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Send article to a colleagueLast week, I did a Webinar with the Email Experience Council in which I shared some very interesting research from a Harrison Group study conducted with digital publication readers. (You can see the study results here.)
A key finding was that people enjoy digital ads more than print ads. That's because digital ads allow them to engage with the products and services they see, on demand. I thought this was a very interesting statistic and could possibly be a reason that e-mail marketing is still such a successful medium for us today!
Think about it: in most cases, a marketing e-mail is intended to be pretty. It strives to include compelling copy that makes you want to engage with the copy and imagery to move once step closer to a purchase or relationship with the company that sent it. If an e-mail's successful at its job, it garners a click, a sign of engagement, and success. Even when people complain about e-mail, they secretly love it, because it offers them immediate access to products or services when they're in the mood. The love/hate relationship people have with e-mail can be compared to the love/hate relationship people had with J.R. Ewing from the television show "Dallas" back in the 1980s.
When building an e-mail marketing strategy, you must remember that people will have this love/hate relationship with whatever you send to them. You'll never be able to please all the people all the time. That's why your e-mail program approach must remain consistent with your brand strategy and include both multiple touches and multimedia integration.
When people receive your e-mail, they do one of five things with it. Knowing what these are when you plan your campaign can help you be much more successful in the future:
- Save it in the inbox for future reading. They just won't have time to get to it now, but they intend to read it later. Make sure that your content isn't dated or that the subject line clearly indicates an expiration date.
- File it away for a rainy day. Not in the market for flowers right now but may need them in a few months? That's exactly why e-mail file folders were invented. Remember this in case your company overwrites landing-page content.
- Read it now and click through, but save it for future purchases. This is the death trap of e-mail. If you engaged people enough to click but not convert, you'd better have a follow-up e-mail en route to remind them (within two days) to come back, or you've lost the sale.
- Delete it. Sad but true. Fifty percent of the e-mail you send will be deleted, even if recipients are your best customers. Remember this (and the "three times" rule from my last column), and ensure you repeat and represent important information in a future e-mail.
- Read, engage with, and enjoy it. While this may seem like success, it's short-lived -- unless you have a strategy to maintain reader engagement.
No matter how we try to evaluate and dissect e-mail marketing strategies, sometimes we just have to go back to Psychology 101 and remember that our audience is made up of plain old humans, like you and me, who love things one day and hate them the next. Keeping that in mind will help you keep a grounded approach to your e-mail marketing strategy. And, if you're lucky, it will also give you a leg up over your competition.
Jeanniey is off this week. Today's column ran earlier on ClickZ.
Join us for a ClickZ Webinar: Transparent CPL Advertising: The Biggest Missed Opportunity in Your Online Strategy on October 15.
Jeanniey Mullen is the chief marketing officer for Zinio and its sister company, the exclusively digital magazine VIVmag. Jeanniey is recognized as a pioneer and visionary in the digital marketing and advertising space, with an expertise in e-mail marketing.
Prior to Zinio, Jeanniey was the senior partner and global executive director of the e-mail marketing and digital dialogue practice at OgilvyOne Worldwide. She worked with such clients as IBM, American Express, and Yahoo. In the mid-2000s, Jeanniey founded the Email Experience Council, the world's largest e-mail marketing trade organization. She currently serves as the executive director of the EEC, which is now owned by the Direct Marketing Association. Before that, Jeanniey ran her own advertising agency. And in the late 1990s, Jeanniey created the global e-mail marketing division inside an advertising agency at Grey Direct.
Jeanniey is a frequent speaker on a variety of topics including e-mail and digital marketing, brand development, and publishing. She is also a published author with two books in her portfolio, including "Email Marketing: An Hour A Day." She sits on the advisory boards of a number of innovative organizations, including the Social Media Advertising Consortium and the Online Marketing Summit.
Article Archives by Jeanniey Mullen
2009: The Year of the Subject Line - Jan 5, 2009
Read This Holiday Column for $0 TODAY - Dec 22, 2008
Did You Remember My Birthday? - Dec 8, 2008
First Impressions: E-mail's Drive in 2009 - Nov 24, 2008
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