Just because we can doesn’t mean we should, right?
Retargeting empowers marketers to track lost sheep, those who have been to our sites but left without purchasing, and target them with ads designed to bring them back into our flock of customers.
But that retargeting line you’re walking is finer than you likely know.
In fact, the difference between stalking and solving a problem for your site’s visitors with your next retargeting effort is so slight it can actually cost you more than it ever earns if not executed appropriately.
Retargeting has been touted as a no-brainer that results in massive ROI.
But could retargeting actually be killing your business?
也许这么做的那么有意义的to rethink retargeting and ask; am I using the tactic as a powerful performance marketing tool that solves a problem or as an invasive means of stalking potential customers across devices?
The answer hinges onhowyou retarget.
The Retargeting Boom
The allure of retargeting is certainly not lost on enterprise marketers who understandjust 2-4% of the people visiting their websites will actually wind up purchasing something.
The opportunity to target and convert visitors after they’ve left is an attractive yet relatively new proposition, especially at scale.
So just how prevalent is retargeting?
Marin Software surveyed 233 enterprise marketers recently and discovered nearlynine in ten marketers say they’re using retargetingto re-engage users who did not make a purchase during their initial web site visit.
Image viaMarin Software
Additionally, more than half of those who are not currently retargeting say they plan to do so in the future.重新定位目标的流行蔓延nearly every corner of the cloud.
Besides the ability toretarget site visitors on Facebook and Twitter, marketers are also engaging inCRM and email retargeting.
You can even serve retargeted search or display advertisements to users who areconducting relevant web searches.
In fact,search retargeting,according to additional researchby Marin, is the most widely used channel to retarget site visitors and allows marketers to use search intent to better segment audiences.
Image via:Marin Software
But just how good has all this retargeting been to marketers?
The ROI of Retargeting
No doubt you’re familiar with the legendary triple digit lifts for which retargeting is often credited.
For instance, apparel maker, and Shopify customer,Chubbiesrecently executed a retargeting campaign focused, in part, on site visitors who had abandoned shopping carts without making a purchase.
These users were later served ads showcasing the producta user had initially shown interest in as well as recommendations for related products.
The results?
A substantial increase in sales and a simultaneous decrease in customer acquisition costs.
Image via:AdRoll
In fact, AdRoll, which partnered with Chubbies and says it can retarget users across 500 ad exchanges, says its customers earn$10 for every dollar spent on retargeting.
Results like these are similar regardless of niche;
- Online tire seller Tirendo credits remarketing with a161% increase in conversions
- Loews Hotels credits remarketing with a10% increase in revenue
- Custom printer Storkie Express credits remarketing with a203% increase in conversions
So what’s not to love about retargeting?
The Dark Side of Retargeting
Maybe retargeting isn’t such a no-brainer after all.
In fact, well-known media buyers are actively dissuading marketers from chasing conversions they believe would likely happen without retargeting.
Essence Digital, the self-proclaimed largest ad buyer of digital media, estimated in 2013 thatbetween 20-75% of retargeting budgets are wastedand might be better spent generating what the company terms truly new business.
Note:We’ve requested additional and updated detail from Essence as the estimate provided is anecdotal and a few years old..
So what constitutes an appropriate ecommerce retargeting budget?
And how can you be sure you’re allocating it effectively?
Retargeting spend,according to AdRoll, should be derived from the audience size you’re targeting:
Image via:AdRoll
Even skeptical media buyers acknowledge retargeting, when executed appropriately, can yield financial rewards for performance-focused marketers.
However, too much of a good thing can cost you dearly.
Research from Inskinmedia indicatesthat while consumers consider ads interesting initially, the more they see an ad online the more likely they are to become irritated or even angry at the marketer responsible for the ad.
Frequency is key.
Consumers viewing an ad five timesoften become annoyed while consumers viewing an ad ten times become downright mad.
Image via:Inskin Media
Visitors who perceive your advertising as intrusive or irrelevant aren’t passive with their disdain.
Instead, they tend to punish advertisers with the power of the purse.
Image via:Inskin Media
Even worse, users who feel as if they are being stalked online are increasingly going off the grid and actively hiding from marketers.
Two-hundred million people,according to Mozilla, have downloaded AdBlocker Plus to thwart the efforts of remarketers.
Remember, successful retargeting relies on the cookie,which users are increasingly deleting or blockingfor privacy reasons.
The result is an audience that becomes unreachable with traditional cookie-based retargeting methods.
In fact, industry estimates suggest yourreach has been cut in halfin some cases.
Impressive as the ROI numbers are for retargeting, it’s important to understand remarketers are only re-engaging a small, though admittedly important, slice of the overall pie.
To Retarget or Not?
You’re likely asking yourself if retargeting at scale is right for you.
A better question might be whether it’s right for your potential customers?
It certainly can be but only if done judiciously, intelligently, and with restraint.
It may actually be possible to have the best of both worlds; to achieve the lofty return retargeting promises and avoid the pitfalls that could actually cost you trust, loyalty, and sales.
Before we lay out a framework you can use to do just that, some context and perspective are in order.
Earlier we told you that nearly90-percent of enterprise marketersare using retargeting to increase conversions.
However, it’s important to look beneath that number and understand that retargeting is actually a relatively small portion of the overall digital marketing spend.
Image via:Marin Software
What’s clear is that while most marketers appear to be incorporating retargeting as a tactic, it is also one that is only being used experimentally.
这意味着有很多occurrin试验和错误g.
PRO:Yes, it is possible to log triple digit increases in conversions with retargeting.
However, performance marketers with a longer term view will focus on sustaining their retargeting achievements long after the case study is written and presented at the next meeting with the boss.
CON:Yes, you can annoy, offend, and anger users with retargeting to the point they no longer want to buy from you and actively hide from you.
Again, marketers with a longer term view will sacrifice one-off triple digit ROI wins in return for a more enduring retargeting program that consistently converts end-of-funnel prospects.
Translation:Retargeting is like a football quarterback; it gets all the credit and all the blame regardless of who or what is actually responsible for converting.
So before we provide you fiveRetargeting Takeaways您可以使用杠杆,重新定位目标to offer while simultaneously mitigating downside risk, take a moment and consider these rarely asked questions that will prevent you from wrongly blaming or crediting retargeting;
- How can I tell whether a user would have returned to my site and made a purchase without being retargeted?
- How can I be sure I don’t pay for retargeting services not responsible for converting even those who are on my remarketing lists?
- How do I connect the dots and determine remarketing is responsible for a conversion rather than my offline marketing efforts?
- How can I figure out exactly why someone visited my site so I can optimize my retargeting creative?
- How do I know exactly when, where, and how often to retarget users?
Remarketing Takeaway #1: Split Test & Succeed
You may actually be hurting your ROI by retargeting.
So how can you tell if retargeting is earning you incremental sales?
Rather than assuming remarketing is responsible for all of the conversions produced during a campaign, be skeptical and consider conducting split tests before launching an open-ended or longer retargeting campaign.
Split testing your retargeting against a non-retargeted segment is the only way to really know to what degree, if at all, retargeting is responsible for converting.
For instance, retargeting firmMerchentarecently conducted a split test that revealed its retargeting effort drove incremental sales for Welsh jewelerClogau Gold.
Not only did retargeting result in a giant lift in return visitors to the jeweler’s website,but this case studysuggests retargeted users were two times more likely to convert.
Image via:Merchenta
Other remarketing providers report a10-20% average incremental lift in conversionswhen remarketing is split tested against a control group though we were not immediately provided with case studies or additional detail as requested.
Why else is split testing so important?
Besides not wanting to spend money on conversions that would’ve happened anyway, Google is trying to increase its margins by touting the virtues of search remarketing.
The search giant is trying to persuade marketers toincrease their search ad bidsfor specific segments of their remarketing lists.
All the more reason to know unequivocally that remarketing is responsible for conversion.
Remarketing Takeaway #2: Always Be Segmenting, Burning, & Suppressing
Retargeting done wrong can not only cost you money but it can also cause you a customer service nightmare.
For instance, guess who western wear retailerBootBarndoes NOT want to see this ad:
Image via:BootBarn
You guessed correctly- the guy who just bought the boots at full price!
如果每son who just purchased these cowboy boots were to be retargeted with an ad offering a discount on the exact pair of boots he just purchased, expect trouble or a discount demand that dents your margins.
This is why smart marketers routinelysegment their remarketing lists.
Doing so prevents showing a product ad to someone who just bought the product on display or, worse yet, offering the product at a discount.
Easier said than done for retailers straddling the offline and online worlds, right?
It’s whyonboarding the datayou have siloed offline or elsewhere is crucial in terms of getting segmentation right.
Once you have your customer data in one place you’ll be better positioned toburnandsuppressspecific segments.
First, to avoid annoying your customers with ads for items they’ve already purchased you canadd a burn pixelto the post-transaction page.
A burn pixel is nothing more than a piece of code that removes users from a particular remarketing list and prevents you or your remarketing partner from serving ads related to the purchased product..
You can still retarget these customers.
But instead of annoying them you can now serve them different ads that offerupsell or cross sell opportunities, which canincrease conversion rates 3-5%, instead of products they’ve already purchased.
Finally, considersuppressing or excluding a certain list from a retargeting campaignjust as remarketing firm Perfect Audience allows users to do with a click of a button.
Image via:Perfect Audience
Don’t forget,69% of web browsers are uncomfortablewith you tracking where they’ve been online. Personally, I fall into this category, but only when I’m blatantly being advertised to.
Segment, burn, and suppress appropriately so it doesn’t look like you’re “marketing.”
Remarketing Takeaway #3: The Channel Check
How well did your last retargeting campaign perform across channels?
How about across devices?
Well, if you’re like43% of all enterprise marketers you’re having a hard time giving credit where credit is dueand identifying which remarketing channels are responsible for converting.
Image via:Marin Software
It means routine channel checks are in order to determine where you’re getting the biggest bang for your buck.
Besides requiring yourremarketing partner to be more transparentregarding inventory, pricing, and ad viewability, you can proactively act to ensure each channel you remarket across performs optimally by doing two things.
First, your ad, no matter the channel, istwice as likely to be perceived positivelyif it is served on a relevant site that is trusted by users.
Image via:Inskin Media
Use this insight and take advantage of the“blacklisting” featuressome providers offer that allow you to keep your retargeted ads from running on sites where they are not performing well or that aren’t brand appropriate.
Lastly here, channel performance isn’t just about CTRs.
It’s also about making sure you fully understand the controls and settings available during your next remarketing campaign.
Remarketing firms often rely on thelast-click model of attributionwhich assigns credit for a particular conversion based on the last click made prior to the conversion.
It means a user who clicks on your retargeted ad but ultimately converts organically will wind up being attributed to your remarketing effort.
You’re paying for a remarketing here that’s not truly responsible for the conversion in question.
Remarketing firms likePerfect Audienceunderstand this and offer avariety of controls that empower marketers to build attribution modelsthat meet their specific needs and prevent you from paying for conversions not attributable to remarketing.
Save yourself some money by getting to know your controls.
Remarketing Takeaway #4: Intent Matters
Why exactly did a user visit your site?
Determining intent is key when deciding whether to remarket to a specific user or segment.
Unless you can determine intent it’s hard to know where the prospect is in the funnel, how qualified the prospect is, or what the prospect’s ultimate value may be.
You’ll also be hard pressed to serve the right message at the right time without first knowing what a user’s intentions are.
Identify precisely why a user visited your site before remarketing to them or be prepared for the consequences.
Image via:Inskin Media
How might you determine intent?
You can gauge intent by looking closely at specific opt-ins, cart abandonments, and time spent on product-related pages.
But you might also consider gauging intent across channels by investigating search.
Overlaying search intent on top of your retargeting listspositions you to better segment users and create ads that convert at higher rates.
Remember theChubbiesexample from earlier?
The apparel maker’s retargeting partnerAdRollsays users who demonstrated intent such as shopping cart abandonmentswere remarketed to in ways that resulted in a 35x lift in ROI.
Image via:AdRoll
Additionally, check with your remarketing partner to see if they have a proprietary measure of intent like Chango.
Changoderives intent by taking into account what users do before, during, and after a site visit.
Chango calls the metric an IntentScoreand uses it to target only users who seem intent on purchasing a particular product.
Chango tells me it uses IntentScore on all retargeting and acquisition campaigns and that:
Additionally, consider using survey toolQualarooto quickly collect customer feedback about specific buyer experiences.
Clearly, digging for intent can result in retargeting gold.
Remarketing Takeaway #5: Frequency
Always remember mom knows best about dessert and retargeting; too much of a good thing can make you sick.
Unless you want to be sick to your pocketbook, retargeting frequency is where you’ll want to show some restraint.
More simply isn‘t always better.
Remember, research indicates more than half of those surveyedfeel the more often an advertisement is shown the more annoying it becomes.
So how about saving some of your money and not laying it on so thick.
Ideally, retargeted ads hit the sweet spot when shown 3-5 times.
Image via:Inskin Media
Notice also that when ads are served judiciously and on relevant sites- you the marketer are more likely to be perceived by the user as clever.
You’ve got a lot going for you here includingCialdini’s principle of likingand thetheory of transference.
So what happens when marketers combine intent with frequency restraint?
Toy maker乐高found out recently when it ran a Facebook retargeting campaign it says resulted inlarger than expected order sizes.
Image via:Chango
Important here is that more than 80% of all converting consumers in this campaignsaw a LEGO ad three times or lessbefore converting.
You can automate the process and set frequency caps inAdWordsand with retargeting partners likeTriggit, which says doing so prevents user ad fatigue.
Conclusion
Retargeting, at least in the near term, is here to stay.
Research indicates more than half of enterprise marketersexpect to increase their retargeting budgets across search, social , and display over the next twelve months.
Image via:Marin Software
It makes little sense then to gamble on retargeting.
Use the five retargeting takeaways to make data driven retargeting decisions:
- Split test to ensure retargeting is responsible for conversions
- Segment regularly to prevent serving inappropriate ads
- Retarget only on relevant sites to optimize each channel
- Retarget only after identifying user intent
- Limit frequency so as not to annoy users
Retarget wisely or don’t waste your money.
About The Author
Nick Winkler is a contributor to the Shopify Plus blog. He helps individuals & organizations generate new leads, make more money, and ignite growth with story. Get more from Nickhere.
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