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By Amanda Robinson.

The more people engage with your ad and post, the more likely it is to be seen by people outside your target audience.

The following excerpt is from Ultimate Guide to Social Media Marketing by Eric Butow, Jenn Herman, Stephanie Liu, Amanda Robinson and Mike Allton, available now via Entrepreneur Press. Order from Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Apple Books.

Boosting your  Advertising efforts is an investment you might want to consider if social media marketing is a big part of your overall marketing strategy.

When you decide to advertise with Facebook, you can either create a new ad or use a status update you’ve already shared.

The ad fee structure is similar to  in that you can set a daily budget, but you don’t set a bid per click. Instead, Facebook will begin showing your ads; the more interest people show, the less per click you’ll be charged. So it’s in everyone’s best interests to create Facebook ad posts that are interesting and compelling.

In addition to driving traffic, you can use Facebook ads for  and simply pay for engagement — in other words, likes, comments and shares. The more people engage with your ad and post, the more likely it is to be seen by people outside your target audience.

Unlike  ads, which are 100 percent text, Facebook ads can be links, images or even video. You can use a single image or a carousel of images. You can even upload multiple images and let Facebook test which one resonates best with your audience.

You can also set up a remarketing pixel (a snippet of code installed on your website) so that Facebook can track users who have been to your site and allow you to “remarket” to them with an ad specifically targeting them.

Here’s how remarketing works. Once you have a Facebook pixel installed on your site and are driving targeted traffic using Google Ads (and, of course, other means), you are equipped to amplify the illusion of frequency.

With a pixel in place, you can now create Facebook ads targeting people who have visited your site, or even specific pages or posts within your site. This is referred to as retargeting or remarketing.

You’ve doubtless experienced this yourself. Spend a couple of minutes looking at cars on an automotive site, and suddenly every site you go to is displaying ads for that brand of car. Because you showed interest in a brand or product by visiting their site, advertisers smartly wish to capitalize on that interest and keep themselves top of mind.

You can now do exactly the same thing!

When your Google ads effectively capture someone as they’re searching for you or information you have published, they register as a visitor with the Facebook pixel. If Facebook recognizes them as a user and you are running a remarketing campaign that includes someone like them, you can layer brand-awareness or added-benefit advertising on Facebook or , which will potentially be seen by someone who was already demonstrating search intent and is familiar with your brand. This is extraordinarily powerful and effective.

Couple this technique with problem-solving content, and you now have a means to reach people who you know have an issue and may need help to solve it. That help might include:

  • How-to guides.
  • Answers to frequently asked questions.
  • Case studies.

Let’s say you’re a local attorney specializing in family law. You can write a series of blog posts that answer common questions about divorce, child custody, estate planning and so on, and then use Google Ads to help people who are searching for those answers find your content. You can then place Facebook ads that encourage those people to call you for more information and assistance.

Or let’s imagine you own a wedding dress shop. Same scenario: Create content that answers common questions brides have about their special day, use Google Ads to drive intentional traffic, and then leverage Facebook to make sure those brides know about your gorgeous dresses by placing ads showcasing your latest offerings and retargeting your website traffic.

Whatever products or services you have to offer, this technique can be implemented, tested, refined and then scaled up.

Feature Image Credit: Image credit: Kornburut Woradee | EyeEm | Getty Images

By Amanda Robinson.

Sourced from Entrepreneur Europe

By Rubicon Project country manager ANZ Rohan Creasey

We’ve all been there…you’re in the middle of shopping online for a present for a loved one’s birthday, and suddenly, you realise ads for the products you’ve been considering are following you around the web. If you made the mistake of searching on a home computer shared by said loved one, the surprise will be well and truly spoiled.

Welcome to the world of retargeting. Although it might be deemed annoying by some, this technique plays into one of the oldest concepts of marketing – the Rule of Seven which states that your prospects need to come across your offer at least seven times before they really notice and start to take action. At its heyday, retargeting was driving up to ten times higher click through rate (CTR) in comparison to standard display ads, so it’s easy to see why so many marketers, advertisers and publishers are fond of retargeting.

But retargeting has a significant Achilles heel: cookies. Retargeting requires cookies, yet cookies weren’t designed for retargeting. Like much of adtech, we used a hack to repurpose a technology meant for something else, and cookies aren’t wholly reliable pieces of data. And now we are paying the price. Users can manually delete cookies whenever they want, and many spam filters delete them automatically. Additionally, when a user moves to another device, say from their desktop to their phone, the cookie is unable to follow their journey. Considering the majority of web traffic is now mobile, even this simple deficiency is a major stumbling block for cookie-based targeting.

Traditionally, the majority of cookies had a shelf life of about 30 days, meaning marketers were challenged to effectively map a customer journey beyond a month. Likewise, most mobile devices do not accept cookies and more recently browsers including Safari, Firefox and Chrome started to block certain cookies by default – making retargeting significantly more challenging.

The message is clear: advertisers and publishers alike need to start planning for a cookie-less world. The display world should draw inspiration from formats including digital out-of-home, audio, and app that generally operate successfully without cookies.

One of the obvious ways to adapt to the cookie-less future is contextual advertising. This relatively old school technique remains an efficient way to capture customers who are interested in your product or service, simply through targeting the pages that those customers are more likely to visit. If you sell car parts, you might choose to advertise on a web page detailing how to fix a car. It’s a simple technique, but it’s (still) incredibly effective.

It’s just that as an industry we were totally sucked into the bubble of focusing on super-fine targeting at the expense of the broader contextual considerations. Perhaps this is because our industry has so many tech parties vying for business or because agencies have been so captivated by algorithms and shifted their attention away from the simpler contextual approach.

Another benefit of contextual advertising, and methods like it, are that they comply with data privacy rules laid out in legislation, including the GDPR. As more countries begin to implement similar legislation, cookies will only face increasing scrutiny.

Google and Facebook have a lot to gain from a world without retargeting. The tech giants have a wealth of first-party data at their fingertips, making them perfectly positioned for a new wave of people-based targeting. Instead of tracking the user through individual site visits and sessions, each user is assigned an ID, which is then tracked wherever that user is signed in.

This is an increasingly popular alternative to retargeting, because the technique overcomes many of the issues, including not being able to follow a user across devices. However, as users become more aware and concerned with data privacy, advertisers need to proceed with caution. If customers are wary of retargeting, people-based marketing takes those concerns to a whole new level.

In order to survive in a world without retargeting, publishers must start to realise the power of their own platforms, their own content and their own audiences (and don’t forget that relying on a third-party log-in – like walled gardens- gives those third-parties a window into your audience).

Contextual advertising and forms of advertising that don’t rely on user data have always been valuable and viable, and maybe now especially so in our data-conscious world. And while retargeting will live on for quite a while, in the end we have to stop putting all our cookies in one jar.

By Rohan Creasey

Sourced from AdNews

By Syed Balkhi 

Not many users who visit your website will make a purchase the first time. In fact, on average shoppers make 9 visits to a retailer’s site before deciding to buy. You need to get those users to come back to your site repeatedly in order to increase your conversions and that’s where retargeting comes in.

Retargeting is a pixel you add to your site that “follows” users who have previously visited and left without converting and shows them a targeted ad to reel them back in. Users who are retargeted are 70 percent more likely to convert. Retargeting is not just a banner ad on a website, it’s a highly-specific ad targeted to just the right users.

Retargeting is all about the details; if you’ve started retargeting but aren’t seeing any results from it, you might have rushed through the setup and missed some key elements.

Here are four retargeting mistakes you might be making and how to fix them.

1. Bombarding users with ads.

Don’t you think it would be irritating if everywhere you went you were being followed and had the same ad shoved in your face over and over again? That’s how your customers feel if you’re overloading them with too many ads.

You want to entice users to return to your site, you don’t want to annoy them. So while retargeting can be very successful, if you bombard users with too many ads, the effectiveness will be drastically reduced.

To avoid making this mistake and being spammy to your users, use frequency caps to restrict the number of times an ad is displayed to someone online. This will increase user engagement, maintain your brand’s trustworthiness and you won’t risk ticking off your customers and leads.

2. Not segmenting your audience.

Imagine you bought something from a website and then you’re shown a ton of ads for that product you literally just bought, that’s annoying. If you don’t segment your audience by who’s never purchased vs. who has purchased or by people who pay full price vs. people who only buy sale prices, your retargeting efforts will go to waste.

One tactic is to use burn pixels to avoid displaying ads to users who have already purchased from your website. You don’t want to lose a happy customer by showing them too many ads that aren’t relevant to them. On the other hand, if someone has purchased a product from you, you can target them with a specific ad to upsell to them or encourage re-ordering.

You should also segment your ads based on interest and intent. Retargeting allows you to show users ads based on their personal interests and also based on particular pages they’ve viewed on your site. This is especially important if your online shop sells a wide variety of products. A customer who visits your women’s footwear page multiple times should not be retargeted with an ad for men’s ties for example because you’ll miss out on your chance to sell them those shoes they’re clearly interested in.

3. Not switching up your ads.

If you’re showing users the exact same ad constantly, your ads are eventually going to fade into the internet background and your users will become blind to them. Consumers will get bored easily if an ad never changes and over time click-through rates will decrease. So you need to switch up your ads to keep them fresh.

Run a variety of different ads to keep users engaged, even simply switching up the photos you use can really help. It’s also important to use different ads across different platforms to keep users on their toes.

4. No ad or landing page customization.

Not only do you need to segment your audience but you need customized ads for each segment too. Different people respond to different messages so you need ads that will speak to each of your different audiences. You’re missing out on a lot of opportunities to convert if you’re not customizing your ads for different users, occasions and holidays.

Customize ads for moms who want back to school deals, for instance, the point of retargeting is to make it as relevant to your users as possible in order to convince them to return to you and buy.

You need to customize your landing pages as well. It doesn’t make any sense for a user to click on a customized ad promoting a holiday sale, only to have it lead them to a generic landing page. It will confuse customers and lead to loss of sales so make sure to customize your landing page to your retargeting ads.

Many marketers feel that retargeting is one of the most underused marketing strategies and it’s definitely one that you should take advantage of. Now that you know not just what mistakes you’re making but how to fix them too, you’ll be able to recapture the attention of users that you would have lost before.

By Syed Balkhi 

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Read more at https://www.business2community.com/digital-marketing/4-retargeting-mistakes-and-how-to-fix-them-02093120

Sourced from Business 2 Community