Ecommerce Blog

Podcast #7: Your Marketing Questions Answered

Published on July 13th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

Length: 17:10

Overview: Today I answer five of the marketing questions that were submitted via fans earlier today on our Facebook page.

Description: In this, episode 7 of my podcast, I answer marketing questions from fans on our Facebook page. Topics include how to get sales when no one knows who you are, why the first impression of your website can make or break you, how to design high-converting landing pages and how I think e-commerce will change over the next five years. I also debunk a popular myth about Google AdWords and search rankings.

(Apologies for the hissing sounds throughout the podcast. It was recorded using the voice memos app on my iPhone as a test)

Like this podcast? Why not subscribe on iTunes?

[Video] Positioning Around Your Ideal Customer Profile

Published on July 8th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

It doesn’t matter what you sell – if you don’t know exactly who you’re selling to then you’re leaving money on the table. In this video I discuss how you can create an ideal customer profile and use that to position the products you sell in your e-commerce store to significantly increase your conversion rate.

[Screenshots] Designing a Brochure in 4 Easy Steps…

Published on June 3rd, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

Step 1: Layout mock up (idea)

Step 2: Content mock up (positioning)

Step 3: Photoshop mock up (graphical elements)

Step 4: Prettied up by the design team (ready to go)

Come see us at IRCE in Chicago next week if you’d like a print out of the brochure :)

How to: Promote Your Business on TV In Front of Thousands of Potential Customers for $100 With Google TV Ads

Published on April 5th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

Have you heard of Google TV ads? For just a few hundred bucks and with absolutely zero video creation skills you can advertise your business on major TV networks alongside American icons like Ford, McDonalds and Macy’s.

You simply sign up for Google TV Ads (through Google AdWords), upload your TV ad (which you can create for $300 using Spotmixer’s step-by-step wizard) and within 24 hours it will start running on the TV networks you select at the specific times you choose. Sweet!

Here’s how Google TV ads works:

Using the Spotmixer step-by-step ad creation wizard you can create a customized TV ad based on one of their many templates. You can add your logo, images and video or just choose from their stock library.

So how does Google get your ad on TV? They’ve partnered with a few of the second tier cable networks who have a combined reach of over 50 million households throughout the country. You might see a Starbucks ad followed by an MGD ad followed by your ad.

You can spend just $100 to get your ad in front of 10,000 viewers. Sure it might be at 2am on a Tuesday, but if you’re creative enough and can work some really good benefits into your ad then you can definitely make your money back – and then some.

If you can shell out a few thousand bucks you can run your ad 7 nights a week between 12am and 3am on major TV networks. Take it up to $5,000 – $10,000 and you’re talking almost prime-time spots (11pm onwards) on channels like Discovery, Travel, Fox, MSNBC and others. You can choose which channels your ad appears on, at what time and on which days.

They say TV advertising is dying and Seth Godin says it’s a form of interruption marketing, but I still say it’s worth testing, especially if you sell “mainstream” products like clothes, shoes, computers, vitamins, etc. Here’s how I’d do it:

  1. Register a new domain name so you can exclusively track your TV ads success. For example, if you sell t-shirts online at CoolTShirts.com then register BuyCoolTShirts.com and use that as the website link you show in your TV ads. Setup a domain forward at your domain name registrar (such as GoDaddy) and make the redirect a Google Analytics trackable link.
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  2. Setup Google Analytics tracking for orders and traffic so you can see which visitors ordered as a result of seeing your TV ad. See this blog post for more info.
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  3. Promote your best selling products at the top of your home page using BigCommerce’s built-in banner creation tool (under the marketing menu in your control panel).
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  4. Run your TV ad for 3-5 consecutive nights on the SAME channels EVERY NIGHT. Repetition is important – they say it takes the average person 7 views of your ad before they take action.
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  5. Use Google Analytics to track your sales from the TV ad. If you made back more than you spent then great, ramp up your budget and run another 3-5 day trial. If not, try a different channel and repeat step 4. If you fail again then choose a different Spotmixer ad template with a stronger call to action or a better benefit (remember, sell on benefits – i.e. what your products can do for the buy – and not features, i.e. what the product has)

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The idea is dead simple and is the same as any other form of direct marketing. If you can make back more than you spend (even by just a few dollars) then ramp your budget significantly. As long as you turn a slight profit then the sky’s the limit.

Remember to factor in the lifetime value of each customer – even if you just break even on your TV ad through new customers ordering from you once, if you have a good autoresponder and monthly newsletter setup (in which you send out discount coupons and info on your cool new products) then they’ll come back for a second, third or fourth order and will tell their friends too, so you could end up making back $3,000 (or more) for every $1,000 you invest in TV advertising.

The key is to pique the viewer’s curiosity with your TV ad. Make it different. Even make it ugly and unprofessional. Include your photo or a home-recorded video of you explaining why people should buy from you. They’ll do a double take and ask themselves “who the heck is this guy/gal”. Then they’ll visit your online store and if your prices are good and they need what you sell then they’ll buy.

It really is that simple and there’s no reason to over complicate things.

Will your ad work? Who knows, but the last time I was in our Austin office I was suffering extreme jet lag (after 18 hours of flying from Sydney->LA->Dallas->Austin) and at 2am I saw an (obviously) amateur TV ad for an online store selling marketing podcasts. I jumped on their website and $140 later I had purchased 5 podcasts which I listened to on my flight back home to Sydney a few weeks later.

Sure I appreciate amateur marketing efforts more than some people, but hey, they got me as a customer so their TV ad did its job.

A step-by-step guide to increase repeat purchases by 25% using postcard marketing

Published on February 16th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

Introduction

I want you to think back to the early 1990s. Before the Internet, before email marketing and way before Google AdWords. Back then print magazines were flying off the shelves, businesses manually followed up with customers using the phone and direct response mail was a big part of the marketing budget for most successful companies large and small.

Fast forward to today and it seems like most businesses have forgotten about sending something physical in the mail (not email) to their prospects or customers. Think about the companies you’ve done business with in the last year – probably dozens. Now think about how many of them have sent you something in the mail after you’ve handed over your hard earned cash – none? One? Probably no more than a handful for more people.

If an online store such as Amazon.com or Zappos.com sent you a 20% off coupon for your next order at their website would you use redeem it? I bet you would. The fact is we can use all sorts of fancy copywriting and marketing ideas but when it comes down to it, people still love a discount.

The Cost of Doing Business: An Example

If we look at CAC (or Customer Acquisition Cost) for a sample company selling to consumers (such as an e-commerce company selling t-shirt) then we can do some basic calculations:

  • Let’s assume we only advertise using Google AdWords
  • Let’s assume we have a 7% conversion rate
  • Let’s assume our average CPC (Cost Per Click) is $1
  • Let’s assume our average order value is $47 (excluding shipping)
  • Let’s assume our profit margin is 35%

So, if we invest $1,000 over a week in Google AdWords marketing we can work out the numbers as follows:

  • $1,000 invested in Google AdWords at $1 per click gets us 1,000 visitors
  • At a 7% conversion rate we get 70 customers
  • At a $47 average order value we generate $$3,290 revenue
  • At a profit margin of 35% we generate $1,151.50 in profit
  • Nett result is a profit if $151.50

Now investing $1,000 and getting back $1,151.50 is a 15% return which isn’t too bad, but what if we could get 25% or more of these customers to come back to our online store and place one, two, three or more orders with us? Yes you can use email marketing to send out a follow up promotion, but everyone is trying to get into your customer’s inboxes and it’s crowded. Very crowded.

Consider these points in favor of postcard marketing to existing customers:

  • They already know who you are and are familiar with your brand
  • You have their correct address, otherwise how would you ship their order to them?
  • They’ll be receptive to your message because they already trust you
  • The average consumer receives 16 emails for every 1 direct mail piece

Now consider these points about prospects and customers:

  • It’s cheaper to keep an existing customer than to find a new one
  • If you “wow” an existing customer they’ll tell (a lot of) their friends
  • You have to earn the trust of new prospects but existing customers already trust you
  • If you value your existing customers you won’t have any problems getting new customers (word of mouth will do the work for you)

Step-By-Step: Postcard Marketing to Existing Customers

I want to propose a dead simple strategy to increase the LTV (Life Time Value) and RPC (Revenue Per Customer) from your online store, and I want to give you the exact blueprint to get the job done. Just follow these steps:

  1. Work out how much of a discount you can afford to offer existing customers on their next order. If your profit margin is low it might only be 10%, but if you sell intangible items which cost nothing to produce such as eBooks or reports then it might be as high as 50%.
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  2. Login to your BigCommerce store and create a coupon code from under the Marketing menu. Set it to expire in 14 days and make sure the unlimited use option is selected. Don’t use the auto-generated coupon code. Use a human-readable word such as SAVE20BUCKS or 35%_Off_March_2010.
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    Optionally enter a minimum order value before the coupon code will trigger a discount. If you do this your postcard’s message will look something like this: Spend over $100 on your next order and receive 25% off your purchase.
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  3. Go to http://www.infousa.com and sign up. InfoUSA is a direct mail company which lets you design a postcard, upload a list of addresses and send your postcard out for under $1 per postcard.
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  4. After signing up, click the “Postcard Marketing” menu option to create a postcard from one of the available stock designs. Make sure the side without the address includes a strong call to action such as “Thanks for your order from [Store Name]. Here’s a coupon for $30 off your next order, good thru [Date Coupon Expires].”
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  5. On the back next to where the address goes, include a personal message such as “Please accept this $30 discount off your next order as a thanks from the team here at [Store Name]. We sincerely appreciate your business and just wanted to send you a small token to say thank you.”. Remember to include something about the coupon’s expiry date if you set one.
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  6. After you’ve designed your postcard, login to your BigCommerce store and from the Orders menu, choose the Export Orders option. Search for order which were created in the last 30 days then hit the search button. This will give you a list of all orders (and customers) placed in the last month. The idea with our postcard strategy is that you create and send a postcard to new customers every 30 days if you can make the initial test profitable.
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  7. When you see the list of orders, click the bulk actions dropdown menu (next to the Go button) and choose the Export These Orders option. Follow the wizard and export to Microsoft Excel. Save the export file to your hard drive.
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  8. On the InfoUSA website you’ll be able to upload your order/customers list and schedule your postcard to be sent. Depending on whether you choose first class mail the price will vary but generally it wont be more than $1 per postcard.

That’s all there is to it. Once the postcard is sent out start checking your orders after a few days. Use the Search Orders option under the Orders tab in your BigCommerce store to find orders which were placed using the coupon code you sent out on your postcard. This will give you the exact revenue returned from your postcard marketing test.

As I mentioned above, it’s a good idea to set an expiry date on the coupon code. This creates a sense of urgency for customers and gives you a predictable period of time over which you can track the response to your promotion.

If you can get your initial test to bring in a positive ROI (Return On Investment) then congratulations, you’ve found a new follow up marketing strategy which you can use to indefinitely scale your business and increase your per-customer life time value.

If not, don’t give up. Play around with your offer: change the discount amount, extend/contract the expiry date for the coupon, try a different postcard design and/or try a different call to action. A lot of times with something as fickle as postcard marketing it takes just one small change to generate the ROI you need to turn a profit.

Conclusion

So there’s a dead simple way to increase your per-customer life timevalue using postcard marketing. Of course instead of postcards you can also try a sales letter, but postcards tend to grab attention because they’re typically sent by relatives or friends on overseas trips and not businesses so they bypass the junk mailer filter, giving your customers time to read your message and/or identify your brand instead of throwing your postcard in the trash.