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10 Steps to Build Your Marketing Strategy

The document provides a summary of the 10 main steps to build an effective marketing strategy. It begins by discussing defining your brand values and offering to ensure they align with customer needs. It emphasizes identifying customer pain points and expectations to solve vital problems. The guide outlines each step visually and notes that planning is important so limited budgets are not wasted. It defines key terms like marketing strategy, tactics, and the importance of an overall strategic vision to guide specific efforts.

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mystratex
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
348 views35 pages

10 Steps to Build Your Marketing Strategy

The document provides a summary of the 10 main steps to build an effective marketing strategy. It begins by discussing defining your brand values and offering to ensure they align with customer needs. It emphasizes identifying customer pain points and expectations to solve vital problems. The guide outlines each step visually and notes that planning is important so limited budgets are not wasted. It defines key terms like marketing strategy, tactics, and the importance of an overall strategic vision to guide specific efforts.

Uploaded by

mystratex
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

The Ultimate Guide to Marketing Strategy: How to 10X Your ROI

[Link]/blog/marketing-strategy

You can’t use an old map to explore a new world.


Albert Einstein

Marketing is a dynamic and ever-changing field. The top digital marketing strategies change with the
consumer and technology trends of the day. This is why every company needs a good marketing strategy
that's well planned and has well defined milestones and objectives. Once you have the right map, the
chances you’ll reach the goals you’ve set to your business, are much higher.

That means, that while most of us are eager to start launching our marketing efforts the minute after we
decide to start a business, we actually need to invest in planning so we won’t waste our limited budget
and energies on the wrong things.

If you're a company / startup owner or marketer you need a good digital marketing strategy to hit your
goals.

In this guide, we've put together the 10 main steps that you need to follow to build the ultimate marketing
strategy for your business. Here's what it looks like visually.

We call it “From story to glory”:

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10 Steps model to marketing strategy, Mayple 2019

As you can see, every step is meaningful, but don’t panic :) this guide will take you step-by-step through
the process, so you won’t miss a thing and get your digital marketing strategy well figured out.

We have some very useful tips and examples that will make it easier to understand.

If you want a quick summary of our post, check out this video by Adam Erhart, where he goes over the 4
basic principles of marketing strategy.

Watch Video At: [Link]

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And if you want to read up on marketing strategy check out our list of the best marketing strategy
books.

Now, let's define some of the basic terms.

What is marketing strategy?


Marketing strategy is a long-term, forward-looking approach and an overall game plan of any organization
or any business with the fundamental goal of achieving a sustainable competitive advantage by
understanding the needs and wants of customers.

A marketing strategy is a broad strategy that encompasses everything from how a company positions
itself, to the creative, the strategic partners, the media relations, the marketing mix, and the channels and
tactics.

A marketing strategy refers to a firm's overall game plan for reaching prospective consumers and turning
them into customers of their products or services. It also contains the company's value proposition, key
brand messaging, data on target audience and customer demographics, and other high-level elements.

The broad marketing strategy is what used to fall under the term "branding" back in the more ambiguous
days of marketing. It's a practical summary of the key details of the strategy and some of the broad goals
and methods used to achieve them.

What is the difference between a marketing strategy and a tactic?


Marketing strategies are broader than specific tactics. For example, a business could have a content
strategy for their social media channels or for search engine optimization, and then they could have
specific tactics they execute for each channel.

Here's the correct order to follow:

Overall marketing strategy -> Digital marketing strategy -> Specific tactics

For example, here's a great video that introduces specific marketing tactics. These aren't strategies,
these are very specific ways you could grow your sales, which would all be included as part of a larger
set of marketing strategies.

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Watch Video At: [Link]

If you're looking for specific tactics head over to our Ultimate Guide on Digital Marketing.

What is the importance of marketing strategy?


Sometimes marketers and eCommerce owners get lost in the weeds, in the bits and bytes. They lose
track of the overall vision of the business and the large goals. They lose track of the target audience and
the main pain points that their product solves for the customer. When that happens, the specific tactics
that the business employs can lost their effectiveness.

So, a marketing strategy is not some dusty old document that you put on the top shelf and forget about it.
It's a vital process of discovering your company's top goals, objectives, and ways to achieve them. That
becomes a blueprint for everything you do to better market your product or service.

Excited?

Let's jump into it.

1. Define your brand value and offering

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Your brand strategy is about defining the core values of your brand to make sure that they align with what
your prospects and customers find important, that they align to your industry trends and competitive
environment, and to what you actually offer ie your product.

That’s not an easy task, but without it, all the other marketing tasks become much more difficult.

Here are some good examples of data-driven brands that succeeded in doing it right:

AllBirds - Sustainable, transparent, comfortable


AllBirds began as a darling brand in Silicon Valley in 2014 and quickly grew to a $1.4B valuation in 2018.
The shoe company set out to create the world's most comfortable, and they overshot their goal. Their
products are fully sustainable, and made out of wool and bamboo, and their branding is impeccable.

It all started with a launch on Kickstarter, in fact, here's their Kickstarter video:

Watch Video At: [Link]

The brand has a really quirky brand voice, and its values are transparency, sustainability and comfort.

Here's an email with an order confirmation:

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You can see the same quirky humorous brand voice in their social media posts.

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Besides the humor, the brand has really taken advantage of this concept of transparency. They display
the materials they use in a creative way and get down to the fine details.

And they tie it in so nicely in their third brand value - sustainability.

Ultimately, the quirky brand voice and the incredible brand values of sustainability and transparency lead
AllBirds to build a super engaged audience online that has contributed the most to the brand's growth.
Yes, it is a really comfortable product (the NY Times called it "the most comfortable shoe in the world"),
but without a strong brand and a focus on the user experience, Allbirds would not have been the giant
that it is today.

Casper - "here to awaken the potential of a well-rested world"


Casper is a mattress company that has completely revolutionized the industry. They were the first direct-
to-consumer mattress company and quickly grew to a $1.1B valuation in 2019.

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Casper's brand values are all about dreaming big, innovation, and bringing joy to a tired industry.

Look how they merge the "dreaming big" brand value with a pun about sleeping, in their purchase receipt
email.

And here's another great email asking for a review.

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Casper's strong brand helped it launch other successful products, like the Casper Glow, which is an
innovative bedtime light that changes its light temperature and brightness automatically and can be
remotely controlled through an app.

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There are a lot of big and abstract words thrown around when talking about brand value creation, so
here's a simple way to think about it.

A simple formula to find the right values that define your brand is this:

1. Think about the main pain points/needs/frictions your brand is solving


2. Translate it into a value-based language
3. Make sure it fits your beliefs and motivations

2. Identify customer pain points and expectations


One of the top reasons why products or services fail is when their makers fail to identify the customers'
pain points. In other words, they don't meet the customer's need or they don't solve a vital problem in
their lives.

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One of the classic examples is the Segway. It was a device that was said to eliminate walking. It could go
up to 12.5 miles per hour, had a lithium battery, and made you look like a dork. It was hailed as the device
that will make walking obsolete and it failed miserably.

It's a sad story but the creator of the device actually drove it off a cliff and died. The problem with the
Segway is that no one wanted to stop walking, people love walking, people loved running, so it failed to
meet the customer's need and to identify a pain point.

What are the different types of customer pain points?

Financial

the most basic pain point is financial. Does your product help your customers save money? Is it more
cost-effective than the alternatives? Are the savings short-term or long-term? And if your product is
cheaper than the alternatives, does that price difference create enough value for the customer?

These are some of the important questions you should ask yourself. An example of this is Target's launch
of the brand Smartly with hygiene/cleaning products all under $2 (approximately 70% less than similar
products by other brands).

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Convenience

Another really important pain point is convenience. Does your product make your peoples' life more
convenient? The classic example of this is Netflix, a brand that became a household name because it
was incredibly more convenient than it competitor Blockbuster.

Instead of having to shlep to Blockbuster, for example, and pay all of those late fees customers could now
get DVD's straight to their doorstep. Fast forward to 2020, Netflix is worth $203 billion and Blockbuster is
is out of business. The company that made me more convenient for people won.

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source: Drift

Service

Service is another major factor in solving a customer's pain point. Service refers to the entire customer
experience and includes things like - warranty, maintenance, replacements, customer service, and ease
of use. A really good example of this is the solar company SolarCity, which was acquired by Tesla in
2016. SolarCity's solar panels weren't cheaper than the competitors they simply had a better warranty
and maintenance on them and that's why customers preferred them. This is one of the major drivers that
helped SolarCity become the nation's largest residential solar provider.

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Source: Tesla

5 easy steps to identify your customer's pain point


Ok, so we've talked about the type of customer pain points that there are, but how do you identify it for
your own company and product? Here are some helpful suggestions that will get you on the right path.

Create a customer journey map

Identify what makes your customers buy your product and how they arrived to your physical or online
store. This should include the channels that they visited - a search result, a Facebook ad, a social media
post, an email, and other online and physical media. At each stage identify possible pain points and
uncover the customer's motivation of using your product. This will also help you evaluate your marketing
mix and see if there are any channels that you need to add.

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Source: ConceptDraw

Survey your customers

Another good way to find the customer pain point is by surveying your customers. Ask your customers
what they like and don't like about your product and what are some of the factors that led to their choice.
There are a ton of survey tools you could use like Typeform or SurveyMonkey.

Look at customer reviews

If you are thinking of launching a new product you should look at the customer reviews of your existing
products. These will tell you a lot about your customers' preferences, expectations and pain points.
What's particularly powerful for eCommerce sites are visual reviews - photos or videos that customers
post alongside the text of their reviews. You can use tools like Pixlee, Yotpo, or Loox to collect and display
visual reviews.

Source: Yotpo

Ask your sales team

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Another good way to find your customer's pain points is to ask your sales team. After all, your sales
people are the ones that hear and have to respond to the objections of your prospects and customers,
hence they are the most aware of what people are looking for in your products or services. Sit down and
have a discussion with your sales team. Try to find out what your customers like/dislike about your
product, what are the issues that they bring up the most, and what makes them turn down the product.

Source: Unsplash

Study your competitors

It's super important to analyze the competitor landscape, in any industry. That's how Netflix and Apple
began, when they strove to make a product that's better and more innovative than the status quo. Look at
all your competitor products, their marketing mix, the type of promotion and media they publish, and their
strategies. Identify the pain points that they are solving and ones that are still unresolved. One strategy is
to try to solve the same pain points just better. Another strategy is to go after pain points the remain
unresolved, to create something that people haven't seen before.

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Source: ColumnFive

3. Identify market trends and competition


That brings us to our next topic - creating a competitive analysis. This is a crucial step in the marketing
strategy creation because this is where you will identify what differentiates your product or service from
the competition. Without this step it's going to be very difficult to create a product that's truly unique and
provides unique value to the consumer. So this analysis is crucial and this is how you go about it:

Identify your competitors

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The first step of any competitive analysis is to find out who your competitors are. Find out all the different
companies that have similar products and services. Look at their social media content, search in related
or niche online communities, news mentions and product reviews.

Categorize your competitors


Now that you have a detailed list of all of your competitors it's time to categorize them. Put them into
different groups - primary, secondary, and tertiary competitors. This will help you get clarity on which of
your competitors are directly competing with you and which ones you should focus on in your analysis.

Take a look at their social media and branding


The next step of the competitive analysis is to find out all you can about each competitor. Look at all the
various social media pages, the content and the branding that they use on their site and email
campaigns. This will give you a visual understanding of their brand positioning and how your product or
service differs from theirs.

Conduct a site audit to look at traffic sources and positioning


This part is the more technical side of the branding audit. Use a tool like Ahrefs, SimilarWeb, or Alexa to
check the keywords that each competitor ranks for and their various traffic channels. This will give you the
precise search terms that the user searches for and the specific needs that your competitors meet. For
example, you might discover that a competitor is using a type of media or content that you're not using
yet, or a traffic channel that you haven't expanded into. This is super valuable information to have for your
marketing strategy.

Source: SimilarWeb

4. Create your value proposition


Now that you have your story right, it’s time to build the right strategy for your marketing. That means
making business decisions about what are you delivering and to whom.

Your product or service tells the most about your brand.

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This is the actual hands-on experience prospects and customers have with your brand, and it can affect
their perception about it the most.

Use your values to make sure you walk the talk and implement what you said about yourself in your
offering.

Here are some examples to help you get the hang of it:

Walmart - translating brand values to service language

Taken from Walmart's brand center

IKEA - Brand values & design

Most people will know right away this is IKEA’s products - humble, simple and functional.

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5. Identify your target audience
Deciding on your target audience could change the way you present your brand and even the language
you use to do it.

We love to use simple models for complex decisions.

We found it is much more effective and fun.

Use this model to map the different target audience groups that you have, and prioritize them accordingly
in your audience analysis.

(This is actually one of the models we used to determine our target audiences)

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Target audience priority model, Mayple 2019

You would want your first tier target audience to have good market potential for your growth and that it
wouldn’t be a Via Delarosa to convince them to buy what you have to offer.

This is not the only tool you need to characterize the people you are going to invest most of your
marketing spend to reach out to.

The second tool we recommend for you to use is defining your personas - or in other words, asking who
is your ideal customer, to the smallest details.

To define your main persona you can use this question list:

1. Who is my persona? Is he a male or is she a female? What age is he or she? Name your persona
and attach a photo so it will be easier for you to plan your messaging accurately.
2. What is my persona initial state of mind? - his or her emotions and thought before starting the
decision-making process?
3. What are the different stages of his or her decision-making process until purchase?

If you’re about to launch a new service or product that prospects or customers are not used to using or
buying, you might consider applying this psychology of change model. After all, you’re trying to change
people perception here.

Each stage represents a psychological state of mind of people until they reach a decision to take action.
You can use the needs that are listed below to create your marketing creative tools that will effectively
move your persona to take action.

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The psychology of change, Mayple 2019

Identify the following for each stage of the buyer's journey:

1. What are your persona’s expectations? What are his goals?


2. What process does she go through in this stage? Where does she look for information? Who do
they speak with?
3. How would you describe his experience?
4. What is your objective for each of their decision-making stages?
5. What actions can help you achieve these objectives?

Now that you've identified your ideal customers, how are you going to reach them?

That brings us to the next step.

6. Identify partners and potential collaborators


Identifying your potential partners or collaborations is a critical step of reaching your ideal customer. It
may be that there are online communities that already exist where your customers hang out. It could be
that you need to work with a distributor or get a marketing partner to help you reach them.

This is a critical point to consider before you execute your inbound marketing strategy. Sometimes finding
and working with the right partner could give you access and help you achieve 10X the results.

We’re on the digital marketing portion of our guide and it contains 3 parts - deciding on your creative &
messaging, selecting the marketing channels that you’ll be using, and deciding on a strategy and budget
for each channel.

Let’s dive in.

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7. Decide on the messaging and creative of your brand
Most businesses (and especially startups) can’t afford to hire a digital marketing specialist in-house so
they use the services of freelancers or digital agencies.

From now on, you have a critical job of guarding your brand’s values and strategy in the messaging and
creative you’ll create and the different tactics you’ll use.

That’s what storytelling is about.

Make sure that the service provider you hired is aligned with your brand and the various marketing
strategies that you want to employ, so they can apply your strategy to the actual marketing
communication you’ll have with your potential customers.

Here are two brilliant brands that keep to their authentic brand strategy throughout their messaging:

National Geographic - how to create the “wow” and “wonder” visually

National Geographic know how to present stunning photography and help us discover the wonders of our
world. They constantly keep the language they use on their ads (paid and earned media) to be aligned
with these brand values.

Source: Vox

8. Define your marketing channels


Now that you have defined your value proposition, your partners, and your creative assets and
messaging it's time to select the right marketing channels for your marketing mix. This is one of the most
crucial steps of the process of creating your marketing strategy.

You need to select those marketing channels that fit your brand and your product. Let's cover a few of the
main marketing channels and their best practices.

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Social media
Social media is a vital part of any digital inbound marketing strategy and there are certainly a lot of things
that you could do. Also keep in mind that social media activity helps you get more traffic from search.
There are a lot of various platforms and strategies you could use and it's important to pick the right
channel for your product.

Here’s a breakdown of the some of the best and most effective social media channels to use for different
type of companies:

For B2B companies - use LinkedIn, Instagram, ProductHunt, and Angellist

For written content-heavy companies - use Medium, Quora, and Reddit

For GenZ-focused companies - focus on Instagram, Snapchat, and TikTok

Social advertising
Ads are becoming more and more popular on social media platforms because the recent algorithm
changes continue to favor them and decrease organic reach. After all, that’s how the social platforms
make their money so you have to use ads to get anywhere these days.

Top Advertising Tips:


Create a lookalike audience on each platform and for each type of campaign that you're running
Organize your campaigns based on the marketing funnel (top, middle, and bottom)
Match your copy and designs to your target audience

If you want to start using ads and are just not sure where to start, we have over 1,500+ top experts here
at Mayple so definitely reach out!

PS: that's our expertise, so don't be shy. Click here to get started.

Influencer marketing
Working with influencers is one of the most lucrative marketing channels you could go into. Studies show
that businesses make $5.20 for every $1 that they spend on influencer marketing. And 49% of consumers
depend on influencer recommendations for their purchase decisions. That’s huge.

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That means that on average about half of your customers are going to be searching for influencer posts
so it is essential that these people are recommending you and your product online. Now, influencer
marketing is different than when your users post image of your product. Influencer shots are called paid
media (just like ad campaigns) while user-generated content (UGC) is called earned media.

Top Influencer Marketing Tips:


Pick influencers based on the type of audience they have, and their level of engagement (not the
size of their following)
Run giveaway campaigns with groups of influencers
Run stories on Instagram because they are clickable
Conduct competitor research to see which influencers they are using on all the relevant platforms
Use YouTube influencers to create videos about your product or service
Use real data to determine which influencers are your best performers

Email marketing

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Source: Klaviyo

This is going to surprise you but the ROI of emails still remains among the highest in all of the different
digital marketing channels and platforms. Studies show that email marketing provides a $42 return on
every $1 you spend, which is terrific.

Top Email Marketing Tips:


Use UGC or earned media in your campaigns
Set up email campaigns and email flows (cart abandonment flow, welcome flow, sunset flow)
Create campaigns with educational content, don't just send constant product promotion
A/B test different copy and formats based your data to better match your campaigns with your
audience

That is not to say that the other channels don’t help or assist the sale, it’s like the functions of the various
team members in a soccer match. There could have been 5-6 players that touched the ball before it
reached the goal post. Same thing happens in marketing.

A user could interact with a brand on numerous channels before they buy their products or services.
Which is why it’s really important to have an effective “omnichannel” strategy, a strategy that includes
many marketing channels.

Here are a few examples of channels that work really well when combined with email marketing:

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Push notifications
Push notifications are those messages you get on your browser on a desktop device or on your mobile
screen. They work really well when combined with emails. You could send off the email in the morning for
example, and then follow it with a push notification 30-60 minutes later, to remind the user to check out
your deal of the day.

Push notifications have a click through rate that’s 7 times higher than emails, so when sent after the email
they increase your chances of getting a sale that much more.

Source: Taplytics

Chatbots and messaging

One of the quickest and most effective ways to communicate with customers is through text messages
and this has become its own marketing channel. You can set up automated messages and flows that gets
sent to a customer or even a chatbot that is able to bring them from product discovery all the way to
purchase, without any human involvement. You can also use this channel to send people a product
promotion, a cart abandonment flow, or a content promotion.

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Source: Manychat

Text messages are much more personal and that’s what makes them so powerful for brands. According
to Social Media Today, chatbot messages get open rates of over 80% and click through rates of over 50%
so these messages provide an additional and very effective way to augment and boost your email
marketing performance.

Search Engine Optimization


One of the most overlooked strategies is Search Engine Optimization, especially for eCommerce. It
involves optimizing a site's content to make it easier for search engines to find it and display it. There are
numerous new ways to get displayed on search engines than ever before - in the images section, as
videos, quotes, products, how-to's, Q&A, and much more. SEO is a super effective marketing channel
and can bring a lot of targeted and high-quality traffic to any site.

Top SEO tips:


Use Google Search Console data to find the keywords and searches that you get the most traffic
from
Optimize your on-page content with a tool like Ahrefs or Moz
Build a comprehensive backlink strategy based on competitor data and best practices

Now remember, not all SEO best practices will fit your needs or make sense. It's a delicate balance
between SEO and the user experience (UX) and that requires some tough decisions sometimes. So
always learn from your data and keep your audience as first priority and you will win.

Content Marketing

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Last but not least, let's talk about content marketing. Content provides a way for users to find your
product or service online.

Top Content Marketing Tips:


Write long-form blog posts for organic search traffic
Publish comparison and shopping guides for the middle of the funnel visitors
Use UGC, video content, and longer descriptions on your social media posts to tell your story

Now that we’ve covered the various marketing channels that you should consider to grow your business,
let’s talk strategy.

9. Select a strategy and budget for each channel


It’s now time to select a specific strategy and a budget for each of the marketing channels that you’ve
chosen for your brand. Here are a few helpful steps:

Identify your business goals


What are your goals? Pick a few strategic business goals or KPIs to focus on in the short-term. A really
helpful rubric for this is what’s called SMART goals. Smart stands for:

Specific - describe clearly what you want to accomplish

Measurable - set goals that you could measure

Achievable - these goals have to be achievable and not way out of reach

Relevant - set goals that improve the specific aspects of your marketing, so no vanity metrics.

Time-bound - pick objectives that you can achieve within a certain time frame.

Now that you’ve set up your goals it’s time to look at your market.

Here's a fantastic video from Hubspot to watch about setting the right goals for your business:

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Watch Video At: [Link]

Research your market

Gather information about your market - the size, growth, social trends, search trends and demographics
of your target market. Find out what is possible and feasible to accomplish and which channels, content
types and media, are used to reach your target customer, and which you should add to your marketing
mix.

Align your strategy with your ideal customer


Go back to the customer personas that you’ve created in the beginning of this process and make sure
that your strategy aligns with your personas. Look at the trends, at the type of customers that you are
going to be able to reach and tweak accordingly.

It’s performance time!

At this point, you have your brand story and values, your go to market strategy and a professional to run
your marketing efforts.

From this point forward, you should focus on a much more tactical management. That means iterative
testing of your content and creatives, of your target audience segments and even of the words you use
on your ads CTAs (call-to-action buttons).

Which brings us to the last step of the process:

10. Analyze your results

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This is one of the most crucial steps in anything you do in marketing. Once you test something you have
to analyze the results and continue testing. Data is crucial in every aspect of marketing and the business
data you get from testing marketing strategies is the best kind of data to have.

Once you have the results of your strategy you can then make the changes you need to make and A/B
test various aspects to get even better results.

BONUS : Examples of Marketing Strategies Templates


There’s no one size fits all marketing strategy, and if you’ve read this entire guide to this point - you’re
probably eager to implement some of the various strategies we talked about. And you’ve probably
discovered a lot of topics that you should learn more about to really perfect your marketing strategy.

Here are some of our favorite resources+ marketing strategy examples + templates. These are really
effective and comprehensive. They cover a really broad range of channels and use cases so you can find
some value regardless of which business you’re in.

Let’s dive in.

How to Plan Your Marketing Strategies in 12 Steps (CoSchedule)


This beautiful strategy guide has everything you need to know to create the perfect strategy. The best
part is that it shows everything visually in each section, and has a really simple strategy template to follow
to create your own strategy. Plus, CoSchedule started off as a content marketing tool for inbound
marketing teams (they are now much more than that), so they go into a brief history of content marketing,
inbound marketing, and how it all started.

The best part about CoSchedule is that they have a feature where that allows you to divide the tasks
among your team members. For example, if you're a content team manager you can use this to visually
display who writes each piece of content, who edits it, and who publishes that piece of content on the
team. This is a crucial and super effective step that gets missed pretty often. Once a brand makes their
strategy, it’s important to delegate the work and get started on the execution.

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10 Marketing Strategies to Fuel Your Business Growth (Entrepreneur)
This is an old one but when we read it we thought it has the perfect sequence of strategies for an
eCommerce business. It has literally everything you need to market successfully. We’re talking
influencers, email marketing automation, content marketing, video content, Facebook retargeting and
search engine optimization. This post is an excellent broad overview of eCommerce marketing at its
finest.

The Essential Guide to Marketing Strategies (Hurree)

Hurree is one of the best marketing blogs ever. This post in particular gives a really good detailed
overview of each step of creating a marketing strategy. It also has a variety of videos sprinkled throughout
the post that explain concepts deeper, and the best part - they have a whole section of marketing
automation.

Hurree is a marketing automation platform so you know to expect some talk of automation in every single
one of their posts. This is a segway from traditional marketing principles to present-day automation and
beyond.

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The 11 Best Marketing Strategies We Tried This Year (WordStream)

This post is for the more advanced marketer that wants to really hone in on the top strategies that work in
2021. It’s written by Sujan Patel, the one and only, and he goes over things like webinars, reaching out to
other tools in the industry, brand partnerships, search marketing, evergreen content, SMS, and non-
traditional social media channels.

Check out this post, even though it was written in 2018, it remains one of the best lists of marketing
strategies on the web.

The Ultimate Digital Marketing Strategies Guide (HubSpot)


This is a classic resource from HubSpot and we like about it is how clearly they define every term, every
type of content and marketing tactics that you should develop. They also include 5 examples of marketing
ads and dissect each one. It’s a great read and you will get a lot of value out of it.

Here's a great video they include in the post.

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Watch Video At: [Link]

That’s it folks.

Now that you have a better idea of how to craft the ultimate marketing strategy for your business or
startup it’s time to go out there and absolutely smash it.

PS: we're here for you if you are an eCommerce brand and you want to grow your business. Just click
here to get your free marketing audit.

FAQs

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What are the 5 marketing strategies?

The 5 P's of Marketing are - Product, Price, Promotion, Place, and People. These are key marketing
strategies that are used to position any business strategically.

What is marketing strategy?

Marketing strategy is a long-term, forward-looking approach and an overall game plan of any organization
or any business with the fundamental goal of achieving a sustainable competitive advantage by
understanding the needs and wants of customers. A marketing strategy is a broad strategy that
encompasses everything from how a business positions itself, to the creative, the strategic partners, the
media relations, and the channels and tactics.

What are the 5 C's of marketing?

The 5 C's is a technique used to help marketers better position their business and make more informed
business decisions. The "5 C's" stand for Company, Customers, Competitors, Collaborators, and Climate.
It's a type of analysis that helps marketers look at the whole picture as an ecosystem in which the
business lives in.

What is the difference between a marketing strategy and a tactic?

Marketing strategies are broader than specific tactics. For example, a business could have a strategy for
their social media channels, and then they could have specific tactics they execute for each channel.
Here's the correct order to follow: Marketing strategy -> Digital marketing strategy -> Specific tactics

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