If you're like a lot of people (myself included) it's very easy to go into an analytics package and focus only on conversion rate. We look at reports like the one below and make short-sighted decisions:
Looking at only the information above, we might decide that "Organic Search" is a bad channel. Making decisions on how successful a channel is based only on conversion rate is short-sighted and will cost you money. Instead, I urge you to think of your channels like a soccer team.
A sensible soccer formation looks something like the image below:
You have one goalkeeper, defenders, midfielders and attackers. You would never think of creating a team of only 11 strikers. But that's exactly what we do with our channels all the time. We create a team that looks like this:
We have a team of channels that are all being graded on their ability to "score goals"—please don't make this mistake. I'm okay with the fact that some of my channels have a low "e-commerce" conversion rate; that may not be what they're designed to do.
Channels aren't binary
The one thing that I want you to take from this blog post is that channels are not binary. It isn't that they either drive sales or do nothing; there's lot's of value in between if you know what to look for.
In a report "The Customer Journey to Online Purchase" Google showed this to be the case by looking at the relationship that each channel is likely to play in the customer journey. The idea is to show on a very simple scale whether a channel plays an "awareness role" or more of a "decision making" role.This is an interactive piece so please have a look and play around in it. You can segment by industry or by country.
Let's take the US market as an example:
US – All Industries
It shows that in general, Display and Social are more of awareness channels, while Organic search and Paid search tend to be last interaction/decision making channels. I'm not surprised by that, but if that's true—if social is best used as a tool for driving awareness of my brand—why would I ever use e-commerce conversion rate as a metric of success? The answer, of course, is that I shouldn't. Better metrics would perhaps be things like:
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How many new visitors did social bring this month?
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Brand awareness - how many people have heard of my business?
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How many people interacted with my brand in some way?
These are just a couple of examples, but if you want more specifics I recommend you read this post by Hannah Smith on the Distilled Blog: Calculating ROI from Social Media - Problems, Pitfalls & Breaking all the things…
If you dig a little further, it gets more interesting. Let's look at the health industry in particular:
US – Health
Social is still an awareness channel, but look at display. It's now playing more of a decision-making role. Email has also moved from an awareness role to a decision-making role.
So what does this mean?
The data above shows that different channels play different roles depending on country and industry, so don't assume anything. Don't assume that social will be an awareness channel, don't assume that email will be a decision making channel, and whatever you do, don't assume that all channels are designed to only drive sales. Next time you're accessing your channels, try two things:
1. Assign attributes to channels
As mentioned above, not all channels have the same strengths, but that's okay as long as they are pulling their weight somewhere else. To see if that's the case, try assigning them some attributes other than sales. Avinash Kaushik gave an excellent presentation at MozCon 2013 (if you weren't there, the video can be purchased from Moz), in which he said that channels should solve for performance and relationships. This is shown in the table below (the example is for ModCloth):
As you can see, if we were to only solve for the line with red text ("Orders") we would ignore all of the other good that some channels are doing. Social, in this example, is terrible at everything except "Be the Buyer." I encourage you to do the same for your channels; add in all the metrics that are important for relationship-building, not just sales, and take a step back to see what else your channels might be contributing to that isn't immediately obvious when you simply look at sales.
Create SMART goals
Just about anyone who's ever read about goal-setting will have seen the theory of creating SMART goals:
I think most people are good at thinking about goals that are specific, attainable, and realistic. We think we're good at measurable, and we seem to often forget about time-bound. Since the rest could easily be a post on their own, I'll just focus on time-bound here.
When we look at tables like the one below, If we are going to make bad decisions like declaring channels "good" or "bad" from just one metric, at least remember to consider time.
If we say organic search is a bad channel, what you actually mean is organic is a bad channel at driving sales in the last X days. That's an important difference, because it has an impact on where the channel is placed on the scale of "awareness" to "decision-making."
In summary
- Build a team of channels, not just strikers.
- Don't assume channels work in the same way across all markets.
- Assign attributes to channels (performance- and relationship-based).
- Remember to create time-bound goals.
- Let me know what you think in the comments.
I like the analogy. It's one of those that you could potentially take a long way. If you're calling Direct your striker - the one who's up front scoring the majority of the goals - then:
I do love a good stretched metaphor.
Thanks for the comment Ben - judging by some of the comments I don't think you're the only one that likes to stretch a metaphor :)
Regarding the role that each channel plays - based on the research from Google that I shared, it's not possible to say channels are one thing or another (striker or defender), it changes depending on various factors; the important point is to realise that, and test it. Don't assume anything.
Thanks again and I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Some great points here. I'd also encourage marketers to check out the "Assisted Conversions" report in Google Analytics. It's a great way to see which of your marketing efforts (SEM, SEO, Email, etc) impacted conversions that took place.
Snousain,
Totally agree with your suggestion. This report can also give valuable insight on how to better optimize each channel to work together in assiting conversions.
Wow, Craig! That really opened my eyes!
I honestly never put much thought into it, but I think you're right. We're all too "decision making" heavy when it comes to marketing. We seem to ignore all other aspects of a potential sale. We often overlook the cultivation that goes along with it. I guess that's because marketers have this habit of thinking if their audience isn't ready to make up their mind on a sale, they're not going to buy.
But that's foolish. Everyone is thinking about buying something sooner or later. Many of the best sales are made after a long cultivation period (or courtship) with a brand.
Thanks for the great article! I'm definitely sharing this.
Thanks James, glad you enjoyed it. Completely agree with the point that a conversion isn't an event, it's a journey. I spoke about that very point at Searchlove recently, see the presentation here: Craig Bradford SearchLove London 2013
Thanks for your comment
Great post Craig! I really liked the comparison to soccer (football). Many people get all concerned with the conversions, yet they do not understand that more goes into a conversion (goal) than a striker kicking the ball in for a score. The ball may be passed all over the field, and eventually a midfielder may pass it to a striker who then kicks it in. All of the players who "touched" the ball had an impact on the conversion, and if you take just one of those players that "touched" the ball away then the conversion (goal) may never have happened.
Twitter passes the ball to Google Ads, Google Ads dribbles down and gives a soft touch to Direct, Direct shoots and SCORES! GOAL!!!!!
Thanks Olin, absolutely, I like the assisted conversion report in GA for this. Glad you enjoyed it. As a side note, watch out for direct, it often gets too much credit. See this post on the subject. Directmonster.js: A Solution for Dark Social
Craig, thank you very much for this article. The agency for which I work has PR, SEO, social media, PPC, and other departments for clients -- and too many people do not understand the big picture and the role that each plays in the overall inbound-marketing sales cycle. I just sent your article to the entire company and told them that it is a MUST read. Thanks for brightening my mood on a Monday! :)
Thank you. My boss is a massive football* fan - this is something he will relate to and it means I don't have to get all hot and bothered trying to explain it!!! Thank you.
*I mean the football you play with a round ball not the type you play with a rugby ball. (though I imagine this analogy would work with pretty much any team playing - goal scoring game?)
Great article - but you mean football surely, not soccer?? (I am British!) :-)
Multilingual... if we say football Americans we'll imagine that sort of rugby they call football :)
haha....yes I know. It's a friendly gripe us Brits always have when someone says soccer..We call your football American Football..!! Which I think is cool to watch :-)
I'd imagine Gianluca prefers calcio!
Agree, I've always wanted to know what would happen if you let American "football" play rugby ...
I guess its a bit like Rounders vs. Baseball!
Hi David, I'm also British but writing for a mostly American audience so I had to use soccer. I was constantly correcting myslef while writing the post.
I love this analogy, and have used something similar in the past -- I've told members on my team that I want them to operate with a bit more freedom in their role, and have said "think of yourself as a false 9--you need to be attack-minded, but offer support when called upon." It's a funny old game, isn't it!?
I´m from Brazil and when comes to soocer we all know "good attack wins the game, good defense wins the championship", so careful with the reputation because it´s important to win the championship >> #longterm #LifetimeCustomerValue :)
I saw soccer in the post title and instantly clicked to read more. Putting 2 of my passions into an article to simplify an SEO strategy was brilliant, Craig.
We don't do any SEO for eCommerce sites, however, the points you make still resonate with our team for practical purposes. Having 11 strikers or 11 defenders for any game or business analogy is never a good approach. Breaking each component (or position) apart helps clients and internal marketing personnel grasp what each function they are meant to serve and why. Explaining how each channel compensates for another or benefits the overall team in the SEO game is crucial to the success of the campaign. Great piece of content!
To take your work as a passion is excellent. If i am not wrong Soccer is your Passion. Great!! Your Game plan was exceptional with tactics but for this your team should be boosted with Skillful players every player has to play their own part. You Should be attractive and excellent to keep your Fans interested in your game. Hope your tactics will help others also. ( One thing i like most with SEO is they are friends to their competitors they help, share, guide, teach and work as global team. )
Craig - great comparison! Maybe even see you in Brazil next year!
My life is SEO - Soccer !
Your pal,
Chenzo
Nice illustration Craig! Stratagem is all is needed in any marketing campaigns. Now that's why the concept of inbound marketing is gaining importance. It's all about how easily a visitor to a web page can navigate and have a great user experience and lead to your conversion funnel. SMART is an all time job and ones a webmaster knows the nitty-gritty of web crawl and index mechanism, it all becomes quiet easy. Making navigation easy, reaching customers through different marketing campaigns, providing them needed information or product is the best way to optimize ones web page.
It's so true. I like that soccer concept about having one goalkeeper, defenders, midfielders and attackers because everyone have different strength on what they know,can do. Like you said if they're graded on their ability to "score goals"—that may not be what they're designed to do and more likely to cause failure.
A splendid post I must remark! It reminds one that there are more to analytic Channels than just seeing them as a tools for making immediate decision. The idea treating channels like a soccer team is clear, and one can easily apply it to achieve quick marketing goals.
as german and fan of munic since I watched my first soccer game in 1991 I have to say your tactic isn't that good 4-4-2 is a bit old fashioned, it is much easier to create goal attemps by playin in 4-3-3 or 4-1-4-1 cause you can build more triangles wich makes it easier to let ball stay in your team and your opponent run - midfield is the biggest matchwinner - the offensive midfield... to stay in munic - robben, ribery, schweinsteiger, kroos, müller, martinez, alcantara, götze ... so it must be true it's the tripple winner not beaten in german league for more than one year - enaugh of soccer for moz here, -->
the concept looks like a very nice idea
I really love "create smart goals" - thats a really great sub-headline for this post
Great article, Craig. Each business first needs to identify which channels are their "money" channels (or "strikers" to fit the theme of this article) and then use other marketing channels to fill in the rest of the "team."
I really like this philosophy and think it's important to build an online marketing strategy in this manner. Kudos!
I like your concept, strange how putting something in the simple terms of a soccer (football!) team can change how you think about your approach. Its important to appreciate that each channel works in a different way, therefore purely looking at conversion metrics is unlikely to benefit you in the long run!
Great Post Craig! I am totally agree with this that different channels are just like your soccer player. One channel complete the goal and other channels assist him in completing that goal. More than 80% of customers didn't complete a purchase in their first visit. So always try different channels(Social, Display, Blogs etc.) Rather than just relying on Google Search Traffic.
Thanks for the post. Always good to diversify and measure all the different channels where you are currently accumulating web traffic and also good to identify channels where you have more room for growth/opportunity.
Such a interesting article. The way you are providing to treat the channels are really amazing. It's quite helpful to think that way. Thanks for sharing.
Really great analogy, Craig! It definitely helps put channel atribution into perspective.
I hate soccer.