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4 in 10 Email Marketers Plan Increase in 2010

December 18th, 2009 No comments

By David Goetzl for Online Media Daily

Email marketers say the recession continues, but nearly 90% will invest as much or more in the platform in 2010 than they did this year. A survey from email marketing firm Silverpop shows that 41% are planning to boost spending and an additional 47% are looking at making no cuts.

With so many of those surveyed believing the recession lingers — and 75% saying it has hurt their business — the survey indicates, nevertheless, the staunch belief that the tactic is cost-effective and solid on the ROI front.

The online survey of 300 marketers took place in November.

Other findings: 52% said increasing customer loyalty, not necessarily acquiring new customers, is a focus in 2010. About 30% said behavioral targeting and promotional offers were effective for them in 2009.

A major challenge: fighting through “inbox clutter,” where research has shown customers might receive 9,000 messages a year by 2014.

Email marketers are increasingly looking to synch traditional messaging with other media — cross-channel marketing — and 84% said campaigns will have a social media element, with 38% employing SMS.

Bill Nussey, CEO of Atlanta-based Silverpop, stated that “as customers become more mobile, their marketing must reach them in more timely ways and through channels such as SMS.”

Still, many marketers have been reticent to move full speed ahead in the text-messaging space, believing that people consider their mobile devices to be for private use.

Endeavour Marketing and Media

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E-Marketing to Swell This Holiday Season

December 1st, 2009 No comments
By Jack Marshall, ClickZ, Nov 30, 2009

Around 30 percent more small business advertisers are expected to use e-mail marketing this holiday season compared to last year. According to research conducted by e-mail marketing firm Constant Contact, small and medium-sized businesses will use online marketing channels substantially more than they did during last year’s holiday period, suggesting they are beginning to reinvest in online after a dip in 2008, likely caused by the recession.

The survey — which questioned 1,187 respondents — found 89 percent of SMBs plan to make use of e-mail marketing this year, compared with 60 percent in 2008. In addition, 27 percent say they plan to use display ads or other online marketing, compared with 19 percent doing so last year. Over half are also making use of social media marketing tactics through services such as Twitter and Facebook, the survey says.

At the beginning of the month, Experian predicted similar uplift in e-mail over the holiday period, estimating volumes among all advertisers will increase 30 percent on Black Friday and Cyber Monday compared to last year. The firm’s holiday marketing report also finds that, compared to promotions offered in 2007, 60 percent of merchants reported increasing the frequency of promotional e-mails in 2008. It also found that e-mail was the second most effective means of attracting sales, trailing only paid search listings.

However, rather than representing a period of considerable growth, Constant Contact’s survey seems to suggest smaller businesses are simply returning to the channel after a difficult 2008. For example, 86 percent of respondents were using e-mail marketing when questioned in 2007, and 38 percent said they were already using online marketing or banner ads.

Commenting on the report, Constant Contact CEO Gail Goodman acknowledged the period of increased economic difficulties that has faced businesses, but suggested it has helped them “learn to promote themselves through new platforms, and developed habits and practices that will serve them well in any kind of economy.”

Read Original Article from ClickZ

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Email Marketing Increasingly a Safe Bet in a Down Economy

October 23rd, 2009 No comments

From Christopher Petix in MediaPost:

Right now, every dollar in a marketer’s budget has to stretch even further and show even more ROI than ever before. Email marketing is now the method of choice for marketers, because it’s grounded on the cost per acquisition model.New research from Clash-Media shows that email marketing is the most popular form of online lead generation in America: 75% of organizations use it. In addition, the Center for Media Research believes that 81% of businesses plan to increase spend on email by the end of the year.

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Developing Winning Email Campaigns – Part 1, Get Ready

August 25th, 2009 No comments

1) Establishing Goals

First, be reasonable – email campaigns are not magic bullets that will instantly solve your MarComm issues.  Most people reading this probably have the goal of “shifting a large portion of their marketing spend into emails because they are cost-effective, easy to manage and are measureable.”  While the former points are true, email campaigns are like any other marketing effort, they require careful planning, execution and analysis.  Additionally, they are best used as just one of many marketing vehicles in your marketing campaign.
Second, determine the EXACT goals that you have for your email campaign.

A) Are you Testing the Method?
Are you benchmarking the email campaign against an existing direct response effort like direct mail or personal selling efforts?

B) Do You Just Want Visibility or a Way to Keep On Your Customer’s Radar?
Are you are engaging in an awareness campaign and want to see a high open rate (OR) and high click through rate (CTR) meaning many people viewed your message/product?

C) Are you Utilizing the Campaign for Viral/Word of Mouth Efforts?
Are you are seeking a high degree of forwards, sign-ups on your Social Media platforms, etc.

D) Are you Seeking a Specific Action?
Actual lead generation in sign ups and sales with the email as the point of origin in the sales cycle for that customer
Have a clear goal for your overall email campaign but also for each email flight that goes out.  A beautiful thing about email campaigns is that you can test many things over time to find the optimal mix for your target audience with favorable costs compared to other marketing methods

2) Choosing an Email Service Provider (ESP)

If you are serious about getting results from email campaigns, get serious about researching and selecting an ESP.  Sending out emails from your Outlook may be okay for small, intimate groupings but if you are prospecting or sending out to larger groups, you need an ESP.

ESPs provide your email campaign with many advantages over regular email:

A) Robust Distribution Capability
If your list is over 1,000, don’t try sending anything from your office email account, ESPs allow you to send serious volume.

B) Easy to Use Templates
ESPs offer easy graphic uploads, link inserts, personalization (very important) for bulk emails, etc.

C) Best Practices
ESPs have “Flight Checks” that test headlines, copy and more for SPAM scores, check links, personalization filters, etc.

D) Measurement
This is the MOST important part of having an ESP!  With an ESP, you can measure Opens, CTR, Opt-Outs, Forwards and more.  Try doing that with your office email.

There are many ESPs out there to provide a solution based on the goals of your email campaign, list size, options and reporting but we’ll group them into two categories with providers that we have personally used, the Start Up and Robust category

Start-Up
You’re new to email campaigns, don’t need a lot of features, medium-sized list
*Constant Contact
*Campaign Monitor

Robust
Experienced user, need a lot of features, very large lists >50K

*EMMA

*Fishbowl
*SilverPop

3) Building Your Database
The integrity of your database is one of the most (if not the most) important components of your email campaigns.  Make sure it’s populated with the right people and defend their security and time like you would a family member.  There are two general ways that you can build your database:

Internally
Internal methods rely on a sign up form on your website, in-store sign ups and other methods.  This list is more or less an active effort on your part to gather the information of your existing traffic, which is a no brainer because they have already show interest though web visit, in-store traffic, etc. so they are likely more receptive to your messages (increased opens and decreased opt outs).

Gather as much information as is necessary to the goals of your email campaign.  From here you can set up “preferences” and “triggers” in additiona to your general campaigns and start segmenting your database accordingly.  For example, do you want to send emails according to product category, say a limited-time only special on shoes? Then you need to try and collect that “product preference interest” from the customer during the sign up process.  Are you a restaurant that wants to send a FREE Birthday promo to a customer?  Well, this is called a “trigger” in that a certain event (in this case the calendar) causes a specific email. For this, you’ll need to collect the DOB in the sign up phase.

Lastly, always give your database preferences on how they want to be communicated to.  Give them options on frequency, format, etc.  For example, there are some vendors that I want to hear from every day and there are some that I only want to get a text on my phone from.

Externally
You can build your database from external sources such as list brokers.  While you cannot purchase the list, you can only rent according to usage, you can convert these tests into “opt-ins” to your internal list through the course of your campaign.
Choose a list broker very carefully based on the audience you want to target.  There are a few things to look for.

A) Specialization
Do they specialize in that area or are they more general.   There is nothing wrong with a general vendor but a specialist may have richer, more updated data with detailed benchmarks from other campaigns to that list.

B) Point of Origin or Reseller
Do they generate the list from their existing activities, like say a survey, or do they resell from another vendor.  Nothing wrong with resellers but the list integrity of point of origin vendors is typically better.

C) Data Processing Capabilities
*note, you will not use your ESP for these external methods, the list broker will not allow it for security of their lists
If you are going to the vendor multiple times for the same list, can they suppress the names you’ve already mailed from the newest?  Can they merge/purge multiple lists?  Can they “nth” select for an A/B split test (we’ll cover that later in the series)?

D) Reputation/Results
Before renting a list, ask for a contact from other businesses that have used the list.  Talk to them and see what they thought of the lists and the service they received.  This is common-practice, you will not be thought of as rude for asking this.  If they make you feel rude, move on!

Part 2 – Get Set is coming soon!

Harold Henn

Partner, CMO

Endeavour Marketing & Media

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QR Codes – Making Mobile Marketing Easier

July 29th, 2009 No comments

Great article by Garrick Schmitt on QR Codes and examples of marketing campaigns utilizing this new technology.

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Harold Henn – Follow Me On Twitter

Chief Marketing Officer

Endeavour Marketing & Media

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E-Mail Marketing: Back to the Basics

June 17th, 2007 No comments

With ever-growing technological enhancements in the marketplace, many marketers and businesses get lost in the latest craze or technology and while totally losing focus from their primary mission of trying to create a positive customer experience with their e-mail campaigns. In turn, this lack of focus on the mission leads to the flawed execution of their e-campaigns. Sometimes the best plan is taking your business back to the basics of e-mail marketing to ensure an ideal customer experience.

The starting point in cultivating the ultimate customer experience should revolve around what we know about the audience that we want to communicate with. Make data collection an ongoing priority as the integrity of your data will directly affect how successful and lucrative your e-mail marketing will be. There are four basic fundamentals that will enhance your e-mail marketing strategy and improve customer satisfaction.

First, focus on your core mission of what you want to communicate and to whom. This should begin with collecting data you need presently and in the near future to develop a significant dialogue with your audience. This data could include the normal fields like name, e-mail address, geography, etc. but you could also focus on preferred price point, demographic data, preferred product line, etc. No matter what product or service you may be selling, an e-mail marketer’s core competency is about delivering email communications that are relevant to the consumer. Having as much information as possible ensures that you are sending the right communication to the right consumer.

Second, make it painless. Too many times marketers do not make signing up for email simple, which ultimately turns consumers off. Making it easier to opt into your email communications will be one of your best practices. Include sign-in opportunities on every page of your Web site, gathering basic fields such as first and last name, zip code, and email address. Next, implement a data collection strategy that will allow you to fill in the personal information blanks over time through interactive polls and surveys.

Third, ask your audience what they want (novel concept, we know!). Trusting that your audience knows best will allow your customers to easily select their preferences; such as types of communications they would like to receive, their desired frequency of communication, etc. Involve your audience in your company’s evolution by frequently surveying your customers to determine what types of services, products, or improvements would help to better create an overall satisfying experience. Maintaining close contact with your audience will strengthen your relationship and in turn keep them coming back for more!

Fourth, allow the process to advance over time. Data collection is a process that will keep growing and improving with time. Eventually, by integrating all of the data collected, you will be able to develop a true connection with your audience and the ability to execute improvements that will become a natural progression.

E-mail marketing campaigns done well, are a simple, fast and cost-effective way to communicate the right message to the right audience. To find out how Endeavour can help with your next campaign, visit us online or just call 615-907-5332.

Kaila Packett,
Endeavour Marketing and Media, LLC

Endeavour Marketing and Media, LLC is a full-service marketing and advertising agency in Murfreesboro, TN. Endeavour provides its clients with strategic marketing plans, interactive media, media planning, television and video production, graphic design and web design.

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