written by
Elliot Manson

Cannabis Digital Marketing - Should You Even Try?

3 min read

Part of me wants to feel bad for cannabis retailers. Your product is legal in many states and some of your products are legal in all states. But you can't really advertising your business...

You have the constant frustration of "I'm in California, my ads are in California, cannabis is legal in California, but I can't advertise in California?"

But at the same token, Tobacco is legal, tons of advertising restrictions. Fitness is very legal, ton of advertising restrictions. Cryptocurrency advertising - yeah, good luck. And the list goes on.

Good marketing is about adapting. Adapting to your audiences. Adapting your offer. Adapting your targeting strategy. So in order to have a strong cannabis digital marketing effort, you need to adapt.

Who Sets The Regulations?

Regulation of ads is done by the advertising platforms, Google, Facebook, Twitter and 100s of other ad networks.

In general, they all follow suit. Something is illegal on Google, probably going to run into the same issues on Facebook.

As much as we all may want, they don't operate on a state by state basis. They make global policies that apply to the entire network and because the drug is still illegal federally, they will play by the federal law.

It's important to keep in my these platforms operate to give the user (not the advertiser) the best experience possible. They need to limit the amount of complaints from parents seeing cannabis ads pop up on their 18 year olds Ipad and then they kid trying to explain to the parent why they are getting cannabis ads. Nobody is winning.

Along with this, even if you find an ad network willing to run your ad, the website that's connected to that ad network would need to allow cannabis ads to show. And guess what, most websites don't. Just like the ad networks, they care about the user experience on their website.

So, How should I advertise?

There are two types of advertising. Push and pull.

Push advertising

is just as it seems. Your pushing products, offers, information out to the world. This is how most companies do advertising.

Pull advertising

is when you are pulling consumers to your website and your social media channels, creating interest around what you do and the content you product.

This is where cannabis sites can win. Create educational content.

  • Safety Tips
  • What If I Take Too Much?
  • What's The Average Cost?
  • Is It Illegal To Drive?

Once a user is on your site, you can control what type of offers they see, so your goal needs to be "how do I get users to my website" not, "how can I sell them through advertising."

Final Do's And Don'ts

Do...

Make an attempt to advertise your business, but keep it clean.

Create a version of your website that is educational only, only products.

Do make the ads very neutral. Your goal should simply be brand awareness, not sales, leads, or anything else. Simply letting people know within 5 miles of your business that you exist (if they can't smell you).

Do create a great social media presence. You can post all day along about cannabis on Instagram.

Don't

Use words like cannabis, pot, weed, or anything along those lines in your ads. They will never get approved.

Don't use any cannabis related imagery, mainly don't use a leaf in any part of the ad.

Don't direct people to a website that sells any sort of product, even CBD oil that's legal everywhere. The ad networks WILL reject it. Believe it or not, they actually do go look at the websites ads are pointed to.

Summary

Running a cannabis digital marketing campaign for your store or business is not impossible, but it's extremely difficult.

The best strategy is to create educational content, ad value to users and go into the advertising campaign with no goal of sales.

With that, we are no longer accepting cannabis advertising campaigns. There are plenty of cannabis only advertising companies out there, would highly recommend going to someone who specializes.