Strategy is hard enough if you understand it. It's even harder if you don't.
If you understand it, you realize it's made up of many moving parts. If you don’t, the best you’ll come up with is some version of operational efficiency: building more links, writing more blog posts, making more video. Those activities aren’t strategies — and if you fail to differentiate your plan, you’ll find yourself forever chasing those who started before you, or falling behind better-funded competitors.
I enjoy strategy, both on the academic and theoretical side of things and in more practical opportunities helping our clients at Distilled. Below are some of the things I’ve learned along the way that you might find useful, especially if you're a business owner, setting up marketing strategies, or a consultant. If you're in more of an individual contributor role, you'll receive the background and basis you need to understand how it all fits together and create a personal development plan towards building strategy.
Read on and you’ll have a better understanding of what strategy means, what type of strategy you need and how to make good decisions. For each section, I’ve included a reading list too.
What is strategy?
Good strategies are compounds, not elements.
Start here:
A good starting point for understanding strategy is an infamous article by Michael E. Porter – "What is Strategy?" It’s quite academic, but covers a lot of the key points. I recommend reading it a few times; it’s worth it.
To understand what strategy is, I like to use a chemical analogy of elements and compounds. A compound is a combination of two or more elements. In the case of a strategy, the activities would be the elements and the strategy would be the compound. I like this analogy for a few reasons:
Reverse-engineering a compound can be challenging
Many people fall into the trap of trying to copy a competitor's strategy. This is bad for a number of reasons, but one in particular that I’d like to highlight: even if you think you know what a competitor's strategy is from the outside, it can be very hard to copy successfully unless you know all of the individual details.
Much like a chemical reaction, different quantities of the same elements combined in different ways can produce very different results. Often, when people try to copy a strategy, they’re really just copying an element or activity.
Compounds are only as strong as their weakest link
Different strategies take different levels of energy to crack. In What is Strategy?, this idea is referred to as “activity systems” and “fit.” The example used is Southwest Airlines. Some people would try and describe a strategy as a slogan: “Southwest Airlines services price- and convenience-sensitive customers.” That might be true, but there’s not anything particularly advantageous about that idea. The competitive advantage comes from how they integrate:
“Through fast turnarounds at the gate of only 15 minutes, Southwest is able to keep planes flying longer hours than rivals and provide frequent departures with fewer aircraft. Southwest does not offer meals, assigned seats, interline baggage checking, or premium classes of service. Automated ticketing at the gate encourages customers to bypass travel agents, allowing Southwest to avoid their commissions. A standardized fleet of 737 aircraft boosts the efficiency of maintenance.”
This is what those individual pieces look like as part of a system:
The more stable the compound, the slower it reacts
A stable compound with lots of bonds, while strong and hard to copy, is slow to adapt if the market changes unexpectedly. Change forces managers to dismantle their existing resource systems and reassemble them in new strategic positions.
“For example, Liz Claiborne, an apparel company, relied on a positioning strategy in which production, distribution, marketing, design, presentation and sales resources were all tightly linked. But when the industry changed, the company’s relationships with department stores were disrupted. In an effort to adapt, Claiborne executives changed resources such as their “no reordering” process that had antagonized department stores. But since this process was synergistically entwined with other resources like overseas logistics and distant manufacturing locations, the “no reordering” process could not be undone without damaging system coherence. Financial performance sank precipitously. Only after Claiborne executives dismantled their existing resources and started reconnecting new ones did positive performance begin to return.”
– Source
All of the above is to say that the key to an effective and sustainable strategy is to focus on the integration of activities. Operational efficiency alone isn’t a strategy. A good way to sanity-check this is by asking why you're doing an activity.
I like this slide from fellow Distiller Rob Ousbey, which puts some of theory into context in marketing strategy:
What type of strategy do you need?
Start here:
The type of marketing strategy you use can (and should) change as the business requirements change. Two questions that are a good place to start:
- How predictable is your market?
- How malleable is the market (can you influence demand, needs, etc.)?
Based on your answers to those questions, there are choices. I like the wording from “Which Strategy When?”:
- Position (fortress) – Positional-based strategies are best when you're trying to defend a long-term position in the market. Strategies in this space involve deepening the activities and resources that you have within a particular area. This is best in markets where there isn’t a lot of change.
- Leveraging strategy – Leveraging strategies are useful in markets where you have some influence on how the market moves and there's less predictability. A chess analogy is a good one, since it’s not just about having the right pieces; it also requires making smart moves. A recent example that I love is the example of Google using Deepmind AI to reduce data center costs by 15%. That’s a pretty big deal.
- Opportunity (surfing) – Opportunity strategies can be compared to surfing and waves; it’s hard to predict when they'll come or how long they'll last. Timing is important, and occasionally you get a good one. Being set up in a way that allows you to capitalize on opportunities as they arise is crucial.
It’s possible, probably recommended, to have some mix of all three. I like the graph that our R&D team use to explain this, shown below. The idea is that there are always trade-offs between the chance of success and reward.
Picking a strategy and making decisions
Start here:
- The Secrets of Consulting: A Guide to Giving and Getting Advice Successfully
- Bringing Science to the Art of Strategy:
- The Innovator's Dilemma: The Revolutionary Book That Will Change the Way You Do Business
- The Big Lie of Strategic Planning
- Creating Your Digital Strategy
Closely related to the difficulty of strategy is the necessity to make choices. Strategy forces you to make decisions and explicitly cut off options. This can be difficult for a number of reasons. I talked about this in depth in my SearchLove Boston presentation, Creating a Digital Strategy:
One of the hardest things about strategy? Resisting the urge to do it all. The most obvious way this happens is by getting distracted by competitors. In the book The Secrets of Consulting, the first chapter introduces the idea of the law of strawberry jam: "the wider you spread it, the thinner it gets,” which is a nice way of saying that you can’t do it all. Every service or feature you add to your business has a cost of some kind. Trade-offs are a critical part of making sure your strategy is sustainable, because they protect from competitors trying to straddle multiple markets.
To go back to the previous example of Southwest Airlines, someone that tried to spread it far and thick was Continental Lite. By trying to copy Southwest and offer a low-cost airline solution while still trying to compete as a full-service airline:
“The airline dubbed the new service Continental Lite. It eliminated meals and first-class service, increased departure frequency, lowered fares, and shortened turnaround time at the gate. Because Continental remained a full-service airline on other routes, it continued to use travel agents and its mixed fleet of planes and to provide baggage checking and seat assignments.”
Source: What is Strategy?
If you haven’t made some trade-offs, your position probably isn’t sustainable and is open to imitation.
“Trade-offs ultimately grounded Continental Lite. The airline lost hundreds of millions of dollars, and the CEO lost his job. Its planes were delayed leaving congested hub cities or slowed at the gate by baggage transfers. Late flights and cancellations generated a thousand complaints a day. Continental Lite could not afford to compete on price and still pay standard travel-agent commissions, but neither could it do without agents for its full-service business. The airline compromised by cutting commissions for all Continental flights across the board. Similarly, it could not afford to offer the same frequent-flier benefits to travelers paying the much lower ticket prices for Lite service. It compromised again by lowering the rewards of Continental’s entire frequent-flier program. The results: angry travel agents and full-service customers.”
Source: What is Strategy?
Other academic theories as to why copying competitors is a bad idea are covered in the Innovator's Dilemma, which I also recommend reading.
The short version is that when competitors copy each other, the only person that wins is the customer. Over the long term, the more competitors converge, the more they look like each other and customers default to price to help choose between options. This drives prices down and squeezes margins.
To draw comparisons to the search space, I see this taking place in processes like keyword research. So many companies make a big list of keywords, then churn out average content that looks the same as every other article online about that topic. Don’t waste your time.
Advice for choosing a digital marketing strategy
Start here:
Don’t turn it into an optimization problem. There's more than one right answer in the majority of cases. I like the advice Scott McNealy gives (he was a co-founder of Sun Microsystems and its CEO for 22 years). When asked how he makes decisions, he said:
“It’s important to make good decisions. But I spend much less time and energy worrying about 'making the right decision' and much more time and energy ensuring that any decision I make turns out right.”
Source
What an amazing attitude! You can see how this applies at the later stage in strategy. Once you’ve gone through all of the possible scenarios, validated the ideas, and narrowed it down to the last couple, this is the stage where analysis paralysis takes effect and people naturally want to turn strategy into planning. Just pick one and focus on making sure it turns out a success. Another way to think about this: strategy is about placing bets and shortening odds of success. Remember that you can course-correct; strategy isn’t sniping. You can take more than one shot and iterate, so don’t be afraid to change.
With that in mind, I’ll wrap it up. Hopefully this was useful to some people. For a deeper dive into this, take a look at my SearchLove presentation, Creating Your Digital Strategy, which covers all of the above and in a more practical, process-driven way.
Craig,
Interesting article but I think the breakdown of what you consider to be right for strategy is just too simple. In some (if not most) cases, it is crucial to be competing on several levels and not focus on one thing at a time (as you finish off).
Strategy, to me, is the formulation of actionnable and flexible steps in sight of the larger objectives. I do entirely agree with you on the fact that execution remains the number one priority and you should always be able to adapt your strategy to a changing environment as the results of your strategy start to become transparent.
Thanks for your insights Craig!
Hi Nizar,
Thanks for the comment. I think we're on the same page. I never said you should only be doing one thing at a time, in fact, quite the opposite; strategies cascade, so by their nature they involve multiple things happening. The important thing is that the individual activities should find in some way "Fit", meaning they should be at the very least be related and ideally amplify each other in a way that builds towards the target.
Hi Craig,
I loved the article, as it takes us back to basics of Digital Marketing (SEO just being a part of it).
It would have been great with real life examples and case studies to complement it.
Regards,
Vijay
Hi Craig.
Great post. From our experience as an online marketing agency, planning and organizing digital marketing strategies are flexible. Although planning is ok, we work under the formula trial and error: continuous evaluation and improvement or correction of faults found. In a oscillating world as the digital, there are not hardly unchangeable strategies. Are you agree?
Hi Juan, absolutely. Executing a strategy does't meant sticking to the plan. Change will be needed along the way. I think too many people get stuck because they try to optimise the strategy too early. It's rare that there is only one solution so don't get stuck over analysing, get started.
Hi Craig,
Great post and a very important topic. As a long time digital marketeer, I think the strategy for your digital marketing is the foundation for it, so it is very important to start off with the right approach and build on top of it as you improve and optimize it. If you do not have a sound plan and strategy, you could easily waste much resources and time with test and trial of tactics. It is essential to make the initial right decisions in building the strategy, which includes your foundation processes and platforms, before you choose the tactics and campaigns. With a solid foundation, you can build a lot on top of it! Tactical flexibility can be achieved from a solid strategy.
Very impressive look at this elusive, almost mythical thing called Strategy. You almost lost me at "chemical analogy" but I made it (my highschool chem prof would be so proud). The one thing I think helps with strategy is trying to stay customer-focused and understand the market, instead of only thinking from my (or my company or my product) point of view or focused on "vanity" metrics, i.e. what is it I want to say, do, achieve, etc. What will we become, how will we win, where will we compete, what will customers be asking of us, what do our customers need from us that we aren't giving them, what do they love about us, etc. Those things can help shape the strategy.
thanks!
Thanks Maria!
Good post, but the money is what make you choose one or other strategy, simple, yes, but at the end everything sums, and as much money you have more ways in your strategy can choose, 1k of euros can let you have a campain in Facebook ads to improve all content site viral so your business sucess or not
Hello Craig, I would say its really leading post.. Being a digital marketer marketing strategy always been a battle of mind to decide which one we should need and what would be their outcomes once we implement it in real..!, but after reading this post I quite confident for the answer of this question "which strategy we should implement and when"?.
Thanks Craig
I really enjoyed your article. Sometimes (specially for small business) it is very easy to fall into the drap of going for a x% increase in sales and not paying attention to strategy that can make a business survive or grow beyond what tactics, actions and luck bring (very important sometimes and not spoken about in my view as much as it deserves...)
In Spanish we use "Quien mucho abarca poco aprieta" as a saying to describe "The wider you spread it the thinner it gets" . For any business, but I think specially for small ones, this is critical. we may want to try 2 things in case one does not work, but by doing it we are losing already focus on both (unless they are somehow connected and both reinforce themselves.
Thanks again for taking us outside of tactical thinking for at least some minutes
Thanks Luis. Absolutely. I've also heard that called "the law of strawberry jam; you can't spread it far an thick". Glad you found it useful.
Very interesting article. Being from a hands on background I've always had an issue with people who do 'digital strategy' as I've never quite grasped what they mean and through they just spoke fluff. This hasn't changed my mind yet, but its opened it up.
Hi Craig
If we ask each which would be our definition of strategy, it is most likely that all (except those copied definitions, and therefore have no strategy ...) give a different definition.
For me strategy is the way I should go com or brand to achieve my goal. A road where I must establish what I want to establish and as I want to establish. An objective that neither have to be the same as my competitors and considering our point of origin, makes our strategy must be one way or another
Anyway, the fact is that although we have no strategy, are already using the strategy of not using strategy, which is already a strategy. So strategists are by definition
Nice article. As per your words, following the competitor strategy can't be successful. Its always better to create as our own strategy which may include some competitor strategy.
Hi, Craig,
Although we have defined a general strategy I think we're playing too much to the trial&error game. So, possibly we'll have to train some discipline skills and define a strict schedule to follow the strategy without distractions.
Regards,
Czd
Hello Craig,
This was my first blog reading in MoZ, but no doubt I have understood the fact behind this. But, I would like to know that from a employees point, how would u see and work or implement the strategies. I mean, it takes a whole lot time to understand the market. What would u suggest?
Hi Craig, it has been really a great post. At this point, many could have understood more about strategy in detail. I also learnt more about decisions and its impacts that in turn affects the optimisation.
Amazing Blog Craig,
Appreciate your efforts, but still I would like to add, all the strategies are not worth if they are not targeted to correct audience.
For instance their is no point of advertising a machinery part to an IT guy.
Me and my team has been assisting all major Enterprise customers with their Niche database requirement.
Do follow our blogs on our website to get a clear picture of how should we select our target market.
Thanks and looking forward for more Blogs.
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Hello Craig
This post is very important for very digital marketer as well as SEO, when i create digital marketing strategy for any our clients we approach always our competitors activity but when i read this article some new things i observe in this blog post may be some are definitely work on.
Thanks of sharing this...