Choosing the best advertising solution for your company involves many factors, not the least of which are a) your level of experience with configuring and managing an advertising campaign, and b) your spending preferences. These five steps should help you choose the best solution for your organization.
Step 1 – Define Your Customer
Defining your customer (demographics, geographies, interests, related activities, and so on) is necessary if you want to be efficient with advertising dollars and ensure they are targeted to generate results.
Step 2 – Define Your Offer and Goals
Be clear on what action you want the customer to take in terms of value measurement (goals). For example: visited my store, completed a survey, became a “friend” and so on.
Step 3 – Set Your Budget Range
Budget will dictate the type of service you choose. Small budgets often have simple solutions since spreading a small advertising budget over too many suppliers may not provide the volume of impressions to make an impact in the marketplace. Larger budgets allow you the flexibility to try more options, which may require more complex solution reviews and supplier contracts.
Step 4 – Understand Where You Are in the “Advertising Cycle”
Twenty percent of solutions work for eighty percent of organizations.
Industry reports (
Advertising Age, 2011) and activity tracking counters (
gs.statcounter.com) tend to mirror this “rule of thumb.” Examples of solutions that may work for your organization include:
Step 5 – Choose Your Preferred Network
Understanding your supplier options is very important. Suppliers generally fall into the following categories:
Choosing a paid advertising solution based on the above five-step process is sometimes an easy decision:
“We’re a small company with a limited budget and limited time. We chose two large search engine suppliers as our solution. Pay based on demand and the fact that so many prospective clients use search were part of our considerations.”
– Mark Lyle, owner of a local auto dealership.
In other cases, choosing an advertising solution can be a more complex decision:
“Search is great and we have it covered. We’ve had time to experiment with our messaging, ads that get a response and how we measure success. We now need to surround all spaces where our target customers are active when they shop, research or need to know about products like ours. We know our customers also visit dominant subject-matter sites like the Weather Network and Yahoo Weather, and we are looking for opportunities to communicate to them through these sites and others. Some sites are not part of a search supplier content network, so we have to deal directly through an ad network.”
– George Savice of Umbrellas to Go.
Cheryl Kenny,
is a digital and online media marketer, editor, researcher and branding guru. Through Concentric, she helps businesses maximize their communications opportunities using innovative and measurable digital strategies, marketing and advertising programs.