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Posts Tagged ‘email marketing’
Digital content: What customers want Thursday, February 25th, 2010
There may be a disconnect between the types of online content that customers want and the types that marketers think they want, according to a recently-published survey.
Marketing Sherpa and IDG Connect asked both marketers and buyers what types of offers would be increase the likelihood of clickthrough, and there were some sizable differences between the two groups. Marketers placed more weight on the impact of educational content (92%) and free research reports (86%) than buyers did (65% and 64%, respectively).
Marketing Sherpa reported that “While educational content, such as whitepapers or relevant industry research reports have their place, sending too many of these offers can further diminish their impact in buyers’ eyes. You need to create the right mix of offers, timed to stages of the buying cycle and contact role, to encourage continued interaction with your email messages.”
The survey revealed that buyers are receptive to receiving industry news and articles from vendor sources (84%), but only 73% of marketers felt the same way.
Marketing Sherpa recommended that marketers ”consider developing competitive comparison tools or guides to help prospects manage the buying process. Although more marketers than buyers said these tools increased their likelihood of a click, buyers still ranked comparisons and buying guides third on this list.
“….It’s difficult for a vendor to present a competitive comparison in an unbiased way, but at the very least you can provide a framework for doing competitive comparison.”
The survey asked how much more likely recipients were to click on certain types of offers. Surprisingly, buyers gave the highest rank to promotional content.
According to IDG Connect VP Bob Johnson, “Buyers want to see your promotional content. They need to understand what you do as a vendor, and need details about what your products and services offer.”
However, you can’t try to pass off promotional content as educational content. “That angers and frustrates them,” says Johnson.
Email body copy is another area in which marketers can provide more value for subscribers.
When asked which features would make vendor emails more useful, buyers ranked “highlight key words and points” (using bold fonts and hotlinks) third out of 12 options - more valuable than social media links, and more valuable than graphic imagery.
Ray Welling, Content Guy, Zazoo
- Tags: content creation, digital content, e-marketing, email marketing, internet content, Marketing, online content, online marketing
Posted in Marketing, Technology, e-marketing - No Comments »
Email success formula: horses for courses Thursday, December 4th, 2008
What can you do to guarantee your customers will open your emails? The answer is: try lots of different things and go with what works. It seems that different solutions work for different audiences at different times. Here are some highlights from a piece Leah Messinger published this week on iMedia:
“The first two rules any professional email marketer will tell you are this: Keep it short and don’t be afraid to use your brand name. Your “subject line” and your “from” line are the only two spaces — at least for those emailers who don’t use preview panes — in which you get to distinguish yourself and your brand, so get to the point and do it quickly.”
“[E]mailers should also consider what’s going on in the world at any given moment. Currently, messages related to the financial crisis in particular and the economy in general are likely to get snagged by spam filters. Even legitimate pharmaceutical sales messages should receive careful vetting.”
“Although many marketing experts suggest sticking to a 30- or 40-character subject line (because those are the maximum characters displayed by common email providers such as Yahoo and Hotmail), they also point out that users of BlackBerrys and other mobile devices can only see 15 characters of a subject line. That’s another reason to have your brand name up front.”
“[M]arketers [should] carefully consider their audience when determining email frequency. If your marketing message happens to revolve around the weather, then you can probably justify sending out a daily email. If you’re a stockbroker… you can even get by with two emails a day — as long as they’re short. But if your content doesn’t specifically dictate a frequency, then you should probably only contact your audience on a monthly basis.”
“Then again, going positive can work, too. Ryan Buchanan, CEO at eROI, found that ‘Want Fresh Email Campaigns That Increase ROI? Talk To Us Now’ brought both significantly higher opens and clicks than the more negative ‘Is Your Online Marketing Stale? We’ll Show You How to Make it Fresh.’”
The article concludes: “In all cases, the best tool for honing in on subject lines that work is testing. Lyris’s [J.D.]Peterson often uses what he calls the “wife test.” He’ll take three subject lines home and show them to his wife, another family member or a friend. The email they open first is the one he’ll often use.
For a more scientific approach, Return Path spokesperson Tami Forman recommends using a larger sample size. Choose two subject lines and send each to a portion of the emails in your database. Go with the subject line with the best response rates.”
- Tags: e-marketing, email, email marketing, subject lines
Posted in Marketing, e-marketing - No Comments »