Imagine delivering a customized, dynamic consumer experience -- generated in real time for each unique visitor to your site.
For many marketers, this is the promise of behavioral targeting
-- the possibility to deliver unique content and offers based on a customer's profile and behavior. Now, imagine the knowledge needed to make informed "projections" about what your visitors want to
see at your site.
Effective behavioral targeting requires both extensive knowledge about your consumers -- and a rich array of content to cater to their unique desires. Without a solid
foundation, content may be off-target -- or worse, off-putting.
Another option for marketers looking to optimize their messaging and content is to leverage A/B testing. A/B testing enables
organizations to test multiple messages and/or creative directions across a broader audience.
A/B can be a precursor to behavioral targeting -- providing a foundation of knowledge to help
build personas -- and it can be leveraged to test content for companies already running a behavioral program. Assessing the complexity and maturing of your marketing model will help identify which
solution is most effective.
Do You Know Enough About Your Visitors?
How much actionable information do you have about your visitors? Can you predict their goals and
needs? Are you working with ad networks, collecting data across multiple external sites and click streams? If so, the potential to deliver targeted content and offers based on their previous behavior
is great. You can construct detailed matrixes that serve content based on the family of sites they have visited -- and the predicted traits and interests visitors to that family of sites
demonstrate.
However, if the first known point of contact with your visitor is their arrival at your site, predicting their targeted area of interest is a trickier. A more effective approach
may be performing an A/B test of two broader offers to site visitors to see which performs better. This would ensure that no audience is excluded or misdirected -- and requires less historical data to
drive the offer.
How Different Are Your Consumers?
Segmenting your visitors into unique profiles -- or personas -- is one of the first steps in most behavioral
programs. High-performing behavioral targeting programs are based on having a rich profile of your consumers, and comprehensive, differentiated profiles illustrating how each segment is expected to
behave.
Do You Have a Wide Array of Products and Services?
Are your products diverse enough to support uniquely rendered content based on consumer behavior? For
companies with large, diversified product sets, behavioral targeting offers opportunities to suggest products and services within a broad category.
Consumers shopping for CDs will have very
different behaviors, search terms and past site views than consumers shopping for sporting goods -- which makes the probability of success for delivering targeted content to each group high.
But for businesses that have relatively few large and complex solutions, serving up unique, relevant content may not be feasible. Is it worth developing comprehensive data sets and behavioral
models if, regardless of the profile, the product and offer are fundamentally the same? If diversity of products is limited, A/B testing messaging that supports the buying decision can deliver
category level insights applicable to a broader audience.