Growth Hacking

Data-Driven Marketing: What Is It and How to Use It in Practice

Data-driven marketing changed everything.

It marked the shift from traditional marketing methods and emphasized measurable insights over assumptions.

Data-driven marketing essentially brought the scientific method to digital marketing with:

  • Observation & hypothesis
  • Experimentation & testing
  • Analysis & conclusion
  • Iterattion & refinement

But let’s take things from the start.

What is Data-Driven Marketing?

In a sentence, data-driven marketing is the kind of marketing that collects, analyzes, and optimizes data to make informed decisions.

By integrating this data into your marketing, you can understand what works and what doesn’t and create more personalized campaigns. More personalization leads to more engagement and more engagement leads to a higher conversion rate. Suffice it to say that it also increases ROI by targeting resources more efficiently.

Data-driven marketing has 3 pillars:

  • Precision in targeting: By understanding who your customers are and what they want, you can tailor your messages to meet specific needs.
  • Measurable outcomes: Data-driven approaches allow you to track the success of your campaigns in real time, making adjustments as needed to improve results.
  • Customer-centric campaigns: Marketing becomes more customer-focused, enhancing customer loyalty (retention) and satisfaction.

 

Customer Retention Rate

By 2026, 65% of all organizations will be fully data-driven. Data-driven is here to stay. Data-driven marketing, even more so.

What Data-Driven Marketing Means for Each Brand of Marketing

1. PPC

We can’t think of PPC (Pay-Per-Click) without data.

PPC advertising, particularly on search engines, was inherently data-driven due to its model: marketers and advertisers pay a fee each time one of their ads is clicked. This model wouldn’t be possible without data analytics to measure effectiveness, manage budgets, and optimize ad performance.

Thanks to detailed analytics on click-through rates, conversion rates, and cost per acquisition you can know which keywords and ad placements are the most effective, allowing for better budget allocation and targeted ad creation.

💁Example: A small tech startup ran an A/B test for a PPC ad for 10 days and analyzed their campaign data. 

Ad A

🔹 Increase Productivity with Our App! 🔹
Boost your efficiency with the latest technology.
Download now and get started!
www.ourawesomeapp.com

Ad B

🌟 “This App Increase My Productivity!” – Sarah K. 🌟
Experience the difference with our user-approved software.
Try it today—download here!
www.ourawesomeapp.com

They identified variant B which features user testimonials has a 20% higher conversion rate than those without.

Following a data-driven marketing approach, they started running variant B, reducing customer acquisition costs and increasing overall downloads.

2. Email marketing

Following PPC, email marketing was another digital marketing branch that used data extensively early on. And for a good reason.

Email marketing campaigns generate a lot of measurable data. From open rates and click-through rates to conversion rates, and bounce rates, using this kind of data you can refine your messaging, timing, and targeting strategies to improve the effectiveness of your campaigns.

What’s more, thanks to the many robust email marketing and automation platforms you have data and analytics in the palms of your hand.

💁 Example: An eCommerce store collects various data points through customer interactions both in-store and online, such as purchase history, browsing behavior, and email engagement. Thanks to this data, the store can categorize its email list into segments based on demographic data like age, gender, and location.

Accordingly, customers who frequently purchase children’s clothing are placed into a “Parents” segment. What’s more, if data shows that a segment often buys kids’ clothing in the early summer, the store sends targeted emails with promotions on children’s summer wear just before the season starts.

💡 Read: eCommerce Email Marketing: From Purchase to Referral

3. Social media marketing

It’s no secret that big tech loves data as do their social media platforms. Social media platforms collect vast amounts of user data, that are used to target specific buyer personas and track campaign performance in real-time, and marketers use them.

Data such as detailed demographics, interests, and behavior data, allow you to tailor your content and advertisements to the most receptive audience segments. Metrics such as likes, shares, and comments will also help you understand the overall effectiveness of your campaigns.

💁 Example: A cosmetics brand uses Instagram data to identify trends in which products are most discussed and shared among users in the 18-25 age group.

They then launch a targeted ad campaign featuring popular items, using images and hashtags that have historically led to high engagement rates within this group. They also use Instagram’s built-in analytics to track which posts and stories lead to the most website visits and product purchases.

4. SEO

To better understand data-driven marketing in SEO and how it can impact your SEO strategy, we need to see how it can impact every one of its three pillars, namely technical SEO, on-page SEO, and off-page SEO.

Technical SEO

Technical SEO includes mostly website-related aspects such as site structure, navigation, crawlability, indexability, and page speed.

Accordingly, some of its fundamental data metrics include: 

  • Page load time
  • Mobile responsiveness
  • Crawl errors

Data-driven technical SEO is not so much about using data for making strategic decisions. Its technical nature leaves no room for improvisation; instead, it demands optimization.

💁 Example: An eCommerce website analyzed its website data and found that pages with load times longer than 3 seconds see a 40% higher bounce rate compared to pages that load in under 1 second. Additionally, they discovered that the checkout page has a high load time as well.

Based on these insights, the store decided to optimize its website’s performance. Accordingly, they target reducing the page load time by optimizing images, streamlining the code, and improving server response times.

Source

On-page SEO

On-page SEO focuses on content optimization (text optimization & image optimization), meta-data, and UX signals.

Some of the key data metrics in on-page SEO include:

  • Keyword Rankings
  • Click-Through Rate (CTR)
  • Content Engagement

Unlike technical SEO, on-page SEO allows for more creative and strategic adjustments based on performance data.

💁 Example: A growth marketing agency noticed that one of its best-performing blog posts has been losing rankings—and traffic. They also found that the post has been declining in engagement and also in the average time spent on the page.

So they decided to rework the post and republish it. They made sure that any information included was current and relevant, with updated statistics, facts, and references, and also did SEO image optimization. Furthermore, they added new sections, based on new keyword research, to enrich the post. Finally, they updated the title and meta description.

Off-page SEO

Off-page SEO is mostly about one thing: backlinks. Finding ways other websites will link to yours; a process known as link-building.

Some key data metrics in off-page SEO include:

  • Backlink quality & backlink quantity
  • Domain rating & domain relevance
  • Anchor text relevance

Off-page SEO -especially white-hat off-page SEO–  is highly strategic, relying on building relationships and online reputation, rather than direct website modifications.

💁 Example: A specialty coffee retailer notices that one of their articles published half a year ago still doesn’t rank. After they ensure that their technical and on-page SEO are both on-point, they look at the page’s backlink profile. They see that not only the page doesn’t have almost any backlinks, but those backlinks also come from spammy, low-authority domains.

First, they disavow those spammy backlinks. Second, they implement a targeted link-building campaign. They reach out to popular food bloggers and coffee enthusiasts for guest blogging opportunities and send samples in exchange for honest reviews and backlinks. 

Challenges of Data-Driven Marketing

Most digital marketers can’t imagine making most of their decisions without data. By just looking at some of the examples mentioned above you can see why.

That said, while data-driven marketing offers considerable benefits, it also presents several challenges. Some of the most important data-driven marketing hurdles are:

Data quality and integration: Collecting high-quality, accurate data and integrating it takes time. If the data is poor, it can lead to wrong decisions. Handling lots of data from different sources can lead to mistakes. At the same time, information that’s outdated or incorrect can be misleading. This brings us to the next point.

Vanity metrics: Perhaps the most common mistake in every digital marketing branch. Digital marketers pick the wrong kinds of metrics—data points that might look impressive on paper. Unlike growth metrics, vanity metrics don’t necessarily translate into real business success or actionable strategies. Digital marketers often fall into the trap of focusing on these metrics because they are easy to measure and present, even though they may not provide meaningful insights into performance or growth

💡 Read: Which KPI Is Most Likely to Be a Vanity Metric?

Privacy and compliance: With the increasing emphasis on consumer privacy, adhering to data protection regulations like GDPR and CCPA is crucial. Non-compliance can result in hefty fines and damage to your brand’s reputation so you need to make sure that you are GDPR and CCPA compliant.

Skill gap: Implementing data-driven strategies effectively requires team members to have strong skills in data analysis and interpretation. However, many companies face a skill gap, where the current team members may not have sufficient expertise in these areas. This gap can hinder an organization’s ability to analyze data properly, draw accurate conclusions, and make informed decisions.

 

The growth marketer skillset

💡 Read: Top Data Analysis Courses in 2024 – From $0

Data-Driven Marketing and Growth Marketing

How are data-driven marketing and growth marketing connected?

Growth marketing can be seen as an evolution of data-driven marketing. It builds on the ideas of data-driven marketing but goes a step further by focusing on the entire customer journey. 

Foundation in data: It’s clear by now that data-driven marketing uses data to help you make informed marketing decisions. Without this kind of data, identifying problems and solving them through personalization and optimization just wouldn’t be possible. 

Expansion beyond acquisition: Data-driven marketing often focuses on acquiring customers and optimizing campaigns for conversion. Growth marketing expands this scope to include retention, engagement, and referrals—what is known as the growth funnel or AARRR framework.

Integration across departments: Growth marketing takes the data-driven approach and integrates it across all facets of a company’s operations, from product development to customer service, ensuring that every aspect of the user experience is optimized for growth. Similar to RevOps, it aims to break down the silos between these departments and makes them more intertwined. 

Source: getfunnelcake.com

Conclusion

Successful digital marketing, let alone growth marketing, is unthinkable without data and data-driven marketing. Only through the right kind of data, with the right kind of handling, can you make informed decisions.

Do you need help aligning your data with your marketing, your big data marketing, or anything data-related? 

Contact us and find out how we can help you!

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Published by
Nicolas Lekkas

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