3 Ways to Design Rapid Testing Capable of Transforming Your Business

Last Updated: December 16, 2021

There are a handful of times when rapid testing in B2B shines: when you’re unsure if a new marketing channel would work; when you’re bringing a new product to market; when you need to test new points of distribution; and when you need more data to automate. In this article, Patty addresses how rapid testing works and why it is wildly beneficial to marketers. She explains how marketers can use a rapid testing process before initiating tasks to provide insights faster – giving them revenue projections, the ability to tweak campaigns, and information for future campaigns – which will save them money and transform them into smarter marketers. 

“Don’t be New Coke.”

This marketing mantra dates back to 1985, when Coca-Cola’s misguided consumer testing suggested that consumers preferred Pepsi’s sweeter taste. As a result, the company introduced a new, sweeter version of its popular soft drink. Within a matter of months, Coca-Cola reintroduced the classic formula and flushed an estimated $34 millionOpens a new window  down the drain.

The internet contains thousands of articles with suggestions about how to test a new product before launch. But these best practices also eat up plenty of time and money. What are resource-strapped entrepreneurs to do? The answer is rapid testing.

Rapid testing involves a small media investment, a short timeframe, and real consumers. This approach enables marketers to test the efficacy of their message, platform, channel, and product before making major investments in a full-scale campaign.

In 2014, entrepreneur Jonathan Beekman was able to validate the market for Man CratesOpens a new window  using a $1,000 budget. How? He populated an e-commerce storefront with mock images of his product, pushed Google searches to it, and waited to see whether consumers took the bait. They did, and that information has helped Man Crates reach its estimated revenue of $10.2 million.

Learn More: Why You Should Design Mobile-First Enterprise Applications

Beekman and others are testing products within their markets using the leanest approaches possible. Once product managers, business owners, and marketers embrace rapid testing, they can quickly learn what will connect best with their target audiences.

The Need for Speed

Rapid testing can lead to sizable savings in time and money. It also helps marketers become more agile — allowing stakeholders to have the information they need to pivot on a dime. This process can be applied to any foundational marketing principles, but it works exceedingly well in these five areas:

New product market validation — Rapid testing provides an effective way to forecast market validation, similar to how Beekman validated Man Crates. A straightforward webpage and pointed Google searches to your new product is a quick way to test whether your market is receptive to your offering.

Pricing selection ­— Beyond market fit, you can also test price points. Quickly put up multiple landing pages with different prices in an A/B/C test, and then sit back to measure the impact. This allows business owners to assess how high they can push a price before consumers drop off, providing crucial information to fuel future discounts to increase sales during peak periods.

ROI on promotions — Quickly testing multiple promotions against each other allows business owners to assess the lines between increased sales versus increased profits.

Product design — Then there’s aesthetic design: Should your product branding be clean and modern or nostalgic and neon? Rapid testing in A/B landing pages or via social ads can help inform aesthetic direction with confidence.

Messaging strategy — Rapid testing can even be applied to a messaging strategy. If you have 10 potential value propositions for your offering, you can measure what your buyers care about most by creating 10 quick Google paid search ads and running them against prominent market keywords.

You can test each of these principles in digital channels with minimal investment and minimal time — even before you have a final product.

Learn More: The Dos and Don’ts of UX Design for Small Business

Getting Rapid the Right Way

When it comes to validating direction, few approaches are more effective than rapid testing. Here are three steps to make sure your rapid testing sets you on the right path:

1. Clearly define what you want to test.
 

Start with a question like “Does a market exist for this product?” Keep a singular focus to avoid overcomplicating the test. The more you try to discover, the more time and resources you’ll need to collect the necessary data points.

Focus on the S.M.A.R.T. goal concept: Is your goal specific in focus, measurably defined by a small set of KPIs, attainable for your existing resources, relevant with your overall sales or business objectives, and timely in its execution? If the answer to any of these questions is “no,” you’ll want to make tweaks before you test.

2. Understand the audience you want to reach.
 

Established businesses likely have an idea of their customer bases, but startups must conduct some R&D to gather this information. Use keyword research to understand how buyers are currently seeking similar products or competing solutions. Scour the results of these keyword searches to understand what customers value, which should help inform where you will test.

Let’s pretend I’m trying to market an email security service. By using the Google AdWords Keyword Planner, I can see that “email security” is an important keyword; more digging shows that “email security free” and “best price email security” are also quite relevant to my service and have a substantial number of monthly searches. That information shows that my audience is concerned about price.

Deeper investigation will help me learn even more about my audience, allowing me to understand what, where, and how consumers would research my service when it’s time to initiate primary testing. It should be noted that these initial discovery methods shouldn’t add significant time or money costs to the rapid-testing process.

3. Think through the thinnest execution possible.
 

Digital means are typically the most cost-efficient to test, so start there. What is the fastest way to get your product in front of people and vet their interest to buy?

You will likely need a few landing pages that contain a clear call to action to buy, one or two ads that explain your product in a compelling manner, and at least one channel where you know your audience members are shopping. The easiest channel for testing purposes is often Google — people searching on Google often are ready to buy and might already be looking for a product like yours.

Rapid testing can provide you with the blueprint you need to take your business — whether it’s fledgling or booming — to incredible heights. You might have an initial direction, but more formalized development, actions, and testing can launch your profits into the stratosphere.

Patty Parobek
Patty Parobek

Director of Integrated Marketing Strategy, Tenlo

Patty Parobek is the director of integrated marketing strategy for Tenlo, a pipeline marketing agency in Cleveland, Ohio. With more than 12 years of experience in marketing, Patty specializes in search, lead generation, and a customer-first strategy across the holistic buyer journey. Her educational background in marketing and communications has given her a broad base from which to approach many marketing strategies for B2C and B2B clients. Patty is a certified marketing professional for paid search, SEO, content marketing, advanced analytics, Python development, and data science. Read more about Patty’s marketing insights and articles at Tenlo.com.    
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