Since the company I founded, Refocus entered the Philippines market in January, a lot has happened for me. We conducted many types of research and CustDevs, tested tons of ad creatives — and even changed the product completely. As a result, our revenue for 6 months has reached 1.5$ million. It became possible for a whole set of reasons: developed product, constant qualitative and quantitative research, and of course, marketing strategy.
Here is the system we created the marketing to make it possible in 4 steps.
Southeast Asia market experiences a shortage of IT specialists: currently, the companies there are estimated to lack between 600,000 and 1.2 million professionals and this number is predicted to reach 4.3 million by 2030. And that's the problem we're determined to solve through our course in Digital marketing that showed excellent metrics in other countries.
When we just started creating the program, we thought that it will be targeted only at people with zero knowledge. However, market research showed that our audience actually consisted of 2 segments:
So, we started testing 3-5 pitches for each segment but none of them were appealing and the conversion rate was pretty low.
It was a good lesson that the product which was in demand in other countries can be not that wanted in the new market. And that’s ok! You just have to dive deeper into the research and find out what people needed — and of course, that’s what we did:
And — data analytics appeared to be both the most in-demand and desirable. Indeed, according to APEC.com, companies experience the highest shortage in Data Analytics than any other IT specialists, with the demand for it growing by 131% during the last 6 years.
So, we started working on another course.
Experience in other countries has shown that the best-working lead-attraction methodology in EdTech consists of two main ways of their acquisition. Combined together typically bring us 90% of the leads; they are:
Of course, one shouldn’t forget about SMM and other branding tools. But the two funnels mentioned above indeed can generate 90% of the leads if they are built correctly.
1. Direct funnel
Similarly with the Digital Marketer course, we started to create several pitches for each segment of the audience. The only thing that changed was that we already knew that the course was attractive to the potential students: we didn’t know which triggers would be the most appealing.
From our Customer Development we knew that a person usually joins a course to find the job that will help them improve their lifestyle: work remotely, travel, spend more time with their family. So, that was what we started testing. Based on the conversion rate of the ad creatives, we determined 3 best-working pitches.
In contrast, the “earn to travel” trigger attracted many leads but showed low CR, while naming the price directly just seemed to be unappealing.
2. Webinars
Pretty the same here: we needed to determine what were the most interesting topics that brought the most leads and showed the most conversion into the sale afterward.
It turned out that 2 factors were determining the success of the webinar: the choice of the speaker and the topic. For example, the same topic could be completely ineffective with one speaker but give excellent results with another. Or similarly, the same speaker talking about different themes could attract many sales afterward or literally none.
Now we finally were ready to take the next step!
As soon as the product was determined correctly, revenue grew and so did the marketing budget. Now instead of around 12 advertisement campaigns per month that we had for the Marketer course, we were able to have 50! This shift is vitally important: now we can constantly improve our creative materials without harming the unit economy and thus attract more clients cheaply and more effectively.
To keep track of it we’re using the tool named communicative map which we informally call “a creative machine”
Basically, it’s the table that includes just everything the team should know about each creative tested and helps to organize the work together with copywriters and designers:
Then we include some technical detail: who is responsible for the certain design, how many of the creatives is needed, the link to them, and so on. You can choose for yourself!
And the last part of the table is dedicated to key metrics.
So, we always see that one or another creative is having good CR and CTL - and can improve it even more!
As soon as all the intermediate results are put into the table and analyzed, one can take the best practices — and proceed with testing. In this situation, we were simultaneously working on improving both ways of lead acquisition.
1. Direct funnel. Here were focusing on the creatives and changing:
2. Webinar funnel. In this case, we were focusing not only on the advertisement but also on the content of the webinars:
IV. Further work together with other departments
No matter how hard the marketing team works, you can't get the proper results without interconnection between different departments. For example, one of our best decisions was to deepen communication between marketing and sales. The latter communicates with the leads directly, so know their pains like nobody else. For example, they said to us that clients really believe in FOMO triggers and value the knowledge they could get for free.
That’s why this creative worked just perfectly: we say that the webinar is free only for some time and that they will not only get knowledge but also receive a certificate for free.
The system is everything! Don't think the good metrics are luck - in fact, they are determined by pretty simple and logical things:
And of course, it's impossible without patience. Just keep going and your startup will stand out one day!