5 simple digital marketing mistakes you should avoid

5 simple digital marketing mistakes you should avoid

Even though marketing today has evolved and we have learned how to engage with consumers and customers in this connected age, a lot of brands continue to make some terrible mistakes in spite of all the lessons out there.  I want to auto-correct the header of this post, first, by saying that these are basic marketing mistakes, and not just digital. Because, as I have said before, 'digital marketing' itself is a bit passé, because, today all marketing is inherently has digital embedded in it. But, we continue to treat marketing in silos, and that's where the problem begins.

1. Calling it digital, treating it as an "add-on"

A lot of brands continue to separate "digital" marketing from "traditional" or "mainstream".  That's the big unforced error right there, and that's when it all starts to go wrong. For some marketers, online, social, mobile etc are clubbed together under a separate umbrella called 'digital' and that's a box that needs ticking, so it is like an after thought. It is nowadays a must have, but it's treated like a nice-to-have that's briefed separately, with separate budgets, and different goals. 

The trick is in briefing every one involved in one go, and starting from a channel neutral perspective. Your 'digital' agency, your media agency, your 'mainstream' agency should all be briefed in together. By the way, a lot of agencies are already integrated in this respect, and we can see why. It makes sense because they are in a unique position to engage the consumer end-to-end.

2. Launching on new 'digital' channels and leaving

First of all, you do not need to be on every imaginable channel. Specially, on social media, you do not need to be everywhere. Choosing the right social media channels for your brand is key. Even, outside social – brands often launch microsites, create websites (that they might not even need), and then abandon them. Agencies don't usually have a problem doing this for brands – more sites, more pages means more revenue, but it often makes no sense at all for the brand. 

It is much better to launch across a limited number of viable channels, keep them updated, and be more adept at leading audiences to well-tended social media accounts. If you created an asset for a time-bound campaign, or are about to abandon one because you have moved on to a better one, you need to ensure that the presence on that channel is removed professionally, with attention to all content, and so that someone mislead on to that site or page doesn't get a blank wall to stare at. That's a 404!

3. Not ready for mobile.

If your presence is not ready for mobile (or tablet), your brand is not moving. Period. And, no, this doesn't mean having separate mobile .m sites, but having adaptable, responsive websites and blogs. There's absolutely no reason why your page still has to be scrolled across, pinched to expand and read through etc. Your website, your e-commerce gateway, all need to be properly responsive and optimized for the mobile experience. Mobile users are an impatient lot, with 80% of users saying they’ll abandon a site if it takes more than 20 seconds to load. You really need to understand and use the power of mobile for this new 'lean forward' generation.

Mobile apps may just be another tool many brands want to use, and the benefits are quite big. Aside from the convenience an app provides to mobile users, there are also push notifications. These messages can be used to maintain brand awareness while also prompting consumers to act upon offers.

4. Gathering and then ignoring data. Or little or no data and insights at all.

In today's data-rich, connected marketing world, this is another huge mistake. We have so much data available to us, so much insight possible from that data, that it would really be stupid to ignore that as a key must-do, or to not use the full possibilities of that stream of marketing. Some brands have huge social media presence, but they are totally content with just basic insights like they get free from Facebook. They are simply unwilling, or unable, to dig deeper to get better data, better insights out of their interactions and to listen effectively to what's being said out there.

Gathering the right data is key. Some brands do gather a lot of data, but do nothing meaningful with the information and insights they gather. Others – and, sadly, quite a few brands tend to just talk about themselves a lot, without bothering to learn at all. It's not about just getting heaps and heaps of it. It is about having the right people with the skills and ability to understand data and to gain fro it to improve your brand performance both in marketing, but beyond it – in sales, in product development, in strategy.

5. Talking to everybody, all the time.

Marketing has never been about talking to all the people all the time. Doesn't work. It used to work a little bit in the old days, but the move has happened today from selling to building relationships, and you cannot engage every one all the time. Starting with clear brand and campaign goals, gathering the right insights about both your target audience and how/where/why they engage – you need to clearly define who you want to talk to. 

Once you know who you want to talk to, you need to define when and where (your engagement points, your post times, your key announcements) and of course, then where.  These definitions do have demographic and geographic targeting elements, but the key today, is behavior. Audiences behave differently on different channels. Every digital communication channel is getting busier and consumer attention is divided and scarce. It takes effort and investment to cut through the noise to get your voice noticed. Don't spread it thin. Focus. Less is more.

Personalize, be honest, be transparent. listen, respond, have conversations. Integrate everything you do on line with what you do offline. Be consistent across all your channels – from facebook to your business card and your signage. Your tweet cannot be frivolous while your brand's body language is all very stiff upper lip. And make sure that your brand teams, your marketing teams, your agencies avoid the mistakes mentioned above. They're very basic, but making them costs you a lot. And they are totally avoidable. It's easy. And it's not rocketsurgery.

GLOCOM SOFT

Director at GLOCOM SOFT Private Limited

7y

What a wonderful read.

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Joshua Rietman

Assistant Manager at Enterprise Holdings

8y

Excellent thoughts! Everything is going digital and it can be overwhelming. Companies shouldn't jump right into online marketing if they aren't prepared to take the time for it.

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Colin Day

Marketing Leader | Non-Executive Director | C-Suite Advisor

8y

Thanks Tom, some great points and I am sure so many of us have been guilty or are guilty of some many of these. From over saturation of the contact universe to not utilising the data and the insights that data brings. Marketing is a mix of art and science, then add in some common sense.

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Thank you writing such a brilliant article, Tom! I am an undergraduate marketing student and there are many key points I will definitely be taking away from this to complement my studies. Your second point really stands out to me - there really is nothing worse than going onto a brand's Facebook or Twitter page only to see that it's collecting dust with their last post being from a number of months (or years) ago. It seems too many brands just don't understand the importance of building a digital profile slowly and effectively rather than a poorly executed strategy of signing up to every website and social media network that comes about with no thought put into it. It really is such a simple marketing mistake - so why do brands still fall into that trap?

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