More often than not, customers do not convert after only one interaction with your brand. According to Marketo, 96% of visitors that come to your website are not ready to buy, yet 70% of those consumers are more likely to convert with remarketing. That’s just one example of why remarketing campaigns are so important, and why the large majority of businesses use this strategy.
So how do you succeed in remarketing to your prospects? We’ll break down everything you need to know, including five strategies to help you persuade potential customers who are familiar with your brand to convert.
Remarketing is a strategy in which a marketer re-engages with someone who has shown interest in their company but has not yet taken the desired action. This could take many forms, including clicking on an ad, visiting your website, opening an email, or following your page on social media.
The strategic value of remarketing is rooted in human psychology. Humans need repeat exposure for a message to stick; in the same way, your customers typically need to encounter your brand multiple times before they convert.
To interrupt and capture your customers’ attention, you first need to learn their interests and behaviors. They have to be compelled to keep taking the next logical step, and that requires building a case for strong relevance. These days, consumers expect nothing less. Once you have them hooked, you'll discover the top benefits of remarketing:
Remarketing campaigns allow businesses to reach a larger audience than they would be able to through traditional marketing methods. This means that more potential customers can be reached, resulting in more conversions and sales.
With remarketing, businesses are able to tailor their message and campaign to the individual consumer; this ensures that the content displayed is relevant and appealing. As a result, it increases the chances of engagement with potential customers and encourages them to take action or make a purchase.
Remarketing campaigns are often much cheaper than other forms of advertising because they allow businesses to target already interested consumers instead of spending money on reaching out blindly. This makes it an ideal option for budget-conscious companies or those looking for higher return on investment (ROI) from their campaigns.
Remarketing helps build brand awareness by keeping your business at the forefront of a customer’s mind; this reinforces your message, strengthens customer loyalty, and keeps your products or services first pick when they’re ready to make a purchase decision again in the future.
The ultimate goal of any remarketing campaign is increased conversion rates; when done correctly, businesses can expect higher click-through rates (CTR) which will result in more sales and profits over time
You may have heard remarketing referred to as “retargeting.” These terms are interchangeable, with the only real difference being that retargeting focuses on driving web traffic through display ads, and remarketing mostly involves reaching visitors through email.
The remarketing process helps keep your brand in front of your potential customers’ eyes even after they navigate away from your website—persuading them to revisit your offer when they need it. Here’s how it works.
Your ad network will give you a small snippet of code called a pixel tag to add to your website so that when a visitor arrives on your site, and give consent to use cookies, their cookie ID is added to your remarketing list. Then, you can create an outbound campaign that shows ads to your list of potential customers to remind visitors of your products and convince them to take the desired action.
Since Google is planning to eventually shift to a world without cookies, we suggest you start advertising on platforms that allow tracking to future-proof your remarketing strategy.
Did you know that remarketing to customers makes them three times more likely to click on your ad than those who never interacted with your company? So what types of remarketing campaigns do you need to convert those potential customers? Here are some of the most important:
These are all great items to add to your remarketing toolbox. To attract potential customers back to your website so they complete conversion, it’s important to show your audiences that you know them through content that is personalized and segmented.
Once you’ve decided on the type of remarketing campaign, you’ll need to explore the types of desired actions that convince potential customers to take once they return to your site. This may include:
It’s worth noting that you wouldn’t use remarketing tactics to someone who downloaded an ebook and never took another action the same as someone who booked a demo and then ghosted you. The key is to determine how to deliver the most relevant marketing tactics to get someone to do what you want.
Pro tip: When you are running a remarketing campaign, segment your message depending on where they fall in the customer journey. But more on that later.
Let’s take a look at some ways you can use remarketing strategies to drive conversions. Before digging in, remember—to remarket to a contact, you have to have previously marketed to them, and they’ve had to engage with your somewhere along the buyer's journey. The way you remarket to that lead or contact who showed intent depends on what action they took to begin with and what desired action they should take next.
Since there are several use cases for remarketing, how do you leverage this tactic to generate leads and win conversions? Here are five ways:
Because the sales cycle for B2B is so much longer than B2C, it is especially important to keep contacts engaged. According to the Rule of 7, it takes on average seven touchpoints before you can expect a conversion. You’ll need to first determine where your customer is in the sales funnel so you can make a more informed decision about how to engage them. Remarketing in this way will help you drive lead generation, nurture prospects, and create repeat customers.
A remarketing list is a group of website visitors who perform a certain action on your site. When you’re building remarketing lists, it’s important to align your PPC campaigns to the appropriate sales funnel stage to ensure you are meeting your customers’ needs every step of the way. Then, you can create remarketing lists for each stage and ultimately develop the ability to nurture leads with hyper-relevance by progressively moving them through each list until they become a buyer.
Of near equal importance to remarketing to new email subscribers is nurturing existing ones. Segment your list and tailor your forms according to which stage of the customer journey they’re in at the moment. Based on the AIDA framework, this loop digital marketing funnel takes into account the dynamics of digital and social media:
No remarketing strategy would be complete without carefully chosen content that speaks to where your potential customer finds themselves in the consideration stage. You could send them a datasheet, one-pager, case study, white paper, video, blog post, visual, or email (the list goes on).
Content marketing didn’t become a buzzword because nobody found it effective. In fact, marketers have embraced it in the last several years because providing value yields much stronger results than forcing your way into a sale. Delivering relevant content also builds stronger customer relationships and speaks to pain points in a way that comes across as authentic and empathetic.
In remarketing, you don’t want to paint with a wide brush and target all of your visitors with the same message. Instead, create distinct landing pages for each campaign so that the user experience aligns with how you’ve segmented your audiences. If they find your message is extremely relevant, they will fill out a form and become a lead, and you can then move to the next remarketing list.
To align specific landing pages with stages of the marketing funnel, you might start with a landing page focused on content (awareness), then social proof (consideration), and finally B2B sales (buy). The purpose for each landing page is different: Show ‘em you know ‘em, highlight logos that have driven success, and cut to the call-to-action (in that order).
Just because your first-time buyers have wrapped up their time with you doesn’t mean you should stop remarketing to them. To convince your departing client that they will need you in the future, you’ll want to leverage the interactions you’ve tracked to call out how you can solve their pain points.
Sustaining the customer relationship over email post-purchase is a great way to keep the door wide open. Through consistent nurturing, you can win customer loyalty via upselling, cross-selling, renewing loyalty campaigns, etc.
Remarketing has been known to turn curious contacts into first buyers, and first buyers into loyal customers, by building familiarity and relevance. The benefits of remarketing are truly endless. You can remind the right people of your brand at the right time and increase the likelihood that potential customers will convert through repeat exposure — essentially enabling you to capitalize on lost traffic to win more business.
This constant remarketing effort to remind visitors of your brand presence and value not only helps you increase conversions but also drives recurring revenue in the future.