Most people don’t have the cash to purchase a home outright. They need to take out a loan to do it. That’s where mortgages come in. Mortgages, also known as home loans, are different from other loan types because of the risk involved. These loans are typically worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, so lenders…
I’m going to go ahead and say it: programmatic advertising is the future. Although it’s a relatively new concept compared with other forms of marketing, spending on programmatic advertising is growing yearly.
Omnichannel marketing, audio and in-game advertising, voice-activated advertising, and 5G are just some of the factors fueling its growth, and they’re going to take programmatic advertising into 2023 and beyond.
Now, enough about the future. What if you’re not so familiar with this type of marketing? How does programmatic advertising work? How are others using it? More importantly, is it right for your business?
In this article, I discuss all of that and more, starting with the basics.
What Is Programmatic Advertising?
Programmatic advertising is the automated buying and selling of digital advertising space over the internet.
Here’s how it works.
Two main platforms are involved: a supply-side platform and a demand-side platform.
By using programmatic technology, ad space gets bought and sold in real-time through automated auctions on a demand-side platform (DSP). This process happens instantaneously, with the winning ad displayed on the publisher’s website or app. This means that ads can be bought and sold more efficiently and at a lower cost.
When targeting ads, marketers first identify their target audience and then set parameters, such as geographic location, age, gender, interests, etc. They also specify how much they want to pay for each ad view or click.
Aside from the ease of automation, programmatic advertising allows for better targeting of specific audiences. The golden rule with this type of marketing is it only does well if you target the right prospects with your ads.
Programmatic advertising relies on data, meaning marketers can direct their ads to people based on their interests, location, internet searches, or even what they’ve bought before. All this makes the ads more relevant to the individual, and likely results in more clicks and conversions.
For instance, if you’re selling health foods in California, you’d want to target fitness enthusiasts in the area.
Publishers also benefit from programmatic advertising because it allows them to sell ad space more efficiently. They can target specific buyers interested in their content and sell ad space on an impression-by-impression basis.
Second, programmatic advertising is efficient and effective. For many marketers, programmatic advertising is an ideal hands-off approach to buying ads; it allows advertisers to buy ad space in real-time, which means they can get their ads in front of the right people quickly and at a lower cost than traditional methods.
Third, programmatic advertising is constantly evolving. Marketers can use it to target not only consumers, but also businesses. As new technologies emerge, programmatic advertising is likely to grow and adapt, becoming even more effective.
However, perhaps the main reason behind programmatic advertising’s success is simple: it gets results.
For example, when Grapeseedmedia.com worked with Lights.com, the campaign created a Return on Advertising Spend (ROAS) of 316 percent, a Cost Per Acquisition (CPA) of $26, 179 newsletter signups, and a 25 cents cost per page visit. This is four times the industry benchmark.
Another case study shows how a campaign for Grand-Hyatt achieved revenues of $1, 647,787 during the nine months it worked with the agency. In addition, by using display advertising, Facebook, and Google, the agency gained:
A 1,017 percent ROAS.
Over 3,000 Facebook page likes
A $275 average daily rate, which is $12 higher than the overall average
Along with 2.5 times more room nights from the Hyatt.com website.
The strategy behind the campaign included:
Showing messages to people actively searching and engaging with Google’s search results.
Focusing on users depending on their travel patterns to New York by analyzing data from Hertz and American Airlines, among others.
Targeting audiences in the trip planning phase of the customer journey
Now, let’s look at the different types of programmatic advertising available.
What Are the Different Types of Programmatic Advertising?
There are three types of programmatic advertising and four main formats available:
Open Auctions: Otherwise known as real-time bidding (RTB). This process is where ad inventory is bought and sold via a DSP or SSP.
Private Auctions: These are sometimes called ‘closed deals’ and are only open to invited bidders.
Preferred deals: Rather than auctioning ads, these provide programmatic advertising at a fixed price to a buyer.
Typically, programmatic advertising comes in four formats: display, video, banner, and in-app ads.
Video advertising is ideal for grabbing people’s attention through imagery, narratives, and sound.
Banner ads consist of a graphical image or animation placed on a web page, along with a URL to direct visitors to a website.
Native advertising is a form of online advertising that matches the form and function of the platform on which it appears. Native ads are less intrusive than banner ads and other online advertising, and can appear in various formats, including in-feed content, search results, and recommendations.
In-app ads are a type of advertising shown within an app. This can include banner ads, interstitial ads (full-screen ads), video ads, and native ads. In-app ads can be a great way to monetize an app and generate revenue.
Is Programmatic Advertising the Right Fit for Your Business?
You’ve read all about the benefits, but how do you know if programmatic advertising is the right fit for your business? That depends on a few factors, such as your target audience and marketing goals.
Below are some reasons why you might want to consider using programmatic advertising:
Volume targeting: if you’re looking to reach a large audience quickly and easily, programmatic advertising may be a good fit for you. Through automation, programmatic platforms allow you to focus on specific audiences according to interests and behaviors to reach more people in less time.
Managing your budget: As programmatic advertising lets you target specific groups, it can be budget-friendly. However, depending on the size of your business, the advice is to spend no more than 6-20 percent of your overall marketing.
What are your goals? Programmatic advertising can help you achieve various marketing goals, such as increasing brand awareness, generating leads, or driving sales.
What type of media do you want to use? Programmatic advertising offers you a variety of media types, including digital and in-app ads.
You need to be comfortable with the idea of automation and trusting algorithms to make decisions about where your ads should run.
Additionally, there are occasions when programmatic advertising may not be for you. If view-through-conversions aren’t of value to you and you haven’t tried display advertising before, then programmatic advertising may not be the ideal match.
How Much Does It Cost?
Programmatic advertising uses cost per mile (CPM), meaning you’re charged per 1,000 impressions.
However, other factors impact the cost of programmatic advertising. These depend on several factors, such as the type of system used (real-time bidding or private exchange), the amount of competition for ad space, and the quality of the ad space.
How Do You Integrate Programmatic Into Your Existing Ad Plans?
Suppose you’re looking to introduce programmatic advertising into your marketing mix. In that case, you can do a few things to help get your campaigns off to a flying start, like:
Defining your objectives: What do you want to achieve with your programmatic advertising? Do you want to increase brand awareness, drive increased website traffic, generate more leads, or improve your ROI? Once you know your objectives, you can start setting specific goals and determine how to measure them.
Set realistic goals: It’s important to set achievable goals; otherwise, you’ll only be setting yourself up for disappointment. Be sure to consider factors like budget and available resources when setting your goals.
Decide on your Key Performance Indicators (KPIs): KPIs measure if you’re on target regarding your business goals. For example, if you were working on SEO, featured snippets might be a desired KPI. Everyone wants something different from their programmatic advertising campaigns. Therefore, the KPIs you choose stem from what you’re hoping to achieve and what success means to you. Some key performance indicators to keep an eye on include:
click-through rate (CTR), which is a metric that measures how often people who see your ad click on it. A high CTR means that your ad is relevant and interesting to your audience.
cost per click (CPC): CPC is an important metric for measuring the success of online advertising campaigns. By understanding how much each click costs, advertisers can better assess the ROI of their campaigns and make necessary adjustments to ensure they are getting the most bang for their buck.
conversion rate, or the percentage of people that make a purchase when they visit your website.
cost per acquisition, which is the cost of acquiring a new customer through an ad campaign.
Decide on the type of ads to use: You can select from In-app ads for getting more downloads, banner ads for brand awareness and retargeting, video advertising for engagement, and native advertising for brand awareness and engagement in a user-friendly format.
Sign up for a DSP: Examples include Amazon DSP, MediaMath, or RocketFuel. However, there are plenty more, and it’s best to do your own comprehensive research before you decide which platform is right for you.
Create your budget: Some networks have pre-determined budgets, while with others, you work to your budget. There are a lot of different resources out there on how to optimize your budget.
Decide who to target: This is when it gets personal. Ideal customers are identified by many factors, including interests, buying behaviors, location, languages, operating systems, and plenty of other factors.
Choose your SSP: Turn to options like Google Ads Platform, AdSuite, or OpenX to get you started in your search.
Next, upload your creatives and set up your ad markups.
Use the above only as a guide, and follow the step-by-step instructions for your chosen platforms.
Once you’ve launched, analyze your data and keep tweaking until you get the results you’re looking for.
Finally, I’ve got another article for you if you’re looking for more ways to implement programmatic advertising.
Programmatic Advertising Success Stories
Now you see the potential of programmatic advertising, here’s a look at some success stories.
Agency Pubmatic worked with a Chinese mobile app games developer with an audience of 40 million. The developers sought a suitable in-app monetization solution to improve the overall customer experience and scale demand.
Pubmatic’s solution was an Openwrap SDK, which allows advertisers to optimize their in-apps earnings. The result was:
A 10.6 percent daily average fill rate lift
A 16.4 percent daily ARPU lift
A 14 percent eCPM lift
For another example, World of Warcraft is one of the most popular online video games with a turnover of $6.9 billion. However, that doesn’t mean its makers, Blizzard, didn’t want to reach out to new audiences. It wanted an advertising campaign that would:
Improve brand awareness and drive qualified traffic.
Enhance awareness for upgrades and game launches.
Develop a healthy return on ad spend.
Increase traffic away from usual sources like Google, YouTube, and Facebook.
To achieve this, Advent Technology used in-app advertising in the form of rewarded video advertising. It also:
Created a full-funnel retargeting solution.
Allowed Blizzard to own the data.
Used retargeted strategies to enhance re-engagement.
The campaign led to an 8.6 percent click-through rate, compared to YouTube’s average of 0.33 percent for audible and viewable on complete (AVOC).
FAQs
What is Next for Programmatic Advertising?
In the fast-approaching cookieless society, we’re likely to see more focus on customer engagement through impactful and engaging creative media based on quality over quantity, with more emphasis on engagement-driven metrics. Artificial intelligence is also likely to play a role in programmatic advertising in the future.
How Does Programmatic Advertising Work?
Programmatic advertising is a type of online advertising that uses computerized systems to purchase ad space in real-time. Advertisers bid on ad space through an auction system, with the highest bidder winning the ad spot.
What is Programmatic Display Advertising?
Programmatic display advertising is a type of online advertising that uses programmatic technology to purchase ad space and target audiences.
When Did Programmatic Advertising Start?
It may sound like a new development, but programmatic advertising has been with us since 1994. The first banner ad was for AT&T’s ‘You Will’ advertising campaign.
Conclusion
If you’re looking for an effective and efficient way to reach potential customers, then programmatic advertising could be your answer.
Not only is programmatic advertising affordable and it can deliver you a high ROI, it automates buying digital ad space, saving you much-needed time.
Programmatic advertising also lets you target your ideal customers with precision, while delivering ads in real-time, potentially saving you money.
However, this type of advertising may not be suitable for everyone, especially if you haven’t started with regular digital marketing and don’t have a lot of data to go with.
Do you use programmatic advertising? How does it compare with other methods?
It may be one of the oldest forms of digital communication, but email still reigns supreme when it comes to usage.
Sure, there are other newer methods of communicating with your audience and customers. Communication methods like social media, live chat, and many others. However, with a user base of over 4 billion people, email is the king of marketing channels.
Additionally, email marketing has an ROI of $38 for every dollar spent, meaning it deserves a place in every marketer’s toolbox.
In addition, with email marketing you own the connections—you don’t have to worry about algorithm changes tanking your reach.
That’s why building a successful email marketing campaign is more important than ever.
There’s a problem—most people don’t know how to do it right. (In fact, you’ve probably seen those people in your email box.)
This post will walk you through tips and strategies for executing impactful email marketing campaigns.
What is Email Marketing?
Email marketing is the act of sending promotional messages to people in mass quantities. It typically is to generate sales or leads and it may contain advertising.
Remember: You’re a Guest in Their Inbox
People are inundated with interruptions, pitches, and advertisements everywhere they look.
Though you might think your email is special. To the reader, your email is one in a million—and not in a good way.
This is why it’s important to remember where you are and use good manners.
Getting into someone’s inbox is like being invited to their home for dinner. If they ask you to take your shoes off, you respectfully do so.
It’s the same with email marketing, so before we begin I’d simply like to remind you to be on your best behavior at all times and remember… you’re a guest in their inbox.
Now, let’s talk about how to build your email marketing strategy from the ground up.
How Does Email Marketing Work?
Email marketing is one of the top-performing strategies, in no small part because it’s fairly intuitive and often automated.
In its basic form, an effective email marketing campaign requires three essential elements:
1. An Email List
For you to pull off successful email campaigns, you need an active email list. This is a database of email contacts who have expressed interest in receiving marketing communications from your brand.
There are many ways to build an email list. One of the easiest is to create a lead magnet (also called an offer) your target audience is interested in, like a coupon, in exchange for their email addresses.
2. An Email Service Provider
An email service provider (ESP), also known as an email marketing platform, is software that helps manage your email list. It also helps design and execute automated email marketing campaigns.
Using an ESP allows you to automate actions triggered by your target audience’s behaviors. These enable you to personalize each interaction with them, meaning engagement and conversion rates generally improve.
3. Clearly Defined Goals
You can use email marketing to achieve many business goals. For example, you can use email marketing to:
To execute an effective email marketing campaign, your email list, ESP, and goals must align. Then, you can get to work.
The first step is to segment your email list according to subscriber demographics or actions.
Next, create an email or series of emails designed to get consumers to do something (your goal).
Finally, use your ESP to send emails and monitor the campaign automatically.
Advantages and Disadvantages of Email Marketing
Just like any other marketing channel, email marketing has pros and cons. Let’s briefly dive into some of the more significant ones:
Advantages of Email Marketing
Email Is Permission-based
When a customer trusts you with their email address, it’s the virtual equivalent of being given the keys to their house. Gaining permission to enter rather than showing up uninvited increases the chances of engagement and conversion.
Affords You Direct Access to Your Audience
You can communicate directly with subscribers on their schedules. In addition, because people check their emails daily, your email is likely to be viewed.
Gives You More Control
With most other marketing platforms, you don’t own the platform. If the platform ceases to exist, all your hard work sinks with it.
With email, you own the relationships you forge with your subscribers.
More Personalization Capabilities
You can use demographic or psychographic data to create personalized and hyper-targeted campaigns. Research shows segmented and personalized campaigns increase revenue by as much as 760 percent.
Measurable
Measuring the effectiveness of a marketing campaign is crucial, and automated email marketing makes measuring your campaign a breeze.
Scalable
Email marketing campaigns can scale without putting a strain on your resources or compromising quality.
Disadvantages of Email Marketing
Tough Competition
Standing out in a cluttered inbox can be quite a challenge. You have to be creative to ensure your emails get noticed and opened.
You Need an Email List
With email marketing, you must already have an email list for your campaigns to be effective.
Tricky Rules and Regulations to Navigate
There are a lot of rules governing the use of email for commercial purposes. Common examples include GDPR, CAN-SPAM, and CCPA. All of these state you can’t send unsolicited emails.
Unfortunately, some subscribers also report your emails as being spam even after they subscribed to the list. As a result, your sender reputation takes a hit.
Delivery and Deliverability Issues
Getting your email to land in receivers’ inboxes is not guaranteed. To run effective email marketing campaigns, you must contend with delivery and deliverability issues.
Email Marketing Examples
Let’s briefly look at a couple of email marketing examples for a bit of inspiration.
Teaonic
Teaonic is an e-commerce brand specializing in organic, healthy teas.
Great subject line: The subject line focuses on the target audience’s main pain point, i.e., improving their health.
Leverages color psychology: The bright, warm colors trigger feelings of health and happiness.
Well-timed: The email is targeted at people who have purchased the product and is sent when the customer’s supply is about to run out.
Bluehost
Well-known for its hosting services, Bluehost decided to try its hand at creating a website builder.
Subject line: Bluehost’s new Website Builder makes building simple.
Sells the benefits, not features: Focusing on the benefits makes the copy more compelling.
Clean design: The simple design makes the email aesthetically pleasing and easy to read.
Excellent targeting: Bluehost knows their audience is mainly made up of small business owners without technical expertise. The email uses language targeted at this demographic.
How to Automate Your Email Marketing
While the automation process varies from one ESP to another, there are some universal steps to automating your email marketing.
Define Your Segments
Effective email marketing campaigns start with list segmentation. Use the data you have about your subscribers to group them. This allows you to create more personalized campaigns.
Design an Efficient Workflow
After segmenting your email list, it’s time to design a workflow. This is the series of emails to fulfill the objective of the campaign.
Determine the Right Triggers
Once you’ve designed your workflow, determine the triggers that will set off the following email in the sequence. Examples of triggers can include customers opening your email, clicking on a link, or not opening it at all within a predetermined time frame.
Best Email Marketing Strategies
To succeed with email marketing, you have to be strategic in the way you design your campaigns. Here are some of the best email marketing strategies you can employ.
Use the Right List Building Strategies
The success of your email marketing campaigns depends on the quality of your email list. To build such a list, you must use list-building strategies designed to attract your target audience. For example, a case study promoted on LinkedIn may help a B2B brand build a list of engaged subscribers but flop when used by a B2C brand.
Practice Good Email List Hygiene
Another essential email marketing strategy is practicing good email list hygiene. Cleaning out inactive subscribers and email addresses that are no longer in use will ensure you have a good sender reputation.
Keep Your List Warm
Regularly send emails to your list to keep your subscribers engaged (warm). However, sporadic emailing could result in subscribers forgetting who you are and lead to low conversion rates.
If some of your subscribers go cold, you can run a re-engagement campaign.
Focus on One Objective
Design each campaign and email to focus on one objective. Trying to kill two (or more) birds with one stone doesn’t work with email marketing. It only confuses your audience and reduces your conversion rates.
Define and Track the Right KPIs
Email marketing is more than sending your subscribers a couple of emails. It also entails tracking the performance of your campaigns. To do so, you must define and track the right key performance indicators (KPIs).
Top 7 Email Marketing Tools Every Marketer Should Know
To pull off a successful campaign, you need to leverage email marketing tools to optimize your processes. Here are the top seven you should know:
Email Service Providers (ESP)
One of the most critical email marketing tools you need is an ESP. Some top ESPs are:
Constant Contact: This is best for e-commerce email marketing campaigns, thanks to features like automated product recommendations and shoppable emails. Plans start at $20/month.
Sendinblue: Sendinblue is best for small businesses running simple email campaigns. It has a rich feature set with a CRM, live chat, and SMS, among others. Plans start at $25/month.
Pardot: B2B email campaigns require a platform specifically designed for the B2B buyer journey. Pardot fits the bill perfectly. However, to build high-growth email campaigns with Pardot, be prepared to part with at least $1,250/month.
Deliverability Tools
Email deliverability refers to the ability of an ESP to place emails in your receivers’ inboxes successfully. The wise email marketer will have an email deliverability tester in their toolbox. Here are some of the top ones:
MailGenius: MailGenius inspects your emails for possible spam triggers. You can use it to run deliverability tests to ensure your emails reach their intended recipients’ inboxes. MailGenius is a free tool.
GlockApps: GlockApps shows your delivery results in real-time, including whether your email landed in the Inbox, Spam folder, Gmail’s Promotional or Social tabs, or if it was never delivered at all. Personal accounts are free, and prices go up from there.
Testing and Tracking
Testing and tracking the campaign performance helps you create optimized iterations of your campaigns. Which email marketing tools are best for testing and tracking?
Litmus: You can use Litmus to test and track your emails in traditional web clients and popular mobile devices.
Email Personalization Tools
Take your personalization game beyond just using your recipients’ name by using a personalization tool.
Hyperise: When it comes to personalizing email marketing campaigns, no tool does it better than Hyperise. It helps you add dynamic, personalized images to each of your emails, including profile images from social media platforms.
How to Write Email Marketing Copy That Drives Results
Whatever your email marketing goal is, it all hinges on email marketing copy.
The first step to crafting compelling email marketing copy is knowing your audience. This will help you better segment your list and create hyper-targeted email copy.
Craft a Hard-to-Ignore Subject Line
The subject line is one of the most important elements of email copy as it helps readers decide whether to open your email. To craft a hard-to-ignore subject line:
use keywords
make it benefit-driven
use active voice
personalize as much as possible
Get the Preview Text Right
Email preview text appears immediately below or beside the subject line. Limited to a maximum of 140 characters (email client dependent), it acts as an elevator pitch to convince people to open your email. An optimized preview text is an extension of your subject line and reinforces your value proposition.
Make It Easy to Read
People are busy. That’s why you should write your email copy so it’s easy to read and understand. Do this by:
using short sentences and paragraphs
avoiding jargon and complicated words
using bullet points
If your readers find your emails easy to read, they’ll likely engage with them more.
Leverage Storytelling
Stories are a powerful way to grab attention and get your message across. That’s why you should leverage storytelling in your email copy.
Use Psychology to Your Advantage
Human beings are wired to react in specific ways. Use psychological triggers to direct your readers towards fulfilling your campaign objectives. Examples of such triggers include:
fear of missing out (FOMO)
color psychology
social proof
Used well, these triggers can help you craft email effective copy.
Email Marketing Step 1: Build Your List
Before you can start sending out emails, you need people to send emails to. How do you get started building your list? Start by adding a banner or form to your website simply asking people to subscribe.
Then, follow these tips.
1. Offer An Incentive
Think of email addresses as a currency: you wouldn’t give money away for free, right? Offering an incentive is the simplest way to gather email addresses.
There are many ways you can do this, of course. Some prefer to give something away for free while others simply offer a newsletter or product updates.
For example, the business newsletter Morning Brew offers readers a simple benefit: their fun, interesting updates every morning.
Search Engine Journal uses a small form in their right sidebar offering daily news—they also ask which topics the user is interested in, which helps them send more valuable content.
You can also offer a checklist, ebook, white paper, or another downloadable asset. Contests and giveaways are another great way to convince people to share their email addresses.
I can’t tell you which is the right or wrong path for your business, but I can tell you that it’s important to have a clear purpose when asking for an address.
Establish your credibility, explain what the emails are for, and get people interested in receiving them.
Simply posting “enter your email for updates” isn’t going to get anyone excited. Instead, share specifics.
By sharing a specific call to action or benefit to providing their email address, you can get more people to subscribe.
Some common ways to entice people to sign up include:
email series
free downloads
free white papers or eBooks
update lists, like new releases and product updates
Whatever that incentive is, make it clear and enticing, and don’t be afraid to promote it.
2. Follow Email Marketing Laws and Regulations
You’ll also want to make sure your emails follow local rules and regulations, including CAN-SPAM and GDPR.
Don’t let all the legalese scare you—just make sure you never buy email lists and consider using double opt-in options so people know what they are getting into. Finally, make it easy for people to unsubscribe.
Email Marketing Step 2: Provide Great Content
Email marketing is all about expectations, and it’s up to you to set them.
If your call to action is strong, and your follow-up is consistent, then you can count on a successful email campaign.
However, if you promise to send one email per week and instead send them daily, then you’re setting yourself up for failure.
On the contrary, if someone is expecting daily updates or critical product updates and you don’t deliver, then they are likely to be just as upset in that case, too.
This is why the first follow-up email is so crucial to the success of your email marketing efforts.
Send an Introduction Email
For example, here’s a basic welcome email from Airbnb to a new host. It explains the basics of the process and what you can expect to receive from Airbnb.
Almost all email service providers give you the option to create an automated welcome sequence, so take advantage of it.
The initial follow-up email should be sent immediately as a way to introduce yourself and detail what you plan on doing with your new subscriber’s email address.
It’s better to be long-winded and detailed than it is to be quick and unobtrusive, but if you can pull off quick and concise, then more power to you.
From here, it’s simply a matter of living up to their expectations.
Don’t Pitch Right Away
You’re not running an email list just for the fun of it—you’re there to engage customers and make sales.
Transitioning from an email list that provides tons of free value into a list that pitches a product for money can be a tricky switch to make.
To do it effectively, it’s a good idea to think in advance about your pitching. You don’t want to surprise everyone with a pitch all of the sudden.
You’ll have a much more successful campaign if people expect sales pitches every once in a while.
If you’re going to get in the habit of selling often, try to put yourself in the reader’s shoes.
Ask yourself if your messaging is consistent with the expectations you’ve set. If possible, understand what the customer has shown interest in before, and send similar offers down the line.
Those that send blind offers are far more likely to lose permission to keep doing so.
Again, each business has different needs, and there aren’t any hard and fast rules as to how often you can pitch or provide content.
Just remember that an email list is a permission asset and it’s better to err on the side of caution than to play it loose and reckless.
How to Write a Great Email Newsletter
Let’s talk about the difference between a good newsletter and a bad newsletter.
The first sign that you’ve received a bad newsletter is that you don’t recall ever asking to receive it.
Typically, this happens when a business either fails to maintain a regular email routine or manually adds someone to their list after receiving a business card or personal email.
Make sure everyone remembers you—the best way to do this is not to let your emails lapse for too long. Try to send an email at least once a month, or once a week if you can.
I find the most compelling newsletters are those that do a great job of mixing messaging and updates.
For example, while the email might contain a list of product updates and images, it’s balanced by a personal message or friendly memo.
Use your newsletter as a way to further your relationship with the reader/customer rather than to pitch them.
Save the pitch for unique updates, offers, and announcements.
Use Email Automation Carefully
If you’re just starting out with an email list, it’s easy to imagine you’ll have time to personally respond to every new subscriber.
Once you start getting more than a handful of subscribers, it becomes next to impossible to keep up.
You’ll start to get more and more complex campaigns, and following through with everyone all the time is impossible.
Though they’re all important, the three most important are open rate, click-through rate, and unsubscribes. Let’s break down each one and see what there is to learn from it.
First, your open rate explains how many people open your emails. It’s based on a single invisible tracking pixel that loads when someone clicks on your message.
When looking at open rates, it’ll usually tell you how well you’ve built your relationship with readers. Ideally, people are excited to read your emails and open them quickly.
If your open rate is low, it usually means you have a lot of unengaged subscribers. You need to work harder on providing value and managing expectations. Here are a few tips on raising your open rate.
Next, your click-through rate, or CTR, shows how many people clicked on a link (if any) in your email.
If your CTR is low, it means that your message is either not targeted enough, or simply not getting through. In this case, focus on improving your copy.
Finally, your unsubscribe rate tells you how many people have clicked the “unsubscribe” button at the bottom of your email.
If your unsubscribe rate is high in relation to your opt-in rate, then you’ve passed the point of building value and writing good copy… you’ve got some serious work to do.
Essentially you’ve built a sieve and people that sign up eventually leave. If this is you, try to examine when people are leaving and take action based on those leaks.
If they’re leaving after a certain automated email, then re-work it. If they’re leaving after marketing messages, then re-work the way you present offers.
If they’re leaving early on in your email funnel, then you need to fix your original call to action so that it’s in harmony with what you’re sending.
Email analytics are critical because, if you’re paying attention, they’ll give you very specific clues as to what you’re doing wrong.
Of course, the key here is “paying attention.”
How To Segment Your Email Marketing List
If you’re unfamiliar with the term, email segmentation is the practice of splitting up your email list into more targeted groups.
Here are a few ways to segment a larger list:
customer list (in comparison to leads who haven’t bought)
newsletter subscribers
daily email list (in comparison to weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, etc)
demographics, such as age, location, or job title
interests, such as marketing or sales topics
Just like targeting in paid ads, dividing your list gives you the ability to send more targeted communications.
For example, some customers want both product and sales updates, while others might only want to hear about new versions. Sales team leads might want to hear about a new sales feature but not a new marketing tool.
With segmentation, you can send a broadcast only to those that didn’t open your last message (ask them why), or to those that showed interest (a second pitch).
You can also split test messaging amongst different groups to A/B test titles, content, or best practices.
As you can see, segmentation isn’t rocket science, but it is work, which is why most don’t take the time to do it right.
If you do, you’ll immediately separate yourself from the pack.
Over time, you can start tracking how much money people on your list spend on average. This will tell you how much your list is worth.
If a list of 10,000 people usually spends $50,000 on a campaign, and you run two of those campaigns each year, you could average it out and say that each subscriber is worth $10 a year.
When you do the math like that, it is easy to see how losing several hundred subscribers could be dangerous to your bottom line.
Email Marketing FAQs
What are the benefits of email marketing?
Email marketing can help businesses reach a wider audience, drive sales, recover abandoned carts, and further develop your relationship with your audience.
How do I build an email list?
You can offer a downloadable asset, host a giveaway, or provide a free email course.
What email marketing regulations are there?
CAN-SPAM and GDPR (for Europe) require you to protect user’s privacy and avoid sending emails to purchased lists.
What is email automation?
Email automation allows you to create complex email campaigns that send emails based on actions, such as when a subscriber adds an item to their cart or downloads an asset.
How do I segment my email list?
Use your email tool to split subscribers based on demographics, interests, or customers versus non-customers. Then, send customized messages to each segment.
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Email Marketing Conclusion
If you’ve been ignoring email marketing, it’s time to reevaluate your strategy.
Email marketing delivers huge returns for marketers willing to learn how to do it right. It doesn’t have to be too complicated.
First, remember you’re a guest in the inboxes of your subscribers. Your emails are always just one click away from losing their interest forever. Be polite, respectful, and deliver value.
As you get started, you’ll need to ask permission. Of course, it’s the right thing to do. In the era of new data protections, like the EU’s GDPR, it’s also a legal requirement.
You’ll want to follow through with the promises you make. Provide people with what they’ve asked for and email regularly to line up with their expectations.
There’s no formula for boosting email automation. It’s all about what works best for you and your company’s voice and style.
Finally, you can move on to email segmentation and analytics once you’ve mastered the basics. Start sending separate types of emails to different groups of people so you can deliver more useful emails.
What email marketing practices keep your readers engaged?
Are you making the most out of the data you can get about your website from Google Analytics (GA)?
The free tool gives you valuable insights into metrics like conversion rates, traffic sources, engagement, audience demographics, and more.
Let’s learn what GA is and how to use it to improve your website’s metrics.
What Is Google Analytics?
Google Analytics is a free tool to track user behavior on your website. With a range of metrics to explore, you can start to get a picture of how people use your website and how you can make changes to increase sales.
On a basic level, you can track how many visitors you have, how they found you, the number of views a page receives, and more.
In many ways, Google Analytics is the portal giving you insider, back end, and real-time access to what your users want.
Why Should You Use Google Analytics?
Google Analytics is the most powerful tool to track website metrics, and it comes from the king of search engines. On top of that, it’s free.
Although it takes some work to get set up, there are plenty of online tutorials and resources to walk you through the process. Once you get Google Analytics connected to your site, you can head to the Google Analytics dashboard and start checking things out. It can’t go back in time, though, so you will have to wait for data to gather.
Google Analytics can free you from relying on gut checks and intuition and instead tell you what pages and which content hit the mark or fall short. In this way, you can make informed choices.
The Basic Google Analytics Interface
Once you set up your Google Analytics account, you can connect different URLs and choose which one to explore from the drop-down.
The first thing Analytics shows is basic traffic data, including dates. You can alter the dates based on your needs.
On the left side of the screen, Google Analytics provides a list of report options. This is where you can start to get into the details.
On the far right, there’s a blue box with real-time metrics showing how many people are on the site, how many pages are viewed per minute, and the most popular pages to view. You can then click on the blue box to learn more about the data.
If you’re looking for something specific, just type it into the handy search bar.
As you scroll down, you can check out different analytics, including where your users come from and what devices they use.
Common Metrics Tracked With Google Analytics
There are many metrics you can track using Google Analytics.
No matter which type you focus on, you need to choose a time frame for your data. This way, you can check a specific timespan against prior spans to see what’s changing and if what you’re doing is working.
As you analyze the data, try to remember what your marketing goals are. Otherwise, you may get overwhelmed by the whirlwind of numbers.
Let’s look at some of the most popular metrics just to get you started.
Tracking Visitors With Google Analytics
Tracking visitors shows who’s visiting, how many visitors you have, and what they’re doing on your website. This includes factors like bounce rates and session durations.
These metrics are anonymous and vague. You can’t gather personal details for specific visitors to your website.
To dig deeper, you can go to the “Audience” section of Google Analytics.
Tracking Traffic Sources With Google Analytics
Another powerful metric Google Analytics can provide is traffic sources. It answers the question, “how are people finding my website?” You can find this information under the “Acquisition” tab.
For instance, you can find out how much traffic comes from social media, Google Ads, and the Google Search Console. Knowing where your visitors are coming from and what they do once they get to your site can help you know where to focus your marketing efforts.
Tracking Content With Google Analytics
Google Analytics can help you understand how well different pieces of content perform by tracking user behavior. For example, are they visiting certain pages more often than others? Is on-page time higher on some types of content? This can help you determine what works and what doesn’t, which you can use to inform future content creation and marketing choices.
You can find this information under the “Behavior” section.
Tracking Conversions With Google Analytics
Let’s get down to brass tacks here. Are people buying (or doing whatever else you want them to do) once they land on your website? That’s what conversion metrics on Google Analytics can tell you.
These metrics are not automatically generated like the previous ones. Instead, conversion analytics requires you to set goals, typically using the pages visitors are directed to once they convert. Telling Google Analytics to follow users to these final pages can provide more specific information about how people are getting there, how many are converting, and more.
These metrics can be found in the “Audience” section under “Mobile.” Here, you can see website metrics broken down by device categories. For example, if you find certain device users are spending less time or money on the site, look into how your site looks and behaves on that type of device.
Creating Custom Reports
As you get a handle on following your website’s metrics, you may find you need custom Google Analytics reports. Custom reports can help you check specific metrics more efficiently, using apples-to-apples comparisons between periods, campaigns, and more.
These custom reports may help when presenting information to your department, organization, leadership, or investors thanks to the hard numbers you can compare and the visual reports you can run. Of course, not everyone may fully understand what you do, but many are likely to understand the basics of what these numbers and graphs mean.
Other Common Google Analytics Functionality and Uses
If you have a lot of content on your website, you may have a search function available to users. Knowing what people type into that search function can help you understand why visitors are on your site, allowing you to plan for and create more relevant content.
Under the “Behavior” area, click “Site Search” to view this information.
Identify Your Worst Performing Pages
Is there content on your website that’s just not performing? Then, you may benefit from optimizing those pages for SEO, deleting useless content, or creating entirely new work.
To learn which pages are not performing, go to “Behavior,” then “Site Content.” From there, click on the arrow to reorder the pages by popularity. This shows which pages get the fewest views. Do with that information what you will—though perhaps consider finding a cause before throwing the page into the abyss.
Find Where People Abandon Their Shopping Carts
People abandoning shopping carts while shopping is a typical e-commerce problem. If you can find where visitors are dropping off your website, you can make improvements to help convert them.
First, set up your goals using a sales funnel. Include each step of your check-out process, including cart, check-out, shipping, and confirmation, in the pages you plan to monitor. Then, click to “visualize your funnels” to see how people behave as they move through the funnel.
You may see a pattern regarding when people abandon carts begin to emerge and make updates accordingly.
See Your Most Important Analytics First
As we talked about above, Google Analytics places many of the most common analytics on the dashboard. However, you can set up a custom dashboard to see exactly what you need. Under the “Customization” tab, find the link for “Dashboards.” You can use a dashboard template or create your own.
How to Create Custom Reports in Google Analytics
Google Analytics makes it easy to create custom reports for your own use or presentations.
First click on “Customization,” then click on “Custom Reports
Click on “+ New Custom Report” to get started
You can name your custom report, as well as each tab you want to create if you want different variables in the same report.
Choose what you want to create the custom report to report on, including overarching metrics you can choose from a dropdown, more specific dimensions, and filters to fine-tune your data thoroughly.
If you scroll over the question mark in the dropdown, you can learn more about each choice.
Click on whether you want to see all views or limit them.
Start with all, if you’re not sure. Now click “Save.” You’ll be taken to a page with the data automatically. From here, you can save, export, share, or edit the report. If you save it, you can find this report under “Saved Reports.” To rerun this custom report, go to “Custom Reports.”
Google Analytics Basics FAQs [wp editor: add schema]
What are some basic things you can do with Google Analytics?
Google Analytics can give you information about who visits your website, how many views your website receives, which content is the most popular, and more.
Google Analytics uses a tracking ID, which you place in the code of your website or a plugin to allow Google to receive information about your website.
How much does it cost to use Google Analytics?
Most of the benefits of Google Analytics are free, though you can choose to purchase upgrades.
What is the benefit of using Google Analytics?
Google Analytics provides in-depth information on how well your website is performing.
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Basics of Google Analytics Conclusion
Google Analytics provides nearly endless amounts of information about your website’s data. Once you set up Google Analytics on your website, you can access metrics covering nearly every part of your customers’ journeys.
You can create custom reports to analyze how well your strategies work. This may help you make informed changes to your website, which may, in turn, draw even more people to your brand and via your analytics-driven marketing strategy.
With over 2.74 billion monthly active users, Facebook is the world’s most popular social media platform. From a marketing perspective, there are many opportunities to engage with new audiences and expand your company’s reach.
How do you capitalize on these opportunities? By devising a Facebook marketing strategy.
For beginners, this can all seem a little daunting but don’t worry. If you’re new to Facebook marketing, let me walk you through using the tools available to your advantage.
What Is Facebook Marketing?
Facebook marketing is a catch-all term for the different ways you can market your business on Facebook. It includes:
Facebook Ads
Business Pages
Facebook Marketplace
Facebook Groups
There’s a marketing strategy for every budget, whether you’re looking for a free social media marketing solution or you want to set aside a regular sum for paid Facebook Ads.
In other words, businesses are actively pursuing customers across this social media platform, so it makes sense to build your own presence there.
What’s more, 45 percent of internet users across the globe turn to platforms like Facebook to find out more about products they want to buy. You can help them discover your brand by advertising effectively on Facebook.
Static image ads are ideal for driving traffic to your website.
They must be in JPG or PNG format, and the headline shouldn’t exceed 40 characters. Since you only have 125 characters for the main message, they’re best for clear and concise calls to action (CTAs).
Video Ads
With video ads, you can showcase a product, promote customer testimonials, or boost your brand. Video posts, in general, have a 6.09 percent engagement rate on Facebook, which is impressive, but you’ll lose viewers if it’s a poor-quality video with an unclear message.
Carousel Ads
With carousel ads, people can scroll through a host of images to see the same product from multiple angles.
While this is great for e-commerce, carousel ads aren’t ideal for showcasing different products or listings e.g., properties in real estate marketing.
Collection Ads
Image collections are great for showing products in your e-commerce store, but as with image ads, you’re limited to a short headline and a 125-character primary message, so they’re not suited for conveying much information.
The ad type you choose depends largely on your campaign goal. For example, an image is great for driving home a visually compelling CTA, whereas videos are useful for engaging audiences.
There’s no set cost for Facebook Ads, either. Since you bid on ad slots across the platform, how much the ad costs depends on how much you’re willing to pay to secure the slot you want.
Steps to Start Facebook Marketing
To use Facebook Ads, it’s best if you set up a Facebook Page for your business if you don’t already have one. Set one up by heading here.
Access Ads Manager
First, you need to access Ads Manager.
Ads Manager is the “hub” to create, manage, and track Facebook Ad campaigns. You can log in here.
Choose Your Ad Objective
Next, determine what you want from your campaign by setting your ad objective. There are three categories to choose from:
1. Awareness Goals
brand awareness
reach
2. Consideration Goals
traffic
engagement
app installs
video views
lead generation
messages
3. Conversion Goals
conversions
catalog sales
store traffic
Click the green “Create” button and choose your goal:
Name Your Campaign
A name helps you keep track of the campaign within Ads Manager.
Once you’ve chosen a name, confirm if you want to test different versions of the same ad against each other using A/B testing. This is optional, and you can change your mind later.
Move on to the next screen.
Set Your Budget and Schedule
First, choose which Page to promote. This is probably your company’s Page.
Then, set either a monthly or daily budget for your Facebook Ad campaign, and determine when you want your campaign to start. You can set an end date, too.
If you want, you can schedule your ad based on time zones to ensure your target audience is most likely to see it. For example, if you’re targeting a U.S. audience, you can run your ads during U.S. daytime hours, and so on:
Choose Your Audience
Build your target audience based on gender, age, location, and language. Once you’ve got a broad sense of your ad reach, you can customize your audience based on user behaviors and interests to improve your chances of reaching the right people.
If you’re happy with your ad reach, move on.
Select Your Ad Placements
Decide where your ad should appear. For beginners, you might be best choosing “Automatic Placements” so Facebook can determine where you’re likely to get the best traction.
If you’re more knowledgeable, you can customize placement based on, for example, device type, social media platform (Facebook or Instagram), and operating system:
Determine Your Brand Safety Controls
You can specify content you don’t want your ad to appear alongside, such as violent, sensitive, or offensive content.
From this screen, you can also customize your bidding strategy a little more. For beginners, though, it’s a good idea to stick with the default options at first and make changes later if required.
Create Your Facebook Ad
Finally, choose your ad format, type in the ad copy, and enter your images or videos. Once you’re happy with the ad, click the “Publish” button to go live.
Congratulations, you’ve created your first Facebook Ad!
Tips for Creating Great Facebook Ads
To get the most from your Facebook Ads, here are some tips to bear in mind.
First impressions matter, so use quality, high-resolution images for every ad.
Highlight your value proposition clearly and avoid overly busy, cluttered graphics.
Keep your CTA highly visible and compelling to grab a user’s attention.
Bring your products to life by showing people using them in your video ads.
Include user-generated content where appropriate to build a sense of community.
Make your videos and images vertical, so they display properly on mobile devices.
Monitor which version of an ad works best by deploying A/B testing.
Examples of Great Facebook Marketing Campaigns
Want to see how businesses just like yours are making Facebook advertising work? Here are two companies putting some of the tips I’ve just outlined into action.
The Teaching Company
To advertise its one-month free trial, The Teaching Company, a college-level course provider, ran a variety of image ads to appeal to different demographics:
The value proposition is clear, the CTA is unmistakable, and the company makes it easy for customers to sign up for the trial. As a result, the campaign generated 15,540 new subscriptions, which was 10 times more than its average monthly subscription numbers.
The takeaway? Keep your ad fresh by switching out the images regularly, and always include a clear CTA.
GoPro
To build hype around its HERO9 camera, GoPro ran a contest called the “Million Dollar Challenge.” In exchange for sending in raw GoPro footage from a HERO9 camera, people entered a contest to win a share of the $1-million prize pot.
Twenty-nine thousand people entered the contest, over 668,000 Facebook users viewed the video, and 56 winners took home nearly $18,000 each.
The lesson? Use video ads to bring your audience closer to your brand and reach diverse new demographics.
Other Ways to Use Facebook Marketing to Grow Your Brand
As I explained earlier, Facebook Ads are definitely not the only way to grow your brand through the platform. If you’re looking to make the most of your Facebook presence, here are some other strategies to try out.
Start a Facebook Group
Give your customers a place to interact by setting up a Facebook Group for your business.
You can use Groups to:
build hype around products.
promote brand events
start conversations about your business
engage with your followers
It’s free to start a Facebook Group.
Join the Facebook Marketplace
If you sell products online, check out the Facebook Marketplace. The Marketplace lets you quickly connect with potential customers who are already primed to buy, and you can also reach local buyers more effectively through highly targeted listings.
It’s free to list on the Marketplace, too.
Use Your Business Page
Your Facebook Page is essentially a free marketing tool.
At the most basic level, you can use it to share content and engage audiences. However, depending on your business type, you can also use it to:
set up appointments
answer questions
share promotions
nurture people to download an app.
What’s more, you can link to your Marketplace listings to help turn Page visitors into loyal paying customers.
How to Track the Success of Your Facebook Marketing Campaign
When you run a Facebook marketing campaign, you want to track metrics such as: – ad impressions – ad frequency – click-through rate (CTR) – conversion rate – cost per conversion
Facebook offers three main tools for tracking metrics like these: Ads Manager, Events Manager, and Facebook Business Suite.
Ads Manager
The Ads Manager “reporting” feature lets you view, at a glance, how your ads are performing. From video ad views to website conversions attributed to a Facebook Ad, you can view all the relevant stats by creating a report.
To create a report, simply open Ads Manager, go to “Analyze and Report,” click “Ads Reporting,” then select the data you want to report on:
Events Manager
With the Events Manager tool, you can set up a pixel to analyze what actions people take on your website. For example, whenever someone adds an item to their cart or completes a sale, the pixel records this as an action or “event.” You can view this data in a report and then target these users with customized ads in the future. Access Events Manager here.
Facebook Business Suite
The Facebook Business Suite lets you quickly view key data about your Facebook account, including: -audience demographics -post and content engagement -paid ad performance
What’s more, if you have an Instagram account, you can access key insights through the Facebook Business Suite, which helps you unify your social media metrics tracking.
You can also use alternative tools like Google Analytics to measure ad performance and conversions if you prefer.
More Facebook Marketing Resources
Need some extra help with your Facebook marketing? Here are some other resources to read.
Facebook Business Help Center: The Help Center has a range of guides and troubleshooting articles to help you navigate the platform.
Facebook Blueprint: Facebook Blueprint offers online courses and training programs to help you build effective campaigns.
Shopify Blog: Do you run an e-commerce store? This Shopify post can help you tweak your e-commerce ads most effectively.
Facebook marketing offers a variety of ways for businesses to reach customers and advertise their products across Facebook. From ads to Facebook groups, you can choose which tools you want to use based on your digital marketing objectives.
How Do I Start Using Facebook Marketing?
Open a Facebook Business Page then access Ads Manager. Choose your objective, name your campaign, set your schedule, pick your ad placement, and you’re good to go.
Is Facebook Marketing Free?
It’s free to set up things like a Facebook Page or Group for your business. You need to pay to use Facebook Ads, though. The cost is generally calculated per click or impression, depending on the type of ad you select.
How Can I Create Great Facebook Ads?
Less is often more. Keep images and videos clear and uncluttered, and make sure you highlight your CTA and value proposition. Choose the right ad type for your objectives by figuring out your goals beforehand.
Facebook Marketing Conclusion
If your audience is on Facebook, then you should really try out Facebook marketing for your business. Try a variety of Facebook Ads and measure your progress regularly to ensure you’re getting the most from your campaigns.
Got a limited budget? You can still utilize Facebook Pages and Groups to draw traffic, nurture leads, and ultimately increase sales long term.
Tapping into new audiences is an incredibly effective way to grow your website traffic.
If you’re expanding your business globally, you may have already considered translating your website into different languages. It can be a great way to monetize your content or sell to people outside your local area.
It’s an exciting thought, but it’s not quite as simple as just hiring someone to translate your website’s pages. Some of the translated pages would likely be similar to the content on your existing pages, leaving you at risk for being penalized by search engines for duplicate content.
Consider the experience of your reader, too. Imagine how quickly they’d leave a site that offers prices and shipping details in the wrong currency or language.
There’s a huge opportunity to grow your business by attracting people in different geographical or language areas, but there is a specific way to guide new users to your site.
The best way to access these new audiences is by using hreflang HTML attribute tags.
What Is the Hreflang Tag?
Hreflang is an HTML language attribute or code that tells search engines important information about your content by indicating language codes and country codes for each piece of content. This code tells search engines what language and region you’re targeting with the content.
Here are new audiences you could attract using hreflang:
Visitors in the same country, who speak different languages
Visitors from different countries, who speak other languages
Visitors from different countries, who speak the same language
Using hreflang can boost the organic search engine optimization (SEO) on your website and launch your digital marketing outreach to new audiences without costing you domain authority or impacting user experience.
Why Are Hreflang Tags Important?
Hreflang allows you to tell search engines which pages to show to which users to show audiences the pages you created just for them. It also gives search engines a clear indication that the content on these pages was not duplicated, but rather, has been customized for different people.
Let’s say your website is written entirely in English, with your local currency noted for products. However, other English speakers in different geographic regions could benefit from your content and offerings.
What if you could show them an alternate version of your website that would automatically reflect their daily currency?
Let’s go a step further. What if you could also translate your content into different languages and then somehow make sure search engines showed the right search result to your target audience?
You can, and while it will take a bit of work to set up, the value of showing visitors what they want to see can be a significant boost to your rankings.
Want to learn more about getting international visitors to your content? Watch this video:
Who Should Use Hreflang Code Attributes?
You should use these tags when you want to offer the correct version of your website to groups you can identify and separate by language or geographical region.
This could include having your entire site content translated into different languages, just portions of it translated, or indicating that you have alternate versions of your site with other currencies.
For example, Canadian, American, and British English are the same language but have different currencies.
This tactic is best for companies that have a good reason to be accessing international markets. For instance, you can monetize the traffic, sell directly to those visitors, or creating a global brand.
If this sounds like your company, it might be time to invest in creating a global SEO strategy.
SEO and More: Benefits of Proper Use of Hreflang Tags
Your website can benefit from hreflang tags in three critical ways:
Improve your organic SEO by lowering bounce rates, increasing rankings, and improving click-through and conversion rates.
Your user experience (UX) will improve for readers outside your region.
It may protect you from being penalized for duplicate content.
The world is full of people who may not share your first language but are still valuable readers for your content. What about Spanish-, Hindi-, or Mandarin-speaking users?
There is a substantial global audience you could be reaching, but to do so, you’ll need to find ways to offer them versions of your content that is optimized for their experience.
When these readers can access a personalized version of your content, they’re more likely to stay on your site longer, reading more pages, which reduces your overall bounce rate.
However, you need to tread carefully any time you create similar content, even in another language. Use hreflang to match the correct piece of content to what the user wants to see.
What Does a Hreflang Tag Look Like?
A valid hreflang attribute might look like this:
link rel=”alternate” href=”http://example.com” hreflang=”en-us” />
How to Implement Hreflang Tags
What does successful implementation look like? There are few things to consider when setting up hreflang for your site content. If any of these steps are not complete, your tags will not work.
Create a Content Map and Plan
Start by doing a site audit to map out what you have already done to target new languages or regions. Include your existing content and any pages you have already translated.
Next, check your analytics and see who else is visiting your website, where they’re from, and the language settings in their browsers. Making decisions based on audiences already finding your site will help your changes have a larger impact.
Decide if your entire site needs to be shown in alternate languages. Would it be enough to have your home page or just your contact information and your footer changed? This can help you decide where to focus your time and resources.
Language and Country Codes
Next, you’ll need to choose the correct codes to create your tags. There are established language codes and country codes, so be sure you’re verifying as you go.
When creating codes, remember that you’ll need a language or country code. This means that you could simply choose a language code, but you’ll never just have a country code by itself.
Remember that you may not know every country you need to target, so it’s also good to have just a language code. This allows you to offer French content for people in France and a French version to capture French-speaking users from any other country.
Relationship Between Tags
You’ll need to be sure that you show the correct relationship between tags, which means understanding self-referential and bidirectional hreflang attribute references.
Self-referencing tags mean that each language version should reference itself and all the other versions.
Bidirectional means each tag should be paired with a tag on the alternate piece of content. For example, if page A links to page B, then page B needs to link back to page A. (This also ensures that nobody can create a one-way tag that links to an external source, taking your traffic away.)
X-default creates a default version of a page that does not target any specific language, or where users are asked to select a language once landing on a page. This should capture anyone who doesn’t have a language designated in their browser settings, or whose IP address doesn’t match any of the languages on your site. This would be your x-default tag: <link rel=”alternate” href=”http://example.com/” hreflang=”x-default” />
Choose an Implementation Method
You can implement valid hreflang attributes in one of three ways:
Implement the hreflang attribute using HTML in link elements in the <head> section of every page.
Implement the hreflang attribute in HTTP headers for PDFs and other non-HTML pages or non-HTML files.
Implementing the hreflang attribute in your XML sitemap markup (this will avoid having to edit multiple HTML documents each time you edit or delete a page. Direct access to the XML sitemap file can make this even easier.)
Resources for Successful Implementation of Hreflang Tags
There are a few handy resources to tackle hreflang tags on your site content. This is by no means a complete list, but they’ll come in handy as you move ahead. Remember that different platforms will have specific instructions for implementation, so reference those before you begin.
Yes, they should be used together, as they perform different functions. Canonical tags tell search engines which URL is the official or canonical version of a page and which page should be indexed. Hreflang tags tell search engines what language and region a page is targeting.
Common Pitfalls When Implementing Hreflang Tags
Common errors include using the wrong language code or country code, trying to use a code for too large a region (like using the EU instead of GBR), forgetting to make versions self-referential, or forgetting that pages need to be bidirectional.
Another area challenge is maintaining valid hreflang attributes once they are set up. As content is added to or removed from the site, or redirects are created within your existing content, hreflang tags must be updated.
Hreflang code attributes are a guide for search engines, not a guaranteed function. All it can do is suggest which pages search engines should display based on a user’s browser settings.
Additionally, while it works with Google and Yandex, it does not work for others such as Bing and Baidu, so look into options and instructions for each.
Conclusion
Hreflang can be a useful tool to tell search engines what language your site is written in, and what region you’re targeting with a particular piece of content.
Implementing hreflang tags can help you reach international audiences with content or offerings. Need help deciding if hreflang could work for you? It might be time to get help with your digital marketing strategy.
Hreflang is not easy to implement but can expand your reach and boost your organic SEO far beyond what your website is doing today.
Just remember to create a plan that avoids common pitfalls and double-check your tags after implementation and every few months.
Which language or region would you target first using hreflang attributes?
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