How incremental revenue can prove the real value of your marketing activities in dollars, not clicks

Marketing is all about how your organization attracts, retains and engages customers. This can lead to a lot of pressure on professionals like you to prove ROI with your efforts. If you’re feeling the crunch, it might be time to reframe the way you talk about ROI.

One of the top ways to discuss returns while demonstrating value is to discuss the incremental revenue that your marketing can create. We like it because it speaks the language of most organizational leadership: money. Focusing on dollars instead of clicks allows you to address a wide range of solutions and needs. Mostly importantly, the impact your marketing has on in-store and online sales.

If that’s the conversation you’d like to have during your next campaign review, or when you’re asking for an increase in your budget, then keep reading.

What is incremental revenue?

Incremental revenue is a way to think about marketing in terms of dollars, not clicks. It turns traditional digital efforts — those that often push sign-ups and interactions — on their head to care about one of the most important business metrics: revenue.

Think of it this way: incremental revenue is the additional revenue you generate as a result of paid marketing.

Measuring incremental revenue is designed to give marketers a straightforward way to understand the business value of advertising’s impact. It compares results between audiences that see the campaign (your “Test Group”) and those that don’t (your “Control Group”).

Perhaps best is that it’ll allow you to easily review the results of your marketing effort, both in-store and online.

How is it truly trackable?

Understanding the success of marketing in terms of incremental revenue requires a bit of data, but it isn’t as difficult as other forms of attribution for many marketers. Because you’re focusing on an end — total revenue — and not clicks, page views, or other metrics that tell part of a customer’s journey to that revenue.

Measuring incremental revenue involves a comparison of the purchases or spending that the Test Group makes compared to your Control Group. The higher your Test Group spends, the better the value of your campaign.

When you first try this methodology, it’s best to limit other changes as much as possible. If you’re able to control for sales, other marketing, or seasonal differences between store locations, then you’ll be better able to determine that these changes are due to your new campaign.

The longer you use this methodology, the more insight you can gain from it. Tracking incremental revenue can also teach a business about its seasonality, recurring trends, and customer habits that will help it make smarter advertising decisions in the future.

Sometimes, with the right marketing dashboards and tools or with a powerful new type of campaign, you can understand the specific incremental revenue because these tools let you isolate new revenue.

What’s a straightforward way to get started?

Now, here’s what you’re really after: how do you implement a new campaign that makes tracking incremental revenue easy?

Figg has a unique advertising platform that can help you understand the lift of a new campaign based on incremental value, because we create a clear path from ad to sale. Our card linked advertising model allows you to tie spend to a specific sale, removing the guesswork around attribution.

Here is our platform in just five steps:

  1. Figg has established a large network of bank and publisher partners – from major financial institutions to leading national retailers. Your brand creates offers to entice customers, such as “Get 5% cash back on all purchases” and advertises them on our partner networks. Customer is served an ad, and claims reward offered.
  2. Customer enters card information. Customers go through a simple process to link any debit or credit card they wish to our partner’s program. Unlike some other card-linked offers, Figg can link to all three major credit card companies: Visa, MasterCard, and American Express.
  3. Customer uses the same card to make a purchase in your store. Next, the customer visits your business, in-store or online, to redeem the deal. He or she completes the purchase using the same card linked to the offer.
  4. You (the advertiser) only pay when a customer actually makes a purchase. Figg’s card linked platform doesn’t require our advertising partners topay just for digital ads that publishers run. With Figg, you’ll advertise on top websites and apps and only pay for in-store sales generated by these ads. You receive impressions and clicks for free, saving you serious money on advertising.
  5. Our platform tracks the path from online ad to in-store or online purchase. The Figg platform automatically comes with tracking, so you can trim the fat off complex models and nix additional services – saving you even more money. Track exactly how your online advertising spend is performing in real time, with transparent and auditable key metrics.

Figg drives attribution from your marketing efforts.

The Figg model is designed to track incremental revenue for digital marketing pushing both in-store and online sales. Some other systems or efforts may support you with online only, which can be tracked through targeting pixels and more.

Incremental revenue is a terrific way to do a quick check on the health of your business and marketing. It’ll show if you’re performing better through your new efforts and is a simple process to understanding how much incremental revenue each $1 of marketing returns.

We believe that return on ad spend should be straight-forward, especially when you’ve got to use it to justify new efforts to leadership. Incremental revenue calculations are a top way to make a case for your spending and demonstrate your value.

Not sure where to start or want to see how your current efforts stack up? Schedule a demo with our team to see how a card-linked advertising campaign can drive your business results.


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