email campaigns

Make Those Opt-Ins Count

So you’ve been collecting emails for months or even years now. You’ve got hundreds or maybe even thousands of people who have raised their hands and agreed to listen to what you have to say.

So what are you doing with that list? If you’re just sending them a quarterly newsletter and a Christmas card, you’re probably not making the most of it. Here are a few things you might consider:

  • 1. Ask for referrals. Heck, offer a bonus (free oil changes for a year or something similar) if they bring in a friend or family member who buys a car from you.
  • 2. Don’t always send to the whole group. Segment the list and hit them with timely, targeted offers.
  • 3. Invite them to special events at the dealership or get them tickets to an event (minor league baseball game, comedy club or the like).
  • 4. They’re special, treat them as such by offering to unveil new models to them first. Give them first dibs on that hot new sports car that you can’t keep in stock.

In short, making being on your list worth their time and attention. Otherwise, you risk being deleted along with the other stuff we all wished we hadn’t signed for.

D. Jones
Marketing Strategist/Creative Consultant
SmackDabble, LLC

Text-Only or HTML: Email’s Million-Dollar Question

It’s one of the most commonly debated issues in e-marketing: Should the emails you send out be text-only or should they be HTML? The argument for text-only goes like this… It feels less like advertising, it’s better at getting around spam filters, the most important emails people get are usually text-only. The argument for HTML is this… The message feels more “polished,” I can include graphics, animations and other high-impact items, and I’m able to carry my brand into the message.

So which should you use?

The answer, as you might expect, is both. Anytime you’re sending a person-to-person message, it should be text-only. This applies to sales and service staff following up with customers and other such one-to-one communications. But when that message is coming from the dealership (rather than an individual) HTML is the way to go. It will do a better job of carrying your brand and carries a more put-together, dynamic message.

D. Jones
Marketing Strategist/Creative Consultant
SmackDabble, LLC

Study: Auto Market Among Top Online Sales Categories

From Auto Remarketing
April 08, 2008

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Despite widespread retail declines across the American economy, a recent study projects an upswing in online shopping for 2008. This includes the auto industry, which analysts predict to be among the top three Internet sales categories.

The State of Retailing Online, a Shop.org study conducted by Forrester Research, anticipates that online retail sales will increase by 17 percent this year to $204 billion. 

The auto industry is expected to account for $19.3 billion of those sales, which would make it the third-largest online segment behind apparel ($26.6 billion) and computers ($23.9 billion), the report highlighted. 

“From higher shipping costs to changes in consumer shopping habits, online retailers are not immune to the current economic climate,” said Scott Silverman, executive director of Shop.org.

“But the fact that online sales will increase substantially this year demonstrates the resilience of the channel and is a testament to the value and convenience most customers find when shopping online,” Silverman continued.

The study pointed out that as people become more comfortable with the Internet, online retailers must choose between two sales focuses: retaining current customers or attracting new ones.

According to officials, 53 percent of online retailers’ marketing budgets is devoted to finding new online customers, while 21 percent is for customer retention. 

But, many retailers have used search-engine or affiliate marketing as effective retention tools that not only market to existing customers, but bring in new shoppers, as well.

“What’s spearheading online retail sales growth is a tale of two shoppers that visit the Web for very different reasons,” explained Sucharita Mulpuru, Forrester Research principal analyst and lead author of the report. “The casual shopper goes online to look for the best price, leveraging the transparency of the Internet to save money.”

“However, more affluent customers appreciate the convenience of shopping online and are not necessarily looking for the best deal,” Mulpuru continued. “Retailers would be wise to recognize there are significant opportunities within both audiences and should market to them accordingly.”

In order to find new customers, retailers have used search-engine marketing more than anything else. According to the study, 35 percent of sales have originated from that source.

Moreover, 90 percent of respondents stated they use pay-per-performance search placement. Seventy-nine percent plan to make it a greater priority in the coming year, officials stated.

Still, such offline strategies as catalogs and direct-mail have helped retailers convert shoppers to the Internet. What’s more, the study indicated that retailers tend to use those tactics more than TV or newspaper advertising.

According to the study, 65 percent of respondents said they would focus more on social networking resources, while 55 percent indicated they would devote more focus to widgets.

These type of campaigns, however, are thought to be more useful in brand-building versus driving revenue or sales conversion, officials indicated. 

Instead, officials stated, the report recommended that e-mail marketing and free shipping promotions be used to boost sales.

http://www.autoremarketing.com/ar/news/story.html?id=7681#

Best Practice: Tracking E-Marketing

One of the great promises of e-marketing is that it’s trackable. You’ve been told for years that e-marketing would lift the fog of accountability from your marketing mix and show you what worked, when it worked and even why. Well all of that is true (mostly), but most folks aren’t taking the simple steps needed to make that dream a reality.

So here’s what you do: Incorporate a series of simple landing pages in to each marketing touch you send out. Require people go to a web page to register or collect their prize or whatever. Then don’t just set up one landing page, but a different one for each marketing message (the pages may look and function the same, but you’ll need unique pages). By tracking hits, downloads and forms submitted from these pages, you’ll have a near-perfect understanding of which messages are driving customer action and which aren’t. And that, my friend, is measurable marketing done in a simple, straightforward way.

D. Jones
Marketing Strategist/Creative Consultant
SmackDabble, LLC

Still Not Gathering Customer Emails? Really?!

So I was working with a client recently and asked, as a part of a marketing strategy session, what percentage of customers in their database they had email addresses for. A sheepish look came over the owner’s face, and he hemmed and hawed a bit before telling me they didn’t have any customers email addresses because, “The software didn’t have a field for it.” It took everything I had to keep from smacking him across the face and asking him how he was enjoying life in 1987.Two things were wrong here… One, they were still using the same contact management system that they’d started using in the early 90s. Second, they thought this was somehow fine and dandy.Email is arguably the most significant communications development since the invention of the telephone. It allows for instant communication at virtually no cost. And this company didn’t think it was an important tool to be using. And my guess is, they’re not alone out there.

If you find yourself among this crowd, it’s time to get with the program. This internet thing is here to stay. It’s not a fad. It can change the way you do business. If you let it.

D. Jones
Marketing Strategist/Creative Consultant
SmackDabble, LLC

Mother May I?

Today’s digital revolution has forever altered the way that companies reach out and communicate with their customers. And digital marketing’s first, and still most powerful, killer app is email. All the benefits of traditional mail minus the printing and postage costs and the three-day wait for the message to arrive.

So if email hasn’t replaced 90% of your direct mail, you’re missing the boat. The question is, why are you missing the boat? And the answer is this: permission.

In the post-spam e-marketing era, permission is one of the most valuable commodities you can get your hands on. When a customer raises their hand and says, “Yes, by all means contact me,” they should have just become a member of the most valuable marketing list you own.

How many names do you have on your permission marketing list? How are you using it?

D. Jones
Marketing Strategist/Creative Consultant
SmackDabble, LLC

E-Mail Takes the Lead in the Digital Marketing Arena

Appeared in: Digital Dealer
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Issue 39
VOLUME 2 ISSUE 39

According to The McKinsey Quarterly, the business journal of the global management-consulting firm McKinsey & Company, chief marketers worldwide use e-mail in their campaigns. In a survey of 311 marketing gurus, McKinsey found that 83 percent utilized e-mail above and beyond the application of display ads, paid search and online video.

When asked about the future of online marketing, respondents thought by 2010 the Web would be an integral part of the first two stages of the buyer decision-marking process: product awareness and information gathering. With this in mind, over one-half of respondents said they planned to increase their e-mail spending in the next three years; however, plans to increase spending could also mean that e-mail would lose some budget to paid search and other tactics.

U.S. Overview
Closer to home on U.S. shores, more than seven in 10 U.S. marketers said that e-mail was one of their online and mobile tactics, according to a Penton Media Custom Research study commissioned by PROMO Magazine.

Top-Line Results:
72.6 percent of U.S. marketers employed e-mail marketing as an integral part of their online/marketing tactics
60.8 percent of U.S. marketers utilized e-mail newsletters as an integral part of their online marketing/tactics

Conclusion:
Over half of all U.S. marketing gurus responding to this survey incorporate and trust e-mail marketing as an effective and declarative digital tool for generating sales.
http://www.imakenews.com/digital1/e_article000914534.cfm?x=bbkdd0s,b4TSprpk

Digital Marketing’s Killer Characteristic

It’s been said before and it’ll probably be said again. But something this important bears repeating…

Digital Marketing’s cost per unit is essentially ZERO!

There are no printing costs. No postage costs. No media buys. No commissions to sales people or printing costs. Send a message to 1 or 100,000 — the cost is the same. All those little ones and zeros are free.

And on top of that, digital marketing is usually more effective. You can include video and audio in your emails or on websites or even people’s cell phones. Let’s see you try that with old-world direct mail.

D. Jones
Marketing Strategist/Creative Consultant
SmackDabble LLC

Win the E-mail Budget Battle

Good article that supports e-mail marketing, find out how to make it work:

Email generates the best ROI of all marketing channels. Find out how to get a piece of the pie and turn the cold, hard numbers into a success story.

Email marketing works. Studies from numerous sources support this. The Direct Marketing Association, for example, reports that email delivers an eye-popping ROI when compared to other media: $57.25 for every dollar spent on it in 2005, compared to $7.08 for every dollar spent on print catalogs, and $22.52 for every dollar spent on non-email internet marketing.

Done right, it does even better. Jupiter Research has found that engaging audiences in more relevant communications increases net profits by an average of 18 times more than broadcast mailing. And marketers back up the claims.

According to Internet Retailer, 50.6 percent of internet retailers report that 6 percent or more of their sales come from email marketing, while another 25 percent say the proportion is over 11 percent.

In addition, 45 percent of chief marketing officers say their best performing online advertising tactic is emailing an in-house list, according to the CMO Council in 2006.
Despite these statistics and success stories, email programs remain under-funded compared to other marketing tactics. The latest IAB/PWC report on digital marketing spending in 2006 put email at only 2 percent of overall budgets.

“Companies are reticent to spend the dollars in the email marketing areas for a few reasons,” says Mark Politi, VP, marketing and media relations for Planetwide Media. Those reasons include:

-Lack of knowledge of how to send out large email blasts legally and not be considered a spammer.
-Lack of an internal email database list to work with.
-Lack of an email rental source to target the correct demographic.
-Proper measurable metrics to prove ROI for the campaign. Unique custom landing pages that can measure visits, downloads, sign-ups and purchases.
-Work involved compared to other online advertising programs make an email campaign low on the totem pole.

But to generate the type of ROI mentioned above, it takes investments in back-end technology for such tasks as targeting, email experts to ensure compliance with legislation and ISP guidelines, and creative specialists to write stellar copy.
So if you can get more, you can make more. Here’s how to do it.

Know the facts

Armed with information, an email marketer can convince the budget keeper his channel is worthy of more dollars.

Of greatest significance, Forrester reports that email has reached almost universal penetration, with 97 percent of consumers using the channel. That’s 147 million people in the United States using email almost every day, eMarketer calculates.

And that usage includes interaction with marketers.

According to JupiterResearch, 90 percent of users will use email to engage in and determine the value of a relationship with a company. And Quris reports that 40 percent of email subscribers will go “out of their way” to patronize a company whose email programs they like.

Not only do consumers use email to make specific purchases (50 percent of shoppers, according to Return Path), 50 percent of them who open and read email marketing messages are likely to also purchase other items on impulse and to spend 138 percent more than those who don’t buy through email (Forrester).

Do your math

Citing general statistics will provide the framework, but it’s the calculations on your own projects that will complete the picture for your CMO.

Simms Jenkins, founder and principal, BrightWave Marketing and EmailStatCenter.com, provides the following guideline:

Establish upfront what your goals from an email marketing effort are, including revenue, page view, in-store traffic, conversions, retention, subscribers, et cetera.

Then, create a monthly scorecard. What good are your email metrics if they live alone on a spreadsheet? A monthly scorecard provides an opportunity for the email/interactive team to monitor the key email performance indicators in the context of company goals (email specific and non-email specific) and industry benchmarks. Since email campaigns are so fluid, these goals in your scorecard are best evaluated and revised as an ongoing exercise. If anything, it prevents surprises and ensures the email team knows the score at all times.

Make sure to benchmark against the industry. Benchmarking internal stats against comparable industry metrics can be both valuable and an exercise in futility. The key is context. You want to make sure you are in the same ballpark as your industry on specific metrics like deliverability and open rates, but you should not make drastic changes to campaigns based on one research report that touted Tuesday as the best day to send emails.

Finally, focus/budget/judge on end-game/ROI. Go beyond CT/Open. Too often email marketers obsess over open and clickthrough rates. However, who cares if your open rate was high but no sales were generated? Your email program’s ultimate goal is what matters. Many email teams can’t even define that. If you fall into that camp, do yourself a favor and call a meeting and set your big picture goals. Worth considering are revenue, page views, sales leads, conversions, in-store sales, email subscribes, PR, cross promotion; the list can go on. Make sure your list is concise and clear.

With this information, make sure you see open and clicks as a means to an end, the end being your overall campaign goals. Otherwise, you may be flying blind.
Note: Company Current/Desired States are purely examples.

Share the successes

The final step in the process is to turn the cold, hard numbers into a success story.
Here’s an example. Furniture retailer Chiasso relies on email to drive customers to its website and Chicago store. Facing issues with deliverability and problems with its email lists, Chiasso spent much-needed cash on Bronto Software. The investment paid off. Chiasso embarked on two email campaigns that increased its online sales to 55 percent of total company sales, up from 32 percent the year prior.

Bronto helped VP of eCommerce and Systems Jerry Bergquist segment his contacts according to location, so he could send a store-opening announcement to his “Chicago” contacts. However, he wisely chose to not exclude his “Not Chicago” segment from the store-opening festivities. Besides keeping non-Chicago contacts aware of the company’s growth, the message also included $10 off coupons for online purchases.

The discount offer to the “Not Chicago” segment generated impressive results: 32 percent open rates and 10 percent clickthrough rates. Not to be outdone, the “Chicago” segment received a 49 percent open rate and a clickthrough rate of nearly 22 percent, with the vast majority of clicks linking to a landing page that included directions to and information about the new retail store.
Metrics for opens and clickthroughs provided Bergquist with important measurements for campaign evaluation, and conversion tracking provided him with sound insight into success. Conversion tracking let Bergquist follow the dollars-and-cents results of his messages. Some Chiasso campaigns, such as its “Good Buy” [note the clever pun] Winter Clearance Sale or its Art Décor Sale grossed more than $13,000 and $14,000, respectively, in sales.

“At Chiasso, we’ve seen such impressive ROI from email marketing that we are always open to increasing our budget,” says Bergquist. “Email marketing software has proven to be a cost-effective method for growing our business.”

Published: July 03, 2007
By: Dawn Anfuso senior editor, iMedia Connection.

http://www.imediaconnection.com/content/15448.asp

Email, Making a Comeback

It wasn’t long ago that email was predicted to be the destroyer of direct mail. Then the public’s confidence in direct mail went the way of the dodo thanks to the piles and piles of virtual junk that was heaped upon us by spammers.

— “You too can make $10,000 a week working from home!” —

But recent advances in spam filtering, as well as special legislation, have brought email marketing back to the forefront of the marketing discussion. Consumers are starting to trust their email again… especially from businesses they know and trust.

So, if you are one of those dealerships that gave up on email marketing in the early part of the decade, it’s time to give it another try. You won’t be sorry.

D. Jones
Marketing Strategist/Creative Consultant
Smack Dabble LLC