50 Top Ecommerce Marketing Strategies
Table of Contents
1. Create a Content Marketing Strategy Before Starting
Nothing good starts without building a plan. Just like a movie studio goes through the preproduction process, an ecommerce business needs a content marketing strategy. Write a list of all the methods you plan on using to reach out to customers, whether it be blog posts, videos or newsletters.
Make it a point to check in with this strategy every week or month, evaluating how the content creation and distribution process is going.
2. Generate an Email Marketing Campaign That’s Automated
Email marketing is the bedrock of effective ecommerce marketing strategies, because it’s still one of the best methods for influencing your customers and convincing them to buy more.
Not to mention, consumers are known to open emails, even if they include simple advertisements. Use an email marketing campaign to keep in contact with your customers, send them helpful information and sell your products.
3. With Social Media, Consider Diversifying Your Platforms
Social media is always a tough sell for ecommerce companies, since it’s tough to figure out which platforms work best in certain markets. There’s a simple solution to this. Diversify, and eventually cut the platforms that don’t work well.
It’s just like investing in stocks. You spread out the risk and realize which options are making you the most money. Create Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and Google Plus pages. Spread your content through these mediums, and use social media analytics tools to understand which ones work best. Even if one works better than another, spreading out your social media presence gives all of your customers a way to connect with your company.
Who knows? You may only have 100 followers on Facebook, but one of them may be your best customer. If you take away that Facebook presence you risk losing that person.
4. Put a Personalization Strategy into Action
Personalization is the best new form of marketing, since no one wants to spend money on faceless companies. The idea is to brand your company along with a person, using one or two people as the “face” of your business.
Address people with their names in your emails, send out videos and images of your employees, and show how your products are made. Every little detail of personalization makes your customers feel special and take a peek into the inner workings of your business.
5. Make Your Own Original Content
Nothing builds a strong connection with your customers like original content. Tying into your content strategy from above, you have the unique opportunity to choose between unoriginal or original content.
Many companies use content pulled from around the web in their ecommerce marketing strategies to free up time for other business tasks. This, however, doesn’t have the same effect as original content. How would your customers respond if they knew an original company podcast came out every week?
Original content like videos, blog posts, audio segments and eBooks help you build your ecommerce site as a knowledge base for those interested in learning more about your market.
6. Hit it Hard with Contextual Marketing
Contextual marketing has various meanings, but what we mean is using your marketing in formats that connect with your demographics, putting the messages in the right places at the right time.
The perfect example of contextual marketing is the famous Oreos Super Bowl tweet, where they played off the Super Bowl XLVII stadium lighting problem to show that “you can still dunk in the dark.” It was the perfect combination of timeliness and humor, to an audience that loves snacks during a game.
7. Opt for User Generated Content
User generated content is a wonderful way to build interaction with your customers, while not having to put much money or time into the campaign on your end. Doritos is know for holding a Super Bowl commercial submission contest every year, meaning that they don’t have to pay for a production crew to design a video.
This gets Doritos fans excited, and Doritos ends up with a commercial to air. This works well when you ask for people to submit pictures, videos or even blog posts.
8. Implement a Loyalty Program
A solid loyalty program brings people back to your store, and it makes them feel appreciated for spending money on your company. You convince your most loyal customers to spend a little extra money, and they receive a reward for doing so.
9. Automate Your Social Networks
Not all social content needs automation, but you’ll find that planning your social strategy frees up time for other tasks in your business.
For example, when you schedule a month of Facebook posts, you no longer have to think about it for the rest of the month. Moderating comments is still needed, but knocking out your social posts in one day means you don’t have to shift gears every week or day to post content on social networks.
10. Reach Out to Customers in Their Native Languages
It’s common for ecommerce stores to sell items to people all over the world. Just because you speak English doesn’t mean that you can’t sell a hat to someone who speaks Portuguese.
Reach out to foreign customers by providing translation features in your online store. Most ecommerce platforms and WordPress themes provide translation settings so that you don’t exclude people in other countries who don’t understand your language.
11. A/B Test Your Checkout Process
The folks behind SimCity are known to test out their checkout process on a consistent basis, leading to improved sales, because they know exactly what types of buttons and words convince people to buy.
An ecommerce marketing plan without A/B testing is sailing blind, so it’s essential to run tests throughout the entire checkout process. This helps you see where people abandon their carts or find it tough to pay you.
12. Optimize for the Mobile World
This has nothing to do with creating an app or mobile site. Nowadays your customers crave mobile responsiveness. They don’t want to open a completely different mobile site to see a mobile-friendly interface.
Consider implementing a responsive interface so that your ecommerce website transforms for devices like tablets and smartphones.
13. Think About Mobile Advertising
Mobile advertising combines geolocation and mobile-ready ads to connect your customers to your store while they are sitting on the train or in a doctor’s waiting room.
14. Start Targeting Wearable Technology
All the big tech companies are releasing wearable technology like watches and even glasses. How can you connect with these customers who have technology at their hands at all times? These interfaces look different than the average smartphone, so your company needs to adapt.
15. Hire Someone to Create Long Form Content
Long form content is a nice way to standout from all the regular blog posts out there. Long form content takes lots of time, so you may need to hire someone, but it dives deep into (sometimes boring) topics, making them engaging and useful for the most interested users.
16. Use Social Ads for the Ideal Testing Atmosphere
Social ads are interesting, because you rarely have to spend a dime to test them out. For example, Facebook lets you send out as many posts as you want on your business page. Once one of the posts receives a bunch of likes and comments, you know that it’s something that customers are interested in.
Once you identify successful posts you can spend a little money and use the same posts as ads.
17. Brand Yourself with Your Own Personal Flavor
Placing a face on your company is one thing, but customers want to hear from the people who run the show. If you hire a few writers or content designers it becomes tough keeping one standard voice.
Develop a guide for these people so that they know you want a voice that communicates something fun or more professional.
18. Reveal the Identities of Your Authors
One way to get around the “one voice” dilemma is to reveal the identities of your authors. Branding under one name is fine, but your site visitors like to see all of the faces and names that contribute to your blog or video channel.
This develops your personalization strategy and reveals who is at work behind the scenes.
19. Create a Face (Possibly Fictitious) for Your Company
We talked about creating a face for your company above, but what about using a fictitious character? The Geico gecko is an ideal example, since everyone associates the brand with the little green guy.
20. Build Authority with Online Discussion Areas
A forum is the most common way to build a community on your ecommerce store, and this is because people are familiar with the format.
Message boards, forums and even chat areas build your ecommerce store as an authoritative discussion platform, using a unique form of user generated content to drive your store.
21. Personalize All Experiences
Building a personalized voice seems simple at first, but what about all of those random emails that go out to your customers? Every ecommerce store has dozens of emails that go out for confirmations, receipts, thank yous and more. Use customer names, provide relevant links and even ask customers to reply to your emails for the ultimate personalization.
22. Make Your Delivery Options Better Than the Rest
Zappos has a reputation for fast delivery, and the occasional expedited delivery for random customers. This makes people feel special. Does your company stand out in terms of delivery? Think about ways to speed up the delivery process for an easy way to stand out from competitors.
23. Focus on Local Branding and Marketing
Not all ecommerce marketing plans require this, but if you have a connection with a brick and mortar store you can focus on local branding and marketing. Reach out to customers near your store with geolocation tools and local search engine targeting.
24. Look for Alternative Automated Marketing Techniques
Do you send out birthday or anniversary messages to your customers? What about automated messages when people sign up for your email campaigns or buy a product on your store?
Free up your own time, and give your customers a reason to come back with automated email campaigns.
25. Make How-To Videos for Creating a Connection and Showing Products
YouTube channels are always a fun way to connect with customers, but what about putting a hard focus on how-to tutorials? If you sell something like gardening gear, customers may not know the best ways to use the stuff they buy. Videos bring them back to your store and ensure they feel right about buying from you.
26. Get Creative with Your FAQs
The FAQ page is an area that gets lots of visits on ecommerce stores, but does it show off your company culture? Think about whether or not you want to reveal a goofy or professional culture and let it shine in the FAQs.
27. Pack Photos Into All of Your Content
People are more likely to click on links and read through content if it includes photos. Stray away from stock photos and consider taking your own professional photos to keep people interested in your content.
28. Turn Your Company into It’s Own Media Outlet
Creating a magazine or TV channel sounds like a stretch, but many companies are taking the jump to share their own original content on various different media outlets.
29. Always Stay Up to Date on Industry News
Industry news offers powerful content ideas for you to share with your customers. Some of this content may seem a little complicated for consumers, so it’s your job to break it down and make it easy to digest.
30. Welcome Controversial Topics to Generate Discussion
Do you sell gun holsters on your ecommerce website? Are you always creating blog posts that favor the freedom to carry guns? That’s way too one-dimensional. Customers are smart, and want to hear arguments from all sides. Think about creating controversial content that will get people fired up.
31. Forget About Catering to Search Engines
One of the best ways to creep up search engine rankings and build social media shares is to completely forget about keyword optimization. Not only does this often look unnatural, but you can stand out with creative headlines and content.
32. Use Pay Per Click Marketing Wisely
Pay per click marketing is extremely cheap if used properly. Run numerous campaigns, and test all of them until you find the ideal options.
33. Dip into the Reddit Pool
Reddit is a huge forum with discussion for everything from bikes to romantic fiction. Did you know that the platform offers advertising opportunities? Find the subreddits that cater to your industry and put this in your ecommerce marketing strategy.
34. Upsell Your Products without Pushing Too Hard
Hit your visitors with relevant product links, but stray away from constant upsells. VistaPrint is a good example of what not to do on your ecommerce site. They hammer customers with upsells, many of which don’t relate to the shopping cart.
35. Turn on the Image Boosters With Instagram
Instagram is a closed community for people who love images. If you can take photos of your products, Instagram is perfect for sharing product previews, your items in action and user submitted content.
36. Use Tools to Reduce Abandoned Carts
A/B testing and user experience testing tools put you in the minds of your customers. Implement a few of these tools to find exactly why your customers are leaving your store.
37. Launch Stores on Multiple Platforms (Ebay and Facebook)
You can sell your items on platforms like Ebay, Amazon, Etsy and Facebook. All of these have new opportunities for revenue streams, so give them a try to find more customers.
38. Optimize Your Email Capture Modules
Does your email capture popup area turn customers off? Do you offer a promotion or free eBook for signing up? Using A/B testing to improve your email capture modules and bring in more subscribers.
39. Go Crazy With the Email Newsletter
The email newsletter is a message that goes out every week or month, an it’s completely un-automated. This is a chance to share unusual content and personal messages.
40. Remind People About Their Wishlists
Wishlist are often forgotten, but they show you the items that people have thought about buying. Consider sending out messages to get your customers to finish off the purchase process.
41. Test to Make Sure You Have the Fewest Amount of Steps for People to Get What They Want
The best way to do this is to have actual customers walk through your checkout process and send you feedback on how fast it was. Could you completely remove a checkout step? Only testing reveals the answer.
42. Push Your Customers to Make Product Reviews
Product reviews provide the quintessential social credibility, convincing other customers to buy products based on user feedback. How many times have you bought something online because of its ratings and reviews?
43. Focus on Free Marketing Options
Landing an article in a big-time magazine takes lots of work, and sometimes money. Why not turn to blogs with huge followings in your market? Just about every business can locate a blog that writes about its products.
Your submission usually only takes a few minutes, and it doesn’t end up in a huge pile of other submissions.
44. Talk to Your Visitors
Do you have a live chat module on your ecommerce site? Are you constantly responding to comments on your social pages? Visitors like to speak with people at your company, so give them the attention they crave.
45. Allow Ratings in Discussion Areas
Forum and customer discussion areas work nicely, but what if you added an extra element to the community? Some businesses allow ratings in the forums, or you can earn badges when you comment a certain amount of times.
46. Generate Reports to Anticipate Future Sales
Use your reports to think about how you can change your ecommerce marketing strategy in the future. Without these reports you can’t identify poorly performing aspects of your company.
47. Implement a Plan for Monthly Market Research
Are you coming out with a new product? Do you have any idea how your customers will respond? Market research puts the product in customer hands, giving you a taste of how they will see the new item.
48. Donate Products for Others to Review
You have a much better chance of receiving a review or magazine story if you send a product for the writers and editors to test out. Not only does this help with their review, but it works as a little gift for them to publish your article faster.
49. Set a Plan for Onsite SEO
Although your content strategy should focus on helping users and not search engines, your ecommerce onsite SEO needs keywords to help the search engines identify you as a store that sells certain products.
50. Find Something Awesome to Give Out
Can you drum up buzz about your company with a raffle or free giveaway? Prompt people to share your company on social media for more entries. This also works well on email signup forms or simply to engage customers with cool contests.
I hope this list helps you in your ecommerce marketing journey. Let me know in the comments if you have any additions or questions.