In AP Business, a marketing campaign is a coordinated set of promotion, advertising, and sales activities a business runs to reach its target customers and sell a product, using customer data and market segmentation to aim the message at the right buyers.
A marketing campaign is the practical, on-the-ground version of everything marketing is supposed to do. Per EK 2.1.A.1, marketing covers all the activities a business uses to identify customers' problems, needs, and wants and then to promote, sell, and deliver products. A campaign packages those promotional activities into one coordinated push: ads, social media posts, emails, sales efforts, all pointed at a specific goal.
The smart part isn't just running ads, it's aiming them. Businesses use customer data (EK 2.1.A.2) and market segmentation (EK 2.1.B.1) to figure out who to talk to, then build a customer profile of the target customer (EK 2.1.B.3) the campaign is designed to reach. So a marketing campaign is really segmentation and data turned into action. You collect the data, find your target customers, then spend money trying to convert them into buyers.
This lives in Unit 2: Marketing, specifically Topic 2.1 Marketing to Customers. A marketing campaign is where learning objectives AP Business 2.1.A and 2.1.B come together: you collect customer data, segment the market, and then the campaign is the spending that puts that strategy to work. It also feeds directly into 2.1.C (building customer relationships) because campaigns can target new buyers or keep existing ones loyal. The big-picture theme is that good marketing isn't random spending. It's targeted, data-driven, and measured against cost.
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Visual cheatsheet
view galleryCustomer Acquisition Cost / CAC (Unit 2)
Campaigns cost money, and CAC is how you grade them. Divide total campaign, advertising, and sales costs by the number of new customers you got, and you see whether the campaign was worth it.
Market Segmentation (Unit 2)
Segmentation is the planning; the campaign is the execution. You group customers by demographics and psychographics first, then build a campaign aimed at the segment most likely to buy.
Customer Lifetime Value / CLV (Unit 2)
CLV tells you how much a customer is worth over time, which sets the ceiling on what a campaign should reasonably spend to win that customer. Spending more to acquire than the customer will ever be worth is a losing campaign.
Digital Marketing (Unit 2)
Most modern campaigns run through digital channels like social media and email, which (per EK 2.1.C.1) also make it cheaper to personalize the message and collect feedback.
Expect the term to show up most often inside a CAC calculation. A classic MCQ stem hands you the dollars spent on a marketing campaign, advertising, and sales, plus the number of new customers, and asks for customer acquisition cost. For example, $50,000 spent to acquire 500 customers gives a CAC of $100 per customer. You may also see it in segmentation questions, where you match a campaign to the right target customer or customer profile. On an FRQ, you could be asked to design a marketing plan and justify which segment a campaign should target and why.
A marketing campaign is the coordinated promotional effort itself, the what and why of a push to reach customers. A marketing channel is the where, the path or platform (social media, email, in-store) the campaign travels through. One campaign can run across several channels.
A marketing campaign is a coordinated set of promotion, advertising, and sales activities aimed at a specific group of target customers.
Campaigns are built on customer data and market segmentation, so you aim the message at the segment most likely to buy.
The cost of a campaign feeds the customer acquisition cost formula: total campaign and sales costs divided by new customers acquired.
A campaign can target brand-new customers or strengthen relationships with existing ones to lower acquisition cost over time.
Don't confuse the campaign (the effort) with the marketing channel (the platform it runs on).
It's a coordinated set of promotional, advertising, and sales activities a business runs to reach its target customers and sell a product. It's marketing strategy turned into actual spending and action.
No. The campaign is the promotional effort itself, while the marketing channel is the platform or path it travels through, like social media, email, or in-store displays. One campaign can use multiple channels.
Campaign spending is the main input for CAC. You add up the marketing, advertising, and sales costs of the campaign and divide by the number of new customers acquired. For example, $50,000 spent to get 500 customers means a CAC of $100.
Yes, indirectly. The exam tests campaign cost through the CAC formula, so be ready to take a campaign's total cost and divide it by new customers to find the cost per customer.
Segmentation comes first and tells you who to target by grouping customers on demographic and psychographic traits. The campaign is the execution, the actual push aimed at that target segment and its customer profile.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.