I recently started a Digital Marketing course - a field I know close to nothing about. Since I spend a considerable amount of time writing each assignment, I didn’t want to keep it tucked away in a folder somewhere. I’ve decided to share them here on HackerNoon. Hopefully, you’ll find them useful and if not, it’ll allow me to connect with the community and grow through your feedback ♥️

The Task

Choose a well-known company or brand and describe the marketing strategies used by this company or campaign. Answer the following questions in the provided template:

  1. Would you classify these strategies more as sales-oriented or communication-oriented? List out 3-5 reasons that you think identify that.

  2. Find and select some results that this company or campaign achieved. What do you believe were the primary goals of these marketing efforts? What do you think some of the Goals as Metrics could have been for those campaigns? List out 3-5 that you can identify or you believe that were used. Describe each one if you think it was valuable and why.

  3. Based on your analysis, do you think the marketing goals were in line with the overall company goals? Is it short-term or long-term thinking? What would you have changed or suggested to better align the marketing strategies with the company's objectives?

Comms-Oriented Strategy

I chose to analyze Gym Shark's (GS further) Marketing Strategy. I believe GS has successfully chosen and executed the Media Marketing business model which Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose described in Killing Marketing: How Innovative Businesses Are Turning Marketing Cost into Profit as one of the most successful models in the modern marketing landscape. The core of media marketing is communication, therefore GS strategies are communication-oriented.

In fact, in the beginning, GS decided to build a community by turning to fitness influencers over spending money on social media ads, since they had a limited budget.

Core principles of GS:

“Create a loyal audience. Once we learn the deep-rooted needs of that audience, and we deliver value to the audience consistently, and the audience (reader) becomes a fan (subscriber), we monetize that relationship in multiple ways.” - Joe Pulizzi\

This suggests that the company is communication-oriented (marketing-first) because the majority of its business model (=marketing strategy) is based on a long-term growth strategy over a short-term sales boost. But as I analyze later, performance marketing is very much a part of their approach.

Gym Shark Campaigns and Goals

Gym Shark website reads: “Our Gymshark family of employees, athletes and followers is now over 10 million strong, with a total social media following of over 18 million and customers in over 230 countries across our 14 online stores.”

For the sake of the task, I will choose to analyze:

TikTok Strategy

Primary Goals:

Primary Metrics:

Secondary Metrics:

Influencer Marketing Strategy

GS was one of the first brands to engage in influencer marketing. As a new company, they didn’t have the marketing budget to spend on ads, so they decided to reach out to their admired Youtubers to wear their gear in the videos. It helped build credibility among their audience and rapidly increased brand awareness, generating early traction.

Back then and still to this day, GS collaborates with fitness influencers and bloggers for more reach. I propose that it helps them stay top-of-mind. If the user, especially a new user, hears about GS from GS they might be less inclined to buy compared to when they hear it from a trusted source (A YouTuber affiliated with GS in this case).

Primary Goals:

Primary metrics

Secondary Metrics

Gymshark Mental Health Campaign

In 2022 GS partnered with the mental health charity Calm to open a barber shop seeking to encourage mental health conversations among men, citing suicide as the lead killer of men under 45. Although it only lasted a week, the campaign was the talk of the town (both offline and online).

Primary Goals:

Are Their Marketing Goals in Line With Company Goals?

I believe so. As discussed, GS is a media, therefore communication-oriented company, seeking to build an audience by providing value. Their TikTok content, Influencer-generated content as well as offline mental health campaigns all point out to the customer-first approach of marketing. Building an audience requires time, therefore it’s long-term thinking.

One area they could look into could be targeting audiences across similar fields to fitness, like wellness or outdoor consumers, maybe through influencer marketing. This could broaden their audience.

In the book, Marketing 5.0: Technology for Humanity Philip Kotler suggests that the future of marketing will be employing new technologies like AR/VR. So GS could explore virtual fitness experiences, like workouts and community events. Also to improve the online shopping experience, they could offer try-ons via AR.

References: