eMarketer Webinar: Best Practices for Email Marketing

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Join eMarketer Principal Analyst David Hallerman as he spotlights today’s best practices for email and offers tips for making it an integral part of overall marketing success.

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©2011 eMarketer Inc.

David HallermanPrincipal Analyst

J U L Y 1 4, 2 0 1 1

Best Practices for Email Marketing

Sponsored by:

©2011 eMarketer Inc.

What we’ll look at today…

Email is not dead: key factors that support continued growth

Getting and keeping customers: essentials of acquisition and retention

Build and maintain effective lists: more data than ever increases complexity

Creating relevant emails: best techniques for segmentation and targeting

Automation’s benefits: pros/cons of ESPs vs. in-house

Test and measure: ways to improve this ongoing and essential process

Beyond the email silo: integrating email marketing with social and mobile

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Email’s Not Dead(far from it)

Email volume and revenue both showed greater increases over the course of last year

Email is the big-time favorite channel for hearing about sales or other promotions

More people join email lists than become social network fans

However, most people are overwhelmed by the piles of email they get daily

Many marketers want a piece of “your” customer’s time and attention

What do people want? Two things…

ValueMoneyMeaningRelevance

ControlOpt-in or opt-outFrequency, content…Channel

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Your customer is rarely your friend—they want from you just as certainly as you want from them

Getting and Keeping Customers(acquisition and retention)

Customer retention and acquisition are leading marketing priorities

Customer acquisitionProven ways to get new subscribers Ask, ask, ask: make it easy to opt-in, reduce barriers

Don't ask too much: get customer data over time

Offer control from day one: such as frequency, content, format

Target prospects: through other channels, like search or store

Tailor landing pages: different depending on source, other info

Launch new, targeted products: an acquisition strategy

Promotions: free trials, discounts, events, content, bundles

Keep pitch focused: handful of benefits and one call-to-action

Incentives after first touch: make part of welcome message

View acquisition as a process: it’s not a single event

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Welcome is the customer “behavior” most used by marketers—and it can color much that follows

Customers rarely fall in love with the company (anyway, one kiss ain’t enough)

Customer retentionProven ways to keep people around Customize email content: personalization builds relationship

Customize landing pages: one size does not fit all

Leverage customer data: to modify and target offerings

Ask, ask, ask: request more info, with clear reason why

Dialogue: make it easy to reach a real person

Opinions: ask people what they think, surveys w/incentives

Unhappy: respond quickly to any customer dissatisfaction

Be personal: unique and uniform tone—people not corporations

Incentives: some kind of value-add, not just for newbies

Triggered incentives: such as coupons after $XX spent

Question: ask why established customer leaves, incentives too

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Email marketing’s central theme: improving long-term customer relationships

Customer relationships are more than a cliché—nurture them over time

Trust and loyalty go together in all relationships, even commercial ones—and especially with email

Marketing that people trust:Email always on top (and bottom)

Build and Maintain Effective Lists(more data, more complex)

Tips to grow and sustain a strong email marketing list Submission does not equal subscription: confirm it with

double opt-in and secure code

Check back in periodically: with your inactive subscribers

Make it easy: include link to subscription administration center that’s more than just unsubscribe

Be consistent: always send from the same address

Provide a real email address: for feedback or general uses

Provide a real-world address: to encourage confidence

Quality over quantity: to increase deliverability

Respect data: that shows your emails are not of interest

Two-way street: Acknowledge all subscription changes

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55% in study cited building opt-in email lists as a top interactive marketing goal in 2011

Top metrics marketers use to gauge their interactive performance

Email list data quality reaches peak with full-scale opt-in (a committed audience)

Single Opt-In

Affiliate Network orForward to Friend

Purchased List or List Rentals

Double or Confirmed

Opt-In

Email marketing tactics that best build opt-in lists

Pre-populating sign-up check boxes undercuts opt-in’s vitality

Pre-checking opt-in boxes may sacrifice quality for quantity

Slow and steady—don’t ask for too much info at once. Get it over time instead

Multistep registration helps attract new subscribers

Maintaining good lists typically requires regular check-ups with customers

Main reasons internet users delete emails without ever opening them

Well-maintained email lists drive greater deliverability

Create Relevant Emails(segmentation and targeting)

How do you get people’s attention when so many are sick and tired of marketing messages?

Some key ways to segment and target email audiences Customers vs. prospects: helps determine offer needed

Purchases: provides details based on demonstrated interests

Engagement: requires robust data to analyze earlier email click-throughs to gauge interest or customer intentions

Time on list: indicates what to offer, especially when combined with three methods above

Location: create messages relevant to communities or regions

Dynamic content: variable sections within email templates, instead of distinct mailings for segments

Customer value: furthers relationships by frequency and spending

Sophisticated segmentation: to avoid targeting based on purchases for others (like a clothing gift to my wife)

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Personalized email is still at a rudimentary stage for many—and so that’s a way to get a leg up on the competition

Effective targeting means less is more

Effective segmenting means more is more

Accurately segmented lists tend to increase relevance, which also encourages recipients to open the emails

However, targeting individuals with relevant content is the single most significant challenge to effective email marketing

Irrelevant messages are a main reason why people unsubscribe to permission email

Benefits of Automation(ESPs or in-house systems)

Automating email is required to make many moving parts fit together

Key automation concepts

Delivering the right message to the right person at the right time…Right message: Inserting dynamic content into emails is an aspect of targeting. Using data on consumer actions, you can insert specific content into individual emails on a mass scale.

Right person: For relevant communication, you need accurate and somewhat extensive information about each individual. By integrating customer and marketing databases, you can segment more effectively.

Right time: Triggered emails get sent automatically following a customer’s action. That could be an immediate message to thank a new customer, or a series of emails spaced over many months designed to keep the brand top-of-mind for a prospect.

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But it’s not just press and send to implement robust automation

Marketers use ESPs for gauging email’s effects and increasing relevance–as well as for automation

Benefits of ESPs

Deliverability: good ones automatically check outgoing emails for spam problems

Relationships: with ISPs, to help you stay on good terms

Compliant: techniques like staggering large mailings into short bursts

Flexibility: tends to put control back into the marketer’s hands

Easier: tools that allow marketers with little coding knowledge to create HTML emails

Extras: such as pre-formatted email surveys, embedded web forms, built-in analytics

Changes: more marketing-automation services means greater database integration (making ESPs more competitive with large in-house email systems)

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Benefits of in-house software

More cost-effective: no extra spend associated with any sends

Simpler bottom line: no worry about the ROI for each individual send

Better integration: with multiple in-house databases

More internal customization: such as getting CRM tools to work with email software and other data

Effective segmentation: easier to segment email when the data that defines the groups are all in one place

Security: your own system behind your own firewall gives greater defense against potential problems

Tight control: if you have the in-house resources to handle extensive details of email campaign

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With an ESP or without, technology is crucial for sending relevant (lifecycle) emails

Marketers who fully understand their needs will be more likely to engage an ESP that has product features they need

Test and Measure(rinse and repeat)

Infinite loop: Test and measure and test and measure and test and measure

Testing practices: A few ways to improve your email marketing Name: add brand name to subject line

Size: alter length of subject line

Targeted: try first or last name personalization on subject line

Others: show the number of existing subscribers on sign-up pages

Links: change email link from text to button, or vice versa

Images: add small, relevant image near the call-to-action

Ease: add second unsubscribe link at email’s top (like Groupon)

Money: try offer as percent-off or dollars-off

One: test one variable by segment (males/females or geography)

Test everything: frequency, call-to-action, design, when sent, which segments sent to, repeating offer, landing pages, from line, etc.

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Test types of welcomes, then layer offer/no-offer variables on top of that

The main reasons marketers do not test emails are solvable

Don’t know how

Campaign timeline is too short

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Measuring test results is also an excellent way to segment customer lists

Metrics tracked varies, based on email marketer’s level of experience

Beyond the Email Silo(integrating social and mobile)

The best don’t do email marketing, but rather they include email as part of overall marketing campaigns

Making email more social than ever before—and more effective, too Acquisition resource: try email-only promotions to encourage

consumers to opt-in

Retention resource: use email to encourage subscribers to follow you on social media (and get further benefits)

Socialize email: personalize email offers with product review content and comments from current subscribers

Special offers: consider extras to give to people who are both subscribers and fans

Track it: not only configure content for passalongs and other sharing, make sure that’s part of your reporting too

Recognize difference: followers and subscribers are not alike

Listen: find out what your target audience is talking about, to help create more targeted, relevant email campaigns

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Brand relationships: A mix of email opt in and social network fandom

However, more people get opt-in email than follow brands on Facebook

The passalong—email’s original social element—still sways purchase decisions

Positive word of mouth is often email’s goal, amplified by social venues

Marketers who listen increase the odds that people will talk about them

Brand advocates and regular internet users talk about products primarily through three platforms

Email-generated word-of-mouth often occurs outside of the digital space

Email is a core channel that people use to discuss products and services

What is prime content for sharing—at least in the commercial space?

More pieces to mobile email marketing than just correct formatting

Reaching people everywhere with a smart mobile strategy Design it: develop mobile versions of emails to accommodate

your audience and their needs

Play well together: mobile web landing pages need to match any call-to-action in mobile email

Make it quick: if subscribers can’t readily respond from mobile, they’ll move on to something else

Email isn’t SMS: ask again if list subscribers want to opt-in to text messages; don’t conflate the two

Always ask: Use email preference center to ask subscribers what device they use for email

Limited channel: because mobile devices limit range of communication, email best vehicle for transactional messages

Personal space: tailor brief messages for the feel of mobile

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Mobile’s personal side leads to closer relationships and increased retention

Mobile email more likely to drive purchases than any other mobile channel, but social contributes strongly too

Mobile users by far prefer email for hearing from their favorite companies (text messages far less so)

Mobile and email together—a doubly personal environment for marketing

Conditions under which college students would accept smartphone ads

Conclusions

©2011 eMarketer Inc.

The right message to the right person at the right time.

Email marketing best practices in one sentence: Get accurate and detailed data from people who want to hear from you, and then automate the steps for sending them relevant messages.

Effective email marketing takes more asking and listening than many companies are comfortable with.

Even with email’s central place for both marketers and their customers, an email is merely one link in a chain of events that stretches from initial contact to purchase.

Trust nurtures email’s long-term relationships.

Conclusions: Email Best Practices

LYRIS OVERVIEW

July 2011

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©2011 eMarketer Inc.

Best Practices for Email MarketingQuestions & AnswersRegistrants will receive an email tomorrow that includes a link to view the deck and webinar recording.

For more discussion, please join us after the webinar on LinkedIn. Search for the eMarketer Group and click on Discussions.

To learn about eMarketer Total Access please visit www.emarketer.com/productsor contact us: (800) 405-0844 or ben@emarketer.com

Twitter Hashtag: #eMwebinar

Sponsored by:Presented by:David HallermanPrincipal Analyst, eMarketer, Inc.