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Digital Marketing Services for Ecommerce: What to Look For and How to Budget

Written by Chris Mehrabi | Jul 6, 2026 2:30:00 PM

Digital marketing for ecommerce is one of the most crowded, over-promised categories in the agency world. Every agency promises lower CAC, better ROAS, and incremental growth — and most of them sound the same until you're six months into a contract that's producing reports instead of results.

This guide is for ecommerce brands that want to cut through the noise: what digital marketing services actually matter, how to evaluate providers, and how to build a budget that reflects reality.

What Are Ecommerce Digital Marketing Services?

Digital marketing services for ecommerce cover the channels and tactics that drive traffic, conversion, and repeat purchase for online brands. The core disciplines are:

Paid media — Google Ads, Meta (Facebook and Instagram), TikTok, Amazon Advertising, YouTube, Pinterest. Paid media drives immediate, measurable traffic and is typically the largest line item in a scaling brand's marketing budget.

Search engine optimization (SEO) — content, technical SEO, and link building to earn organic search traffic. SEO has the highest long-term ROI of any digital channel for most ecommerce brands but requires patience and consistency to compound.

Email and SMS marketing — lifecycle programs that turn one-time buyers into repeat customers. For DTC brands, retention marketing often has 3–5x the ROAS of acquisition channels.

Marketplace marketing — Amazon Sponsored Products, Walmart Connect, sponsored listings across marketplaces. As brands sell across more channels, marketplace-specific advertising becomes its own discipline.

Conversion rate optimization (CRO) — testing and optimizing the on-site experience to improve the percentage of visitors who buy. Often underinvested relative to its impact.

Influencer and affiliate marketing — performance-driven creator partnerships and affiliate programs.

Most brands work with a combination of in-house marketing staff and external agency or service partners. The right mix depends on your volume, internal capabilities, and growth stage.

Paid Media: What You're Actually Buying

Paid media is the highest-leverage, fastest-feedback channel for ecommerce — and the one where it's easiest to waste money if the management isn't strong.

When you hire a paid media agency or service, you're paying for:

  • Account structure and campaign architecture
  • Creative strategy (what ads to run) — though production may be separate
  • Ongoing optimization: bidding, targeting, budget allocation, A/B tests
  • Reporting and analysis

What separates strong paid media management from weak isn't the tools — it's the depth of strategic thinking and the speed of iteration. An agency that makes one change per week and sends a monthly report is not a growth partner.

Red flags in paid media:

  • Guaranteed ROAS numbers before they've analyzed your account
  • Long-term contracts (12+ months) with no performance milestones
  • Black-box reporting that you can't verify independently
  • One account manager stretched across 40 clients

What good looks like:

  • Access to your own ad accounts (never let an agency own your accounts)
  • Weekly optimization cadence with transparent reporting
  • Creative testing built into the strategy, not treated as an afterthought
  • Clear attribution methodology that accounts for incrementality, not just last-click

SEO for Ecommerce: The Long Game Worth Playing

Organic search is consistently one of the highest-ROI channels for ecommerce brands that invest in it seriously. The challenge is that it takes time — typically 6–12 months before meaningful organic traffic compounds — which makes it easy to deprioritize in favor of faster-feedback paid channels.

The brands that win organically treat SEO as infrastructure, not a campaign. That means:

Technical SEO — ensuring your site is crawlable, fast, and structured correctly. Core Web Vitals, site architecture, canonical tags, structured data, and mobile experience all affect how Google indexes and ranks your pages.

Content — product pages optimized for purchase-intent keywords, and a blog or resource center that captures research-phase traffic and builds topical authority. The brands ranking at the top of competitive ecommerce keywords have invested in content seriously, over time.

Link building — earning high-quality backlinks from relevant publications and sites. This is the hardest part of SEO and the most commonly done wrong (or ignored).

The right SEO partner will audit your current state, prioritize the highest-impact opportunities, and execute across all three pillars — not just one.

Retention Marketing: The Channel Most Brands Underinvest In

Email and SMS consistently deliver the highest ROAS of any digital channel for ecommerce brands — often 10–20x or more — because you're marketing to people who already know you. Yet most brands spend far more time and money on acquisition than retention.

A mature retention program includes:

  • Welcome series — convert new subscribers and capture first purchase
  • Abandoned cart and browse abandonment — recover purchase-intent visitors
  • Post-purchase flows — build loyalty, drive second purchase, collect reviews
  • Win-back campaigns — re-engage lapsed customers before they're gone
  • VIP and loyalty programs — identify and reward your best customers
  • Promotional calendar — strategic deployment of discounts and campaigns

If your email program is mostly promotional blasts with no automation layer underneath, you have significant untapped revenue sitting in your list.

How to Budget for Digital Marketing Services

Budgeting for digital marketing is one of the questions brands get most wrong. The two most common errors: treating marketing spend as a fixed cost (it should scale with revenue) and underinvesting in the channels with the highest long-term ROI (SEO, retention) in favor of the ones with the fastest short-term feedback (paid social).

A useful framework for scaling DTC brands:

Stage Annual Revenue Marketing as % of Revenue Channel Priority
Early <$1M 20–30% Paid social, email basics
Growth $1M–$10M 15–25% Paid search + social, email/SMS build-out, SEO investment begins
Scale $10M–$50M 10–20% Full-funnel paid media, mature retention program, SEO compounding
Enterprise $50M+ 8–15% Optimized channel mix, incrementality testing, brand investment

 

Agency fees vary widely. Paid media agencies typically charge either a percentage of ad spend (8–15%) or a flat monthly retainer. SEO retainers range from $2,000–$15,000+/month depending on scope. Retention marketing (Klaviyo, Attentive, etc.) is often billed on a combination of platform cost and service fees.

The key question isn't what percentage you're paying — it's what performance milestones are tied to that investment.

What Makes a Good Ecommerce Marketing Partner

They've worked in your category. Paid media strategy for a supplement brand is meaningfully different from strategy for apparel or electronics. Category experience matters.

They're transparent about attribution. Every agency will show you good numbers if they get to define the attribution model. Push for clarity: last-click, first-click, data-driven, multi-touch. Ask how they measure incrementality.

They communicate proactively. You shouldn't be chasing your agency for updates. The best partners surface issues early and come to you with recommendations, not just reports.

They own outcomes, not activity. "We launched 12 campaigns this month" is an activity update. "We improved ROAS by 18% on your top-performing category" is an outcome. Hold your partners to outcomes.

They're integrated, not siloed. A paid media agency that doesn't talk to your SEO partner or retention team is leaving money on the table. The best digital marketing setups treat all channels as one connected system.

Cart.com's Growth Marketing Services

Cart.com's growth marketing team works with ecommerce brands on paid media, SEO, and retention marketing as an integrated service — not siloed channel management. The team brings ecommerce-specific expertise across categories and channels, with a focus on building scalable programs rather than managing individual campaigns in isolation.

Whether you're looking to improve ROAS on existing paid channels, build out a retention program, or develop an SEO strategy that reduces your long-term dependence on paid acquisition, Cart's marketing team has the depth to execute.

Talk to Cart.com's marketing team →

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