A Survey-based Marketing Campaign for Ecommerce

A simple, survey-based public relations campaign can help an e-commerce business build its brand, attract backlinks for search engine optimization, and encourage sales.

This article will outline the significant steps to run a survey-based PR campaign. This campaign will inspire a few journalists to write about the survey results. The pieces they produce may include backlinks for SEO. And those articles could introduce potential customers to your business.
Create a Questionnaire

In our PR campaign, the consumer survey is the prize. It is the thing that will attract journalists or bloggers. So, the data we provide must be exciting and informative.

For example, if we pitched survey results showing that folks with relatively high incomes, perhaps $200,000 per year, are likelier to buy expensive luxury products, it would probably not be newsworthy. Most reporters would assume as much.

Rather, we want the survey to tell or imply a story that reporters and bloggers want to share. Something unexpected, perhaps. That story begins with the questions.

Good questions should result in interesting survey results. Interesting results should engage reporters and bloggers. And our goal is to earn media coverage.

By the way, having a goal for the survey is what SurveyMonkey — which makes an online survey tool — puts first on its list of best practices for creating a valid investigation.

The full SurveyMonkey list contains 10 items:

Define a clear, attainable goal.
Put personal questions at the end of the survey.
Keep the study relatively short.
Use multiple-choice and checkbox questions predominantly.
Consider using an incentive.
Don’t ask leading questions.
Keep your answer choices balanced.
Avoid absolutes.
Ask just one thing per question.
Preview your survey before you send it.

With the goal in mind, take the time to write several questions. Have co-workers proof and critique them.
Collect Responses

Once you have developed the survey questions, add them to a survey tool, consider an incentive, and decide how long you will keep the survey open — I often use two months. Then, begin collecting responses.

You could create a custom survey form for your website or use Google Forms. However, several good survey tools make collecting and analyzing results easy. SurveyMonkey, mentioned above, is a good choice. So are Qualtrics, SurveyGizmo, and SoGoSurvey, to name a few.

Choose a platform that will present the survey professionally and help you easily collect responses. You likely want a unique survey URL. If you include the study in a Twitter post, for example, use a unique URL to that post or at least be impressive to Twitter as a channel.

Speaking of collection channels, here are a few to try.

Your email newsletter. Include a survey link in the body of the email newsletter.
Dedicated email message. Give the survey its own faithful email message at least once.
Social media profiles. Link to the survey from all of your business’s social media profiles.
Facebook Groups. Post the survey there if your company has one or more Facebook Groups.
Reddit. Find an applicable subreddit, mention the incentive and link to the survey.

You want a survey that will entice journalists to report about it. So aim for a fairly large sample — 1,000 responses or more for a month or two collection period.
Analyze Results

At the end of the survey collection period, analyze the results, combine any insights with other information when it makes sense, and draw conclusions.

For example, in a recently created survey, I asked consumers these three questions (among others).

Why did you buy an electric bike? (Recreation was a top answer.)
How old are you? (A significant portion was over 55.)
How much do you earn annually? (A narrow majority said $25,000 to $50,000.)

These data points may be interesting, but together, they might tell a story. Is it the case that retired folks ride around parks and visit grandchildren on electric bikes? Maybe. Some journalists might not have imagined retirees riding bikes. So, the survey could offer an unexpected angle.

I could combine the survey results with retirement income data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and information about how many Americans live longer and look for recreational activities to help keep them in shape (which was a top answer for why they own or desire an electric bike).

Present Results

Present the survey results and analysis as an article, downloadable PDF, information graphic, or similar. This survey presentation should live on a dedicated landing page as part of a topic cluster.

This landing page is where you will send journalists to get more information. It is also where you want journalists to send website traffic.

Assemble the survey results, associated insights, and the story into one or more press releases and pitches.

100+ Market Research Questions to Ask Your Customers

Distribute the press release via a service such as Business Wire or directly to news outlets. The release will describe the survey’s story, feature links to your survey landing page and other relevant content on your site, and provide contact information so reporters can ask additional questions or interview company leaders.

Single out leading reporters, bloggers, and influencers for pitches specific to them. When possible, offer an angle specific to their audience.

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I have been working in the field of SEO and content marketing since 2014. I have worked with over 500 clients and more than 100 websites. I started blogging in 2012 and have now made my first steps into the world of freelancing. In my spare time, I like to read, cook or listen to music.