In an increasingly
efficient world, what works today won't work tomorrow. So what should marketers
do? Columnist David Rodnitzky discusses some key tactics.
“Facebook ads don’t work anymore,”
according to an investor friend of mine, who had witnessed one of his portfolio
companies reduce their Facebook spend by more than 50 percent in the past few
months. “Companies can’t get the ROI they used to get on the network.”
The complaint was
reminiscent of a Yogi Berra quote about a popular restaurant: “Nobody goes
there anymore. It’s too crowded.”
The truth about Facebook —
and almost every other online marketing channel — is that it is becoming an
efficient market: As more advertisers enter the market, and as Facebook
improves its tools and user interface, the price of an ad on Facebook edges
closer and closer to its “true value.”
As a result, advertisers who
have been using the system for a while will notice their ROI decline (assuming
that the advertiser does not make improvements to their campaigns that outpace
the increase in competition).
So what’s an advertiser to
do? There are two ways to combat efficient markets: improving your own
performance and arbitrage.
Improving faster than market efficiency
As noted, as new advertisers
join a marketing channel, prices rise. Prices also increase when existing
advertisers improve their performance — enabling them to bid more for
inventory. And prices rise when publishers (e.g., Facebook, Google) make it
easier for advertisers to spend money on their networks.
Put another way, in a
dynamic, ever-more-competitive market, standing still is definitely moving
backwards. To maintain historical ROI, an advertiser has to improve their own
metrics at the same rate of growth as the channel’s own efficiency growth.
Both Google and Facebook are
essentially cost-per-thousand (CPM) networks where click-through rate (CTR)
multiplied by cost-per-click (CPC) multiplied by 1,000 determines the rank of
advertisers. So an advertiser who is striving for a return on ad spend (ROAS)
goal (which is revenue divided by cost) would need to increase their
revenue-per-thousand impressions (RPM) (Revenue multiplied by CTR multiplied by
1,000) at the same rate as the increase in CPM.
Improving RPM can be driven
by numerous factors: conversion rate optimization, pricing/offer optimization,
CTR improvement, improvement in lifetime value (LTV) and so on. And to be
clear, to grow ROAS, improvement needs to exceed the CPM growth of the channel.
So simply improving
performance year over year does not guarantee better results — indeed,
improving at a slower rate than the market will guarantee worse results. That’s
right — improvement can lead to worse results year over year!
Arbitrage: getting in early
Tactic number two is to
attempt to find inefficient marketing channels. This is known as “arbitrage.”
Marketers who launched campaigns on Facebook as soon as the advertising network
went live were able to buy ads at a deeply discounted price, simply because
fewer advertisers were competing at that time.
Every new marketing channel
follows a similar arc to Facebook (which I call “the arc of Internet marketing
channel adoption”). There are three stages to this arc: 1) no one cares, no one
spends any money; 2) everyone cares, no one spends any money; 3) no one cares,
everyone spends money.
Advertising on a channel
before the majority of advertisers have allocated budget to that channel is a
great way to get ad inventory at below its “efficient market” value.
Of course, arbitrage is not
without its risks. For starters, new advertising channels typically have
limited reporting and tools and immature user interfaces, all of which means
that advertisers have to put in a lot of sweat equity to get results.
Second, not all new channels
will drive great results, so advertisers looking for arbitrage are going to
have to accept a certain number of unprofitable failed tests.
Lastly, arbitrage — by its
nature — is a short-term strategy. Highly profitable channels do not stay
secret for very long; once other advertisers discover the channel, the
arbitrage strategy must be replaced by a performance improvement strategy that
outpaces the increasing efficiency of the channel.
Efficiency neutralizes your secrets
My wife always complains
that I “give away my secrets” when I write tactical how-to guides to online
marketing, like my explanations of The Lin-Rodnitzky Ratio and the Alpha Beta
Account Structure. But here’s the thing about tactical secrets: They have a
half-life of usefulness.
Secret strategies either get
discovered by the masses or simply become outdated; these are both consequences
of market efficiency.
Online marketing is a moving
target, so discovering a new technique, or a new arbitrage channel, will help
today but not tomorrow. This fact, by the way, is why it’s often a huge mistake
to replace online marketing experts with cheaper junior staff; the junior staff
is generally able to maintain the current performance, but they fail to keep up
with change, and eventually, performance declines.
So the next time someone
tells you that online marketing no longer works, put the comment in the proper
perspective. The truth is that there are companies that continue to improve and
evolve their online marketing, and thus maintain consistent profitability from
their efforts.
Many other companies,
however, believe that what worked yesterday will work tomorrow. In an
ever-more-efficient world, that is a strategy doomed to failure.
This post was originally
published here: Efficiency And Arbitrage:
Two Strategies To Own Performance Marketing

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