BLACK FRIDAY SALE - up to 57% off memberships for a limited time!

Explore our Digital Marketing Strategy and Planning Toolkit

Digital marketing trends

Author's avatar By Dave Chaffey 05 Dec, 2012
Essential Essential topic

Trends in marketing with the best potential for commercial growth

Update: My review of 22 Digital Marketing Trends 2014

Throughout the year I’m asked about What’s New, What’s Hot and What’s Next. This is one of the reasons why we’ve created the [What’s New in Marketing" updates, to give a monthly summary to help people working in marketing and using digital technologies see the latest developments which really matter. So much of what’s discussed daily in digital marketing is useful or interesting, but just noise.

In this review I will focus on the major trends which we think will be significant in 2013. What’s "significant’? These are marketing activities where we expect to see the most increased investment and focus in 2013. The activities will gain the funding since they will have the biggest impact in creating additional leads and sales and strengthening brands. It doesn’t focus on the latest new Ecommerce technologies and marketing techniques, I will create an additional post on this.

Poll - what do you rate as the most important digital marketing trends

In this review I picked out what I saw as the major trends in marketing activities and asked readers to vote on what they saw as important. These are the results:

Trends summary

The trends are listed in the poll in alphabetical order, with my list later in this post in order of how I see popularity. It will be interesting to see how they compare. I have put my eight trends in order of current interest in marketing based on marketers I’ve spoken to while at conferences, workshops or when consulting. I have spoken at three mobile marketing conferences in the Autumn, so that skews it a bit, but does indicate the interest.

1. Mobile marketing

The importance of mobile marketing varies dramatically by sector. It’s incredibly important to sales in some consumer markets where there is a sweet spot of mobile use to sales. In other types of business, the proportions of tablet and smartphone access are lower, less than 10% in some cases, but they’re only heading in one direction. The debate continues as to whether mobile access will exceed desktop by 2014 or 2015 (see our mobile statistics post for the latest). See the latest Mary Meeker review at the end of this post for more on trends in mobile adoption.

The examples from the start of this presentation like Betfair, Autoglass and Dominos show the impact mobile commerce is having already.

Mobile marketing strategies from Dave Chaffey

Hub page: Mobile marketing

2. Content marketing

We rate a focus on content marketing as more important to marketing success today than social media since successful content creation and amplification supports leads and sales generation and engages existing customers across a wider range of digital channels than social networks. Content marketing supports SEO, Pay-per-click, landing pages and conversion rate optimisation, social media marketing and social media marketing.

Hub page: Content marketing strategy

3. Branded niche or vertical communities

Interacting with customers and prospects via social networks has the benefit of increasing promotion and awareness about brand through sharing and it gives an alternative to email marketing to broadcast promotions and content to customers that don’t favour email marketing. However, social networks have many limitations compared to communities developed on a brand site including the need to use paid advertising (Facebook EdgeRank), limited direct sales from social networks, limited options for creating tailored experiences, limited data capture and personalisation at an individual level). So we expect to see more medium and large companies growing branded communities on their own site alongside their social presence.

Here are some examples from across different sectors.

Hub page: Customer communities

4. Conversion rate optimisation (CRO)

We have featured many articles on [CRO processes[() and [CRO examples] in the past year. We believe it often doesn’t get sufficient budget compared to driving traffic to sites. CRO isn’t only important for Ecommerce and transactional sites. Every site should have conversion paths to marketing outcomes which contribute to the business. This area gets more important when tactics and techniques centred around social and content marketing are used to increase leads, since the ‘quality’ of leads generated can start to vary, which also leads us on to the next point, number 5. See this article for detailed guidance on conversion rate optimisation process.

Hub page: Conversion rate optimisation

5. Increased use of marketing automation

We have given several examples of the power of targeted email sequences during 2012. Once the preserve of larger companies. While not new and possible for many years, we are seeing more triggered emails such as welcome sequences. Increased adoption is made possible through low-cost email systems like Aweber, MailChimp and Office Autopilot. These platforms are moving quickly to enable, automated, multi-channel customer centric communications previously only available via Enterprise systems such as Marketo, Eloqua and Genius/Salesforce.

Hub page: Marketing automation, Behavioural Email marketing

6. A move from #bigdata to #smalldata

Big data hype cycle

As Alan Mitchell explained in our briefing on big data, in many organisations…

"Big Data is actually customer data: data about customer behaviour. This is something that organisations collect about their customers in order to do something like offer them a product or send them a message. It’s all about helping organisations do more, more efficiently.

We think there are bigger gains in connecting and using customer data using social, transactional customer data and with digital analytics to refine marketing through approaches such as social media outreach, conversion rate optimisation and marketing automation. Some say we need to exploit #smalldata before worrying about #bigdata.

7. Contextual targeting through ad networks

2012 has seen more use of the relatively new Adwords Remarketing technique and we can expect to see this increase in 2013.

Other networks.

Hub page: Behavioural ad targeting

8. Search personalisation including Google Search Plus Your World

Google has always been about increasing relevance; it’s based its success on this. Over the last several years, Google has been increasing its ability to tailor results for the individual. The advent of social recommendations in Google+ and Google Authorship favours brands with the biggest engagement who do more than simply promote through social media, but take customer engagement seriously.

Hub page: Search Engine Optimisation

Digital technology adoption trends

If you're looking for more data summarising trends in technology adoption I recommend the annual Mary Meeker report published on the 3rd December. Meeker, a former securities analyst works for Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers (KPCB).

2012 KPCB Internet Trends Year-End Update from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers

For me the two most telling technology trends from this compilation are again around mobile marketing where we can see the rapid adoption of Tablets and Android compared to previous compilations. Supporting users on these platforms must be a priority in 2013.

Tablet adoption trends after launch

Smartphone adoption trends after launch

We hope you find this look at the major trends in marketing useful as a prompt for what to include in your digital strategy and roadmap for new developments. We will follow-up with a more detailed post looking at innovation across the other areas of RACE and how they impact on Ecommerce.

What are your priorities in 2013?

Dave Chaffey and Dan Bosomworth

Author's avatar

By Dave Chaffey

Digital strategist Dr Dave Chaffey is co-founder and Content Director of online marketing training platform and publisher Smart Insights. 'Dr Dave' is known for his strategic, but practical, data-driven advice. He has trained and consulted with many business of all sizes in most sectors. These include large international B2B and B2C brands including 3M, BP, Barclaycard, Dell, Confused.com, HSBC, Mercedes-Benz, Microsoft, M&G Investment, Rentokil Initial, O2, Royal Canin (Mars Group) plus many smaller businesses. Dave is editor of the templates, guides and courses in our digital marketing resource library used by our Business members to plan, manage and optimize their marketing. Free members can access our free sample templates here. Dave is also keynote speaker, trainer and consultant who is author of 5 bestselling books on digital marketing including Digital Marketing Excellence and Digital Marketing: Strategy, Implementation and Practice. In 2004 he was recognised by the Chartered Institute of Marketing as one of 50 marketing ‘gurus’ worldwide who have helped shape the future of marketing. My personal site, DaveChaffey.com, lists my latest Digital marketing and E-commerce books and support materials including a digital marketing glossary. Please connect on LinkedIn to receive updates or ask me a question.

Recommended Blog Posts