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E-Mail Marketing

Once you decide to invest time and budget resources to upgrade your list quality, one of your first targets should be winning back the segment of your mailing list that has gone inactive. That segment could be pretty sizable, given that 50% or more of a typical B2C list can be inactive.

A recent article, published by ClickZ, explains why some list subscribers go inactive and offers some tips on how to wake-up your sleeping subscribers.

Why Do Subscribers Go Inactive?

Any one of these conditions can increase your inactive segment, but you probably have two or more working together to amplify inactivity:

  • List age. As e-mail ages as a marketing channel, mailing lists themselves get older. If addresses on your list are five to 10 years old, they could be abandoned but not invalid yet.
  • No welcome program to engage new subscribers immediately.
  • Messages that don’t meet subscriber expectations or match preferences.
  • Weak inbox presence (unbranded sender line and/or generic or boilerplate subject line)
  • Unsubscribe process that’s hard to find, complicated, or untrustworthy
  • Large percentage of Web e-mail clients, like Yahoo or Gmail, with high mailbox storage capacity, allowing unopened e-mails to pile up.
  • Mailing frequency – either too frequently for subscriber comfort and expectations or too seldom
  • Offer repetition, where you rotate through the same offers every week. Subscribers catch on and simply ignore your messages, waiting until they are finally in the mood to purchase.

As with any e-mail marketing effort, there is a right way and a wrong way to manage your inactive subscribers. For starters, don’t just chop off addresses that have no clicks or opens associated with them. Often you’ll be asked to come back to these folks months later. Because they haven’t heard from you in a while, they often tend to forget they signed up many moons ago.You could also lose subscribers who are reading your e-mails but blocking images (thus not recording an open), or who aren’t in the market more than once or twice a year.

Given the money you spent to acquire those addresses, you are better off creating a multilayered campaign to identify who’s still engaged but not recording opens, who needs a nudge to unsubscribe, and who has abandoned their e-mail addresses without unsubscribing.

This has a deliverability impact, too. ISPs are beginning to include engagement (subscribers opening and clicking on your messages) in the formula for deciding whether to deliver your e-mail to the inbox, route it to the bulk folder, or block delivery.

Reactivation Program Tips: Open With a Survey or Profile Invitation

Reactivation programs work best when they become an automatic element of your e-mail marketing program, like a welcome series.

But, first things first. I often begin with a subscriber survey or an invitation to create or update subscriber preferences. These messages can replace a mailing if you send e-mail more often than once or twice a week. If you mail less often, you can send a survey or profile-update request in mid-cycle.

With this first campaign – test your subject lines, message content, and segmentation strategies. See what works best before moving into a more permanent program.You can also establish a baseline for inactivity, showing you more precisely how much of your mailing list is asleep or absent.

Watch for Complications

Once you send your campaign, you’ll want to measure how much activity it generates, beyond opens and clicks on the message itself. Also, watch your delivery reports and be on the lookout for more spam complaints.

To avoid a sudden surge in spam complaints, it is best to send messages in small batches instead of all at once. This strategy will help keep your more important e-mail marketing programs from being blocked or filtered because of spam complaints your reactivation campaign might generate.

Placing an unsubscribe link at the top of the e-mail message in the preheader region can also deter complaints.

To read the entire article, click here.

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Do you have an e-mail newsletter for your company or brand? How about a presence on social media sites? Now the two can go hand-in-hand. Your e-mail marketing campaigns can now be used to also create an opportunity to extend your presence on social media web sites, and social media sites can provide a way to get more e-mail subscribers to your opt-in list.

According to a recent study published by eMarketer, 48% of marketers include “forward to a friend” features in their e-mails, but only 13% include features that make it easy to share content on social networks.

By adding a feature to your e-mails that allows them to be shared online through social networks, you are allowing your content and promotions to go viral. Instead of just your subscriber list receiving your e-mails, there is now  a larger audience can learn of your promotions, news and specials.

A recent study by Marketing Sherpa found that including sharing buttons to an e-mail marketing campaign led to a 25% boost in reader interaction, and a surge in inbound traffic from social networking sites.

To read more about taking advantage of social media in your marketing e-blasts, click here.

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The year 2009 was a big year for e-mail marketing and e-mail marketers. The ability e-mail marketing has to target and measure results effectively has helped marketers deal with recession and limited budgets and it is predicted that e-mail marketing will continue to play a large part in 2010 marketing efforts.

Marketers have done well at keeping e-mail on top of new trends and integrating it with social media marketing. Also, as more users adopt smartphones, e-mail marketing will be able to reach audiences on-the-go.

To read more of this article on e-mail marketing predictions for 2010 click here.

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Having trouble increasing the open rate of your e-mail marketing campaign? The problem may lie within your e-mail’s subject line. The subject line and from line are two of the most important factors a recipient takes into consideration before deciding to open an e-mail.

Even if you spend hours crafting the perfect e-mail body copy and layout, no one is going to open your e-mail if they do not find the subject line appealing.

Here is a great article from EmailGarage that offers tips to writing great e-mail subject lines.

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Customer segmentation is a topic often discussed when planning and executing an e-mail marketing campaign. Although traditional monetary-based and demographic segmentation drive most programs, what is the value of behavioral, or even attitudinal segmentation?

This article by David Baker has value in educating both novices and pros about the opportunities to define and refine your e-mail lists. What it also indicates is that most lists need to be continually managed across the product buying cycle. You should never be satisfied that your list is the best it can be.

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Research has shown that over-mailing to your list leads to apathy, unsubscribes or even spam reports. Finding the right e-mail frequency has become a balancing act: you don’t want to turn off your recipients by e-mailing them too, but you also need a permission grant that allows you to contact your list between scheduled mailings without appearing to violate the original agreement.

Below are some tips and strategies that will help to show you how to work out your own frequency.

Understand Who Controls Frequency

Research over the years is showing how today’s e-mail user had become savvy at sorting the good e-mail from the junk mail and at knowing what they want from e-mail and how to deal with e-mailers that do not respect their inboxes.

Realize that your recipient ultimately controls your e-mail frequency in the long run. Keep this in mind when scheduling your next e-mail campaign.

Choose Your Own Frequency

Frequency must be a combination of how often you want or need to send your messages and how often your list wants to receive e-mails from you. How you balance these two things will determine the success of your e-mail program.

Use the following factors to help you set useful frequency parameters:

  • Feedback
  • Market Conditions
  • Preference Center
  • High-Volume Numbers

Respect Your Subscribers’ Choices

You need to keep your promise to your subscribers. Although most will forgive an extra mailing or two, it is important not to over-e-mail them. You don’t know exactly where the tipping point is that will drive them to unsubscribe or report your e-mail as spam.

An easy solution – refine your list description that allows you to reserve the right to send relevant messages between scheduled mailings. And be realistic in your expectations.

Beware of Under-Mailing

As discussed in the entry Determining E-Mail Frequency, it is also possible to e-mail out too infrequently to your list. If you go for long periods of time without e-mailing your subscribers, you may trigger unsubscribes or spam reports. Try to e-mail your list once per month – at minimum.

To read more about the strategies to finding the best e-mail frequency for your company’s e-mail campaigns, click here.

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Determining E-Mail Frequency

Posted By: Stevens & Tate   Category: E-Mail Marketing

12 Nov 2009

E-mail campaigns are one of the best ways to reach out to your current and potential customers but don’t let determining the frequency of your e-mails become a marketing challenge. Althrough there is no quick answer or perfect formula for determining how often you should e-mail out to your list, here are some rough guidelines to adhere to:

  • Mail At Least Once per Month – if you e-mail out to your list less often than this, you risk being forgotten by recipients. You want your company name and services to be top of mind.
  • Let the Content Be Your Guide – Evaluate what you are sending out to your readers and analyze how often the information changes and how quickly readers must receive it in order to act on it.
  • Take the Lead From Your Readers – Always tell potential readers how often you mail when they sign-up, so that they can decide if the frequency will work for them.
  • Work Within Your Resources – A daily e-mail requires much more work and resources than a monthly newsletter. It is better to send out a well-done monthly e-mail than a shoddy-looking weekly or daily e-mail.
  • Watch for Trends – Declining response, open and click-through rates can be signs of list fatigue. Watch carefully and cut back frequency if you see a problem.

Read more about e-mail frequency and list control here.

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