Every marketer knows that where you place your call-to-action can make or break a campaign. But in digital channels, CTA placement is guided by mouse-tracking studies, scroll-depth reports, and A/B testing. In direct mail, there has never been an equivalent - until MARC. For the first time, marketers can see exactly how prospects interact with physical CTA moments inside a brochure, and where attention peaks and dips throughout the video narrative.
This guide breaks down how to use MARC engagement data - view duration, replay clustering, drop-off points, and intent signals - to place CTAs with precision. When done correctly, CTA placement becomes a strategic choice rooted in real behavior, not guesswork.
Digital experiences have unlimited surface area: banners, sidebars, pop-ups, modals, sticky CTAs. A MARC brochure has one core viewing moment - the video - and the CTA must complement the narrative rather than distract from it.
MARC analytics reveal three truths about CTA performance:
Understanding these dynamics is key to optimizing conversions.
MARC campaigns follow several consistent viewer behavior patterns. Each suggests an ideal CTA placement strategy.
Viewers watch intently for the first 10-20 seconds, evaluating whether the content is worth their time. Drop-off is minimal in this phase.
Best CTA Type: Light brand reinforcement or a simple tagline - not a full CTA.
From 20-50 seconds, viewers decide whether the message applies to their needs. MARC data shows that most replay clusters occur in this section.
Best CTA Type: Mid-video micro-CTAs such as "See how it works," "Explore the data," or "Talk to a specialist."
After the midpoint, viewers respond strongly to:
This is where the emotional + logical argument peaks.
Best CTA Type: Full conversion CTA: scheduling a demo, requesting a proposal, downloading a benchmark report.
In MARC videos that run 60-90 seconds, the last 10-15 seconds produce a predictable spike in intent. Viewers who make it this far are often evaluating seriously.
Best CTA Type: Direct, singular CTA without competing text.
Marketers can use four specific analytic lenses to determine where their CTA should appear.
The percentage of viewers who pass 30, 45, and 60-second marks influences how early or late to introduce the CTA. For example:
Replay clustering often signals emotional relevance or curiosity. Here are examples of CTA-triggering moments:
Placing a CTA immediately after these moments amplifies conversion.
If a significant portion of viewers drop off at 35-45 seconds, consider:
Prospects who cross certain engagement thresholds (60+ seconds, multi-day engagement, replays) convert at far higher rates. Align CTA placement to maximize the number of viewers who reach those thresholds.
Optimizing CTA placement with MARC is simple because every brochure version generates its own engagement analytics. You can test:
Within days, analytics reveal which version drives:
Our team will walk you through real campaign examples and help you design CTA structures rooted in analytics.