Strategy is a plan of action designed to achieve a major goal. Strategies are necessary tools to help pinpoint a path towards the achievement of a goal. There may be times that the initial path selected may not be the only one. Issues could be discovered that changes course and new ideas may arise that would improve the outcome. It is important to remain open to changing strategy to produce the best results. Always keep in mind – the goal is fixed, the way to get there is not. So, how do you achieve the desired end result when strategy flexibility is required?
What are your advertising goals? What is your return on investment? How much are you willing to pay per conversion? All of these questions seem pretty straightforward; however you might be surprised how many advertisers can’t answer them.
Defining your goals should be a priority in any form of advertising: online or offline. While traditional advertising has always had more barriers to tracking performance, online advertising offers ways to evaluate performance that some businesses might not be using.
Define what your conversion points are. Do you want your site visitors to sign up for a newsletter, become a member, or make a purchase? Next, decide how much you are willing to pay for that conversion. You may have many conversion points on your site and each one may be worth more or less than others.
What do you want to track? With the transparency of online advertising, you have the ability to track just about any metric you want. You can track how much revenue was brought in by a particular search engine, such as Google or Yahoo. You can even determine which keywords are generating conversions.
Once your goals are clearly defined, you can then begin to determine how effective your advertising is. Are you making a profit? What is your return on investment?
Investopedia defines ROI as “a performance measure used to evaluate the efficiency of an investment or to compare the efficiency of a number of different investments”. You can easily calculate your ROI by using the following formula.
For example, if you earned $18,000 from your Google paid campaigns and you spent $4,000, your return on investment would be 350%.
If you are able to determine if your goals are being met, you can easily begin to optimize the performance of your efforts. If you are not seeing a return, you can also determine what efforts you should not continue or work to improve.