Email Marketing Voodoo - MindComet

Mar18

email summit

Email Summit Wrap Up

Where do I begin? Well first let me say that Tabbatha Marcus at MarketingSherpa really pulled through by hooking us up with admission to the event. Thank you Tabbatha!  Secondly, the entire event was a blur… but a good kind of blur.  I’ve never in my life been surrounded by individuals who are as passionate about email marketing as I am.  Heck, this was the first time that I’ve actually ever talked to someone face-to-face who can relate to me when I talked about “deliverability” issues. Seeing the booths set up and meeting their reps was a total joy. There were about 50 booths or so, and I tried to make the rounds the best I could. It was a little overwhelming, to be honest. But with all the craziness going on around me, I still took away a lot of useful information, particularly panels moderated by Stefan Tornquist and Flint McGlaughlin. 

Tornquist’s speech was a very affecting one, as it focused mainly on the current state of email and how the economy has been effecting it.  Some of the most engaging wisdom came from his speech.  One of his statements being “email is solace in this difficult economic turn” was really comforting to hear.  Another point he made was that since every company under the sun sends emails nowadays, subscribers inboxes are flooded and benchmark metrics are slipping in response. People aren’t necessarily overwhelmed by the amount, but they’re underwhelmed by the mediocrity of their inboxes, so they’ll just “mark all as read”.  Marketers need to keep in mind that your email addresses are extremely valuable and you should treat them as such.  Deliver the promise of relevance. Furthermore, give your users a reason to stay engaged… give them a reason to TRUST you. Also, give them complete access to adjust their preferences. This is absolutely crucial for segmenting your database for relevant and timely messages. And one of the most important things I took away was that just because email is cheap, it doesn’t mean you should settle for a small budget. Fight for it… get the money to do it better.

Flint McGlaughlin was a very interesting speaker.  He reminded me of a thespian of sorts… He definitely demanded the audience’s attention for the time he was on stage. His speech covered landing page optimization—definitely a factor that we as email marketers tend to overlook.

Some key points he touched on:
- Privacy is key in converting a visitor of your site into a subscriber.
- Stop using the word “SUBMIT”; it causes subconscious anxiety. A phrase like “access now” is a bit easier for users swallow.
- Try to minimize and counter any and all elements that cause psychological resistance or concern.
- Initiate a conversation with your landing page

He also declared that the main point of a landing page—other than the obvious—is to optimize a sequence of thoughts for your customers. It was very eye-opening and it definitely made me think of landing pages in a different light. They should not be overlooked.

Rok Hrastnik’s case study about Targeting and Messaging strategies was excellent. Since I interviewed him, I (and whoever read my three-part interview) had a bit more insight to his findings than most people did. His case study was on a mattress brand. Now mattresses are unique when compared to say, a DVD. There’s a lengthy buyer lifecycle.  Their purchase process jumps all over the place from email, to Google (research), to a print catalog, to a physical store. This process is never linear, but it gets them closer to actually buying something. The way he narrowed down his customer base was by taking his email analytics and comparing them to other analytics such as web traffic and search… He checked the click-throughs from his email against how much time they spent on the site. He checked his database for gender specific names (conveniently most Eurpoean names are inherently gender-specific) and marked them accordingly.  He also stated that “the subject line picks the right reader” as a reference to subject line A/B testing. With this wealth of research and knowledge, you’re better prepared to send emails per segment, as you’re speaking to each segment specifically. It was a great case study, probably the best I attended from the entire event.

So much information was delivered throughout the summit… so much information that it deserves more than one massive post. Instead of inundating this one post with everything I took away from the event, I think I’ll stop here and continue on with more details on the Email Summit tomorrow.

View Comments

Posted by MindComet on Mar. 18, 2009

+ 1

Gravatar

Thanks for coming, Bryan. We loved reading your 3-part interview with Rok! Thanks for highlighting some of the great content featured at the Summit.<BR><BR>Hope to see you next year!

Posted by Tabbatha Marcus on 03/24/2009 05:13 PM

Leave a comment

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Mar11

email targeting, email summit, rok hrastnik, interview

Rok Hrastnik Interview - Part 3

In this, the last part of our interview with Rok Hrastnik, we discover rules he lives by in the world of email marketing and what we can expect from his session at the MarketingSherpa Email Summit.

What is the most important thing you’ve discovered from a previous campaign you’ve managed?
Use best practices only as recommendations, not as something written in stone. Test, test and then test again, and come up with your own set of best practices that work for your industry, your marketing strategy and your audiences. I can’t stress this simple rule enough. And as you can imagine managing online for 18 countries with 18 local teams isn’t exactly stress-free, especially when you’re trying to keep a unified look & feel throughout your communications. But eventually you come to realize that having some diversity is a good thing, as you can continuously learn and improve, sometimes based on completely out-of-the-ordinary campaigns produced in countries that like to play a little too much.


What do you hope your audience will take away from your session at the Email Summit?
Hopefully a lot. Somewhere in the corner of my mind I’m even hoping that at least some of them will come back home with actionable plans or at least ideas on how to transform their existing email marketing strategies and bring them to an entirely new level.

If you’ll be attending the Email Summit next week, here’s a shortlist of what to expect from Rok’s session:
• Understand and measure the multi-channel impact of email marketing that goes far beyond the direct email sale
• Learn how email supports complex purchase processes that cross multiple channels
• See how to upgrade your standard set of email metrics with behavioral based and multi-channel measurements
• Learn how subject-lines influence recipient behavior and how to use them for user segmentation and targeting
• See why & how to go beyond brand in your email communications
• Understand how to segment your email communications using a variety of different data sources
• Upgrade your email lead generation efforts by going beyond the low-hanging fruit (prospects ready to buy now), extending your reach also to different levels of less qualified prospects and then profitably converting them to customers on the long-term using a heavily content focused email strategy 

For a recap of this interview, check out parts 1 & 2 below:
Part 1
Part 2

View Comments

Posted by MindComet on Mar. 11, 2009

+ 2

Gravatar

I agree with using best practices only as recommendations. These pratices might not be right for your audience, your products and services. <BR><BR>Each email campaign that I executed suprised me…

read more »

Posted by Aslihan Ayan on 03/12/2009 12:09 PM

Leave a comment

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Mar10

email targeting, email summit, rok hrastnik, interview

Rok Hrastnik Interview - Part 2

Continuing on from yesterday’s initial installment, here’s part two of my interview with Rok:

What were the initial expectations for some of your campaigns?  Were the results surprising or unpredictable?

The entire email program development process was full of surprises. You have to keep your mind open and accept that consumers react differently than what marketers expect, and then adjust your communications accordingly.

There were a lot of things that went according to plan… follow-ups always increase total sales. In most of our campaigns the follow-ups actually generate more sales than the initial e-mail. Last-minute text-only reminders tend to work best. Being able to read the core message of the email is more important than the email looking good. It’s another simple one ... and one that many marketers still tend to ignore. It’s so simple. Just replace all of your text in graphics with standard HTML text. In 99% of our tests HTML text outperformed text in graphics.

Some of the bigger surprises I touched on earlier... First, you can’t sell mattresses by focusing your email communications primarily on sleeping related content. Only when you start going beyond your brand do things really start moving.
Secondly, email generates more sales indirectly than directly. In a multi-channel world no single channel can hold the line. Consequently your analytics also need to adapt. Men and women exhibit completely different email interaction patterns. Your email campaigns should reflect that, catering differently to different audiences.

Have you had the opportunity to apply your predictive behavior model to other interactive mediums besides email?
We’re using this approach in a variety of media, although not always the exactly same models. The insights we have on our email users are used also for direct mail and catalog campaigns, and occasionally also for mobile.
We are using the same logic (although not the same models) for our paid and organic search. We are right now working on a project to take this model and also apply it for dynamic website content targeting and also integrate it with our external display advertising.

Sounds like Rok and his team at Studio Moderna have some incredibly clever things up their collective sleeves.

Stay tuned for the concluding, part three post tomorrow!

View Comments

Posted by MindComet on Mar. 10, 2009

+ 0

Leave a comment

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Mar09

email targeting, email summit, rok hrastnik, interview

Rok Hrastnik Interview - Part 1

Leading up to the Email Summit taking place next week, we’ll be posting a string of interview questions from Rok Hrastnik. Rok has been involved with interactive marketing / media in one form or another for nearly a decade.  He works for Studio Moderna, which is primarily a DRTV & multi-channel retailer which operates in 19 European countries.  He’s primarily responsible for digital business development, in which he leverages multiple channels and mediums to expose his client’ brands.

Rok is probably best known for authoring “Unleash the Marketing Power of RSS”, which has garnered such praises as being “the best and more comprehensive” guide on RSS for marketers. He’s been active as a speaker at such events as DMA Annual and ACCM. His reputation for being incredibly knowledgeable when it comes to interactive marketing certainly didn’t precede him with the interview questions I emailed him last week. He’ll be speaking at the Email Summit on “ Targeting and Messaging Strategies that Effect Behavior”.  Below is the first in the interview series with Rok.

What was it like for you when you first started dabbling in email marketing, specifically targeted messaging? 
For me personally the story starts way back in 2001 when I first started doing email marketing for a financial consulting company. That first experience was a real eye-opener in terms of the real marketing capabilities of email when it’s done right. Even back then we realized that relevant prospect and customer communications aren’t about sending out a new sales message every second day (as we still see many US online retailers doing today), but rather about educating/entertaining your audience, gradually building their trust and preparing them for their first purchase. Sure, we could get a higher short-term purchase response if we focused only on the immediate sale, but that would alienate all the readers who aren’t in their “shopping” mode just yet, eventually destroying the long-term potential of our email lists and lead generation efforts.

This simple point became even clearer when I started managing online for a business daily newspaper a couple of years later, where targeted and timely messaging were the absolute norm. Sure, you still have thousands of email subscribers that only want your overall daily business news recap message. But you only start providing real value when you let your subscribers decide exactly what business news they’re interested in and exactly when they want to receive it. Some only want to be notified of their ticker changes. Others only care about the latest business news in their specific industry. Yet again others only care about news involving their company or their competitors. Giving your audiences this sort of choice in the online media world is crucial.

What were some of the most beneficial things you learned early on?
When I joined Studio Moderna back in 2004 we were focused on one thing when it came to email , and that was sales, sales, sales ... and more sales, immediately. I followed suit, but all of that time my previous email experience kept nagging at me at the back of my head, reasoning that in its essence online retail really isn’t that much different from selling business services or from the online media world. People are still people. And people want real value. The thing is, different things are valuable to different people. There is no real cookie-cutter model for “value” that works for everyone.

Having that in mind, we started transforming our email program step-by-step, ultimately going through 5 distinct development phases, shifting from a total focus on direct immediate sales to putting readership & engagement before everything else. Studio Moderna owns several brands, but let’s focus the discovery process on Dormeo, which is our mattress & sleeping brand.

The first step, as you can imagine, was total focus on sales campaigns. The metrics used to measure results were your standard mix of open-rates, clickthrough rates and conversions, as well as basic business data, such as revenue per email address and similar. Early results were certainly encouraging, but not enough.

The next logical step was starting an email newsletter on… yes, you guessed it, sleeping. Newsletter after newsletter with tips on improving the quality of your sleep, selecting the right mattress, mattress materials, subscribers’ dream interpretations, the consequences of poor sleeping and so on. The logic was simple: support the purchase process for those already in the consideration phase and educate all others that they need to get into that consideration phase right now. As we started focusing more on content we also added churn as one of the regular metrics we looked at.

But then a funny thing happened. After a couple of issues readership started going down and churn started increasing dramatically. We found out the hard way that for some reason people just aren’t interested in reading about sleeping every week. Figure that.

That brought us to our third development phase, changing our newsletter from being strictly sleeping oriented into a more general lifestyle newsletter. We still kept some of the sleeping oriented content, but started focusing more on general interest high-readership articles such as diets, sexuality, relationships, home decoration, personal growth and more. That’s when things really started moving. And yes, you really can sell mattress with articles on diets and sex.

We updated our email database with gender information, which turned out to be another big eye-opener. As we quickly saw, men and women care about completely different topics. What’s more, they also show different email interaction patterns.

This new information brought us to our next email development stage: gender based lifestyle newsletters and email campaigns. From that point on we started segmenting all email communications based on gender. Not only the content selection, but even implementing structural template changes to the campaigns based on gender interaction patters. One of the many differences, for example, is that female newsletters are made for reading and men newsletters are made for browsing. While the table of contents in the female newsletter would focus on “selling” the article and getting the clickthrough, the men version would already give the meat of the article up front.

So what other targets do you now focus on?
Targeting based on different lead generation models. An email address that entered our program via a viral sweepstakes game will, for example, be treated completely differently than an email address acquired through a catalog subscription campaign or a sleeping tips whitepaper campaign.

Targeting based on user engagement. We look at a variety of metrics that tell us what an individual is interested in at a specific time, using that data to determine the right messaging strategy based on that person’s interests and stage in the purchase cycle. If you spend 10 minutes browsing our mattresses that’s a clear sign you’re in the market to buy a mattress now. Our email communications to you will usually reflect that, as well as other behavior patterns that we look for and detect.

How do you get a better feel for your customers through email?
Using subscriber surveys to get an even better idea of the content and products individual groups of users are interested in. We also use transactional data for follow-up sales. Analyzing responses to different subject-lines to see what matters most to individual user groups and then focusing our communications based on this data. For example, someone that responds to a subject line on allergies will be treated differently that someone who responds to a subject line on neck pain.

View Comments

Posted by MindComet on Mar. 09, 2009

+ 1

Gravatar

I see I need to update my online photo set:) Yeah, I am young, but not THAT young ... anymore ... too bad.<BR><BR>Anyway, just a quick comment: Studio Moderna is a DRTV & multi-channel retailer with…

read more »

Posted by Anonymous on 03/09/2009 02:49 PM

Leave a comment

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Mar04

email summit

Marketing Sherpa Email Summit: T-Minus 11 Days

In less than two weeks from now, we will be joining hundreds of email marketers in sunny Miami at the Intercontinental Hotel for the 2009 MarketingSherpa Email Summit.  For two days, we’ll be covering various strategies, tactics and case studies that will expound upon the possibilities and benefits of email marketing.  emailmarketingvoodoo.com is honored to be on the of the official blogs of this event and we will be blogging live from the Intercontinental Hotel for the entire duration!  I’m so excited to get down there, mingle and get my hands dirty with the best of ‘em!  Stay tuned!

View Comments

Posted by MindComet on Mar. 04, 2009

+ 1

Gravatar

Sounds like a wonderful event to be at.  I’ll take a look. <BR>Email is the most cost effective way of Marketing Check out my…

read more »

Posted by Kurt Johansen on 03/04/2009 07:58 PM

Leave a comment

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Feb27

email summit, benchmarks, email awards

Back from Miami and the MarketingSherpa Email Summit!

We are back from the MarketingSherpa 3rd Annual Email Summit.  All we can say is that those 3 days, felt like 4 weeks.  There was so much to take in, both at the Summit and just being in Miami in general.  So many things going on!!

As for the Summit itself, 800 email marketers in one place at one time, it is bound to get crazy.  But we learned a lot and are eager to implement so we can see some results on our side!  We also received confirmation that we are doing a lot right!!!  (that is always good) Now the trick is to take the stuff we got going on and move what we are doing right from good to great.  It’s a great challenge and we are looking forward to it.  We also are striving to produce the results that will gain us a chance to win one of MarketingSherpa’s awards for next year.  Yesterday at the close of the summit, they announced the 2008 winners in the 10 categories for into B-to-B and B-to-C.  They stressed that when choosing a winner, how important the documentation on measurement and results were.  MarketingSherpa made it a point to stress that many submissions lacked in documentation on these points.  This comment followed along with many points made throughout the conference: have a goal and track the results! 

Now, back to compiling everything we learned from the Summit, and yes, we will share some good points =)

View Comments

Posted by MindComet on Feb. 27, 2008

+ 0

Leave a comment

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Feb26

email summit

MarketingSherpa - Take THIS!

After a South Florida hour long power outage (YIKES!).  The MarketingSherpa Email Summit Concluded this afternooon.  The last presentation was on
Top 5 Takeaways:

    me
    #1 Marketers have to be more than marketers. (be a good business person)
    #2 Is 2008 the year that email marketers get religion on landing pages? (yes, as email marketers we are finally getting it)
    #3 It’s all about the message. (the ratio of click to open rate is a measure of quality of content.  The benchmark is roughly 25%, Make sure your value proposition is tied thru all your marketing collateral)
    #4 Marketing + IT = A Happy Family smile
    #5 Email isn’t dead.  (reference my quote from Eric Stockton from my previous post!)

MindComet would like to Thank MarketingSherpa for such a great couple of days of amazing research and information.  We will definitely be heads down for a while trying to wrap our brains on everything we came away with.  We look forward to next year’s Email Summit and showing how we have benefited from everything. 

Readers, stay tuned, we will continue to post MANY tidbits of info we collected thru the coming weeks!! YAY EMAIL MARKETING!!!!!!!! ITS ALIVE!!!!!

View Comments

Posted by MindComet on Feb. 26, 2008

+ 1

Gravatar

Hi, your posts on the email marketing summit in Miami were very interesting. I have been following the event with open eyes from Belgium, while my colleague was blogging about it too. Indeed a very…

read more »

Posted by Jelle Quirynen on 02/26/2008 04:00 PM

Leave a comment

Notify me of follow-up comments?