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Posts Tagged ‘email’
Unlimited SMS & Email Reminders
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Unlimited SMS & Email Reminders
Top 12 issues your directors should know about eMail marketing
Sunday, October 17th, 2010#1. eMail is used by all types of organisations Over a decade into the internet revolution, you would think that eMail marketing would now be acknowledged as a valuable asset, even by company directors. This assumption is made at your own risk. It’s better to demonstrate eMail’s acceptance in the language that your directors understand – numbers. eMail is the most widely used internet-based communication channel and it’s the cornerstone of viral marketing. A few facts are worth pointing out: Sending and reading eMail remains is the #1 activity on the internet 99% of internet users say they use eMail 96% of internet users check their eMail weekly or more 60% of internet users checked their eMail yesterday There is simply no other internet-based, one-to-one communication strategy with the adoption rate, reach, and usage that eMail enjoys. #2. eMail Is cost-effective There is also no other marketing medium as cost-effective as eMail. With pay per click for example, you have to rent keywords. With direct mail, you have to pay for printing and postage. With eMail, you can cost-effectively use your own data to build your own proprietary list of subscribers who are interested in your products and services. Remember, your eMail subscribers are a company asset that no competitor can reproduce. Even better, eMail lets you communicate with subscribers through a direct, internet-based medium that is very affordable and provides instant delivery. Today’s tough worldwide economy demands that marketers look more closely at the ROI of their marketing campaigns. In times like these, eMail continues to be an excellent investment. It offers a highly-engaging, customisable, highly-targeted medium to strengthen customer relationships, produce sales, and improve brand recognition. What is there not to like about eMail? #3. eMail is profitable The US Direct Marketing Association’s annual survey has revealed that eMail marketing provides the highest ROI of any direct marketing tactic – whether it’s online or offline. In its 2008 survey, the DMA (USA) found that eMail generated £30 for every pound spent. That’s an ROI of over twice that of any other online marketing tactic surveyed. The possible danger of sharing eMail’s ROI with your company directors is that they may see it as a justification to send out unwanted “scattergun” eMail, instead of more permission-based, focused eMail. Emphasise to your directors that “eMail is not direct mail”. The eMail inbox is not a postbox – it’s a far more personal space. eMail subscribers dictate the terms of their marketing relationship with you. Unfocused, mass mailing is not a valid strategy – it’s a recipe for subscriber revolt and delivery problems. Better ROI comes from developing a long-term eMail marketing strategy, designed to build relationships. eMail is superb for customer retention and lead nurturing. Once your directors understand that eMail ROI is tied to subscriber satisfaction, they will be more inclined to accept your long-term marketing communication strategies. #4. eMail must be permission-based It’s worth continuing to emphasise to your directors that the inbox is not the postbox. Many recipients will simply use the “Delete” button to purge unwanted eMails. Worse than that scenario, aggrieved recipients can hit the “Report Spam” button and potentially block your company from sending any eMail to other recipients at that domain. A recent survey by MarketingSherpa and Q Interactive found that 48% of those who use the “Report Spam” button do so for reasons other than the regulatory definition of “unsolicited commercial eMail”. Instead, they use a perception-based definition based on “dissatisfaction”. You must convey to your directors that the majority of subscribers will lump all of the following complaints into the “spam” category: eMail that is not requested eMail with irrevelant or uninteresting content eMail that is sent out too frequently If your company does not respect subscriber preferences like content and frequency, it will be treated like a spammer, and it will suffer impaired eMail deliverability and declining ROI. Here’s how to treat your subscribers: Treat subscribers individually Respect each subscriber’s unique preferences like content and frequency Provide them with timely, relevant content that meets their needs An eMail strategy that incorporates this subscriber philosophy will avoid the spam button and help develop meaningful, long-term customer relationships. #5. eMail needs data integration As you explain the detail of eMail marketing’s high ROI to your directors, you will inevitably need to cover the two important subjects of resource allocation and data integration. Unfortunately, this is where the cost-effective nature of eMail can work against you. In a recent survey “Maximizing Routes to Revenue” (a CMO Council survey from 2008), over 70% of marketers surveyed felt they were not realising the full revenue potential of their current customers. Consider a website development project for example – it’s well understood that there will be significant third-party costs including software, creative design, development, testing, and maintenance. Consequently, significant resources are allocated to this type of campaign. eMail marketing, on the other hand, is often a small line-item near the bottom of a marketing budget. While eMail’s ROI far outpaces every other medium, spending on it often lags behind, because it is seen as a retention vehicle with deployment costs far lower than other marketing tools. Experienced eMail marketers will understand that eMail deployment is actually only a small part of the investment required. The other key components are: Personnel: employing knowledgeable eMail marketing experts committed to building long-term results Data Integration: investing time and human resources in a strategy that brings website, CRM, and response data together to make eMail interactions more relevant, personal, and timely In these budget-conscious times, the good news is that you may already have the human resources in place. What is needed is a long-term strategy to integrate customer intelligence to enable more timely and relevant one-to-one communications in the future. You will need to get your IT and CRM teams “on side”. Thorough integration can eliminate deliverability problems and cut down on IT’s burden by empowering the marketing department with easier access to relevant data. With your IT and CRM teams working together, you’ll be in a better position to demonstrate to your directors that data integration can provide significant, long-term benefits that go far beyond eMail marketing on its own, and that eMail should be seen as an integral component of the much larger IT and CRM strategies. #6. eMail is personal With your organisation’s data integration in place, you will then be able to incorporate segmentation and personalisation into your eMail marketing campaigns. The “Four Rs” are essential: The Right message The Right person The Right time The Right channel A 2008 CMO Council Survey, “Maximizing Routes to Revenue” reported that “60 % of marketers surveyed are introducing better segmentation, profiling and targeting strategies, while 49% plan to add or improve database marketing systems and 30% intend to acquire new analytics capabilities to better target and engage”. When explaining this to your directors, it’s essential to demonstrate that personalisation is far more than simply beginning your eMail with, “Dear John. . . ” It’s all about using the information that your subscribers have shared with you, and combining this with data you already have from CRM systems and previous online interactions. This will enable you to deliver content that is consistent with their particular needs and interests. Examples of eMail personalisation include: Providing account status information Tailoring content based on preferences Populating content based on browsing history Reducing eMail frequency based on subscriber requests The above points represent some of the highest ROI eMail marketing strategies available today. The use of greater segmentation and personalisation is a proven way to increase spend and ongoing customer retention. Both are excellent goals to achieve in the current economic climate. #7. eMail is immediate One attribute of eMail that often gets neglected is its immediacy – your eMail is delivered almost instantaneously to every recipient. The eMail medium offers companies an “instant” channel to manage unforeseen crises and enables them to exploit opportunities as soon as they appear. To take advantage of eMail’s immediacy takes two things: Permission to send the eMail A detail-oriented team with a “rapid-broadcast mentality” It’s worth emphasising that permission-based eMail subscribers are often your most loyal, return customers. Maintaining happy, engaged subscribers should be an important part of any company’s marketing plans. If an issue should suddenly arise, your most engaged and committed customers need to be contacted quickly. The second point is that a “rapid-broadcast mentality” is required. Once you hit the “send” button, you can’t recall your eMail message – “the horse has bolted”. This differs from other forms of advertising where there is a production window in which your campaign can be amended or even cancelled. This is also different to the traditional “launch and fix” website development philosophy. Why is this “rapid-broadcast mentality” important? Because few marketers can take the pressure or have the attention to detail that eMail marketing requires. You will need to identify and retain staff (or an external agency like eMarket2) who have these attributes. A long-term eMail marketing strategy requires committed and passionate people to execute it. This sort of talent is worth its weight in gold in today’s economic environment where customer retention is vital. #8. eMail is now accessed using mobiles The iPhone (and similar mobiles) are revolutionising internet access, with eMail, websites, interactive maps, and search engines available on the move. Thanks to Apple’s decision to delay multimedia messaging (MMS) capabilities, eMail is the main way that iPhone users share photos, videos, and links. With the increasing use of smartphones for business, mobility and eMail access now go hand-in-hand. It’s now critical to determine if your subscribers are using mobiles for eMail and web access. If they do, you must offer mobile-friendly versions of eMail messages. The investment of time will result in much better responses from your mobile eMail users. #9 eMail is extremely flexible Remind your directors that eMail is the most flexible marketing communication channel ever developed. Consider for a moment these 30 different ways that organisations can, and do use eMail: Product releases Affiliate communications Lead nurturing Order confirmations Contests Loyalty club Sale notifications Monthly statements Service updates Customer service News alerts Shipping notices Drip campaigns Newsletters Store openings Event notifications Product alerts Upsell messaging Abandoned cart notifications Franchise communications Product recalls Account alerts Invitations Corporate communications Membership renewals Satisfaction surveys Coupons Membership rewards Service reminders Cross-sell messaging The overall use of eMail communications within an organisation encompass far more than simply eMail marketing messages. With today’s eMail marketing technology (eg eMarket2’s eMail systems) companies can aggregate, optimise and measure their overall eMail communications across the entire organisation. If your company is for example, still sending out untrackable, text eMail order confirmations, then it’s time to move to a single-platform eMail system. This will not only enable you to use eMail in all its different forms, but it will also provide you with the statistics you need to justify further data integration. #10. eMail is easily measurable In today’s results-motivated marketing environment, eMail is popular because it’s measurable – you get immediate feedback on who is receiving, opening, and responding to your eMail messages. The integration of web analytics with eMail is a powerful means of optimising ROI. Companies that use real-time performance data to optimise their eMail content will separate themselves from their competitors. By using web analytics solutions from providers such as Omniture, WebTrends, and CoreMetrics, organisations can easily track the post-click behaviour of their eMail subscribers. This creates vital data that can be used to assess the ROI of an individual eMail campaign. It will also aid future eMail segmentation and personalisation. The only way to find out if eMail is returning the best ROI or if it’s helping to retain customers is to examine your data in detail. #11. eMail is NOT spam There’s always a director somewhere who say “all eMail is spam”, simply because they get so much of it in their inbox. There’s no question that spam is and always will be a problem. However, if you respect your subscribers’ permission and send only relevant, timely, and requested eMails, THIS IS NOT SPAM. If your doubting director isn’t convinced, point out that prospects continue to give their permission to communicate with them via eMail. B2B prospects and customers continue to prefer eMail for: Order confirmations and “thank you” messages Financial alerts Account status updates Permission-based promotional eMails Polls and surveys about recognised companies All spam in the inbox may be eMail, but not all eMail in the inbox is spam. With eMail, you should be embarking into a one-to-one environment requiring careful listening to customers to achieve smarter and more effective relationship marketing. #12. eMail represents the future Hopefully, your directors will now no longer be pushing you to “blast out eMails” and they will value the company’s eMail list among the most important marketing assets. However, they might also start to ask you about SMS (text messaging), behavioural targeting, and other new forms of one-to-one marketing. They want to be “get with it” in terms of the latest marketing methods. Take the opportunity to encourage your executives enthusiasm and point out that new tactics like SMS have even more stringent standards and gatekeepers than eMail. With eMail, there’s no mass medium to control, only millions of individual conversations to join. Conclusion The winners will be those companies who incorporate Best Practice eMail marketing, in particular adhering to the “Four Rs” – the Right message, sent to the Right person at the Right time, using the Right channel.
How email marketers can capitalize on mobile marketing: Our advice
Friday, August 13th, 2010Your email program is booming and now your CMO asks “What about mobile?” Make no mistake, the world and your customers have gone mobile, so that your mail program must follow. Reach your target audience today can feel like an exercise in virtual roulette an assortment of options to choose from, each feeling as much a bet that the other. Mobile has become a key place marketing today, you must be ready to improve your email program on the market with exponential growth in the number of mobile users and introduce mobile messaging in your mix . Be a maverick mobile marketing Since your customers have adopted the convenience and portability of handheld computers and cell phones for media management, it is time for traders to adapt and customize their messages based on habits and preferences of customers. As digital media adoption rates soar, the demand of customers for the mobile employment will skyrocket. Be where your customers are As e-mail marketing, it is essential to be at the center of attention of your customers if you hope to gain and maintain their activity. According to AOL Mail fourth annual Email Addiction Survey, 16% of respondents said they check their e-mails from a mobile device. In addition, 55% of respondents said they upgraded to a new cell phone in the last year so they can check email on the go. Crunch those stats and you have a great migratory movement moving. Clearly, to succeed in today’s marketplace, your mail program must adapt to meet consumer demand in the stratosphere mobile. Do not think of mobile phones in lieu of e-mail suggests that an improvement strategies that you already have in place today. To start, try these simple but powerful tactics to integrate mobile into your strategy e-mail from today. Steps to Mobile Marketing successStep # 1: Create mobile friendly formats for your e-mail Not all the provisions of email and the styles are right for mobile media. As you target your audience travel, make sure to think of simple models designed for small screens, mobile software, and the most common use of multimedia players. Mobile users spend accessing messages simple moments, then said quickly and focus on the benefits. - Boat Offers clear and easily understandable for the subject line. - To put the most important issue at the top of emails for quick access to the bottom. - If you include links, ensure that landing pages are optimized for handheld computers. - Make messages short, concise, and worth … with clear action items and incentives. Remember, size, layout and design features useful in the communication standard e-mail will not produce the same results in mobile messaging, which can potentially cause the recipient to hit the delete key, without bothering read more. Step # 2: Have a plan and stick to it Plan for success by identifying your goals and tactics you’ll need to achieve them. Ask yourself, “How mobile marketing help me build my business and meet the milestones of commercialization? The agenda of the first action should include an assessment of the unique qualities of the mobile lifestyle. Content and flow of user informs Web layout scale will not necessarily be on a scale of Blackberry. Play campaigns on the strengths of this small platform to run multiple facets and that the value for mobile users, e. g. , Click for ringtones, mobile access only special offers. - Building a mobile marketing strategy that integrates with your overall marketing plan. - Campaigns framework and relevant offers specifically appeal to mobile users. - Setting targets with dates and additional steps and monitor performance. Step # 3: Collect data mobile visitors to your website Before you start a mobile campaign, turn your own captive audience of your website visitors to see what, when, where and how they want to be in communication with their mobile device. In communicating your website preferences page, collect the key points of data, such as: - The mobile numbers - Mobile opt-in agreement - Type of users want information from mobile messages - The basic demographics such as age, sex, date of birth, email, phone, zip (geographic targeting), and interest - Type of phone and carrier specifications - E-mail If possible, offer incentives to fill the form to sign power-ups. While you’re at it, indicating that advice down exclusive list of the best offers and announcements to come in the future of mobile messages to you. Remember, those who opt-in to receive mobile news are likely: - Too busy to proactively obtain all their data from the Web, - Do not miss the last, greatest development of their brand preferences, hobbies, and heroes. Maximize the community by offering benefits that save time, give them useful advice, and sell them more and more to your value. Step # 4: Create an infrastructure that conforms to industry Mobile marketing, like any medium, has its rules. The good news is, following these guidelines, you can afford to travel smoothly along the highway news. To ensure that your infrastructure is up to, check first with the Mobile Marketing Association (www. mmaglobal. Com), their code of conduct and industry best practices cover the protocol essential that you need to know to keep you rule. Simple things like the proper use of SMS aggregators and sending permission-based communications are large transactions in the small world of handhelds. Just as in e-mail, there is no spam allowed! Please note: messages clear and precise and age-appropriate keys are the playing field. Step # 5: Down to details, campaigns and track results From mobile marketing is actually a part of your overall marketing strategy, sync with business goals and develop campaigns that reflect and complement what you do in other places. Get your hands in the details, to set quarterly goals, and describe the steps the job done. Take inventory of these tactics integrated along the path: - Praise ongoing promotions with offers mobile only. - Encourage interaction mobile user by sending an e-mail address or mailing special offer codes that provide access gimmee “(eg, ringing song, coupon widget). - Use mobile messages: build drive people to your website, your brand and promote your services. - Establish a schedule of test methods to test SMS, calls to action, and the responsiveness of the public. - Response time measurement speed, time of day, day of week, and create a matrix of best times and types of messages to send. - Test calls to action that include coupons, click-through rewards, and the latest breakthrough /; adjust tactics based on the results. - Send emails to different groups of different audiences, test that the best results and change the future sends accordingly. - Ask yourself “What makes my audience respond?” And to do so. Success Step 6: Analyze and implement the campaign As the campaigns pay you, your testing and tracking of activity will reveal what works and what does not. It’s time to refine your methods and construct a strategy that grows with your business objectives. If a campaign results in a large number of opt-outs, taking notes and analyzing demographic data, subject lines, calls to action, time of day, and offers a message locate the source of failure. On the other hand, if a campaign reaches the roof, stimulates sign-ups, sales surge and triple site traffic, try to identify the muscle behind the home run and create some clones! Criteria to assess the success of campaigns: - What was the level of interaction on the phone? - How many recipients unsubscribed? - How many new users subscribed? - How many recipients sent to the survey? - What day of the week and hours of the day did users respond? - How long have Recipients wait to react? - How many coupons have been redeemed, songs, ringtones / / skins / widgets downloaded? - How many recipients clicked on a link call to action and / or clicked on my website? - What do the other replies performance of the campaign? Stay focused and get in the game As the face of email marketing Forever Changes, support and evolve with time. Integrate mobile strategies into your marketing mix will help you reach more customers more often and more reliable. With a few adjustments to your program, you can create scalable campaigns catering to mobile devices that you get in the game to win.
How email marketing can Capitalize on Mobile Marketing Insider Tips
Sunday, April 18th, 2010Your mail program is going strong and now your COM application “What about mobile?” Let’s face it, the world and your customers are gone mobile, so that your email program should follow suit. To reach your target audience today can feel like an exercise in virtual wheel of an assortment of options to choose from, each feeling as much a challenge than others. Mobile has become a key place marketing today, you must be prepared to give your mail program on the market to grow exponentially in the number of mobile users and introduce mobile messaging to your mix. Being a maverick mobile marketing Because your customers have adopted the convenience and portability of handheld computers and cell phones for media management, it is time for marketers to adapt and customize their messages based on habits and preferences of customers. As digital media adoption rates soar, customer demand for mobile engagement will skyrocket. Be where your customers are As a buyer of email, it is essential to be at the center of attention of your customers if you hope to gain and maintain their activity. According to AOL Mail fourth annual Email Addiction Survey, 16% of respondents said they check their messages from a mobile. In addition, 55% of respondents said they would upgrade to a new cell phone in the last year so they can check email on-the-go. Crunch those stats and you have a great tendency to migrate mobile. It is clear that to succeed in today’s marketplace, your e-mail program must adapt to meet consumer demand in the stratosphere mobile. Do not think of mobile phones in lieu of mail-thinking as an accessory to the strategies you have in place today. To start, try this simple but powerful tactics to integrate mobile into your strategy for e-mail from today. Steps to Mobile Marketing successStep No. 1: Create ‘mobile format’ user-friendly for your e-mail Not all provisions of email and the styles are right for mobile devices. As you target your audience on a trip, remember to think a simple design for small screens, mobile software, and usage patterns more common on portable devices. Mobile users spend moments simple access to messages, according to this brief and focus on the benefits. - Craft offers clear and easily understandable to the subject line. - Put the most important topic at the top of messages for a quicker access to the bottom. - If you include links, be sure landing pages are optimized for handhelds. - Make the messages short, concise but memorable … with clear action points and incentives. Remember, size, layout and design features useful communication standard email will not produce the same results in mobile messaging, potentially causing recipients to hit the delete key without taking the trouble of read more. Step # 2: Have a plan and stick to it Plan for success by identifying your goals and tactics you’ll need to achieve them. Ask yourself: “How mobile marketing can help me build my business and meet the milestones of commercialization? The first step must include an assessment of the unique qualities of the mobile lifestyle. Content and flow of user informs the full presentation at the Web scale does not necessarily adjust on a Blackberry. On the strengths of this platform for small and multi-faceted campaigns and run, which add value for mobile users, e. g. , Click for ringtones, mobile access only special offers. - Building a mobile marketing strategy that integrates with your overall marketing plan. - Plan campaigns and relevant offers that appeal particularly to mobile users. - Setting targets with dates and additional steps and monitor performance. Step # 3: Collect data from mobile visitors to your website Before you begin a mobile campaign, turn your captive audience of visitors your own website to see what, when, where and how they want to be contacted by their mobile device. In the contact page of your site preference, gather key data such as: - Phone Number - Mobile opt-in agreement - Type of information users want from mobile messages - Demographic data base, such as age, sex, date of birth, email, phone, zip (geographic targeting) and interest - Type of phone and carrier specifications - Email If possible, offer incentives to complete the registration form to power the inverter. While you’re there, drop boards indicating that exclusive list of top deals and announcements are coming soon in future mobile messages to you. Remember, those who opt-in to receive mobile news are possible: - Too busy to proactively obtain all their data from the Web, and - Do not miss the past, development of best deals on their favorite brands, hobbies, and heroes. Maximize the environment by offering benefits that save time, give them useful advice, and sell more and more on your value. Step # 4: Create an infrastructure that conforms to industry The mobile marketing, like any other medium, has its rules. The good news is, following these guidelines can provide smooth travel along this new highway. To ensure your infrastructure is up to, check first with the Mobile Marketing Association (www. mmaglobal. Com)-the best practices of their code of conduct and industry cover the essential protocol which you will need know to keep you in good standing. Simple things like the proper use of SMS aggregators and sending permission-based communications are big deals in the small world of handhelds. Like the e-mail arena, there is no spam allowed! Please also note: clear, accurate and age-appropriate messages are key to the playing field. Step # 5: Get the detail, developing campaigns, and track results Since the mobile marketing is actually a segment of your overall marketing strategy, sync it up with business objectives and develop campaigns that mirror and compliment what you do in other places. Get your hands into the details, to set quarterly targets, and outlines the steps the job done. Make an inventory of tactical integrated along the following: - Compliment promotions with offers mobile only. - Encourage interaction mobile user by sending an e-mail address or mailing codes provide special access that offer Gimmee “(eg, song, ringtone, coupon widget). - Use of mobile messages: people drive to your website, build your brand and promote your services. - Develop a testing schedule to experiment with SMS, calls to action, and the responsiveness of the public. - Response time measurement: speed, time of day, day of week, and create a matrix of best times and types of messages to send. - Test calls to action include the redemption of coupons, click-through awards, and recent / new developments, adjust tactics based on the results. - Send emails to different groups different audience; test that gives the best results and to modify future sends accordingly. - Ask yourself: “What makes my audience react?” And to do so. Step # 6: Analyze and implement successful campaigns As you wage campaigns, your tests and monitoring activities reveal what works and what is not. Now is the time to refine your methods and build a strategy that grows with your business objectives. If a campaign results in a high number of opt-outs, take note and analyze demographic data, subject lines, calls to action, time of day, and offers message to locate the source of failure. On the other hand, if a country reaches the roof, stimulate sign-ups, waves of sales and triple the traffic Web site, try to identify the muscle behind the home run and create some clones! Criteria for analyzing the success of campaigns: - What was the level of interaction on the handsets? - How many recipients unsubscribed? - How many users of new subscribers? - How many recipients sent to the survey? - What day of the week and hours of the day did users respond? - How long have Recipients wait to react? - How many coupons have been redeemed, songs / ringtones / skins / widgets downloaded? - How many recipients clicked on the link to the invitation to action and / or clicked on my website? - What are the answers of others not yield the campaign? Stay focused and get in the game As the face of email marketing Forever Changes, support and evolve with the times. Integrate mobile strategies into your marketing mix will help you reach more customers more often and more reliably. With a few adjustments to your program, you can create scalable campaigns catering to mobile devices that you get in the game to win.


