The Opportunity Cost of a Safe Online Strategy

Like a financial portfolio, an online marketing strategy must be diversified and include some risk.

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Date published
December 30, 2009 Categories

If you play e-marketing to win, you’re playing a portfolio of tactics for long-term gain. If you have sufficient budget, there’s simply no other tactic that will give you the same results over time as a coordinated, multipronged effort. Much like a solid financial portfolio, your online strategy needs to be diversified, respond to market conditions, and have a goal and timeframe in mind to make any sense at all.

Some financial investors choose to simply float with the market in a broad index fund, expecting and finding their results will mirror those of the market. Similarly, some investors in online marketing may simply repeat the same Google search marketing campaign or broad display campaign without taking advantage of new opportunities or testing new approaches. They believe they’re creating a more certain future, but what are they giving up in exchange for that perceived stability?

As with a financial portfolio, you have to be willing to accept some level of intelligent risk with your online strategy. Not every trial will result in a win, but it will result in knowledge that can be applied to an ongoing effort to balance and optimize results.

Robin is off today. This column was originally published Sept. 9, 2009 on ClickZ.

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