Are you using content remarketing yet? Here is a practical guide

6 replies
  • PPC/SEM
  • |
It is so difficult to get a consumer to click through and reach your site. And it pains when that consumer leaves the site without buying your product or signing up for a newsletter. There is no reason to conclude that the consumer is not interested. He probably was just too busy the last time he visited your site and thought he would come back later to finish those tasks. Content remarketing helps you serve him reminders. Wherever he goes, he is shown your ad units to pull him back to your site. All you have to do is tag your site visitors so that he can be followed.

What are the steps you need to follow to do content remarketing?

Select a network: You need a network of sites who will flash your ads to your consumer a number of times in a span of few weeks ( before he forgets about you). Google Display Network (GDN) is the most popular one and has over 2 million sites in its kitty. They say you can reach 84% of your tagged consumers for a whopping 10 to 18 times in a month. Wow!



Create your Audience List: Specifically for GDN you need to sign into your Adwords account. Go to shared library and then to Audiences tab. Finish the set up process. The two important things you need to tell Google is - the website page you want to include and the number of days you want to follow each consumer ( membership duration). Leave cookies and all the backend set up to Google. Tip: Try to segment your audience in a number of ways. People who visited your bags store online can be shown some awesome bag offer ads and the ones who visited your books section can be pulled in with free e-book promotions. The better you segment your audience, the better you will be able to work on your ad creatives.



Get Creative: If you show boring text ads, nobody is clicking. You need to spend some money on creating content that elicits emotions. Show some hilarious, happy, silly or sentimental ads and draw your audience attention. And don't save money on ad formats. Create ads for different formats and maximize your impressions. Remember, you will be paying for clicks and not impressions. Go all out. Also, you are following the consumer so much that he may feel annoyed if you show the same creative. You need to spend on creating different storylines.



Stay In or Get Out: You need to stay on top of your analytic numbers to know if the game is over yet. You cannot keep following a consumer. Select your membership duration number wisely. What's your offline sales cycle? How many times do you have to convince your consumer before he makes a purchase? Use the same number multiplied by 2 or 3 times (because it is not a one-on-one). Change your tactic mid way through the campaign if needed - push consumers to a high conversion page or increase frequency of a high CTR ad unit.

#content #guide #practical #remarketing
  • Profile picture of the author LHMarketing
    now this is amazing can't wait to put this to practice
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  • Profile picture of the author dkate9
    Great guide. Remarketing is one of the best tools in the online marketers toolbox.The use of Content re-marketing lists helps to identify which groups of visitors are converting best.
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  • Profile picture of the author EPoltrack77
    I use it on Facebook and its so much cheaper and much better CTR's
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    Working to achieve higher results...
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  • Profile picture of the author HayleyS
    What an informative post! It is really great guide about content Remarketing. thank you for sharing.
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  • Profile picture of the author elvenza
    Great strategy but the risk is high and so the reward....It will be great if some stats are shown here if anyone tryed it....
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    E lvenza
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  • Profile picture of the author dburk
    Hi shraddhay,

    I can tell by your article that whoever wrote it probably does not do much advertising. The information was rather basic and very incomplete. I would call it at best a fluff piece.

    It's generally not called "content remarketing". Retargeting is the more common generic term. Google AdWords is the only platform that refers to their retargeting campaigns as "remarketing". AdWords introduced Remarketing campaigns long after they had renamed the "Content Network" to the "Display Network". So they have never called it "content remarketing", it has always been called Remarketing. Within AdWords, remarketing in the Display network is referred to as "Standard remarketing". There are actually many ways to remarket in AdWords.

    Ways to remarket with Google AdWords
    1. Standard remarketing: Show ads to your past visitors as they browse Display Network websites and use Display Network apps.
    2. Dynamic remarketing: Boost your results with dynamic remarketing, which takes remarketing to the next level with ads that include products or services that people viewed on your website.
    3. Remarketing for mobile apps: Show ads to people who have used your mobile app or mobile website as they use other mobile apps or browse other mobile websites.
    4. Remarketing lists for search ads: Show ads to your past visitors as they do follow-up searches for what they need on Google, after leaving your website.
    5. Video remarketing: Show ads to people who have interacted with your videos or YouTube channel as they use YouTube and browse Display Network videos, websites, and apps.
    6. Email-list remarketing: With Customer Match, upload a list of email addresses that your customers have given you. When those people are signed in to Google Search, YouTube, or Gmail, you can show them ads.

    Your article barely scratched surface of the nearly infinite strategies and audience targeting methods available. AdWords will automatically create your first audience list, All Visitors, by default whenever you create your first remarketing campaign, in addition if you have conversion tracking in place they will also create All Converted visitors list by default. You did mention segmentation by page visited, but there are many more ways to segment your audience lists.

    For example you can create a custom combination lists. A very popular and often implemented custom combination list is based on visitors that added a product to your shopping cart but abandoned the cart. Those visitors, on average, are far more engaged and interested and can typically provide a very high ROAS.

    You can also link your Adwords account to your Google Analytics account and create even more audience targeting methods based on user behavior, things like session duration, number of page views, time of day, number sessions, days since last purchase, geo-location, and many many more data points. the possible strategies and tactics are almost limitless.

    It's also useful for cross-channel marketing, targeting specific sources of traffic and creating custom tailored ads to match that audience list's specific experience with your website.

    (i.e. Hey, I noticed you just left my website without making a purchase. Please return now to get a coupon for $20 off your next order. <button>Get My Coupon Now</button>)

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