6 Steps for a Successful Marketing Campaign

by / ⠀Finding Customers Startup Advice / October 31, 2011

Whether large or small, a successful marketing campaign follows the same path.  Don’t always think of a campaign as something huge and daunting; a group of emails that you send out to your contact list over a month should also be considered an email campaign.

The biggest difference in the size of the campaign will be the resources expended—time and/or money—on each step.  The lifecycle of a marketing campaign follows 6 basic steps.

The 6 Basic Steps of a Successful Marketing Campaign

1. Determine your buyer persona/campaign target and outline the desired outcome.

Likely, you will already have a good understanding of your buyer persona profile; this step in the cycle will identify which of those personas you are trying to reach.  For example, your buyer personas may be both mothers of elementary schoolers and elementary school teachers, but in this particular campaign you’ve decided to target the mothers.

Most importantly, start with the end in mind.  What are you trying to accomplish?  This may sound basic but, spoken from experience, it can prove to be more difficult than you think.  Determine what, EXACTLY, you want this campaign to accomplish and how you will know if you’ve gotten there.  If your campaign is designed to generate more leads from elementary school moms, then you would say—“the goal of this campaign is to increase the number of elementary school moms that become leads on our site by 40%.  We will know that they are moms and not teachers or other visitors because we will design the conversion form so that they indicate this.”

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2. Campaign design—graphic, creative, and copy.

This is where you can get creative.  Start your brainstorm with the sky as the limit; don’t get caught up in your resource limitations during your brainstorm because it will inhibit ideation.  After brainstorming, you have to come back down to earth and figure out what your resources will allow.  If you have no budget, you probably can’t hire M.C. Hammer (I heard he was busy with a new project too).  Not every campaign has to be earth-shattering.  Once you’ve developed the campaign outline, proceed to creating graphics and copy.

3. Determine tools for a successful outcome.

Go back to what you want to accomplish (step 1), your buyer (step 1), and your campaign (step 2).  Often, steps 2 and 3 may be run concurrently.

When determining the tools to use, consider your target audience’s sophistication (especially digitally), your resources, and a quick to market approach.  It’s better to use Facebook and your company blog if you already have both of those tools in place.  Don’t build a brand new website until you gain traction on some smaller similar campaigns.

After you’ve determined the tools to use, set your metrics.  These will be ways that you can tell early and easily if the campaign is going in the right direction.  This is not the end, but it is your campaign flight dashboard.  While ultimately the number of new Facebook likes are not what you’re looking for, that may be a good metric to figure if you’re on the right track toward your destination.

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4. Schedule campaign implementation and benchmarks.

Create your campaign calendar.  If it’s a longer campaign (more than 4 weeks), set sprint benchmarks along the way.  This will keep your team energized and moving.  If the benchmarks are not met, it will also let you know if you’re on the wrong track.  Put all dates and to-dos in your project management software (we use Basecamp) and include various members of your team.

5. Implement the campaign.

Surprisingly, this will be the easiest of the 6 steps.  If you’ve planned appropriately, you know your target audience, and you know what to measure, step 5 will be a walk in the park.  Most important in step 5 is to pair it with step 6 and to begin measuring and analyzing your campaign immediately.  Especially if you’re running a digital marketing campaign, you will get an early read on the success and will know whether any tweaks need to be made.

6. Measure, analyze, and learn for next time.

Again, step 6 should walk hand-in-hand with step 5 as measurement along the way is imperative.  Just because you’re heading for a mountain that you didn’t expect doesn’t mean that you should crash, burn, and start the next campaign.  Make adjustments.  At the end of the campaign, be sure to note everything that you learned and measure your final success against your original campaign goal.

If you are traveling into uncharted territory—whether it be with different tools, a different audience, or a higher campaign spend than normal—we recommend starting with a mini-campaign to gauge interest and to better predict outcomes and successes.  Don’t spend a bundle on premier videos until you’ve seen through a smaller campaign that your customer really digs the videos.

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Alexandra Gibson is the Managing Director for OttoPilot Media, an inbound marketing firm based in Charlottesville, Virginia, and the SVP for Aspen Associates, an FF&E procurement company in the hospitality industry.  She wrote her first business plan at age 11…she’s been entrepreneurially intolerable since then. Be sure to follow her on Twitter- @gibsondm

About The Author

Matt Wilson

Matt Wilson is Co-Founder of Under30Experiences, a travel company for young people ages 21-35. He is the original Co-founder of Under30CEO (Acquired 2016). Matt is the Host of the Live Different Podcast and has 50+ Five Star iTunes Ratings on Health, Fitness, Business and Travel. He brings a unique, uncensored approach to his interviews and writing. His work is published on Under30CEO.com, Forbes, Inc. Magazine, Huffington Post, Reuters, and many others. Matt hosts yoga and fitness retreats in his free time and buys all his food from an organic farm in the jungle of Costa Rica where he lives. He is a shareholder of the Green Bay Packers.

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