Motor Equipment News

Business – Digital Marketing

ALEX GARDEN HIGHLIGHTS A TRIED AND TESTED PRINCIPLE FOR MANAGING YOUR DIGITAL MARKETING AND PUTTING SOME ‘ZING’ INTO YOUR COMPANY’S PERFORMANC­E.

- Alex Garden is ‘NetGuru’ at NetInsites, specialist­s in web design and general web strategy.

One of the major issues with modern business is the continual change and innovation in the digital media sphere. We’ve been in this business now for 22 years and when we started none of the current social media giants were even in existence. The oldest two are probably Facebook (17 years) and Reddit (15.5 years).

So as a business how do you navigate the shift to digital when things are everchangi­ng?

In this article I’m going to look at Google’s use of the 70:20:10 rule to drive their own innovation and apply it in a practical way that you can use.

First developed by researcher­s in the 1980s as a model for learning and developmen­t, the rule is now also applied to innovation and marketing. Eric Schmidt, when he was Google’s CEO, put in place the 70:20:10 rule to systemise innovation.

The principle was that 70 percent of everyone’s time should be spent on their core job, 20 percent as part of another team or on related projects and ten

The underlying premise was that a company can’t continue to grow and innovate if it continues to do what it has always done. However, you can’t spend so this is a way of controllin­g but also encouragin­g innovation.

So how can you use this principle in your business?

I’m going to concentrat­e on marketing and in particular digital marketing but you could apply it however you like.

1. 70 percent of your efforts should be on existing marketing because it’s bringing in customers and hopefully sustaining your business growth.

2. 20 percent should be on marketing projects that relate to your main efforts but aiming at a new group of customers or launching a new related service or product.

3. you take some chances by using different media, or products and

But how does that look in practice? It would be fair to say that most small and medium size companies market themselves using a mix of the following media and methods:

1. At trade shows, conference­s or other real-world opportunit­ies such as marketing groups and business associatio­ns.

Email marketing.

A website presence – perhaps selling online via an e-commerce store. Maybe some advertisin­g in magazines (although more likely on digital platforms these days).

Digital advertisin­g on newspaper websites or on other websites.

Some Google AdWords.

Maybe some Facebook advertisin­g.

2.

3.

4. 5.

6.

7.

A mix of these media, for most businesses would be regarded as the 70

The 20 percent part of the 70:20:10 rule with a digital focus would be to do things such as:

1. Building a mini-website to market a new product or service.

Linking your email marketing with your sales data so that customers get regular updates that are more personalis­ed and therefore more useful.

Analysing the leads that follow from your Google AdWords against your Facebook advertisin­g and adjust the spend accordingl­y. start writing articles about your industry or specialist subject. 2. 3. 4.

As you can see, the 20 percent is more focused on improving or adding to your existing products/services without doing anything outrageous­ly different.

The 10 percent section is where you can take some chances, such as these:

1. choose one to follow through on. If your product/service has a young customer base or you’d like to grow that, how about advertisin­g on TikTok?

Investigat­e Instagram and even Instagram TV (IGTV) where you can post video. 2. 3.

The 70:20:10 rule is a great way of putting some zing into your company’s performanc­e.

As Albert Einstein famously said: “The thing over and over again, but expecting different results.”

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