  and  best      prac-ces.”  

Marke&ngSherpa  Landing  Page  Handbook,  2nd  Edi&on  

Headline  

Body  copy  

Image  

Form  

BuZon  

3.84%  MarkeKngSherpa  Landing  Page  Handbook,  2nd  EdiKon  

average  conversion  rate  

Landing  pages  2.0  

Post-Click Marketing!Successful post-click marketing campaigns are!characterized by the following eight techniques:!

1. Conversion paths!2. Message matching!3. Segmenting!4. Qualification!5. Conversion!6. Testing!7. Analysis!8. Optimization!

1.  Conversion  Paths  •  Landing  page  •  Segmented  path  pages  •  Offer  page  •  Thank  you  page  

•  Match  the  post-­‐click  message  with  the  promise  made  that  solicited  the  iniKal  click  

2.  Message  mapping  

3.  SegmenKng  visitors  

8.12%  conversion   11.4%  conversion  9.23%  conversion  

16.1%  conversion  rate  

5  Reasons  2  clicks  are  beZer  than  1.  

1.  Easy  engagement.  

Clicking  an  ad  =  5  seconds.  

First  choice  on  a  landing  page  =  also  5  seconds.  

Contextual  navigaKon.  

2.  Self-­‐iden-fica-on.  

We  respond  to  self-­‐idenKficaKon  cues.  

More  accurate  than  a  form  field.  

ExpectaKons.  

3.  More  focused  content.  

Contextually  relevant  content  sells  be8er.  

Subtle  shins  in  language  can  have  big  impact.  

Eliminate  clu8er.  

4.  Signaling.  

Investment  reflects  commitment.  

“If  you  target  me,  you  must  think  I’d  be  a  good  fit…”  

5.  Market  research.  

Which  ads  a8ract  which  segments?  

Which  segments  convert  best?  

How  do  prospects  think  of  themselves?  

More  specific  pages  needed  

So  self-­‐segmenta-on  acer  

the  click.  

3.  SegmentaKon  and  4.  QualificaKon  

• Segment respondents into strategically important groups;!

• Engage the respondent with relevant, compelling content;!

• Track respondent qualification and segmentation back to traffic sources;!

segment  

segment  

simple  

40%  lic  

73.1%  segmenta-on  rate  

Don’t  think  of  a  landing  

page.  

Think  of  a  post-­‐click  marke-ng  experience.  

How  is      landing  page                    op-miza-on              like        a  Ferris  wheel?  

Your  landing  page  

Respondents  

h8p://company.com/campaign/landing  

h8p://company.com/campaign/landing  

Respondents  

Versions  of  your  landing  page  

Versions  of  your  landing  page  

h8p://company.com/campaign/landing  

Respondents  

Green  people  love  green  experiences  

Blue  people  think  blue  is  most  important  

Orange  people  make  decisions  on  orange  data  

h8p://company.com/campaign/landing-­‐blue  

h8p://company.com/campaign/landing-­‐orange  

h8p://company.com/campaign/landing-­‐green  

3  different  landing  page  desKnaKons  

Segmented  respondents  

5.  Conversion  

•  Ge|ng  value  out  of  the  click  •  From  a  anonymous  click  to  ge|ng  to  know  your  visitors  

65.4%   segmentaKon  rate  

16.2%   conversion  rate  

Segment Conversion Rate

SMB 14.7%

Enterprise 23.5%

Which  segments  convert  best?  

(hypotheKcal:  not  actual  data)  

6.  TesKng    

•  A/B  tesKng  or  MulKvariate  tesKng  of  a  single  landing  page  

               Versus  

•  A/B  tesKng  of  conversion  paths    

8.12%  conversion   11.4%  conversion  9.23%  conversion  

A/B  Tes-ng   Mul-variate  Tes-ng  

•  Requires  more  traffic  

•  Can  test  more  combinaKons  

•  VariaKons  of  fixed  elements  

•  Need  independent  elements  

•  Harder  to  visualize  tests  

•  Risks  of  bad  combinaKons  

•  Usually  limited  to  a  page  

•  Onen  harder  to  set  up    

•  Requires  less  traffic  

•  Tests  fewer  variaKons  

•  Apples-­‐and-­‐oranges  tests  

•  Dependent  elements  okay  

•  Easy  to  visualize  tests  

•  No  risk  of  bad  combinaKons  

•  Can  test  mulK-­‐page  paths  

•  Onen  easier  to  set  up    

7.  Analysing  for  conversion  

•  Analysing  the  results:  Learn  strategically  criKcal  informaKon  from  respondents  who  abandon;  convert  a  higher  percentage  of  respondents.  

Post-­‐Click  MarkeKng:  Analyse  

8.  OpKmizaKon  

Aner  analysing  the  current  results  you  can  opKmize  for  higher  conversion.    

•  OpKmizing  for  higher  conversion:  

Pre-­‐Click  Marke-ng  

Post-­‐Click  Marke-ng  

Post-­‐Click  MarkeKng  campaign  can  run  together  with  the  current  website.  

A  Pre-­‐Click  and  Post-­‐Click  campaign  will  cost  between  €2.500,-­‐  -­‐  €15.000,-­‐  for  a  campaign  of  6  months.  

Let’s  talk  about  Post-­‐Click  MarkeKng  for  your  agency  Damian  Bo8  De  Online  Fabriek  Email:  damian@deonlinefabriek.nl  Twi8er:  damianbo8  Linkedin:  h8p://nl.linkedin.com/in/damianbo8    

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