Applying this strategy to your digital and website marketing is a great approach, not only to tweak and improve current activities, but to also get the most from what youâve already got. After all, pouring leads into the top of your sales and marketing funnel is a critical (and obvious) requirement for growth, but ensuring your funnel is effective and free of leaks is just as important!
Letâs explore some high level areas where you can apply this â1%â strategy to your digital strategy.
Better measurement
Understanding and knowing your key performance indicators is a key starting point in driving consistent marginal gains. Letâs explore a few common ones to look for:
Lead source ROI
âHalf of the money I spend on marketing is wasted, I just donât know which halfâ is an often cited colloquialism. While understanding where customers are coming from sounds obvious, ensuring effective use of your budget is a fundamental requirement to do more with what youâve got. Digital channels are inherently easier to track than traditional forms of advertising, and this doesnât require a fancy online system! Using UTM links and Google Analytics is a great place to start discovering which sources your traffic is coming from.
Visibility
Though considered a dark art by many, one measurement for SEO performance is the impressions youâre getting on search engines. Donât be mystified by this, just start by focussing on reverse engineering the intent of your customers right before they find you â what problem are your customers trying to solve? What questions are they asking? What content do you need to serve them to a) fix their problem and b) get found. Piece by piece, % by %, youâll get found.
Most wanted action
Every business owner should know their âmost wanted actionâ for their site and online activity. That is, what is the one thing we want visitors to do more than anything else. For most, this is an enquiry or a purchase, but this varies from business to business. Usually the 1% improvement in this area will be driven by external factors, which leads neatly on toâŠ
Speed and friction
Irrespective of whether youâre selling tangible goods online or offering a B2B service, we all deal with humans! Ensuring the customer journey is fast and frictionless must be a key consideration in the 1% game. Areas for improvement include:
Website speed
Data shows you have a three to five second window to load your site and grab interest before prospects bounce off somewhere else.
Purchasing
How can you make checkout or enquiry faster and simpler? For ecommerce businesses, payment methods like Apple and Google Pay cut form filing and speed up processing well beyond the 1% rule!
Delivery
Within an ecommerce context, half of customers abandon a purchase if the delivery and return options donât meet their needs and 86% resent paying for returns. Seller beware!
Efficiency and automation
Time saved
When deployed correctly, digital technologies can save hours of time per week on manual processes. Bristol based businesses like Brightpearl and ShipTheory have helped some of our ecommerce clients save hours. Letâs put this into context, in a standard 37.5 hour week, saving 1% of someoneâs time equates to over 20 minutes. How big is your team? How could you be streamlining processes and redeploying the time saved to more valuable tasks?
Engagement
Time and time again, we meet with businesses whoâve gone to some effort to build a database of contacts⊠usually at great expense of time and/or money. How regularly are you engaging with them? When adding in CRM tools to automate the legwork of this you can save time and help to maintain a nurtured database of leads that could be tomorrowâs customers.
We frequently deploy the â1% principleâ with our clients and would encourage you to try this in your business. Whether youâre running an ecommerce operation or are just looking to increase inbound lead generation â itâs 1% at a time, rinse and repeat!