What is the objective?
The most important question in our business, and maybe yours too, is often the question that’s most overlooked for its simplicity and because the answer is so commonly assumed. Here it is:
What is the objective?
Companies, businesses and individuals without an objective are like Twitter – there’s noise, activity and some level of assumed intention: but who knows what’s really happening, or why.
Because that’s the thing with objective; it’s easy to skim over or get wrong entirely.
Finding your objective
Usually the overall business goal is obvious – become a highly profitable company.
But it’s from here that businesses skip the objective and get stuck into the strategies and tactics – run an ad campaign, hire more staff, launch new product lines – without asking why, and how these tactics pair with the goal.
Examples of this are all around us: businesses with highly-qualified target markets that are advertising in widely-circulated newspapers or magazines, sites launching apps with no actual function, or businesses that rebuild websites that don’t communicate their own offering.
Getting the objective right
In some cases it’s not just about not knowing the objective, but that there’s congruency above (with your business goal) and below (with your strategy and tactics).
In the past I had a client through an agency that wanted to bid on iPad through Paid Search because that was a trending keyword at the time. They sold corporate software, but they thought that their objective was to get in front of as many eyes as possible, instead of selling their corporate software.
As an agency usually tasked with achieving an objective, not defining it, this sort of scenario can be tricky. Our own objective, though, is to deliver great value to our clients – so we work with this sort of client to understand their business and help direct them towards an objective that’s likely to be profitable and in line with their business goal.
Sticking to your objective
Another business I’ve worked with couldn’t commit to their objective. The wanted leads, in which case the Cost Per Lead and conversion of leads to sales should have been their most important metrics.
However, they couldn’t commit to their leads and continued to misalign their perception of the campaigns and their success based on other metrics. They would hold weekly meetings about small changes in impression levels or click-through rates; even when the leads themselves had increased or were above their target.
Get your objective right and commit. While the details matter, stick to the output. If you want apples, count the apples – not the number of apple trees and keep your eye off the weather forecast. Leave that to the guy that’s been charged with getting you as many apples as possible.
– Morris Bryant
More by Morris Bryant
Sparro introduces a ‘pick-your-own-pet’ buddy system for new starters
Continue reading bSparro wins B&T Best Digital Services and Young Achiever of the Year
Sparro picked up 2 of our 3 nominations at the B&T Awards on Friday night at a packed Sydney Town Hall.
Continue reading bSparro announces six new business wins
Independent digital marketing agency Sparro has won six new clients, including Rentbetter.com.au, Oxford, Vision6, Healthy Life, LawPath and Grace Loves Lace. Sparro has also won work with two other major, undisclosed clients.
Continue reading bSparro wins Innovator of the Year at 2018 Bing Partner Awards, Seattle
Sparro has picked the award for Innovator of the Year at the Bing Partner Awards overnight in Seattle, USA, for their in-house AI bidding solution.
Continue reading bSparro/REMI win the Mumbrella Travel Award for Innovation
Sparro and REMI won the award following the creation of an AI bidding platform for use on the Webjet paid search account.
Continue reading bSparro appoints Michael Sparkes as SEO Lead
SEO expert Michael Sparkes has been appointed to the newly-created role of SEO Lead, managing all key clients and the existing team.
Continue reading bSparro wins 2 Google Premier Partner Awards in AUNZ
Sparro have picked up 2 of the 5 AUNZ Google Premier Partner Awards in the Shopping Innovation and Mobile Innovation categories.
Continue reading bSparro swag is in
We’ve found a new swag partner and kitted up for winter. Grab a notebook and shirt next time you see us!
Continue reading b5 AdWords Features We’re Wishing For
We’re regularly sharing feedback with Google on the AdWords console, and here are a few of our top feature requests.
Continue reading b5 Key AdWords Announcements from Google’s Performance Summit
1. You will be able to bid separately for mobile, tablet and desktop (again) Advertiers will soon be able to set bid adjustments for all three device types. Enhanced Campaigns ended this function when they launched in 2013 and grouped desktop and tablet bidding, and it’s a welcome change. For Advertisers, this means far greater […]
Continue reading bWhy you should be using Facebook’s Lead Ads now
Facebook have been fairly aggressive in claiming a greater share of ad spend over the last few years; particularly reinventing their ad units for Mobile and to be more native to their platform. One of the most interesting ad units they’ve released in some time are the new Lead Ads. These ads allow users to enter […]
Continue reading bSparro signs four new clients
Bringing in 2016 with some fresh faces, Sparro have won four new digital accounts with SurfStitch, GUESS Australia, National Hearing Care and Bay Audiology (NZ). Working across digital marketing, partner outreach and paid search accounts, Sparro is looking forward to establishing great working relationship with the four exciting brands and helping them further cement their online […]
Continue reading b5 things I learnt about business working at Appliances Online
When my brother and I started our digital marketing agency, Sparro, in 2013, we were very confident in the direction we wanted to take in our business and our work. We wanted to take on the best qualities of all of the businesses we’d worked with, while avoiding the worst aspects of agencies that we’d […]
Continue reading bThings I learnt starting and ending a Daily Deals aggregator site
Today I pulled down our site TheDealer.com.au – a daily deals aggregator that Cameron, Ruben and myself built way back in 2011. As a challenge, we designed, coded and had the site live sending daily deals emails within 6 weeks; integrated with a dozen or so of the largest deals sites at the time – […]
Continue reading b5 childhood lessons from my Father, the businessman
Park outside the door Our Father would get you a park right outside the door of any busy event. He’d drive past crowds of people walking to the Easter Show from where they’d parked, streets away, and he’d tell us – they all think there’s no parking right outside, but you watch this. His theory […]
Continue reading b5 reasons your business doesn’t need an app
Mobile’s been a hot topic for a few years now, and it always seems to be ‘just about’ to take over. There’s no doubt it’s not going away and presents huge opportunities for any business, but is an app the right way to get in front of mobile users? In most cases, we don’t think so.
Continue reading b