Monday, June 25, 2018

You Are Doing Your Marketing Wrong (and I Have the Data to Prove It)

marketing wrong

You know what’s interesting about having an ad agency?

It’s that you get to talk to companies of all sizes and learn what causes them to grow.

And I know what you are thinking… “Neil, shouldn’t you be the one telling companies how to grow”?

Technically, yes. And I do.

But at the same time, I need to analyze what a company has done so far to come up with the best marketing strategy for them.

And the sad reality is, most marketers and companies are focusing on the wrong things. (I’ll go over how to fix it later in this post.)

Over the last 7 months, I talked to 208 companies to find out where they are spending their marketing efforts and what’s working. And best of all, I got the approval to share their data with you. 🙂

I talked to companies generating anywhere from one million dollars in yearly revenue to $291 million.

I avoided talking to companies less than a million in revenue because most of them weren’t doing much marketing. And I avoided talking to companies generating over a billion in revenue because you wouldn’t be able to replicate what they are doing.

As for the industry, I talked to companies in the B2B space as well as the B2C space. From ecommerce to lead generation to software as a service and everything in-between.

The first question I asked each of these companies was:

Where do you spend your marketing dollars?

In essence, I got a breakdown of marketing spend by channel.

marketing spend by channel

It was obvious that most companies spend their money on Google and Facebook ads.

Even if they didn’t share that data with me, you can tell by just looking at Google and Facebook’s market cap. They are worth $790 billion and $554 billion respectively because of paid ads.

Now let’s break down the data by company size.

Does marketing spend by channel change by company size?

When talking to these companies, I broke them down into three groups.

The first being under 5 million in yearly revenue (with a minimum of $1 million per year). The second group was $5 million to $100 million, and the third was over $100 million.

marketing spend by channel under 5 mil

marketing spend by channel 5 mil to 100 mil

marketing spend by channel over 100 mil

Do you see a trend? No matter what size a company is, the majority of their marketing budget is going towards paid ads.

When I asked why the most common responses were: it’s easy to scale and you can see a direct ROI.

Now let’s look at the conversion rate per channel…

Conversion rate by channel

Before I share with you conversion data, out of the 208 companies I interviewed, only 73 of them had the correct tracking set in place for me to get accurate numbers.

If you want to succeed as a marketer, you need to set up your tracking correctly.

You don’t have to pay for an analytics solution, you can just use Google Analytics and set up goal and conversion tracking. It’s better than nothing.

Here is the average conversion rate per channel:

conversion rate by channel

When looking at the conversion data per channel, you’ll notice that I combined SEO and content marketing because they go hand in hand.

The more content marketing you do, in general, the better you’ll do when it comes to SEO.

The graph clearly shows paid ads convert better. And they usually do because you can control the landing page the traffic goes to. That’s why I love paid advertising!

Just look at these 2 pages below. They are both on page 1 of Google for the term “auto insurance”.

This one takes the top spot through paid ads:

aaa

And this one takes the top organic listing:

nationwide

It’s obvious why the paid one converts better. The design focuses on converting a user into an auto insurance client. The organic listing (the second one) has tons of text because, without the content, it wouldn’t rank high on Google.

But looking at pure conversion rates doesn’t tell the whole story because some marketing channels are more expensive than others.

To get an idea of how effective a marketing channel is, you have to look at return on marketing spend.

return marketing spend

Return on marketing spend doesn’t necessarily mean how profitable a channel is.

All it’s doing is showing the return based on marketing spend.

For example, although Facebook Ads don’t convert as well as Google Ads, they are much cheaper. Out of all the companies we interviewed, on average, they generated $3.04 in revenue for every dollar they spent on Facebook ads.

Again, this doesn’t mean profit. But typically, companies won’t keep spending money unless it is profitable.

What’s interesting about this data is that it shows 2 things:

  1. Facebook Ads produce a better return on ad spend over Google Ads – this makes sense because it’s much cheaper to advertise on Facebook and it hasn’t been around as long as Google. Facebook Ads are quickly increasing in cost and over time the return on ad spend will probably even out with Google AdWords.
  2. SEO produces the best returns – assuming you have set up your conversion tracking correctly, SEO is very effective because you can focus on increasing traffic from the right keywords that are causing sales. The only problem with SEO is that it is a long-term play and you won’t see results instantly.

So what’s wrong Neil?

Well, nothing yet, because you don’t have all of the data yet. 🙂

Let’s look at a few more trends and data point points…

The first is that paid ads are just increasing in price, which means you can expect to pay more for them each year.

google revenue

Google generated $50 billion in 2012 and $109 billion in 2017. Yes, Google generates revenue outside of ads, but ads still make up 90% of their income.

Second, the majority of users don’t click on ads. But still, companies focus their marketing budgets on ads. Did you know that only 2.6% of the searches result on a paid ad click?

That’s crazy!!!

Now, I am not saying the remaining searches cause clicks on organic listings.

34% of searches get no clicks because Google is solving a lot of search queries through their knowledge graph, which means a user won’t have to click. Plus, people are clicking on images, new stories, map listings, and whatever else Google decides to show.

But still, the majority of the remaining clicks are going towards the organic listings.

So why are you focusing all of your efforts on paid ads?

Just think about it. You know ad costs are going to keep going up because they have over time. And users prefer to click on the organic listings, yet you still spend the majority of your budget on paid ads.

And no, I am not saying that you shouldn’t leverage paid ads. Heck, I still think you should spend the largest portion of your marketing budget on paid ads because they are easier to scale, they convert better, and you’ll see an instant return assuming you know what you are doing.

But what you should be doing is maxing out your SEO spend because it produces the best return.

Here are 3 lessons for you when it comes to your marketing efforts and where you should be investing your time and money.

Lesson #1: Get good at SEO

You have no choice!

You’re going to struggle to keep your business profitable as your cost to acquire a customer is going to continually rise.

If you don’t believe me, just look at Google’s revenue graph that I shared above.

And learning on-page SEO and link building isn’t enough. To do well these days you’ll have to incorporate social media marketing and content marketing.

But here’s the beauty: If you get it right, your cost for SEO will continually go down over time compared to how much traffic and sales it’s driving.

Let’s look at NeilPatel.com.

I’ve been doing SEO on my own site for many years now. And when I mean SEO, I’m encompassing social media marketing, content marketing (including podcasts and videos), and crazy experiments.

Here’s my overall traffic excluding any cost per click type of ads for 2015.

2015 traffic

A whopping 868,821 unique visitors. During that year I spent $320,301 on SEO related efforts, excluding CPC ads.

And in 2016 I generated 3,448,929 unique visitors and I spent $1,430,133 on SEO related efforts, excluding CPC ads.

2016 traffic

Last but not least, I generated 7,442,647 unique visitors in 2017 for a total spend of $581,495 on SEO related efforts, excluding CPC ads.

2017 traffic

2018 isn’t over yet, but my costs are even going to be lower than 2017 and my traffic is higher.

Technically if you include how much money I’m spending on building out the Ubersuggest tool it will be higher… but that’s not really considered SEO. 

Here’s a recap…
marketing spend neil patel

In 2015, SEO was really expensive for me when you look at it from a cost per visitor standpoint.

It got worse in 2016 because I really wanted to grow faster, and then in 2017, I started to run out of places to spend my money and naturally, my growth rate slowed down.

If you fast forward to today, my cost per visitor is drastically lower than 2017. But still… I’m able to generate a B2B visitor for less than 8 cents.

That’s ridiculously cheap considering some of the terms I rank for would cost me $11 a click.

In other words, SEO is very expensive in the beginning, but it generates one of the highest ROI because you don’t have to keep spending money at the same pace to generate the greater results.

With paid advertising, if you stop spending money, your traffic and sales will stop. And if you want to scale fast, it tends to cost more per visitor instead of less per visitor like SEO.

If you are going to max out your SEO efforts like I’m recommending, make sure you know what is causing an ROI or else you’ll waste time and money acquiring traffic that won’t ever convert into sales.

Lesson #2: Ugly is the new sexy

I asked each of the 208 companies one simple question… which marketing strategy has provided you with your biggest return on investment?

Can you guess what the answer was?

No, it wasn’t SEO.

It was CRO (conversion rate optimization)!

The second runner-up was SEO.

It makes sense though.

If you already have traffic, optimizing for conversions is one of the simplest ways to grow… assuming you can come up with tests that perform better than your control.

But here’s what’s interesting… less than 1.7% of marketing spend was allocated towards CRO when you look at all companies as a whole.

I do understand why companies generating under $5 million a year in revenue don’t spend much on CRO because they don’t have as much traffic.

But if your company generates over $5 million a year you should consider allocating more of your budget towards CRO.

Yes, it’s not as sexy as SEO or social media marketing, but it works.

Lesson #3: Don’t forget lesson number 2

Most marketers and companies want to be hip and cool. In other words, they want to spend more time and money on cool marketing channels.

When I asked each company, “which marketing channel do you feel has the most potential”, here are the responses I got back:

marketing channel potential

What’s shocking about the chart above is that both B2B and B2C companies almost equally agreed Instagram and YouTube have the most potential.

Although Instagram is cool, ads are really expensive and it’s hard to generate a positive ROI on Instagram.

As for building up your Instagram reach organically, it’s definitely doable, but it’s hard to drive traffic from Instagram to your site unless you are having people swipe up.

As for YouTube, there is huge potential in it as long as marketers are willing to create videos. YouTube SEO isn’t competitive and ads are still affordable.

But here is the thing, you can see from the data above that most of these large companies have been built off of traditional channels like paid ads and SEO.

Yes, these newer channels are sexy, but the old ones still work extremely well.

And here is the kicker… you haven’t even seen the maximum potential of both paid ads and SEO because most you haven’t fine-tuned them.

So why would you want to go after unknown channels that aren’t as proven when you haven’t made the most out of the channels that work for your competition?

Conclusion

Yes, I spend a lot of my time and money on podcasting and videos, as well as leverage all of the cool channels such as Facebook Watch, but I do the fundamentals really well.

If you want to grow your traffic, leads, and sales, here’s how you should prioritize your marketing budget:

  • Spend more on SEO – whether you are a small company or a large one, SEO will produce a better return on your investment than paid ads in the long term. With all of the companies I talked to, less than 3% dominated the organic listings. But before you go all in on SEO, you need to setup tracking correctly so you so aren’t wasting your time driving traffic that doesn’t convert.
  • Keep your SEO budget reasonable – I’m kind of crazy, but most companies should never spend more than a million on SEO. Yes, really big companies will… but when you are maxing out your SEO budget it’s nowhere near as expensive as paid ads. As for what the amount will be, it ranges a lot depending on the industry, how competitive it is, and how fast you want to grow. So sadly I can’t give you an answer on how much, but it should decrease over time.
  • Invest more in CRO – if your company is generating at least 5 million dollars, you should consider spending more money on CRO. I know many of you don’t care for it based on the data above (plus my CRO blog posts aren’t as popular as my SEO ones), but it will help tremendously. It will allow you to spend more on paid ads as costs rise and it will increase your overall profit margin.
  • Avoid the sexy marketing channels – you shouldn’t consider copying me or others when it comes to Facebook, YouTube, etc. if you haven’t figured out the basics yet. Spend more time and energy on what’s proven.
  • When you’re small, test – many of you have businesses that generate less than a million dollars a year in revenue. If this is you, don’t follow the formula above. When you are starting off, it is best to test 4 or 5 marketing strategies out at the same time. Spend very little money on each of them… whichever one produces the best return, that’s what you should focus on in the short-run.

And if you are one of the rare marketers in which you’ve mastered all of the above strategies and already implemented them, the next step for you is to think outside the box and be a bit more creative.

Just like I am doing by creating marketing tools.

So where are you spending your marketing dollars?

The post You Are Doing Your Marketing Wrong (and I Have the Data to Prove It) appeared first on Neil Patel.

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Essential Design Trends, July 2018

With the heat of summer comes a little bit of a design slowdown, but there are still plenty of projects worth your attention. Most of the major design trends happening right now feature structural components of website design, such a interactive layers or multiple columns of text. And there’s also this “little” international event that’s having some influence as well – the soccer World Cup.

Here’s what’s trending in design this month:

1. Interactive Layers

Designers are constantly trying to develop ways to keep users interested in the design for longer period of time. Using more interactivity is one way to do that.

Pairing that interactivity with layered effects is another way to do it that has high visual interest. (It’s like putting the best of the visuals and interaction together.)

Much like how parallax scrolling has worked for some time, interactive layers give users something to do with the design, generally scrolling, while elements on the screen move in different ways. The layered effect makes everything look a little more real, a little less cartoonish and can help increase engagement.

It’s a mix of information and gamification. Each of the three examples below do it in a different way.

  • Salomon uses a scrolling story with great photos layered over a background image with depth and plenty of supporting facts. Almost haphazard placement of photos keeps the scroll action obvious so that users don’t stop moving through the content.

  • ENO tells a story with video and sound in the background, while a simple foreground layer clues users into their products in the scene. It’s like watching a movie and knowing exactly what the product placements are so you can watch for them. Plus, adventure-style is instantly engaging.

  • Martin Laxenaire uses fun color and animated hover states to provide content in a top layer with a similar visual in the background for depth and visual interest. And it’s a lot of fun just to see how the animations shift and shape elements on the screen.

2. Three Columns of Text

One … two … three! Three columns of text!

While multi-column text blocks phased out some time ago, that trend seems to be circle back. More designs are featuring three columns of text. (Maybe because users have wider desktop screens? Three columns is a little less unwieldy to read.)

There’s a lot of science to back up the idea that elements in threes have a natural and harmonious feel to them.

The “rule of three” has long been associated with content creation and speechwriting as a way to bring home a set of points. Think of all the stories that feature threes – Three Little Pigs, The Three Musketeers, Three Stooges – and in literature plays use three acts. It’s also a common practice to use three bullets points to support facts in slides and presentations.

The rule of thirds helps you understand how and where users look at visual elements and even helps photographers and illustrators compose their work. So, it seems like a natural way to organize visual content as well.

Using a three-column structure for text blocks can make it easier to break up the design. A full-width text block can be difficult to read unless the text is overly large. The ideal character count per line on a desktop is about 65 characters, so the size of the screen and size of the text do factor in.

Each of the examples below use a three column format to organize information. While the first example uses three columns to break up a single block of text, this same concept is east to apply to three distinct copy blocks as well (such as in the other examples). The structure works best visually when all three text elements have similar weights and content styles.

3. World Cup Fever

It seems like almost everyone has World Cup fever. With the international soccer tournament happening through mid-July, the sport is top of mind for sure.

From website designs that focus on the event itself to others that are drawing inspiration from the sport, there’s a World Cup influence on design.

Think about the design elements that can be pulled from World Cup designs:

  • Bold color choices such as the bright red and blue from the FIFA branding and design.
  • Typography choices, such as the uppercase, curved lettering style uses in the main logo.
  • Color combinations from all the world flags, many of which feature bright colors and reds, blues and greens.
  • Soccer-field inspiration with more gridded or block-style designs.
  • Hexagon shapes from the panels on a traditional soccer ball.

World Cup-inspired projects also give you plenty of room to experiment with different types of data visualizations, such as the cool calendar grid from FifaTwenty18, below. Sporting events are packed with data points to plot, analyze and visualize.

The event is also a good reason to provide some soccer history for users, such as the visual exploration of ball types used in the website-based infographic below.

And there’s plenty of interest in websites with these themes right now, so it shouldn’t be hard to find material to work with and plenty of sites to explore for inspiration.

Conclusion

My favorite trend this month is definitely all the soccer—dare I say “football”—projects. It’s great to see all the world influences and how something like a major event can impact the mood and visual composition of design projects. What trends are you loving (or hating) right now? I’d love to see some of the websites that you are fascinated with. Drop me a link on Twitter; I’d love to hear from you.

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Sunday, June 24, 2018

Popular Design News of the Week: June 18, 2018 – June 24, 2018

Every week users submit a lot of interesting stuff on our sister site Webdesigner News, highlighting great content from around the web that can be of interest to web designers. 

The best way to keep track of all the great stories and news being posted is simply to check out the Webdesigner News site, however, in case you missed some here’s a quick and useful compilation of the most popular designer news that we curated from the past week.

Note that this is only a very small selection of the links that were posted, so don’t miss out and subscribe to our newsletter and follow the site daily for all the news.

8 Brilliant Blogs Run by Ecommerce Stores (And What You Can Learn from Them)

 

The Ultimate ECommerce Website Design Guide

 

How to Design a High Converting Email Newsletter

 

Lessons Learned Making my Variable Font

 

Analytics Without the Numbers? Explaining Our Early Product Design Decisions

 

A Brief History of Coffee

 

UWP Access – GDPR Access Requests for Shopify

 

Site Design: Bear Grylls

 

Micro is the Terminal-based Text Editor You’ll Love

 

Beijing Wants to Rewrite the Rules of the Internet

 

Designing Design Culture Wrap-Up

 

Project Rush: Adobe Announces All-new Video Editing App

 

Centering: The Newest Coolest Way Vs. The Oldest Coolest Way

 

A Free Futura Alternative

 

ShipFast – The Simplest Project Management Tool Ever

 

The Unseen Value of Brand Design

 

Five Rants from a Cranky Designer

 

Typographic Posters for Each Team Playing in the World Cup

 

SimplePortfolio.co, Easily Create a Simple Portfolio Webpage for Free

 

5 Ways to Handle Forms on your Static Site

 

Gradient Joy – Gradients as Placeholder Images

 

EU Takes First Step in Passing Controversial Copyright Law

 

Interface Exploration: Depth and Color

 

Take the Money

 

Open Logos

 

Want more? No problem! Keep track of top design news from around the web with Webdesigner News.

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