A beginners guide to digital marketing strategy | Tide Banking

You’ve got a great product with a solid customer base. And the time has come to take things to the next level, which means putting together a strong marketing plan.

But don’t go creating dozens of social media profiles and blog posts just yet! If you fire without having a well-defined target, you are likely to fail.

Which is why having a clear digital marketing strategy is key. It’s the difference between throwing spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks, and giving potential customers content they truly engage with.

In this guide, you’ll learn how to put together a digital marketing plan, how each activity aligns with your marketing funnel and be introduced to some core channels to help you get started today.

Creating your digital marketing plan

The goal of a marketing strategy is to document how your strategic business objectives will be achieved through different marketing approaches, channels and tactics.

This means that you can’t create a clear digital marketing plan without a business strategy that informs it. Before putting pen to paper, devise clear strategies and objectives for at least 6 to 12 months out. Once that’s complete, feel free to build upon your roadmap for the next 12 months to five years to achieve prolonged outlook.

Some basic business objectives include:

Your digital marketing plan will help you achieve the objectives you’ve set for your business.  Now, it’s time to determine exactly how you will reach those targets. 

Objective analysis

A great goal-oriented exercise helps you set actionable, measurable goals. A popular framework is the SWOT analysis, which stands for:

As a small business owner, having this level of awareness will make you more resourceful when planning your growth and marketing activities.

For example, if one of your strengths is proprietary knowledge within your industry, you can use this to fuel original and value-driven content to attract your target audience.

Establishing specific goals 

You can then start setting practical digital marketing goals for your plan. It’s usually wise to set yourself SMART goals, which stands for:

A bad goal might be “increasing the number of followers to my Instagram account”. This isn’t specific or measurable. 

A SMART way to rewrite this goal would be more like “We want to generate 5,000 new followers over the next 12 months”.

Define a strategy

Following this approach you now have some well-defined goals that you can use to put your digital marketing plan together. 

This involves documentation of three core areas:

We’ll tackle the marketing funnel in the next section. For now, let’s start with the segment of the market you’re addressing, i.e., your target audience.

Segment your target audience

Your target audience can be defined by a series of attributes, some of which include demographics like:

As well as more granular attributes (also known as psychographics):

Having a clearly-defined overview of your customers will make planning your digital marketing much easier. Some of this information you may already know, but the best way to collect it is by asking it from your customers directly. You can either do this through online surveys (using a tool like SurveyMonkey or Typeform) or speaking with them directly (either in-person or over the phone):

Typeform email example for marketing strategy
Typeform email example

Building customer personas

You can then use this information to build your customer personas. These are documented “avatars” that represent your company’s ideal target audience. 

These personas are based on the real target audience research you conducted and often help to keep your business partners and employees on the same page about targeted marketing efforts:

It’s common to have multiple customer personas that vary based on your diversified products and services. In fact, varying personas help you market to specific demographics for relevant items rather than attempting to market an aggregate product or service to a divided audience.

Studying your competition

Your SWOT analysis from earlier helps you to assess your overall strengths and weaknesses. But, unless you’re choosing an incredibly niche arena, your chosen market is most likely saturated with competition. And as much as you understand your goals, you need to better understand your competitor’s positions.

This requires having a strong understanding of your competitors and their own positioning in the market. 

Understanding your competition’s achievements, pitfalls, target audience, marketing strategy, and so on helps you learn what strategies to mimic and what mistakes to avoid. 

One of the fastest ways to do this is by searching for your competitors on social media and seeing what their audiences have to say about them.

Here’s an example tweet when we search The Trainline:

Using customer feedback for marketing strategy example tweet
Example customer feedback on Twitter

From this one engagement, we can see this customer values the quality of service received. Presumably while being in a difficult or stressful situation. Given the positive feedback we can assume The Trainline’s customer service handled the unfortunate situation brilliantly.

To get the bigger picture, you’ll need to monitor the broader conversation – including any negative feedback they receive.

Market positioning

Now that you have a clear understanding of the space you occupy in the market, you need to position yourself in a way that makes you stand out. Customers should look at you and immediately understand why and how you differ from the crowd. 

It’s time to create a positioning statement. This is a method of telling yourself, your team and the world what your values are, and how you plan to be perceived in the world. This can simply be written out as a mission and vision statement.

For example, Tesla’s mission statement is simply: “To accelerate the world’s transition to sustainable energy”.

And their vision statement is: “To create the most compelling car company of the 21st century by driving the world’s transition to electric vehicles”.

There’s nothing too fancy going on here. All Tesla have done is create a short statement that sets the intention for their positioning.

Determining costs based on specific goals

Finally, with your digital marketing plan defined and in place, you’ll need to measure your results against your goals. Every single marketing activity should be measured against the goals you set in this section, and the metrics you should use to do this include:

The marketing funnel

You now understand your competitors, as well as how your business will fit into the market. The next step is gaining a clear idea of who exactly your target market is.

You can do this by exploring the marketing funnel. This is a method to map your marketing activity to your prospective and existing customers’ typical customer journey. It helps you develop a clear picture of what your customers go through when engaging and buying from your brand. 

The more aware you are of your customer journeys, the more efficient your marketing efforts will be. 

Each step of the marketing funnel is dedicated to making your audience more familiar with your brand. It also helps to build trust – a fundamental part of any relationship, and one that helps your customers feel more self-assured when engaging with your brand.

The modern marketing funnel is built of five stages:

Marketing funnel overview for marketing strategy
Image source: AWeber

As your customers’ needs change, your marketing efforts should adjust accordingly. It’s best-practice to continually return to the marketing funnel and revise your marketing strategy, need be, to remain relevant and engaging within your target audience.  

Let’s run through each step of the marketing funnel in detail.

1. The awareness phase

The awareness phase is where you draw in potential customers who are not yet familiar with your brand and its products or services. 

Think of it like casting a wide net wherein you put yourself out there and see who bites. Your ‘net’, so to speak, can take many forms, with all efforts leading towards the common goal of showcasing your brand to a wide audience and attempting to build trust. 

As touched on above, building trust is a fundamental part of gaining new customers. It helps them ease into the idea of buying from you. After all, anybody who shells out money for a product or service can’t ever be sure they will get their money’s worth. 

The awareness phase is about showing potential customers your brand is worth every penny.

So, how do you cast this net and build trust? Here are a few ideas to help you get started:

You can also use direct mail, social media posts, networking events and trade shows to put yourself out in front of your target audience. Hopefully, they will find your efforts educational, entertaining and ultimately valuable.

2. The consideration phase

Once you’ve generated leads through the awareness phase, it’s time to teach them more about your company.

Use this phase as an opportunity for your potential customers to learn as much as they can about your products and services. Find out their pain points and show them how your business will help to solve them. 

You want to show potential customers your best side while also being transparent about how your business operates. 

This is also the phase to nurture your leads through targeted content that shows off why and how your products and services will provide value. It’s a chance to go a bit deeper below the surface. 

If you’re already up and running, a great way to do this is by not just talking about how your business has solved other people’s problems, but showing exactly how they have. Use case studies, testimonials or reviews. Your job here is to help guide the prospect further down the funnel.

3. The conversion

At this stage, your leads are getting warmed up to the idea of actually spending money at your business. This is when they turn from leads into prospects. 

Trust is high and value is understood. Qualified prospects often fall into your target market, have the means to move forward with the deal and are authorised to do so. If you were talking with a project manager, for example, now is most likely when you will be introduced to their manager who has purchasing power.

Continue to nurture them through the funnel with targeted campaigns and case studies to keep interest high. Now is also a great time to discuss discounts and bundled deals. Show them how much they’ll save in year 1 if they sign up by X date. Gauge your customer and if you feel you can create a bit of urgency to finalise faster, go for it. 

You can also position yourself against your competitors (or let your audience do it for you), like this YouTube video where Robin James compares Harry’s razors with Gillette’s:

The key is to convert them without jeopardising trust. Ideally, they are as excited to buy as you are to sell. 

4. Fostering loyalty

Once you’ve converted a prospect into a customer, you need to keep them. This is where customer retention comes into play. 

The obvious retention pattern is repeat purchases of the same item. If you sell services with subscriptions, however, the retention is renewing when the subscription expires or levelling-up to a higher price point with more perks and benefits. If you sell products, cross-selling is a fantastic way to encourage customers to experience more of your offers.

This is an often overlooked part of the digital marketing strategy, with much of the focus being placed on acquiring rather than retaining.

However, acquiring a new customer can cost five times more than the cost of retaining one. And, if you focus on retaining 5% more customers, your profits can increase by 25%-95%.  

Those numbers tell us that retaining existing customers is incredibly important and deserves the time it takes to give them extra attention and keep them happy.

Plus, you’ve already done the hard work, so aim to keep that existing relationship strong.

Some tips for retaining customers are: 

Don’t forget about customer service. One unhappy customer can lead to a massive headache. Make sure you maintain quick response times, listen to your customer’s needs, provide a warranty to take the hit if something with your product or service malfunctions, and be empathetic. 

5. Turning customers into advocates

The final stage of the funnel focuses on turning customers into advocates.

Happy customers are also a great form of free marketing. Statistics show that one happy customer tells nine of their friends about their positive experience. By keeping one customer happy, you’ve just potentially gained 9. 

Brands who successfully foster strong relationships with their customers do so because they take the time to listen to their needs. Customers who feel heard will go the extra mile for your business through word-of-mouth marketing.  

Before you know it, you’ll have dozens if not hundreds of free brand ambassadors talking up your business and generating new prospects and leads. 

Lululemon do a great job of this, offering their ambassadors a space to run yoga classes, as well as other benefits to empower them to spread Lululemon’s mission:

Marketing strategy example Lululemon brand ambassadors
Lululemon brand ambassadors

Talk to your best customers on a regular basis. Ask them what their biggest goals are, and how you can help them achieve them. This is how you show you care.

Five marketing channels to get you started

Each stage of the funnel serves a purpose for business growth – both from a customer acquisition and loyalty perspective.

Putting together a digital marketing plan that maps out the customer journey will help you to aim in the right direction. But how exactly do you do this?

Let’s cover five digital marketing channels and approaches you can get started with today.

Channel #1: Social media marketing

Social media has become a staple of day-to-day life. Your customers are using it, and there’s no doubt about it: your brand needs to be there, too.

The first step to successfully using social media to promote your business is to focus on one or two channels. Figure out which ones your customers use the most and double down on them. 

Why only one or two? Because when you spread yourself across more, it’s hard to commit to the process with the intent it requires. 

Not sure how to find the platforms your customers are using? Check out where your competitor’s have the strongest followings and see if you can capitalise in the same space.

You can also approach it from a platform standpoint rather than your customer’s POV. Do you research around each platform’s demographics and adoption and choose the ones that fall in line with your target market.

Once you choose your social media outreach platforms, start off by creating great content that your customers will want to engage with. If you can, interact with your customers by replying to their comments and questions. 

A great example of a client who creates content that performs well on social media platforms is travel brand Huckberry. They know their audience loves travelling and respond well to travel photography. Therefore, they create high-quality content of this nature to attract and engage with their followers:

A post shared by Huckberry (@huckberry) on

They also bake this approach into their consideration and awareness content by uploading great looking photographs of their products in action:

A post shared by Huckberry (@huckberry) on

They’ve created the perfect blend of value-driven and promotional content to cover all stages of the funnel.

Pay attention to what your customers respond well to. Is it high-quality photography, videos or illustrations? Then, establish a cadence that delivers this content and create a social media voice that they’ll look forward to seeing.

If you can only create two posts on each platform a week, then commit to that and no more (until you can automate or outsource parts of the process).

Channel #2: Content marketing

Seth Godin, an entrepreneur, best-selling author and authoritative voice in the marketing space,  once said that “content marketing is the only marketing that’s left.” This went with his belief that the only way to connect with an audience is by giving value first.

And this is the exact philosophy behind content marketing. Content marketing is where you deliver value to your audience through blog posts, ebooks, videos and other formats to build a connection with them.

In truth, content can be applied to all channels and stages of the funnel, but it’s well worth addressing as a standalone approach.

For example, SaaS brand Buffer create blog posts around social media marketing trends, news and how-to tips:

These blog posts can rank highly in Google (see channel #3 below) and connect with new prospects fast. They can also be used to help your customers use your products or services.

When coming up with topics to create content around, start with your customers. What are their product pain-points and non-product related pain-points. They should be relevant to your brand in some way (a furniture shop wouldn’t write about cooking, for example). But they don’t have to be all about your products.

Channel #3: SEO

Search Engine Optimisation is definitely a long term commitment, but it is also one of the more cost efficient channels that can bring exponential growth.

There is quite a large number of things to consider in regards to SEO, and it would require a guide in itself to go through. But here’s a quick rundown of the basics:

There’s a lot to take in here, so we suggest you have a more in-depth read. One well-known resource is Moz’s Free “Beginner’s Guide to SEO”. You can also have a look at reading material Google provide themselves such as the SEO Starter Guide. 

Channel #4: Paid media

If you have the capital available, paid channels (like Google Ads and Facebook Ads) can be a fast way to attract new customers, test your messaging and generate a positive ROI.

The paid channels you choose will, again, depend on where your customers can be found. For example, you don’t want to spend money on Twitter Ads if your audience is highly active on Facebook. Start with where you know your audience is most active.

Most digital paid media platforms work on a cost-per-click (CPC) basis. This means that you pay every time a user clicks on your ad, which is based on a bidding system.

Let’s take Google’s pay-per-click (PPC) platform, Google Ads. You can set up campaigns that target specific keywords and drive them to relevant landing pages. For example, if you sell Colombian coffee beans, you can target people searching for the term “buy colombian coffee beans”:

A similar system works on platforms like Facebook Ads and Instagram Ads. Instead of keywords, however, you target based on user interests. Taking our coffee example, you can serve your ads to users who are interested in other coffee related pages, or have expressed an interest in coffee-related topics.

Some quick tips for experimenting with paid media:

Channel #5: Email marketing

Your email list of subscribers, leads and customers is one of the most valuable marketing assets you can build. While platforms like Facebook and Instagram essentially “own” your followers, you own your email list.

Which is why it should be the centrepiece of your marketing activity. As you collect email addresses from prospects at all stages of the funnel, it will be easier to guide them through the customer journey.

Here’s how this translates to the marketing funnel we laid out earlier:

You can get started with an affordable and simple tool like Mailchimp, which allows you to collect contact details through forms and send emails directly from their platform.

Here’s a strong email example from office startup Knotel, where they send prospects an invite to a webinar that showcases how their business helps other businesses find the ideal office space.

Wrapping up

Building a strong digital marketing plan requires a strong understanding of the customer journey. How do your customers behave at each stage of the funnel?

Answering this question requires some research, but the key is to provide prospects with the right content and information to help them make a decision to buy from you.

Here’s a quick rundown of what your digital marketing strategy should include:

From awareness to advocacy, aim to create great content and show your prospects that you’re the right product or service for their needs. This is how you create a brand that captures customers for life.

Photo by Startup Stock Photos, published on Pexels