Similar to any effective federal bid strategy, a successful marketing and communications plan in Government Contracting starts with research. Audience research is any research conducted on a your audience to understand them. By leveraging audience research, a Government Contractor can gain an advantage in content marketing and advertising campaigns.
So where to start?
First, you want to take inventory of where your federal audience hangs out online. With a more relaxed social media policy out of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) in 2017, “Govies” are more accessible than they used to be, which makes virtual interaction that much easier. The use of these virtual tools can be very revealing so begin to pay more attention to where they prefer to spend their virtual time.
- Podcasts – what is your audience listening to?
- Social – where do they connect with others?
- YouTube – what do they watch?
- Webinars – what are they interested in learning?
- Press /news – who does your audience trust as a news source?
- Websites they frequent – what content is your audience engaging with?
- Hashtags they use – how are they tagging their content?
- Phrases they use in their bio – what insights can you gain from how they talk about themselves and their work?
- Share phrase – what is the “language” your target audience uses when they share or repost others’ content?
- Job titles – which titles are most important to your outreach?
- Streaming platforms they watch – where are they spending their time?
After you have answered these questions – it is now time to collect the data! And this task might not be as hard as you think. From the moment an organization launches their website, publishes their first blog, sets-up their social accounts, or runs a paid advertising campaign – their marketing engine is already humming. If your organization already has an online presence, you have already been collecting audience data. Here are some tips on how to find target audience data using the tools you probably already have:
- Your Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Tool: There may not be large amounts of data in your system but it is still a great place to glean data. Break your data down into segments including top customers, disqualified leads, and highest lifetime value customers. Once you define those segments, you can identify your most-desirable and least-desirable customer groups and define their characteristics.
- LinkedIn: You can leverage an easy to install JavaScript tag that powers conversion tracking, website audiences, and website demographics for LinkedIn ad campaigns. Once a tag has been placed, you will be able to start pulling audience data, which can be found on the website demographics tab. The insights provided include location, country, job function, job title, company, company industry, job seniority, and company size.
- Facebook: You can see a large range of information about people currently interacting with your page by selecting “People Connected to Your Page”. It is still the largest social network with the most active users of all other social platforms in the world. It is a fantastic source of audience information.
- Google Analytics: With the Google “Analytics Audience” tab you can quickly understand who your audience is. Using the “Demographics” tab you can find your audience’s approximate age(s) and gender(s). The “Audience” tab includes Affinity and In-Market audiences (formerly known as interests and topic targeting) and will give you insight into your audience’s interest. An example of affinity data can be seen below: