By using cookie data from website visitors (with consent), businesses can send a physical postcard to high-intent prospects who didn't convert online. This tactic creates a powerful, seemingly serendipitous touchpoint that reconnects with potential customers offline, making your brand feel omnipresent.
Differentiate marketing channels by their purpose. Use online platforms for broad reach and repeated touchpoints. Reserve offline, in-person events for fostering the genuine, vulnerable connections that are difficult to replicate digitally and are critical for building strong relationships.
Instead of presenting all form fields at once, use a two-step process. The first step asks only for an email address, a low-friction action. This allows you to capture a lead for remarketing even if the user abandons the second step.
The 'creepiness' factor in marketing doesn't come from using data, but from using it poorly. A generic, timed 'you left this in your cart' email feels more intrusive than a highly-tailored message that reflects specific user behavior, which feels helpful.
Start with a single field asking only for an email address. This low-friction entry point secures a lead for retargeting even if the user abandons the form. Subsequent, more detailed fields are presented only after the initial, low-commitment step is complete.
Proving digital data can fuel offline sales, a Toronto restaurant group that launched e-commerce during the pandemic bridged the online-offline gap. By integrating Shopify data with MailChimp, they used automated welcome and win-back campaigns based on online grocery and wine purchases to successfully drive customers back into their physical restaurants.
Extend segmentation beyond email content by using tools like RightMessage to dynamically alter your sales pages. Change headlines, testimonials, and copy to reflect a specific visitor's segment. This creates a highly relevant, personalized buying experience that can dramatically boost conversions.
During tentpole holidays, Resident activates CTV to retarget users who recently visited but didn't buy. They view this not as a performance channel with measurable ROI, but as "marketing hygiene"—a necessary, common-sense tactic to capture high-intent buyers on a big screen, even if direct attribution is impossible.
Coterie treats its physical retail presence not just as a sales channel, but as a marketing tool. A well-placed product block acts like a billboard, driving discovery and funneling 10-12% of new customers back to their primary D2C subscription business.
Instead of generic postcards, send customers useful branded items via direct mail, like magnets with school calendars or sports schedules. This utility-focused approach ensures your brand remains visible and top-of-mind in their home.
In a digitally oversaturated landscape, successful ABM campaigns require a mix of touches. Reintroducing traditional physical elements, like thoughtful direct mail, alongside digital tactics creates a multi-dimensional experience that drives engagement and opportunity creation.