{"id":33959,"date":"2021-12-04T13:28:18","date_gmt":"2021-12-04T11:28:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.reliablesoft.net\/?p=33959"},"modified":"2022-01-17T12:04:17","modified_gmt":"2022-01-17T10:04:17","slug":"remarketing-vs-retargeting","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.reliablesoft.net\/remarketing-vs-retargeting\/","title":{"rendered":"Difference Between Retargeting and Remarketing"},"content":{"rendered":"
Retargeting and remarketing are marketing strategies that allow businesses to connect with their past audiences.<\/p>\n
Many view the terms as one and the same but they do have their differences.<\/p>\n
In this post, we will break down the difference between retargeting and remarketing and when it is best to use each for your business.<\/p>\n
The difference between remarketing and retargeting is how the two marketing tactics are used to achieve their intended objective of getting your business in front of people who have engaged with you in the past.<\/p>\n
Retargeting<\/strong><\/a> focuses primarily on using paid advertisements through paid media, social media, search engines, and other platforms to re-engage people that have recently visited your website.<\/p>\n Companies can track who visits their site and the actions they perform to immediately add them to retargeting ad campaigns.<\/p>\n In contrast, remarketing focuses primarily on using email to engage previous customers and people that have visited your site or social media profiles in the past.<\/p>\n The process usually involves creating lists that include the information of customers to include in the remarketing campaign.<\/p>\n While the primary use of remarketing is email, it can also be done using paid ads. With popular advertising platforms like Google and Facebook, you can upload a list of specific users to remarket to with your ad campaigns.<\/p>\n Advertising platforms don\u2019t make a clear distinction between the two terms. This helps increase the confusion and assumption that the two concepts are one and the same.<\/p>\n Remarketing is a marketing tactic in which you reach out to previous visitors and buyers to remind them of your business. It gives you the ability to nurture leads and increase brand awareness while also maximizing the lifetime value for each of your customers.<\/p>\n Remarketing is easy to get started. As your business generates web traffic, social interactions, and customers, you can begin compiling a list of people to include in your remarketing efforts.<\/p>\n Once you have the list of people, you can add it to different marketing solutions to use for your campaigns. This includes advertising platforms like Google, email marketing software, and social media platforms.<\/p>\n Facebook: <\/strong>Facebook is one of the most powerful remarketing tools. It gives you access to a large part of your audience as many use the platform and are able to see your remarketing ads.<\/p>\n With Facebook remarketing Ads<\/strong><\/a>, you can upload a list of email addresses and phone numbers for people to include in your campaigns.<\/p>\n There are a wide variety of ad types that you can use for remarketing to your customers on Facebook.<\/p>\n Google: <\/strong>Google is another advertising platform that many remarketers will want to have in their arsenal. With Google remarketing campaigns<\/strong><\/a>, you can reach your audience across the millions of sites in the Google Display Network. You can also reach them when using Google Search.<\/p>\n Like Facebook, Google lets you upload contact lists of people to include in your remarketing campaigns.<\/p>\n Mailchimp: <\/strong>Mailchimp is an email marketing platform that includes a variety of remarketing tools to re-engage your audience.<\/p>\n You can segment your email list using countless variables including the date of the user\u2019s last purchase or total lifetime value.<\/p>\n You can also use your list to create remarketing ads on Facebook and other social media platforms.<\/p>\n There are several approaches you can take to build a remarketing campaign.<\/p>\n One is to run broad-level remarketing targeting that covers your entire audience.<\/p>\n For example, you could set a display remarketing campaign to show all your previous buyers your new product offering.<\/p>\n Or you could set timed campaigns to reconnect with customers a certain amount of time after their purchase.<\/p>\n Another approach is to take a more granular targeting with your remarketing efforts.<\/p>\n This allows you to get more personalized with your messaging as you can choose to hone in on the specific interests of the recipients.<\/p>\n For example, you could run a remarketing campaign for your ads to only show to people who have viewed products in a certain category. In these ads, you can showcase this type of item as you know that it has the customer\u2019s interest.<\/p>\n Ultimately, your overarching remarketing strategy will likely include both broad and specific targeting.<\/p>\n Email remarketing: <\/strong>The most common form of remarketing, with email remarketing, you build a list of prior contacts to include in your campaigns. This can include previous customers as well as email newsletter subscribers.<\/p>\n You then use email marketing software to send remarketing messages to users based on your campaign objectives.<\/p>\n For example, you could showcase new products in your collection. Or you can remind someone of renewal that they need to complete.<\/p>\n Email remarketing can be automated to engage your audience at certain times.<\/p>\n Display remarketing: <\/strong>With display remarketing, your ads are displayed across different websites included in the advertising network, such as the Google Display Network.<\/p>\n These ads contain a mix of text and images. They can be static for all viewers or dynamic.<\/p>\n Dynamic remarketing leverages technology to display a unique ad creative to every single user based on specified criteria. For instance, the products they\u2019ve bought in the past.<\/p>\n With dynamic display ads, you have the ability to send highly-tailored remarketing messaging.<\/p>\n Video remarketing ads: <\/strong>If you have videos on a platform like Youtube, you can use retargeting video ads to get in front of people that view your content.<\/p>\n When you launch the video remarketing campaign, your video ads will display at the beginning or middle of other videos on Youtube.<\/p>\n Remarketing for search ads: <\/strong>Remarketing lists for search ads (RLSA) is a feature in Google Ads that lets you track and build a list of previous web visitors to target in a Google Search campaign.<\/p>\n When you use an RLSA for your search ads only the people who know your business will be targeted, helping to increase the efficiency of your campaigns.<\/p>\n Retargeting is a marketing tactic for finding people that have interacted with your business and showing them digital advertisements to bring them back to your site.<\/p>\n These ads are shown to different parts of your audience based on past behavior on your site such as the pages they view.<\/p>\n To track the user behavior on your website, retargeting relies on tracking pixels. These small pieces of code are added to the backend of your site. They enable it to place cookies on visitors\u2019 browsers.<\/p>\n Each visitor gets an anonymous ID that the ad network uses to track their behavior. With the cookies, the ad server is able to access the visitor\u2019s ID and automatically add it to your remarketing lists.<\/p>\n If someone views a page or likes your post, you can quickly add them to a retargeting campaign to see if you can encourage further engagement.<\/p>\n Retargeting ads normally use a cost-per-click (CPC) payment model. Although, some use cost per impression (CPM) and cost per acquisitions models as well.<\/p>\n Retargeting is an effective marketing strategy as it allows you to capitalize on your audience\u2019s interest quickly and at scale.<\/p>\n Here are some of the ways you can use retargeting:<\/p>\n Recovering abandoned carts: <\/strong>When someone leaves your site with products still in their cart you can use a retargeting ad to remind them to complete their order.<\/p>\n Revisiting a specific page: <\/strong>When someone views a product or service page, you can create retargeting ads encouraging them to explore it further.<\/p>\n Search retargeting: <\/strong>With this type of retargeting, you can target customers based on the keyword searches they conduct when using search engines such as Google.<\/p>\n Account-based retargeting: <\/strong>Account-based retargeting is a strategy for acquiring new accounts by showing ads to decision-makers within your prospects\u2019 companies.<\/p>\n With various ad platforms, you can filter users by position to ensure that your ads are only going to those with the authority to close the deal.<\/p>\n LinkedIn is one of the most popular platforms to deploy an account-based retargeting strategy.<\/p>\n There are a wide variety of ad types you can use for retargeting. This includes a mix of both static and dynamic formats as well text and visual ads.<\/p>\n All of these ad types will fall into one of two categories depending on how the audience for the retargeting campaign is collected.<\/p>\n Pixel-based retargeting ads<\/strong><\/p>\n This is the most common type of retargeting ad. Pixel-based ads are those that use the cookies I mentioned to gather the users to include in your campaigns.<\/p>\n With them, you can retarget visitors without needing to gather their contact information<\/p>\n Pixel-based ads can be triggered instantly and automatically after someone performs an action on your site.<\/p>\n The ad server will track their behavior, and if their actions match the specifications of your retargeting campaign, they will be immediately added as part of the audience and eligible to receive ads when they visit the respective web properties.<\/p>\n List-based retargeting ads<\/strong><\/p>\n This is a less common type of retargeting and more along the lines of a remarketing methodology.<\/p>\n With list-based ads, you upload a list of target audience members to your ad platform. The network then identifies the people who match the contact information you provided and shows them your ads.<\/p>\n While this type of ad can be highly personalized, it is far less timely. Instead of having users automatically added to a campaign, you need to take the time to upload the list.<\/p>\n Not once, but each time you want to expand an audience or add a new one.<\/p>\n Given their similarities you may be wondering whether retargeting or remarketing is more effective for your business.<\/p>\n Like many things, the answer depends on what you are trying to accomplish.<\/p>\n If you are looking for ways to continually engage and spark interest from an old audience, remarketing campaigns would likely be your ideal choice.<\/p>\n If you want to capitalize on the fresh attention of a new user that views your site for the first time, you can create a retargeting campaign to swiftly bring them back to your site.<\/p>\n You can use display and other types of retargeting to engage users at the top of the middle of the funnel.<\/p>\n Or close the bottom of the funnel prospects with an email remarketing campaign.<\/p>\n For current customers, you can boost retention and repeat purchases with consistent remarketing.<\/p>\n Here are some tips to help you find success with retargeting and remarketing:<\/p>\nWhat is Remarketing?<\/h2>\n
Remarketing tools<\/h3>\n
How to use remarketing<\/h3>\n
Types of remarketing<\/h3>\n
What is Retargeting?<\/h2>\n
How to use retargeting<\/h3>\n
Retargeting ad types<\/h3>\n
Which is Better, Remarketing or Retargeting?<\/h2>\n
Retargeting & Remarketing Tips<\/h2>\n
Tips for retargeting<\/h3>\n