This is the second part in our series of articles on strategic marketing. If you haven't read Part 1 – What is strategic marketing and how does it differ from traditional marketing? – you should read it either before or after this article.
Why we are committed to strategic marketing because by investing in customer centricity, building customer insights and leveraging customer data, we help our clients achieve the best value for their marketing investment.
A high quality marketing strategy is the result of careful mapping and analysis. As background work, we recommend the following measures:
This background work will help us build a long-term marketing strategy. This is followed by annual or seasonal budgeting, identification of the resources needed and the preparation of an annual marketing plan and a content plan.
Once the concrete measures are selected, we need to translate the top-level objectives into specific performance indicators. Only then can we move on to designing the campaign content and implementing the practical activities
Results should be monitored continuously throughout the campaign so that actions can be adjusted and optimised when needed. After each campaign, we like to compile a comprehensive report with benchmarks, analysis and concrete improvement recommendations, and review it together with the whole team.
Marketing can only be described as strategic if it supports business objectives and focuses on longer-term value creation, such as building brand awareness, developing the customer experience or ensuring long-term customer relationships.
Achieving such objectives requires a comprehensive, long-term approach. We should select a diverse mix of marketing activities and tactics. The choice of marketing materials and channels should be guided by what your target audience is most likely to consume and where they can be reached most effectively. It is equally important to consider how these channels work together so that each has a clear, complementary role in the overall mix.
Target customers move across a number of different channels. If you have brand advertising in one channel, product advertising in another and recruitment in a third, the image company projects can become fragmented. Synergies between simultaneous and consistent email marketing, social media and search engine advertising will increase the effectiveness of your message.
Strategic marketing is inherently customer-centric, data-driven and results-oriented. Data informs planning, enables continuous performance tracking, guides optimisation of activities and supports fact-based decision-making
Effective data management and utilisation are greatly supported by modern marketing automation and CRM systems, combined with high-quality integrations to other marketing tools. These integrations make it possible to collect extensive data from digital channels about customers, their online behaviour and, where relevant, their purchasing patterns.
By analysing this data, we can deepen the understanding about your target groups, build more detailed customer profiles and identify emerging behavioural trends to inform future planning.
Marketing automation tools streamline email campaign processes and enable data-driven content personalisation. Meanwhile social media marketing allows us to build communities, engage customers and communicate with customers through visually compelling videos and stories.
It is also important to invest in the discoverability and visibility of your website and e-commerce content by optimising it for search engines (SEO) and for generative artificial intelligence (GEO) platforms. This should be boosted by paid search engine advertising (SEM), such as Google Ads campaigns.
Webinars and various downloadable knowledge-intensive materials play an important role in the strategic marketing toolbox, as they allow for more in-depth knowledge sharing while effectively engaging and measuring the interest of the target audience.
Today, marketing that is simply product-centric and showcases product features is not enough. It is worth actively leveraging the company’s values, history and mission in both branding and marketing.
Emotion-based branding aims to create an emotional bond between the customer and the company or its products. When successful, this can increase customer loyalty and brand equity. At the same time, compelling storytelling helps your company stand out amidst the information overload and leave a lasting impression on the audience. For example, customer stories and testimonials are an effective way of linking product benefits to customer's emotions through narrative engagement. Authenticity and transparency generate interest and build credibility.
The importance of product sustainability and corporate responsibility is growing rapidly and adds an important dimension to marketing storytelling and brand communications. Discussing environmental impacts, such as the recyclability of products or the eco-friendliness of production, tends to resonate well with both informed consumers and business decision-makers. Equally, acts of social responsibility, such as promoting equality or charity, can be a message that strengthens your company's reputation in the eyes if your customers.
In the next part of this series of articles, we'll explore in more detail what makes strategic marketing useful and of value to your business.
If you can't wait, contact us now!