When searching online for information about inbound marketing and marketing automation, you’ll often find blog posts and articles pitting the two against each other, as if they’re competing or mutually exclusive. However, this is not a good way to view the two. In fact, when teamed up together, these two concepts can become a single high-powered marketing machine!
On the other hand, when standing alone, both inbound marketing and marketing automation have their own strengths and may be better suited for a particular business, depending on that business’s individual needs. In some instances, the best marketing strategy may be to choose one over the other, and combining them may be unnecessary.
So, what exactly is inbound marketing? What is marketing automation? How are they similar, and what makes them different? How do you know which is best for your company? Here are simple explanations of each concept along with a short list of strengths:
Inbound marketing is the process of utilizing digital marketing tools such as social media, blogging, and creating offers in order to attract prospects to your website, turn them into leads, and guide them down the sales funnel to ultimately become customers and promoters of your brand. The inbound marketing methodology is a long-term strategy that works in four phases:
In order to follow this methodology, inbound marketing strongly emphasizes the use of content through social media, blogging, and downloadable content offers (such as eBooks, white papers, and case studies) to help speak to prospects in different stages of the buyer’s journey.
Marketing automation is the technology or software used to attract leads, nurture contacts, and delver ROI through tools like email marketing, landing page forms, automated workflows, and contact lists.
Marketing automation is not a complete philosophy like inbound, but it is a way to streamline online marketing efforts in order to see ROI on specific campaigns. Marketing automation focuses heavily on drip email campaigns or email marketing in general to nurture leads to become customers.
Since both inbound marketing and marketing automation have individual, distinct strengths, it’s easy to see how some people would perceive the two as rivals. When standing alone, marketing automation is truly, by nature, an outbound marketing strategy, very different from inbound, whose main focus is attracting strangers to your website and engaging them with quality content. But when paired with inbound marketing, marketing automation tools can support the inbound philosophy by nurturing leads and creating and measuring campaign ROI.
Here are two examples of when it would be appropriate to use only marketing automation:
Now, here are a few instances where it would be smart to utilize both strategies together:
Blue Frog can help your business achieve its online marketing goals through inbound marketing, marketing automation, or both! We highly recommend HubSpot for it’s impressive marketing automation software, which works seamlessly with its inbound methodology. We also offer the SharpSpring marketing automation platform for several business needs as well.
If you’re interested in learning more about HubSpot, SharpSpring, and inbound marketing vs. marketing automation, register for our free webinar on August 27th at 11:00am CDT by clicking on the button below!