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Recent Posts

  • Email Marketing During the Holidays Tips for Retailers
  • Google + and Email
  • Key Tidbits for Email Success
  • Creating Connections with Your Email Subscribers
  • Sammy Pizza Does it Right - Building Your Email List
  • How to Stop your Customers from Unsubscribing
  • The social break-up: why consumers unsubscribe, unlike & unfollow your brand
  • Mitigating Email Solution Security Breaches
  • Mobile Devices for Email Review Continues to Increase
  • @facebook.com is coming - what it means to marketers
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Email Marketing During the Holidays Tips for Retailers

How many more shopping days til Christmas? Oh well, time to make sure your email marketing for the holidays will be productive. Recent research has shown that open and click-through rates tend to hold steady during the holidays – despite the added volume – and that click-to-conversion rates increase significantly. Listed below are some good suggestions we have pulled from various sources - Make your holiday emailing count!
  • Send a thank you email: Use Thanksgiving as an opportunity to give thanks to your customers for supporting your business. You don’t even have to include an offer (but you can if you want to) – it’s been proven that a simple “thanks” goes a long way toward increasing customer loyalty. Your customers will thank you in return by giving you their patronage this holiday season.
  • In-store only promotions: Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, is famous for being the biggest shopping day of the year. Send an email telling people to come into your shop for a one-day only offer or early doorbuster promotions.
  • Online only promotions: Create an online only promotion in honor of Cyber Monday, which is said to be the busiest day for online shopping. Send out a promotion code in an email and direct people to your website where they can redeem their discount.
  • Email campaign series: Create an email series for Hanukkah or the 12 Days of Christmas, and present a new gift idea each day.
  • Be helpful: Offers such as “guaranteed delivery by X,” “extended shopping hours” and/or “free upgraded shipping” help reassure those rushing to make deadlines.
  • Provide last-minute gift ideas: Late shoppers often procrastinate because they can’t decide what to get. (Or they just hate shopping!) Help them with the decision-making and ease their shopping stress by providing gift ideas for certain types of people or at certain price points.
  • Attract last-minute shoppers to your store or website: Consider these offers: Most popular items of 2011; gift cards/gift certificates; extra percentage off their purchase; gift with purchase; or complementary wrapping.

For after the holidays:

  • Holiday clearance sale
  • Post-holiday sale
  • "Stock up for the new year and save" promotion
  • An appeal to return that horrendous gift and get something you actually want
  • "New year, new you" product promotion

November 07, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (1)

Google + and Email

This article has been reposted from The Magill Report

As an email marketer (or any marketer), you can’t seem to go anywhere without hearing about Google+. From how fast it has grown (25 million+) to what it is (a new way to share) and what it isn’t (a Facebook killer). Google+ is everywhere.

And yet, it can be difficult to determine if Google+ is the next big thing or just the newest social media kid on the block.

So, what does Google+ mean for email marketers? Should you care? While I can’t predict the future, here’s why email marketers should care and what they can start doing to prepare for Google+ or the next big thing.

For starters, Google+ reinforces email as a powerful sharing tool and provides even more reasons for subscribers to interact with their inboxes. Google+ allows you to share content via email (as well as with your Google+ circles).

And like Twitter, Google+ sends email notifications about your Google+ account activity. Someone adds you to a circle? Get an email. Tags you in a photo? Get an email. You get the point. Not only does this demonstrate that email is not dead, it means email marketers need to ensure their messages are more relevant and targeted than ever to stand out in the crowded inbox.

If Google+ does become the next big thing, email marketers need to be ready. Start coordinating with your social media team. While companies can’t create a Google+ business profile yet, email marketers need to have integration and testing plans in place when the Google+ business profiles are up.

Do you plan to run a standalone “add us to your circle” email campaign to your Gmail subscribers? Will you include an incentive to encourage this behavior? How will you define success? How will you incorporate Google+1 sharing icons into your email templates? Will you include Google +1 sharing icons for all content or only certain types of content (offers, each newsletter article, etc.)?

Is there a chance your company could provide customer support via a Hangout? If so, will you need to account for this in any transactional emails? Now is the time to determine how you will test and integrate the various potential Google+ elements into your already busy email schedule.

Here are some other things you can do now as you work on your email and Google+ integration plan:

  • This may seem obvious, but set up your own Google+ account. Invite some friends. Create some circles. See how your +1 content shows up on Google+.  Even though business profiles are still an unknown, getting a better understanding of Google+ now will make its integration into email more seamless in the future.
  • Monitor the content on your website. What content, products, or offers are being shared via Google+ (and other social networks)?  How many people are sharing your content on Google+?  How much referral traffic comes from Google+?  Content that drives sharing is also good content for your email marketing messages in most cases. Work this shareable content into your overall email marketing plans.
  • Analyze how your subscribers are interacting with social media via email.While these elements are often part of every campaign, have you looked at them in their own right? Are subscribers actually clicking on your follow/like links? Are subscribers sharing your content (via FTAF or social media)? If so, what content is being shared? Use these data points to determine future tests and how to best integrate Google+ into your email program.
  • Ensure the social media portion of your email programis in order. Test all social media sharing links. Is it easy for your email subscribers to share your content? How do the sharable text (and graphics) render when shared? Does it appropriately represent the email content?
  • Review and test all email capture forms on your existing social media properties (or create email capture forms on your social media pages if they don’t exist). Are they working properly? Are they collecting the right amount of data? What learnings can you potentially leverage for email capture on Google+ business pages?
  • Don’t forget the fundamentals. Target, test, analyze, repeat. If you aren’t sending email worth sharing, a new tool won’t add value to your program.

 

No matter if Google+ takes off or not, content sharing is here to stay. Google+ just further confirms that strategic sharing needs to be part of your email marketing plans. Reviewing and analyzing the social and sharing aspects of your email program now will prepare you for Google+ or whatever the next big thing might be.

September 15, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Key Tidbits for Email Success

Email marketing is still alive and well - but you must continually improve your processes if you wan to reach your recipients and have success. Here are a few key tedbits:

Be Specific - no more "batch and blast" It’s not enough to send your entire audience the same email communications—unless your audience is completely homogeneous. This is no longer "one size fits all" marketing.  Be relevant to your subscribers- send specific emails, personalized to their needs and interests.

Optimize your email. Sounds simple but may people are still not doing the very basic things to make sure their email is read.

  • Use alt tags in your email for your images
  • make use of the pre-header to let people know what your email is about
  • optimize for the preview pane - your call to action should be in the top 1/3 of your email
  • have a creative but succinct subject line
  • personalize your email
  • optimize the "text" version of your email

Use an ESP (Email Service Provider) There are a multitude of email marketing service providers that can offer expert services at a reasonable cost. No more going it alone sending your emails via Outlook or your own internal server. With an ESP you will get better delivery and key statisitcs to drive your marketing. Here are a few that we have vetted that work great for our clients: ExactTarget, Blue Hornet, Mail Chimp, Constant Contact, and Campain Monitor

Optimize Email for Different Devices
Users are in the habit of accessing email anytime, anywhere—from home, at work and on the road—and from a variety of devices—desktop computers, laptops, tablets and smart phones. Plus there are dozens of email programs in use, from Microsoft Outlook to Gmail, Yahoo and others.

Optimize  emails for reading in different programs and devices.  Have a link at the top of your emails allowing users to access a web version in case the content does not render well in the program they’re using. Poll your users to see how they are viewing your emails. Remember there is a big migration tot he 3rd screen (mobile). How does your email render there?

Testing Is a given.Testing helps you improve the effectiveness of your email marketing efforts.Plan and simple. You can test various components of your emails and make adjustments based on what you learn to increase your results in terms of clickthroughs and conversions.

Test these:

  • from line and subject line;
  • day of week and time of day for sending;
  • number, placement and type of links;
  • call to action; and
  • layout and use of graphics.

Think outside the box lead generation. There are plenty of potential customers you are not able to reach because they haven’t heard of your company or you haven’t met them. We have had success by advertising in third-party email newsletters that your audience reads. You place advertisements and or advertorial that drives prospects to a specific landing page. Try it...you will like it.

September 07, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Creating Connections with Your Email Subscribers

It is all about connecting - earn the opportunity to keep communication with your customer! Here are 4 simple ideas:

1. Let your customer know that they are important to you. Create an immediate impression of value. Go past the  standard "You've been subscribed" message on your confirmation page. Instead, build anticipation by sending an exclusive, email-only discount that will arrive shortly. Include a sample screenshot of the offer so subscribers will know what to look for.

2. Stay in touch... but not too much. Don't allow long periods to lapse between messages. If you send less than one email per month, you risk greater problems than losing a subscriber's  attention. Once the gap between emails grows to a few months, people will start forgetting they even signed up - out of sight out of mind. he notes.


3. Send email when your customers are most likely to read it.  There isn't a hard-and-fast rule for sending an email, but  testing will reveal when that is.


4. Keep the trust and do not loose it. Misleading subject lines may boost open rates but you will end up teaching your subscribers to delete your messages without reading them—or even to unsubscribe.

 

September 01, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Sammy Pizza Does it Right - Building Your Email List

It is always refreshing to come along and see a company doing an excellent job of building their emarketing list. Today's hero of the day is Sammy's Pizza.

Recently , Sammy's opened up a location near my home so Tuesday night became Sammy's Pizza night. Right there in the middle of the table was a table tent asking me to join the e-club (By the way if I did I would get a free pizza next time I come in). How's that for a company understanding the value of being able to market via email to a customer base (That was a $10 - $14.00 value!) What is an email adress worth to your company?

Sammyfinal

They followed thru with a proper double opt-in and then my welcome email arrived immediately - not a month later like so many other companies if at all. Guess what? I have already forgotten that I requested your info - I just might end up deleting your message or marketing you as Spam. Timing is everything. Their welcome message tells me exactly what I wil be receiving - let's me know thay value my business - and my offer is enclosed with an expiration date.  Very nice Sammys!!

Sammys2

August 17, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

How to Stop your Customers from Unsubscribing

Every new subscriber to your emarketing program has a lifcycle.  We add a new subscriber into our email marketing database, send that person a  welcome series, and then send relevant emails, hopefully.  At some point this subscriber will start ignoring your emails and become inactive. So what is your strategy to keep that contact in the fold longer?

Provide incentives for subscribers to stay engaged early in the relationship. Remind them what they receive for being part of your program in regular messaging from time to time. 

Ask your new subscriber about the content they want, frequency of emails, and types of offers.  The sooner you provide relevant offers to your new subscribers, the stronger (and longer) the relationship you build might be.

Alert customers if the benefits of a product or program have changed since their last activity.

Provide other communication options (SMS, social, etc.). Okay so maybe they do not want to receive your enewsletters anymore - but how about have them like your facebook page or connect with your company twitter feed.

Have an active winback program in place for inactive customers.  Give incentives to help them fall back in love.  People love special  Email ONLY sales and free offers.

If the customer unsubscribes, ask them on your exit page (if your ESP allows) why they are unsubscribing. Provide some other options rather than just globally unsubscribing.

 

August 08, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

The social break-up: why consumers unsubscribe, unlike & unfollow your brand

Great article post from ExactTarget that is spot on about how brands interact with your company:

Key Points---

  • Brands must invest in building audiences now more than ever.
  • Engagement isn’t just a metric, but a marketing mandate.
  • Brands are making mistakes across Email, Facebook & Twitter
  • The coming user battle for Facebook’s soul (commercial vs. non-commercial)
  • The huge impact smartphone adoption is having on Email, Facebook & Twitter


The power of email. There have been a lot of articles lately stating that we are coming to the end of the email era, but that is far from the truth. All social networks need email to survive, and email is still the largest growing digital communication method. 93% of US internet users willingly receive at least one commercial email daily– that’s a huge amount!  Moreover, email is the first thing that 58% of those same people check when then go online in the morning—compared to just 11% who check Facebook.

When digging a little deeper, our SUBSCRIBERS, FANS & FOLLOWERS research concluded that people who check email as a first priority tend to be customers who interact with brands for the sake of receiving discounts or promotions. People who chose Facebook as a first port of call for online interaction tend to be those who become fans of brands for entertainment purposes or to show their brand support to all their friends. The act of “liking” a brand should, therefore, be viewed as an opportunity to engage with your customers and create conversation, capitalising on its viral potential.

As for Twitter, it has a smaller user base than email or Facebook (around 20% of US internet users have joined, and 5% follow a brand) but mighty.  Twitter has captured content creators with the daily Twitter user generating 2 to 6 times more content (blog posts, pictures, comments, ratings, etc.) than other internet users. The bottom line is that what these people say on Twitter, doesn’t stay on Twitter, and what they say about your brand could have a profound impact on your company.

The reasons for why brands and fans “break-up” all comes down to the same three things:

--brands talk too much (frequency)

--continuously repeat that same information (boredom)

--and there are other brands out there who do it better (relevance).

So in reality, it doesn’t really matter what social media channels you choose to talk to your customers, it’s all about how you engage with them. The frequency and content of your marketing efforts need to be tailored to the unique needs of your subscribers, fans and followers.

 

July 07, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Mitigating Email Solution Security Breaches

A recent article from DemandGen commented on the new rash of security breaches an Epsilon last month, and SilverPop back in December - two leading ESP companies. How can you protect your company's data? Learn more below:

(paraphrased from DemandGen)-  Epsilon Interactive reported on April 1 a customer data breach. It caused quite a stir, as the company noted on its web site that “a subset of Epsilon clients' customer data were exposed by an unauthorized entry into Epsilon's email system.” BtoC brands including Best Buy, Kroger and Walgreen were among the estimated 2% (of Epsilon’s approximately 2,500 clients) affected by the attack.

While the breach was primarily limited to BtoC organizations, industry experts caution that the incident should serve as a serious wakeup call to BtoB firms. Realizing that a breach like this could have even deeper implications for BtoB organizations, many vendors have been taking proactive steps to help their customers secure email data.

As a result of the recent Epsilon data breach, marketing automation vendor Pardot announced that it will begin requiring activation for any unrecognized IP address from which customers access the application, to prevents others from accessing individual accounts in the event that they discover a user’s Pardot username and password.

“Prospects should ask vendors how they protect the accounts that their support team uses, both for the application and their individual email accounts,” said Adam Blitzer, Co-Founder and COO at Pardot. “Similarly, how will the prospect's account be protected once they become a client?”

While the tactics and measurements companies can take to protect customer data are extensive, experts advise marketers to be mindful of the following 3 key security tactics:

  1. Password Management- “Most intrusions happen through the ‘front door’ versus obscure technical ‘back doors,’” noted Joe Colopy, CEO of Bronto Software, an email service provider. “Email Service Providers (ESPs) should have flexible settings that require customers to have ‘strong’ passwords that are changed periodically.”
  2. User Management- “Not all account managers need full access to all accounts or systems,” according to Eloqua’s Dayman. “Many ESPs support personnel have full access to all customers and the databases because it creates short time to address customer needs, but in reality doesn’t truly save the company much more time in having to deal with situations where the data has been breached. What should happen is that certain support personnel have certain access to certain data, but not all.”
  3. IP Restrictions- “A way to [make intrusions more difficult] is by restricting the IP addresses that one can use to access the application,” according to Bronto’s Colopy. “The typical restriction would be the IP addresses of one’s office so that would make it difficult for the intruder to enter with one’s username and password from within the office network.”

 

Another strategy vendors pointed to is encrypting data fields to ensure the security of Personal Identifiable Information (PII). “Many ESPs don’t treat email address as PII when they should be,” Dayman said. “An email address today is just as important when connecting to someone as an identify point.”

Genius.com has designed its system to keep Salesforce data within Salesforce, and the company does not replicate any of that sensitive data. “With the number of relatively inexpensive SaaS solutions out there, companies tend to link multiple solutions with multiple databases,” said Sam Weber, CEO of Genius.com. “So if one of the systems is breached, any data replicated in that database is exposed.

While more organizations migrate to the cloud to operate more efficiently, SaaS application adoption has increased, which has made it more difficult to secure Internet-hosted information and networks. “With the growing acceptance of SaaS solutions, there seems to be a new level of blind faith,” according to Weber. “So before you jump in blindly, ask the hard questions about security, up time, scalability, etc. It's amazing that if you scratch the surface of some of the ‘top players’ in the SaaS space, you will see that they haven't invested much in their infrastructure and many don't even run and maintain their own servers.”

In addition, vendors suggested ESPs should employ multi-factor authentication, no only for employees, but customers as well. “Today, many employees have a simple password that gives them enormous access to customer’s data,” Dayman noted. “To date, you can see that most ESP breaches occurred because an employee with to much access had their PC infected with malware giving the hacker access to simple passwords to the systems. With multi-factor if the employee was infected; the password access would change quickly not either allowing the hacker access or the account access session would expire their access often.”

“Breaches likely happen because individual power users or support employees likely had their passwords compromised,” said Pardot’s Blitzer. “Companies should be using additional security layers to protect these accounts, such as two factor authentication (where you have to enter a code that is updated in real time on your mobile phones, similar to a VPM key, in addition to your password) and IP level security (i.e. access from unrecognized IP address must be white listed).”

Experts agree that having a “breach response plan” in place is vital to be prepared to assess and repair damage. “[Coordinate your plan with all relevant departments] so that a quick response can be made,” advised Josh Aberant, Director of Privacy at Marketo. “You don’t want to be figuring out your plan after a breach occurs.”

Aberant said organizations should be prepared for “two main attack vectors” that hackers will use in breaching — technical attacks and social engineering attacks.  “You need to be ready to repel both,” he said. “Companies with great security technology have been breached by social engineering so it’s important not to ignore this.”

CALLOUT: 5 Key Considerations To Mitigate Risk

  1. Avoid multiple redundant databases whenever possible;
  2. Have systems and internal team members in place to watch networks and servers for break-in attempts or unexpected changes;
  3. Consider having a security/privacy officer to keep abreast of security issues and policies;
  4. Inform prospects how accounts will be protected once they become a client;
  5. Ensure anti-virus and anti-phishing solutions on all employee computers or terminals are up-to-date.

 

 

April 18, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Mobile Devices for Email Review Continues to Increase

Okay mobile devices are continuing to become the go-to option for review and reading emails. Are you optimizing your messages for the mobile experience? If not you better! the handwriting in on the wall. I predict we will move to an almost totally mobile experience for email viewing. Afterall, how many times are you checking email with your mobile phone, while waiting, etc.

Mobile useage

Source: View from the digital inbox 2011 - Lori  Connoly, Merkle, Inc.

Mobile useageIIII
Source: Mobile Email Opens Report Q4 2010 Knotice, Ltd.

March 17, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (1)

@facebook.com is coming - what it means to marketers

I am sure by now you have heard all the hoopla about Facebook taking over the world. Well perhaps not the world but soon Facebook will be rolling out to its 500 million members the option to have an @facebook.com email address.

Take a look at the video below to see how emails will be treated by Facebook. It is really more of a threat to folks like GMAIL. However, marketing messages will be handled differently so it wold be in your best interest to get a facebook.com email address and start testing to see how your messages are received and how they are rendered within the Facebook application. More to come..

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qt018J2VsU4&feature=player_embedded

Facebook video

 

February 07, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

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