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Illustration of a podium showing a red target with an arrow in the bullseye in the center, yellow light bulb and trophy cup on either side. Blog post on creating a successful marketing strategy.

How to Create a Successful Marketing Strategy in 2025


Samantha Scott

Dec 29, 2023

A strong marketing strategy is key for maximizing ROI and encouraging positive growth. Set your marketing team up for success with our tips on crafting a strategy using vital customer acquisition and growth channels.

Table of Contents

What Is a Marketing Strategy?

Broadly speaking, a "marketing strategy" can be defined as follows: a business’s plan for getting in front of potential users and turning them into purchasers.

Depending on if your business is more transactional or relationship-focused, a marketing strategy oversees all the ways to encourage repeat website visits and purchases. Your strategy and goals are executed through a marketing plan, which breaks down the day-to-day structure for putting your ideas into action.

To get started, establish a strong foundation by looking closely at how you're benchmarking against the previous years.

This will help you establish the specific marketing goals and KPIs you want to achieve.

What Is a Marketing Plan?

A marketing plan takes your marketing strategy and goes into more detail about how it will be executed. Marketing plans are usually channel and campaign-specific.

Your marketing plan is your roadmap for executing the strategy and achieving the marketing goals of the campaign. It should have a date-based timeline, giving you plenty of buffer space for gathering assets and planning the launch.

How do you write a marketing plan?

Marketing professional sitting at a desk in front of a laptop, creating a marketing plan for 2024

The strategic marketing channels we discuss below each have their own complexities. This means that your marketing plan needs to include what each one is responsible for.

For example, say your company is planning a major product launch. Perhaps you want to schedule several teasers on social media leading up to the launch. You'll need promotional copy and imagery prepped.

Where are you linking to? A landing page or blog page on your website? Well, this means you need a content writer and possibly a web developer to help. You'll might also want to announce the launch to your email lists. Maybe once the product is on the market, you want to work with a group of influencers to promote it to their audience.

This all leads to a lot of cats to heard and staying organized is key. So having a carefully laid out social media marketing plan, content marketing plan, email marketing plan, and influencer marketing plan is essential. These should all strictly agree with each other so that all team members are on the same page and not stepping on toes (or missing opportunities).

Every marketing plan should include:

  • The goals for the campaign
  • Campaign KPIs
  • Timeline
  • Promotional materials needed, including press releases, social copy, and content
  • Marketing budget
  • Competitors
  • Team leads and responsibilities

While there is no perfect template for the best marketing plan — and it should be specific to your brand — here are some top tips for success:

  • Set up a campaign calendar. Identify the marketing campaigns you want to do throughout the year. Check out our blog about how to create a social media content calendar for ideas!
  • Apply dates to deliverables. When you have a timeline associated with each component of a marketing campaign, it helps everyone stay on the same page.
  • Apply reasonable budgets. Make sure you’re allocating marketing funds where they are most needed to achieve the goals you set for this year. Think creatively about places you can save.

How to Create a Marketing Strategy

Marketing team in a strategy session.

There are many factors that contribute to your business's success, and a successful marketing strategy is one of them! Here are a few key tips for creating a strategy that will have an impact and drive conversions.

1. Look at your year in review

First and foremost, you’ll want to assess your performance from the previous year. Highlight the bright spots and the areas that could use improvement. 

Review metrics

Data-driven decisions are important. But it can be very easy to get pulled into the weeds of looking at every single type of marketing metric — especially for data nerds.

It’s crucial to make sure you're pulling the most relevant metrics that tell the important stories for your team to start planning. 

Recommended metrics for marketing teams include:

  • MQLs (Marketing Qualified Leads)
  • Conversion rates at key points in your consumer acquisition funnel 
  • Customer acquisition cost

It’s also recommended to run a SWOT analysis. Create a table to visualize your brand’s Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats.

2. Build audience personas

Diverse group of young professionals in an office meeting.

Any marketing strategy should begin with a solid understanding of your audience. If you haven't already, start building marketing personas and audience segments so you can more accurately and effectively structure your marketing priorities and hone the tactics you use to engage existing and potential customers.

Remember to go beyond basic demographic information. Marketing has grown in sophistication as has our understanding of our customer's needs. After doing some audience research you may learn about new markets you could be reaching based on their hobbies, interests, and priorities.

It's also worthwhile to think beyond the "typical" or "expected" audience and challenge your assumptions.

For example, if you're a company that makes baby products, consider single dads, brothers, sons, and other adjacent communities that may also have a need for your products; rather than marketing strictly to women and mothers. In many instances, marketers can drive barrier-breaking conversations forward — so use your marketing powers for good!

Tip: Read the Marketers Guide to Unified Reporting

3. Re-examine your customer journey

Young woman looking out over winding road. Understanding your customer journey is crucial to successful marketing strategy.

Use this year to take another look at your customer journey. Given that much of the world now works from home, at least part time, our schedules, priorities, and routines might be different than when you first mapped your customer journey.

Users could be be online at different times, meaning the right moment to reach out for the highest conversions will be different than before.

Even if they’re not ready to purchase, you should have touch-points in place to keep them coming back. And when they are ready to buy, the purchase flow and CTAs should be straightforward. You don't want to make it confusing for someone to complete their checkout. This is especially important for social commerce and in-app purchase flows.

4. Establish goals, metrics & KPIs

Closeup of a computer screen showing charts in Google analytics

We've said it before, and we'll say it again. Goals and KPIs are the bread-and-butter of marketing, or really any business initiative. They are what help your marketing strategy take shape.

Without goals, you end up just charging ahead aimlessly.

Without KPIs, you won't know how success is measured and who is responsible for achieving a certain metric.

So, taking what you learned from last year, it’s now time to identify any new objectives, and the KPIs you want to connect to them for measuring success.

Tip: Keep it reasonable, and be honest! We want ambitious but achievable benchmarks for successful marketing campaigns. Don’t apply an impossible KPI to an impossible goal, but don’t go too easy either. Strike a balance so you don't burn out your resources or cheat yourself out of potential growth.

5. Identify marketing channels

Marketer writing on a green sticky note with an iPhone unlocked showing multiple apps.

Lastly, assess the channels you're currently using to see where you should focus your efforts to achieving your marketing goals. Start where you already have a presence, but also create a list of channels where you'd like to get more established.

Perhaps you're ready to launch a TikTok account, or start a YouTube channel, or maybe you now have a bigger budget to add more digital advertising into your marketing mix.

While you may be spending more time and energy on one channel over the other, it's definitely good practice to make sure you're covered in all the major areas of the PESO marketing model: Paid, Earned, Shared, and Owned.

We'll go into all the different channels for marketing below, but here's a quick overview:

  • Paid: advertising, paid search, paid social, purchased blog articles, or purchased spots in an email blast.
  • Earned: word-of-mouth, UGC, guest blog posts, reviews and comments.
  • Shared: closely related to Earned, shared media is any content that is shared in the media by other brands, companies, or individuals.
  • Owned: blogs published on your website, social posts on your channels, your own email marketing efforts, or gated content created by your team.

6. Do some competitor benchmarking

There’s almost no point in setting up a rockin' marketing strategy if you are operating in a void. You need to keep tabs on what your competitors are doing, how successful they are in their marketing and PR strategy, and what their followers are saying so you can measure yourself against them accordingly.

Tip: Take a look at our competitor benchmarking blog and use a competitive analysis tool like the Meltwater Media Intelligence Suite to automate this process.

What Are the Different Kinds of Marketing Channels?

There are several different ways you can use marketing to promote your business. Which ones you focus on depends largely on your specific goals, but it is recommended to use more than one channel in order to maximize ROI for your marketing team.

To be successful, a comprehensive marketing strategy typically involves a combination of marketing methods, including email, social media, and digital advertising. For true success, no matter how large or small your team, the marketing efforts from each of these areas should work closely together.

Here are some top marketing channels:

1. Social media

As a savvy marketer, your job is to stay on top of the tried and true channels while identifying interesting opportunities to reach new audiences and micro-communities, which social media is well suited for.

How social media fits into your marketing mix depends on your buyer personas and your marketing objectives. But it’s an important channel that you can't ignore no matter how big or small of a role it plays in your overall strategy.

Top social platforms for digital marketing include:

  • LinkedIn: post company news, connect with others in your industry, find influencers, and create thought-leadership posts that establish authority in your space.
  • Facebook: the demographic of Facebook users has shifted significantly in recent years. 65+ is the fastest-growing age range, reaching 40% in 2019. Whereas teens dropped from 71% in 2015 to 51% in 2018. Be sure to consider this when advertising on Facebook!
  • Twitter: 280 characters to get your message across, and a dialect of hashtags, memes, and GIFs to understand. Twitter is the ideal platform for building your brand personality.
  • Instagram: with over 1 billion users accessing the network every month, Instagram is incredibly useful for social media marketing. Follow hashtags to find influencers and create Stories and Reels to share engaging behind the scenes glimpses, tips & tricks, and more.
  • TikTok: a massive audience, quickly growing beyond GenZ, TikTok has taken the social marketing world by storm and shows no signs of slowing down. Hop on trends, run a HTC (Hashtag Challenge), and tap into a growing influencer cohort to reach new followers.
  • YouTube: Dip into longer, more polished videos with a YouTube channel. You can also create Shorts directly from your longer videos — a quick and easy way to diversify your content and get in front of new eyes.

Authenticity on social media is one of the toughest balances to strike but also a key component to the success of your social marketing strategy. Social Influencer Management Platforms and Influencer Marketing Tools can help you.

One brand that does authenticity and values-based social media marketing extremely well is Dove.

They understand clearly what their audience values and the issues they care about. In particular, these include body positivity and diversity. Dove's numerous campaigns around these topics focus on individuality and highlight female empowerment:

Dove consistently showcases some of the best examples of social media marketing and is a great brand to look to for how to use hashtags for marketing campaigns.

2. SEO

SEO (Search Engine Optimization) is one of those strategies that more and more people know about, yet still either do poorly or don’t put enough effort into. This is a fatal mistake costing you potentially thousands of website visits a day. 😬

And if you do organic SEO well, these visits cost very little. Which leaves you more budget for optimizing your website experience and lead capture flows — turning that organic traffic into paying customers. 

Content is king when it comes to attracting new users through SEO, and a blog is a great way to start. Try writing articles around specific keywords, particularly long-tail keywords, to attract customers more likely to convert after landing on your website. Invest in your content marketing efforts by promoting the content you create on social media and other websites. 

Tip: Check out current content marketing trends.

3. Influencers

Influencer marketing has steadily gained traction as a major marketing channel, with more and more brands incorporating it into their marketing strategy. In particular, micro influencers (500-10K followers) have maintained a foothold as the sweet spot, for their niche subject matter and better audience engagement. 

Top channels for brands using influencer marketing include: TikTok, Instagram, & YouTube. Learn more about setting up an influencer marketing strategy.

Use Meltwater's Social Influencer tool to pinpoint those influencers who will relate the most to your audience. Uncover the pros and cons of micro vs macro influencers and how to facilitate successful partnerships in our Ultimate Guide to Influencer Marketing.

4. Email

Even with new-fangled digital marketing channels continuing to pop up, email marketing remains one of the most powerful touch-points with customers. If you don’t already have one, you should set up an email newsletter.

Hint: set up both an internal newsletter and an external one. 

Check your success metrics on a regular basis — weekly is recommended. You’ll soon have enough data to learn some key insights about your audience — and you can course-correct if needed.

You should be tracking:

  • CTR (Click-through Rate)
  • Open Rate
  • Goal completions from email

Other email marketing tips:

  • A/B test your subject line as often as possible
  • Don’t underestimate the power of segmenting your email list so you can market specifically rather than broadly. 

A catchy subject line is the hook-line-and-sinker gateway to improving your email open rate. (Although you shouldn't only using open rate as a measure of success). Your subject lines should reflect who you are as a brand. Don't be afraid of experimenting to see what your audience responds to.

For some great examples of clever and fun subject lines, as well as extremely personable email copy, check out The Hustle (and even if you don't get to the emails, do it for their superb thank you page after you subscribe).

5. Digital advertising

Incorporating retargeting ads into your digital marketing strategy could be a clincher for your growth strategy if you have the budget.

Use an omnichannel approach to increase your conversions — interacting with the customer in adaptive ways based on their stage in the customer journey. 

A study from ClickZ found that engagement metrics increased dramatically when companies took an omnichannel approach to digital marketing: “Using three or more channels in an automation workflow earned an 18.96% engagement rate, while their single-channel counterparts earned a just 5.4% engagement rate.”

When considering your online display advertising don't shy away from creating ads that speak to a small segment rather than trying to speak to everybody.

For example, check out these Microsoft ads that specifically target coders:

(Source: Aquisio.com)

Examples of Microsoft display ads for coders.

As the article states, these ads "won’t capture the attention of non-coders. And that’s okay, because they aren’t the target of the ad. But if you’re an engineer or programmer, your interest will be piqued because the ad is talking in your language."

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Learn more about how Meltwater's marketing solutions can help you level up through social listening tools, media monitoring, competitive intelligence, and more. Fill out the form below to schedule a free consultation.

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