Top five tips on how to improve your marketing ROI
You may be looking at ways to save money on marketing at the moment.
Rather than cutting down on campaigns, take a step back and analyse
your strategy and the recent response you have had to current and past
campaigns. Put measurement procedures in place to monitor the responses
to each campaign. Use this information to improve the decision making
process and the actual return you get from your next campaign.
Marketing
tactically has reached the forefront this year as customer buying
habits have changed dramatically. Now more than ever before your
marketing has to be proactive as well as responding to current and
future trends. Outlined below are some tips and ideas (and maybe
reminders) on how to hone your marketing activity to dramatically
improve the return on investment.
1. Split test your marketing material
Test your latest message on a small section of your database...

Test your latest message on a small section of your database to see
what response you get. If it's an email marketing campaign, test
different subject lines and send on various days of the week. If it's
direct mail, try sending a different message to two halves of your
database and see how the response differs from each section. By doing
this you are testing both the message and the target before you commit
to a larger campaign which will save time and money.
Find out how many calls each test generated
2. How clean is your data?
Before embarking on a large campaign go through your database and
clean up the contacts. Make sure you have appropriate contact names and
if you have email addresses in your database contact the list and ask
if they are happy to receive regular emails from you. Your hit rate will
drastically improve if the recipients are expecting to receive regular
correspondence from you and the list is up to date. Segment the
database and label it into sectors, age ranges and locations. This will
help you target your marketing with a specific campaign rather than
mass mailing everyone with a single generic message.
Use website call tracking to track your results in Google Analytics
Use your sales database to measure which marketing activity resulted in actual sales

3. Identify the winners and losers in your marketing strategy
Track the response to your marketing campaigns by channel. Use the data
you receive to find out which marketing has generated the most response.
Go one step further and use your sales database to measure which
marketing activity resulted in actual sales. Once you have this data at
your fingertips you can make informed decisions on future marketing
investments. Cut back on the areas not bringing in the results and
allocate the spend onto the most successful areas. Keep an eye on it
however, as consumer buying habits are constantly changing. What has
worked this quarter may not work as well in the next. Using data to
manage your response levels will help you predict buying trends for the
future. Being aware of occurrences that may affect buying habits such as
seasonal events, school holidays and peak selling periods for your
customers, will enable you to prepare for busy periods and plan for
increased activity for when the telephone goes quiet.
Track the response to your next marketing campaign
Try recording the calls that come in from advertising and monitoring how the sales team are responding to enquiries

4. Inspire the sales team
Are your ads getting the telephone to ring but not resulting in sales?
Try recording the calls that come in from advertising and monitoring
how the sales team are responding to enquiries. They may need a
refresher course on how to handle internet enquiries as today’s consumer
is price check savvy and most likely to be ready to buy, armed with
information gleaned from the internet. The only problem is they have
shopped around first and are fully aware of what deal they want and how
much they are willing to pay for it. If your sales team are not adept
at responding to this type of enquiry and overcoming objections, they
may need some extra training. By listening in to sales calls you can
identify any areas of weakness and iron out issues as they arise. This
will save money on marketing to generate enquiries that aren’t being
converted into sales.
Listen to your sales enquiries
Email is a great way of keeping your name in front of previous enquiries and past customers

5. Keep in touch
Using the data you have generated through past sales and previous
enquiries is vital for keeping in touch with ready to buy customers.
Email this section of your database with regular updates on new products
and services that they may be interested in. Design an email campaign
around this sector and encourage them to buy from you if they haven’t
yet made their decision. Email is a great way of keeping your name in
front of previous enquiries and past customers. Keep the design the same
each time and try to send on the same day each week or month to remain
familiar. The marketing campaign that lead this customer to your door
will still be relevant for return on investment purposes so make the
most of every contact you get even if it has gone cold.
Try website call tracking free for six weeks to test your next campaign. Please call us on 0844 411 7138 to find out more.