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Targeting Your Audience Earlier in the Buying Process

Rand Fishkin

The author's views are entirely their own (excluding the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of Moz.

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Rand Fishkin

Targeting Your Audience Earlier in the Buying Process

The author's views are entirely their own (excluding the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of Moz.

Bigger audiences and less competition aren't actually that hard to find; we just have to reach a bit farther up the funnel. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand explains the benefits of this largely unexplored place, showing you how to reach potential customers before they're even aware that they're looking for you.

Here's a still of this week's whiteboard:

Video transcription

Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Today I'm going to talk a little about targeting your customers and your potential audience earlier in their buying process.

So you're probably familiar and have seen diagrams, maybe even from marketing class if you went to marketing class, about the buying journey. Usually, the buying journey starts somewhere around here. There's awareness, research, establishing criteria, evaluating vendors, and then making a buying decision.

I want to challenge us to think even a step ahead of that. Before we know that we're going to be aware of a potential product, we are pursuing our own interests. We are living our lives. We are maybe trying to chase away boredom or downtime on our mobile phones or browsing random sites on the Internet or following our interests.

Whatever we're doing actively, that's the first place where we usually start to have awareness about something. That awareness of a potential problem or an issue or something that we might want to invest in, a business could have those awareness issues, an individual could, a family could.

Then, once we get to an awareness stage, then we start realizing, "Hey, I have a need. I'm going to start researching this need, this problem, this challenge." Then, after I've researched a little, if I decide to keep going, I'll establish criteria by which I'm going to make a buying decision. I'll evaluate some vendors, and then I'll buy.

As you can see, this is often framed in terms of a funnel because there's usually a lot more people up here than there are down here. Some people decide the problem is just not that big, and they don't need to research it. Some people who research it decide it's too expensive, or they satisfice and do something else. Some people who start to evaluate vendors decide they don't like any of them, and so they never buy anything. And that's fine.

Here's the problem. In the SEO world especially, but even more broadly in Internet marketing, we think about all of our marketing efforts down at the bottom of this process. Even the most broad ones usually think in the awareness and research phase. Very, very rarely does anyone think about that "pursuing interests" phase, but you can do remarkable things here.

For each of these phases, there are questions that you want to ask yourself as a marketer and your team, things like: Where does your audience spend time online, and what are they doing on the Web? Who do they listen to? 

Those big broad questions, because that can tell you, "Hey, we can create awareness even before that awareness exists on its own." This is the challenge of overcoming that branding problem that a lot of companies face, especially those who aren't very transactionally focused.

Then, when you get to that awareness stage, what are the earliest questions that your audience has around your topic? Not around the purchase or the criteria or the vendors, but around the broad topic. Then, in the research phase, how would someone discover the potential choices or solutions? What broad resources already exist out there that they might be navigating to in some way already?

Once you get to establishing criteria and evaluating vendors, you know what? Too late. You are too late. This is where everyone is already doing SEO. Every keyword phrase, term, every retarget or every content marketing effort, they're all here. Only a few of them are here, and almost none of them are up here. That's why it's so exciting.

Early means less competition, because there are so few people operating in here. It means more link opportunities, because a lot of the content that you create down in here is going to be very transactional, very promotional, not likely to pull in a lot of links, not reference worthy.

This stuff is super reference worthy. This is where content marketing plus link earning plus social sharing, that's where you really get that wonderful, wonderful effect of earning those links, which gets you more domain authority, which gets you the ability to rank higher for all your content, which then means the next time you produce content, it's easier and easier. That's the boulder rolling down the hill.

Earlier in the process means a bigger audience. A bigger audience, that means this is a great place to build community. This is a tough place to build community, not an impossible place, very tough compared to these.

But there are challenges that come along with this too. This is extremely hard, sometimes impossible to measure. In fact, I would say it is impossible to fully measure the efforts that you put in here and what comes out at the bottom of the funnel. You have to be willing to accept some serendipitous outcomes and some unmeasurable results.

Because of that, there's a lot less competition. By the way, you get a low overall conversion rate. You're going to target a ton of people. Look at Moz. I mean, our audience is 2.5 million, well maybe it's 3 million or more people coming to our website every month. There's not even close to half a percent of those people who are taking their free trial. Our audience, because we're reaching so far up into the phases of pursuing interests and awareness and research, we're not just spending time down here at the bottom of the funnel. For that reason, the overall conversion rate is very, very tiny.

Because of these things, because it's hard to measure, because so many of the results are serendipitous, and because of that low overall conversion rate, it's super hard to get managers or executives or clients to buy into a process like this. A lot of people are just going to say "no," and not do it.

I love marketing opportunities where lots of people are saying "no." You know why I love them? I love them because it means that there's opportunity for me. It means I can make a lot of mistakes, I can not be perfect at it, and I'm the only one there. It's a beautiful thing.

So, I've created a quick example to kind of walk you through this. Here's Rand, and I get an email from Darren Rowse at ProBlogger, and he's inviting me to come speak in Australia. Boy, Australia is a long ways away. But you know what? I want to make the trip. The ProBlogger conference sounds awesome, super cool audience. I love bloggers. I think they're a fantastic group for me to be presenting to. I think I can make a really good deck, and it's a great opportunity.

So all right, I'm going to go, but I'm also going to have three or four extra days in Queensland while I'm there. What should I do with those days? Where should I go? Well, I've already been pursuing some interests, doing things around this. I happen to know some stuff about Australian tourism and particularly one of Queensland's projects.

So I have some awareness preexisting, but the places where I hang out, social networks, technology events, tech and marketing sites have only ever once, once ever seen a company that was smart enough to do marketing alongside an event. It was like a technology search event that I went to in Utah, and a local skiing, snowboarding, slopes company had partnered with the event to run something, an offer, a discount, and this kind of thing. So a ton of people at the conference went to that skiing/snowboarding event, which was very smart because they got a lot of extra rentals. It was kind of off-season for them normally anyway. So very smart.

But these are not places where vacation folks are normally thinking about hanging out. Maybe they should. The questions that I'm asking, those early questions that I'm asking: What time of year? What will the weather be like? What about normal travel things, like adaptors and currency and prices I should expect to pay for all sorts of things? What about tipping customs? All the usual travel questions. Airlines, I'm trying to get from the West Coast of the United States to Australia.

So I have all of these kinds of questions, which a shockingly small number; I think there was maybe one or two hotel websites that I eventually found that offered this type of information. So I had to go research them elsewhere. By the way, those elsewheres were not places where any of those companies were advertising or marketing or had a partnership. What are they doing?

The places that already exist to help me find these potential choices, these are places like the Queensland Tourism Bureau and hotel resort listings and travel aggregators and blogs and forums. This is where I started to see a lot of marketers being intelligent. They had gotten to this research phase already.

But if you can take your marketing efforts and think up the funnel, rather than down, and think about keywords, websites, content, social accounts, potential influencers, all of these types of folks and opportunities, you can have an immense impact on your downstream funnel, and you can do so with far less competition and oftentimes a much larger audience.

So, hopefully, some of you are going to think a little bit earlier in the funnel around your SEO, your social, and your content efforts. We look forward to having you join us again next time for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.

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