Skip to content
iOnline digital marketing agency homepage
  • Our Services
    WebsiteDesign2-Gradient

    Website

    • Website Development
    • Copywriting
    • UX/UI Design
    • CRO
    • Hosting
    Website Development

    Development

    • API Integration
    • Software/App Development
    SEO

    SEO

    • SEO Strategy
    • Local SEO
    Ads

    Paid Ads

    • Google Ads
    • Meta Ads
    • LinkedIn Ads
    • Microsoft Ads
    Content writing

    Content Marketing

    • Content Strategy
    • Content Writing
    EmailMarketing

    Email Marketing

    Rocket

    Digital Marketing

    SocialMedia

    Social Media Management

  • Our Work
    • Case Studies
    • Portfolio
  • About
  • Resources
    • Newsletter
  • Contact Us
1800 466 546

Blog » Marketing

How an Integrated Marketing Approach Can Boost Your ROI

  • Published: 13 November 2024
  • Last Updated: 6 March 2026
  • 6 minutes
All good marketing is integrated. Here’s how a unified strategy can help improve your return on investment.
Portrait of Duncan Croker, Content Strategist at iOnline

Written By

Duncan Croker

Portrait of Shaia Deacon, Sales and Account Manager at iOnline

Reviewed By

Shaia Deacon

Integrated Marketing Approach 2

Content Complexity

General

For people with general business knowledge.

Table Of Contents

Share This Post

Table Of Contents

Ever felt that your marketing efforts are disconnected? That you’re promoting your brand and offerings in different places … but without any kind of central guiding strategy tying them all together?

Now picture the opposite: one smooth go-to-market machine, seamlessly pushing out the same message and branding across every web page, social ad, and networking event. No matter where a current customer or potential buyer looks, they’re seeing the same thing – which helps them understand what you do and why you’re a great fit for their needs. That’s integrated marketing, and it’s what every organisation should be aiming for.

In this article, we’ll explain exactly what integrated marketing is and how adopting an integrated approach can improve your marketing ROI.

What Is Integrated Marketing?

‘Integrated marketing’ sounds complex, mysterious and novel – the kind of concept that could transform your marketing efforts. It’s none of those things.

Its actual definition: a unified go-to-market strategy where the same messages are delivered in roughly the same way across different channels. That’s not ‘integrated’ marketing. It’s just … marketing. The reason a standalone term exists is because, at large organisations, different departments sometimes own different channels. That can lead to differences in messaging and creative, especially if there’s no proper communication between stakeholder groups.

SMBs, in theory, shouldn’t have that problem. But they often do. Why? Because a lack of top-down processes means that, even in the absence of true departments, different stakeholders will often approach ‘their’ marketing channels in silos.

Here’s an example. A small law firm (under 20 staff) has 7 different marketing channels.

  1. The solicitors and practice manager engage in one-to-one business development at networking events.
  2. The front-desk admin runs the firm’s social media accounts on Facebook and LinkedIn.
  3. An external marketing agency manages the website and runs Google Ads campaigns. They also undertake technical SEO, but don’t have the in-house content expertise to run a proper SEO program.
  4. The firm gets around 40% of new business via word of mouth from past/current clients.
  5. It also receives a number of professional referrals from accountants, financial advisers, and other law firms.

The practice manager is technically responsible for coordinating everything, but has no way of knowing whether each channel is working. (The front-desk admin sometimes asks clients how they heard about the firm and records the results in their CRM, but it’s inconsistent and no-one looks at the data anyway.)

None of the stakeholders are working in a unified or ‘integrated’ way. There’s no centralised messaging. No coherent brand. No overarching strategy aligned around business goals. Each one is operating as an autonomous silo, which is a great way to get subpar results for a lot of wasted time, money, and effort.

We used a law firm as an example, but many small (and even mid-sized) businesses have similarly disconnected approaches to their marketing. It’s a problem – and one that can become fatal when the competitive landscape tightens.

How Integrated Marketing Can Improve ROI

All marketing is, ultimately, about improving return on investment. The higher your ROI, the more revenue you’re driving with your marketing budget. But a disconnected approach means you’ll struggle to even measure that number – let alone get a positive return. Here’s how integrating your marketing channels can change that.

Less Duplication

When marketing is delivered under a unified strategy, different stakeholders aren’t double-handling market research, message creation, or even asset production. That means you aren’t wasting resources on duplicated efforts; lower costs directly translate to higher ROI.

Integrated Marketing Approach
Applicable resources are shared between channels, leading to fewer overall resources consumed.

Better Decision-Making

All good marketing decisions are based on accurate, up-to-date data. You need a single, top-down approach to collecting and analysing data sets from different channels – particularly when it comes to attribution.

Let’s say the law firm we talked about earlier split its marketing budget evenly between BD, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google Ads, SEO, and referrer enablement. Under an integrated marketing approach, the firm’s partners could see exactly how much revenue each channel delivered, which could then be used to tweak budget allocations to improve total ROI.

More data means a more accurate view of your brand’s marketing reality.

Greater Effectiveness

Marketing is, in many ways, saying the right thing over and over again until it sinks in. Politicians have a good phrase for it: staying on message. If your marketing varies between channels, you’ll be less effective at having buyers understand and buy into your messaging, which directly compromises ROI. There’s always going to be a level of variance between channels, but your overall approach should be consistent and unified.

The effectiveness of your marketing increases exponentially with greater integration.

No Channel Biases

When different stakeholders own specific channels, they’ll inevitably become attached to them. The issue: that attachment clouds good judgement. If we think back to the law firm example, the external marketing agency will almost always defend Google Ads and SEO, even if those channels aren’t getting results. It will use misleading metrics to justify ongoing and even amplified investment in both, which will end up compromising marketing ROI. The same goes for internal stakeholders who don’t want to have their budgets cut.

You need a centralised decision-maker who can compare each channel’s performance, make appropriate resource allocations, and drive coordinated messaging and creative. At larger organisations, that person is a CMO. At the small business level, it’s a very good argument for working with a full-service marketing agency like us.

Unlike agencies that focus on a handful of services, our incentives aren’t tied to any single channel. We win when your marketing ROI improves – not when our slice of the pie gets bigger. And, because we work with every channel, we understand the pros and cons of each one, which results in a better strategy from the outset.

If you need help implementing a fully integrated marketing strategy – or unifying your existing efforts – schedule a consultation with us.

Written by

Portrait of Duncan Croker, Content Strategist at iOnline
Portrait of Duncan Croker, Content Strategist at iOnline

Duncan Croker

Content Strategist

Linkedin
Duncan leads iOnline’s content department, working across channels like organic search and email to connect buyers with the information they need.
View profile
Linkedin

Reviewed by

Portrait of Shaia Deacon, Sales and Account Manager at iOnline
Portrait of Shaia Deacon, Sales and Account Manager at iOnline

Shaia Deacon

Sales and Account Manager

Linkedin
Shaia Deacon leads iOnline’s sales and account management, helping clients identify and move towards their goals.
View profile
Linkedin

Share This Post

Related Posts

Loading...
woman-looking-at-laptop-with-charts-and-graphs

Marketing

What Are the Benefits of Data-Driven Marketing Strategies?

70365

Marketing

Five Emerging Marketing Technologies You Should Know About (2024)

00

SEO

GPT-4 and SEO: How GPT-4 Will Revolutionise SEO & Content

Join Our Newsletter.

iOnline digital marketing agency homepage

Where Strategy Meets Substance

  • 1800 466 546
  • hello@ionline.com.au
  • 2/42 Lawrence Drive
    Nerang QLD 4211
Facebook Linkedin Instagram

Services

  • Website
  • Website Development
  • Copywriting
  • UX/UI Design
  • CRO
  • Hosting
  • Development
  • API Integration
  • Software/App Development
  • SEO
  • SEO Strategy
  • Local SEO
  • Paid Ads
  • Google Ads
  • Social Ads
  • Linkedin Ads
  • Bing Ads
  • Content Marketing
  • Content Strategy
  • Content Writing
  • Email Marketing
  • Digital Marketing
  • Social Media Management

Locations

  • Brisbane
  • Gold Coast

Industries

  • Electricians

Company

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Case Studies
  • Portfolio
  • Resources
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • © 2026 iOnline
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • © 2026 iOnline
Call Rail Agency Partners
Google Partner certified digital marketing agency
klaviyo-partner-badge-light

Team Member Name

Team Member Title

I'm Currently:

Watching: TV

Listening: Music

Reading: Book

Drinking: Drink

Quoting: Quote

Obsessed With: Love

Why I love what I do:

Enter text

I am not about:

Enter text