How To Reach Your Audience On Every Channel

The modern consumer uses many different channels. The modern marketer knows it’s all part of the same journey.

Curtis Maher

Aug 23, 2023

6 min

The customer journey has never been perfectly linear. But today, it's more complicated than ever. There are new social media platforms to manage. There are emerging generative search experiences to navigate. What does this mean for marketers?

Mostly, it means that consumer preferences are shifting. Marketing strategies should be, too. Consumers interact with brands in more places than ever before. Marketers need an omnichannel strategy to be everywhere your audience is.

This strategy has to:

  • Reach your audience on every channel

  • Ensure a positive experience each time

  • Give your brand the most value from each interaction

To do this, you need to manage your content and engage your audience. And to reach your audience on every channel, you need to optimize both owned and non-owned channels.

What Are Non-Owned Channels, and How Do You Manage Them?

Consumers interact with countless digital channels. Some of them are owned, and some of them are non-owned.

An owned channel is an online property that your marketing team has full control over. Think of websites, blogs, mobile applications, email, and the like. Non-owned channels are the online properties you don't own. These are search engines, social media, reviews on sites like Yelp, and other third-party platforms.

The modern consumer uses both owned and non-owned channels. They may search for your brand on Google (a non-owned channel), then land on your website (an owned channel). Then they might read reviews on another platform like Trustpilot (non-owned). Finally they are directed to the landing page for a free trial (owned).

The modern marketer knows that non-owned channels are just as important as owned channels. It's all part of the same journey.

Of course, every brand is different. Each audience is unique, just like the channels in your marketing strategy. Let's look at a few examples of important points in the omnichannel journey — and how your marketing strategy may need to adapt.

Example #1: The Initial Google Search

Think of the consumer above, searching for more information on Google. They're looking for the most relevant search results, and assessing their options. In this case, you likely want to control how your brand appears in those third-party search results. Here, SEO plays a critical part in your omnichannel marketing strategy. As a result, you want to keep your listings with publishers optimized.

(What do we mean by optimized listings? A listing is an online profile, like your Google Business Profile. A publisher hosts the listing. For example, Apple publishes your Apple Business Connect listing. Most of the time, searchers see your listing before they see your website. That's why many marketers make listings management a key part of their omnichannel strategy.)

Your business listings are very intertwined with your search engine rankings. They can feature you higher in the search results. But without up-to-date listings, your business isn't prioritized the same way.

Search engines want to serve the most accurate information to their users. The more information you have on your listings, the more questions you can answer about your business. Then, search engines like Google can verify your business and prioritize you in their search results. This ultimately helps you reach your audience at a pivotal moment in their buyer journey.

Example #2: Reading Reviews Before Purchasing

What do 97% of people do before making a purchase decision? They read online reviews.

Review platforms are very common on both owned and non-owned channels. They're important to manage, but there are also lots of them. The consumer reads reviews on your Google Business Profile listings, your Yelp account, and even your Facebook profile.

Customers interact with reviews all throughout their customer journey. Sometimes these are on owned experiences, like the testimonials on your website. Other times the reviews are on a non-owned experience, like Yelp.

Customers want to know what to expect when interacting with your business. It's important to manage your reviews anywhere people might be evaluating your products, services, or people — whether that's on owned or non-owned touchpoints.

Consider this: companies that respond to at least 25% of their reviews earn 35% more than those who don't. Addressing consumer feedback is a vital part of omnichannel marketing and reputation management.

Example #3: Standing Out on Social Media

Maybe the consumer has already finished their Google search for your business, and they've already read your reviews. They then switch over to a social media platform, like LinkedIn or Instagram. They want to learn more about you through branded content.

Some of the content they could be interested in could be user-generated (UGC). Customer testimonials, product reviews, and explainer videos on your social media accounts give the consumer additional context during their buying journey.

Can they explore your organization on this channel? Do your social media accounts help the consumer educate themselves? An omnichannel marketing strategy needs a plan for cases like these, too.

Here's the TLDR: there are many ways to interact with your audience. The channels your marketing team is expected to manage increases all the time. A true omnichannel marketing strategy accounts for all channels, so consumers have great online experiences wherever they are.

Engaging Your Audience Across the Omnichannel Journey

Owned channels are typically easier to customize than non-owned channels. That's great news, but it also sets a high bar in consumers' eyes. Your owned properties need to be more than well-managed, they need to be engaging. It's not enough for your audience to simply find your owned channels — you'll also need to keep them there.

Curious if your audience is engaged? The good news is that engagement is typically easier to measure on owned channels. It's likely that your owned channels are performing well if you're seeing:

  • Regular inbound leads

  • A high average engagement time on page

  • Increased page depth

Brands with high engagement build their omnichannel marketing strategy with the consumer in mind. Their marketing teams ask, "What is our audience looking for, and how can we make it as easy as possible for them to find?"

Every brand has a different answer. Some will make it as easy as possible to convert with a modern, interactive user interface on their website and mobile app. Others will prioritize site search, and use search analytics to identify content gaps. Others still will use conversational AI in their chat experiences to reply to complicated questions with consumer-friendly answers.

To drive conversions (whether you measure that in leads, sales, or another KPI), you'll need to interact with your audience. However you design your omnichannel marketing strategy, remember: engaging experiences are key.

How do you engage your audience?
When your audience visits your owned channels, they're telling you that they want to interact with you. Are you giving them a customized online experience?

The purchase journey begins
87% of people search for products online first (1)
Visitor sees the Google My Business Listing
They visit the website next
43% of site visitors go directly to a search box. (2)
They use site search to find a product
They want to read the reviews before purchasing
97% of people read reviews before making a purchase (3)
They briefly visit their Trustpilot app to read more reviews
72% of buyers won’t take action until they've read the reviews (3)
Next, they have an open-ended question: "What features are relevant to me?
Conversational AI is growing in popularity: ChatGPT has over 100 million users. (4)
They find their answer
4 out of 10 people use search chatbots several times each week (5)
They engage the chatbot with more questions
They convert in the chat

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How To Manage Many Channels

With so many channels in your marketing strategy, teams become quickly overwhelmed. That's why many marketers are turning to a headless content management system, or CMS.

With a headless CMS, you can manage both owned and non-owned channels from one platform. This is a pivotal tool in your omnichannel marketing strategy. Marketing teams can manage and engage audiences.

The result? Your audience has a seamless online journey — and you get the most value from every interaction.

Take a deep-dive into the reality of your audience’s experiences

With a headless CMS, your online experiences should be seamless, no matter how your audience enters your funnel — or where.

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