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Offline vs Online Marketing - Which Is Better For Your Business? - Fleximize

Offline vs Online Marketing - Which Is Better For Your Business?

Dmitrii Kustov, online marketing expert, delves into the pros and cons of offline and online marketing, including sharing examples of when offline marketing can produce exceptional results

By Dmitrii Kustov

In the world of online marketing, we generally think of offline or traditional marketing channels (like TV, radio, cold calls, billboards, flyers, and visiting expos) as too expensive. According to one of many studies, the average lead-to-sale conversion rate is up to 77.5x higher for online marketing compared to offline efforts.

Offline Marketing

Pros:

Cons:

Online Marketing

Pros:

Cons:

However, there are a few specific scenarios when offline marketing outperforms its digital sibling. These are outlined below:

Reaching a specific audience

One of the situations where traditional marketing has shown itself to be more effective is when an incredibly small or specific audience is targeted, say 1, 2, or even 50 people in a particular area. For example, let’s say you’re a house flipper who got your hands on a list of properties that are about to be foreclosed. You don’t have emails or phone numbers, but you know the address. You could create a PPC or social media ad campaign and advertise by radius, but you’d be spending all that time, effort, and money on everyone in that radius, not just the people you need.

In this situation, direct mail will be the perfect fit. It costs less than £1 to print a letter and send a piece of mail. And you can be certain that the person you want to reach will be reached.

Traditional industries

In the case of large oil & gas companies, deals are not being made because a given company is ranking #1 on Google for “oil & gas provider”. In those circles, it’s all about who you know, how connections are built, and, of course, referrals. So, it’s common to spend a lot of money on PPC and email marketing, but without some type of personal introduction, it will be difficult to make a deal. This is an example of where traditional marketing channels come in - such as conferences, EXPOs, and high-level networking.

Companies with large budgets

Each marketing channel, whether it’s online or offline, has an impressions cap or the max number of times an ad can be shown to users. For example, social media marketing and advertising are limited by the number of people on a given platform in the area you want to market. This audience would have a platform views cap of around 1,000,000 people in the area targeted with ads. Each person goes to that platform 20 times a day. Therefore the ad views cap would be somewhere around 20,000,000 max.

Another example would be PPC campaigns like Google AdWords or Microsoft Ads. These search giants can’t show a product or service ad more than the number of times people search for it, so that’s the technical ad view cap for PPC. Therefore, even if the online marketing channels in use are not fully optimized, yet they are close to the impression cap, and there’s still a marketing budget left; the only real choice is to spend on traditional marketing.

Guerilla marketing

Guerilla marketing is probably the biggest pro-traditional argument. By definition, guerilla marketing is “an advertisement strategy in which a company uses surprise and/or unconventional interactions in order to promote a product or service”.

In this case, the marketing idea is the implementation of offline marketing - the product itself, the guerilla marketing “piece” is the advertising channel. Guerilla marketing, online and offline channels work particularly well together - creating something in the physical world and then letting it spread through social media, video marketing, etc, increasing the reach.

What works best for your business?

Both online and offline marketing will always have pros and cons. Neither is perfect for every situation, and there’s always room for improvement or unexpected change in how marketing and audiences react to each other. Typically, online marketing brings more value per pound spent. But, as shown above, sometimes offline marketing can perform just as well, if not better, than online. In most cases, they work even better when used together.

About the Author

Dmitrii Kustov is the Internet Marketing Director at Regex SEO and his work has appeared on MOZ, RankWatch, SEMrush, HackerNoon, UpCity, Business Innovator Radio, Small Biz Bonfire and many other high-profile marketing platforms. He has increased the online presence of numerous brands through custom digital marketing campaigns and innovative content marketing techniques.

Companies with large budgets

Each marketing channel, whether it’s online or offline, has an impressions cap or the max number of times an ad can be shown to users. For example, social media marketing and advertising are limited by the number of people on a given platform in the area you want to market. This audience would have a platform views cap of around 1,000,000 people in the area targeted with ads. Each person goes to that platform 20 times a day. Therefore the ad views cap would be somewhere around 20,000,000 max.

Another example would be PPC campaigns like Google AdWords or Microsoft Ads. These search giants can’t show a product or service ad more than the number of times people search for it, so that’s the technical ad view cap for PPC. Therefore, even if the online marketing channels in use are not fully optimized, yet they are close to the impression cap, and there’s still a marketing budget left; the only real choice is to spend on traditional marketing.

Guerilla marketing

Guerilla marketing is probably the biggest pro-traditional argument. By definition, guerilla marketing is “an advertisement strategy in which a company uses surprise and/or unconventional interactions in order to promote a product or service”.

In this case, the marketing idea is the implementation of offline marketing - the product itself, the guerilla marketing “piece” is the advertising channel. Guerilla marketing, online and offline channels work particularly well together - creating something in the physical world and then letting it spread through social media, video marketing, etc, increasing the reach.

What works best for your business?

Both online and offline marketing will always have pros and cons. Neither is perfect for every situation, and there’s always room for improvement or unexpected change in how marketing and audiences react to each other. Typically, online marketing brings more value per pound spent. But, as shown above, sometimes offline marketing can perform just as well, if not better, than online. In most cases, they work even better when used together.