Marketing Tools
Learn how to choose the right tools and put them to work for your business.
-
Personalized Product Recommendations
Suggestions to customers for products they may be interested in based on products they’ve already bought or viewed online. For example, if a customer bought the same tank top in 3 colors, there’s a good chance they’ll like the same tank in a new color.
-
Google Remarketing
Also called retargeting, Google remarketing is the technology that enables your Google Ads to follow potential customers as they move across the internet. When a user visits, a small snippet of code on your website adds them to a remarketing list.
-
Abandoned Cart
When a user adds a product to the online shopping cart of an e-commerce site but doesn’t proceed to checkout and complete the purchase. Users may abandon because they aren’t ready to buy.
-
Email Automation
The use of predefined rules to trigger email messages based on specific actions customers take—or don’t take.
-
Backlinks
Links on websites other than your own that go back to a page on your website. Backlinks are also called inbound links because they represent traffic coming to your website from somewhere else.
-
E-commerce
At its core, e-commerce is simply the buying and selling of goods and services using the internet. However, the term is often used to describe all of a seller’s efforts throughout the buying process.
-
Direct Mail Marketing
A type of direct marketing that’s delivered physically to a prospect’s mailbox through the United States Postal Service or other delivery service. Postcards, flyers, and catalogs are common examples. Email marketing is the digital equivalent.
-
Audience Segmentation
A marketing strategy based on identifying subgroups within the target audience in order to deliver more tailored messaging for stronger connections.