Building Connection

Main Menu

  • Articles
    • Columns
    • Features
  • News
    • Business Matters
    • Design
    • Fire safety
    • Heritage Trades
    • Materials
    • Prefabrication
    • Research
    • Safety
    • Sustainability
  • Products
    • Adhesives and sealants
    • Bricks
    • Cladding
    • Concrete
    • Doors
    • Fences
    • Flooring
    • Interiors
    • Joinery
    • Pest control
    • Plumbing
    • Roofing
    • Steel
    • Storage
    • Technology
    • Tiling
    • Timber
    • Tools & clothing
    • Vehicles
    • Walls
    • Waterproofing
    • Windows
  • Resources
    • Building TV
    • Standards and Regulations

logo

Building Connection

  • Articles
    • Columns
    • Features
  • News
    • Business Matters
    • Design
    • Fire safety
    • Heritage Trades
    • Materials
    • Prefabrication
    • Research
    • Safety
    • Sustainability
  • Products
    • Adhesives and sealants
    • Bricks
    • Cladding
    • Concrete
    • Doors
    • Fences
    • Flooring
    • Interiors
    • Joinery
    • Pest control
    • Plumbing
    • Roofing
    • Steel
    • Storage
    • Technology
    • Tiling
    • Timber
    • Tools & clothing
    • Vehicles
    • Walls
    • Waterproofing
    • Windows
  • Resources
    • Building TV
    • Standards and Regulations
Business MattersNews
Home›News›Business Matters›Navigating the digital marketing world

Navigating the digital marketing world

By Staff Writer
August 8, 2019
136
0

Digital marketing is an incredibly important part of any business but often the jargon can be really puzzling. Digital marketing expert Sabri Suby breaks it down to help you navigate your way through.

As a builder, you know the ins and outs of your industry and you could explain the essential tools (pun intended) to being a great builder. However, if you’re new to digital marketing, acronyms such as CPC and CPA can get confusing. I have put together a guide on digital marketing jargon to help get you up to speed.

CPA (COST PER ACQUISITION)

At the most basic level, your ‘cost per acquisition’ is how much you’re spending on your marketing to sign a new customer. You essentially look at your marketing spend and divide it by the number of customers that resulted from those activities, to determine how much it cost to acquire those new customers. You can also use that formula to determine how much you need to spend for a potential client to take an action leading to a sale, such as visiting your website.

This means if the cost per click in the building industry is $5 and you want 100 people to come to your website so that you can get one new client, the cost to acquire one is $500. Even if you’re not a digital marketer, it’s important that you know your CPA so you can measure your return on investment.

CPC (COST PER CLICK)

‘Cost per click’ is the pricing model where businesses are charged by publishers for every click someone makes on an ad which leads potential clients to your website.

Let’s say you’re a builder in Melbourne. The keywords ‘builder in Melbourne’ will be bid on by hundreds of other builders wanting to advertise on Google. Every time your ad is clicked, you pay per click.

The demand for that keyword will determine how much that click costs. A word or subject that doesn’t have a lot of demand will be lower in cost. So, as an example, at my agency we try and find niche keywords that other marketing agencies may not have thought of (but are still searched for by your ideal potential customers), so we can get lower cost of clicks.

CTR (CLICK THROUGH RATE)

The rate of clicks that your online ad receives compared to other ads is called your ‘click through rate’. If for every 100 times a building business appears in Google, they have seven clicks on their website, that would make their CTR 7%.

This is where expert copywriting comes through to attract attention and compel people to click your ad, and where you need to make sure that you have a digital marketing agency that understands your business and requirements.

CONVERSION

This is the desired action taken by a visitor. Simply, conversion is getting a potential client to respond to your call-to-action. So, for example, getting people to go to your landing page and filling in an online form is one way of seeing your conversion. The big question is: did your call-to-action convert to customers? The ultimate conversion is booking that new big client that came from your online ad. If you aren’t getting $2 for every $1 you put in to your digital marketing, then something is wrong.

KEYWORDS

Keywords are the really important terms that showcase what your business is all about. So if you specialise in construction and your main clients are those in the retail industry, your key words would be around construction and retail.

It’s all about understanding the psychology behind the person making that search. So you need to understand what your potential client would be typing into a search engine in order to find a company like yours. Once you find your keywords you can use them in your lead-generating content.

Another term that should be in every digital marketer’s jargon, is ROI – return on investment. Metrics like CTR (click through rate) are important markers for a how a digital campaign is progressing, but they are not measures of success. Enquiries that lead to sales are the only measure of success that matters. So make sure your digital marketing agency is motivated to help grow your business.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sabri Suby is the founder of Australia’s fastest growing digital marketing agency, King Kong, and author of international best seller, ‘Sell Like Crazy’. The book covers all facets of digital marketing and illustrates the path to success with real-life case studies where Sabri has used the exact same selling system to supercharge their business.

 

Tagscpactrdigital marketingjargonroiseo
Previous Article

Oliver releases new range of boots

Next Article

Mildura’s new service hub is setting a ...

Advertisement

SIGN UP TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Advertisement

Latest posts

  • NSW Government introduces digital applications for high-risk work license holders
  • ResiLoop unveils collection network to protect landfills from floorcoverings
  • Modulate introduces Modulate Express container-based buildings
  • Building Commission NSW launches Construct NSW course in Mandarin
  • Industry bodies speak on impact of Albanese’s re-election on new housing projects
  • Home
  • About Building Connection
  • Download Media Kit
  • Contribute
  • Contact Us