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Delivery Timing of Communications Pivotal in any Email Marketing CampaignAccording to a new research study put out by email delivery auditing and optimization firm Pivotal Veracity, the timing of delivery for communications in an email marketing campaign can be as, if not more, important than the actual relevancy and content of the messages themselves. The time of day, day of the week, and month of the year can all have a significant influence on the success of one’s campaign. Yet often times these factors are overlooked or downplayed, resulting in a limited engagement level from your target recipients, and an unnecessarily restricted ROI.Pivotal Veracity’s Engagement Index found that financial services, technology and communications firms tended to be most successful in holding the interest of their recipients, whereas retail, travel and hospitality companies struggled to engage users with their communications. Retail and travel marketers, however, were more apt to being effected by seasonality changes. Travel communications engagement received a nice boost in the months of April and May, just before the summer vacation season jumped into full swing, whereas retail outlets saw their biggest rebound in August as consumers returned to work and school. ![]() Pivotal Veracity’s study also found that many email recipients, especially in the B2C sector, do not access their personal mailboxes as much as their work accounts. “The average elapsed time between when messages are first sent to when they are first seen grew from 23.2 hours in January to 25.9 in August,” Pivotal Veracity says. This significant increase means that in general, consumers will not see your message for more than 24 hours. This could spell major trouble for any marketer who relies on time sensitive campaigns in order to get their key brand messages across. ![]() Importance and appeal of communications is a major player in determining how much time elapses between when a consumer receives a message to when he or she actually reads it. Pivotal Veracity’s Email Engagement Index technology found that travel marketers’ messages came in at the highest appeal and importance between the months of March and April, with an average elapsed time of 2.9 hours. Retailers on the other hand struggled during the month of August, coming in at almost 5 hours of elapsed time between when a communication was received, till when it was actually read. ![]() The Relevancy & Response metric measures the percentage of email that is actually read and engaged with. Coming out on top with a 34% read rate, not surprisingly, were the communications of financial institutions, who often send out critical and time sensitive correspondence. Travel and hospitality fared the worst, which was only able to garner an 18% read rate from their target consumers. ![]() Finally, contact frequency and deliverability can be an important metric for comparing your campaign performance with competitors. In addition, it can act as a source of discovery for any disconnect that may occur between the number of communications sent versus the number of emails found in a target consumer’s inbox. Here, retail and travel marketers come out on top, demonstrating a much higher message velocity of 4.8 and 3.7 messages a month respectively. Financial and technology communications, who as mentioned before both command a high read rate, also tended to be distributed the least amount per month, with only 2 and 2.6 emails on average being delivered to their intended target. ![]() Multiple factors go in to creating and sustaining a successful email marketing campaign, and Pivotal Veracity’s report only stands to strongly reinforce this point. No longer can content alone attract and retain the interest of your target consumers. Instead, strategic distribution, time relevancy, and frequency of communication all play an increasingly important role in triggering desired consumer response and boosting ROI. Labels: Email Marketing 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Retailers Planning Holiday Marketing StrategiesThis holiday season, retailers are resorting to more traditional marketing tactics, such as paid search and e-mail marketing, to achieve company sales objectives. With the economy in a recession, it is important for retailers to successfully execute these strategies. Fifty-five percent of CMOs at leading US retailers plan to focus on e-mail promotions this holiday season, according to an October 2009 survey by BDO Seidman. Other strategies retailers are likely to focus on include free shipping offers, search engine optimization and social networking. Though social media usage is increasing at the highest rate this holiday season, a small portion of online retailers do not plan to incorporate sites such as Facebook and MySpace in an overall marketing strategy. On the other hand, 100% of retailers will send e-mails to their house lists, and a majority (63.9%) will not include mobile phone alerts in marketing strategies. Due to a disconnect between ads clicked and the company landing page, some of these efforts are not as successful as they have the potential to be. For example, two-thirds of advertisers did not have a landing page relevant to purchased keywords, causing misdirected searches. In order to avoid this, retailers need to improve landing pages and increase visibility of marketing messages on e-commerce websites.Source: eMarketer; December 1, 2009 Labels: E-commerce, Email Marketing, Marketing Trends 0 comments. Click here to post comments. E-Mail and Social Media Marketing Popular Among Small BusinessesAlmost 75% of small businesses have included increased expenditure on e-mail marketing as one of their New Year's resolutions, according to a VerticalResponse survey. Following close behind, many smaller companies plan an increase in utilization of social media as an online marketing tactic, with almost 7 out of 10 agreeing that there are many benefits to be cited by employing such a strategy. Conversely, over 70% of companies polled planned on cutting back on or getting rid of online banner advertising altogether.![]() The continued interest in e-mail marketing stems from the beliefs held by many small businesses of the benefits it can provide. The most commonly held opinion by those organizations who already participate in this marketing strategy is that it is an effective way of obtaining new prospects. This is also the most popular belief of small business that soon plan a foray into this field. ![]() However, corporations that are currently in the process of implementing an e-mail marketing strategy do not see it as beneficial in terms of ROI or as a source of feedback on current campaigns, contrary to the opinion of small businesses with already established programs. Source: eMarketer, November 24, 2009 Labels: Email Marketing, Marketing Trends 0 comments. Click here to post comments. E-Mails Need to Be Relevant to ConsumersIrrelevance is the number one reason consumers are unsubscribing to e-mail newsletters, according to a report by CMO Council and InfoPrint Solutions Company. Nine out of ten consumers have claimed to unsubscribe from e-mail newsletters that they could not relate to. Additionally, 23% of consumers say they receive too much e-mail in their inbox. On the other hand, there are e-mails more consumers always open. Seventy-two percent of Internet consumers always open monthly bills, followed by 60% who open bank statements. Liz Miller, Vice President of Programs and Operations at the CMO Council, notes that irrelevance is a waste and should be a warning to marketers that consumers will disconnect from brands who deliver messages demonstrating "a lack of intimacy, customer insight and individual understanding."Source: eMarketer; November 23, 2009 Labels: Email Marketing 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Coupons Increase E-Mail Open RateAccording to a recent eMarketer article "coupons are cool." Though consumers have always sought out deals online, the recession has caused them to continue spendthrift ways.Studies by Experian have shown that consumers are more likely to open an e-mail if it includes a coupon. Coupon e-mails had open rates of 24% to 25%, while non-coupon campaigns only had open rates of about 16% to 18%. Furthermore, higher open rates translated into higher click rates; e-mails containing coupons have a click-through rate of about 4%.![]() Experian estimates nearly two-thirds of households use online coupons - almost a 46% growth in the past three years. Source: eMarketer; Thursday, November 19, 2009 Labels: Email Marketing, Internet Behavior 0 comments. Click here to post comments. What is your marketing priority for 2010?According to a recent study published by Unisfair, marketer's top priorities for 2010 include new customer acquisition and customer retention and engagement. Thought leadership was also seen by many as an important factor to focus on for the next year. Creating a community for consumers was at the bottom of most marketer's to-do lists, with only 31% believing this to be a crucial focal-point.![]() ![]() ![]() Source: eMarketer, September 21, 2009 Labels: Email Marketing, Facebook, Marketing Trends, SEO, Social Media, Social Networking 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Where Have My Messages Gone?E-mail marketing is considered one of the most valuable assets of any marketing organization, and for good reason. ROI is generally much higher compared to other forms of online marketing. Yet despite success in most opt-in email-marketing programs, a large amount of messages are deflected due to anti-spam measures or junk folders. Below shows a graphical representation of the average inbox placement rate for e-mail in North America. Only 79.3% of messages ever make it to their intended recipient, while almost 21% is lost in cyberspace.![]() On the B2B side of things, delivery of e-mail messages serves slightly worse, at only a 72.4% success rate. This may be a result of more advanced spam blockers and tighter restrictions in corporate environments. ![]() Broken down by ISP, Gmail subscribers were the hardest to reach with a 23% failure rate. Other popular e-mail services such as Hotmail and MSN were not far behind at 20%, with Cox appearing to have highest delivery success rate. ![]() E-mail marketers must be careful in applying best practices when creating and sending out marketing campaigns, in addition to checking the relevance to the recipient. Otherwise they may find the bulk of their announcements in a possible prospect's junk mail folder. Source: eMarketer, August 7, 2009 Labels: Business-to-Business, Email Marketing, ROI 0 comments. Click here to post comments. E-mail: Fastest Growing Direct Marketing SegmentAccording to Veronis Suhler Stevenson (VSS), in its annual Communications Industry Forecast, e-mail will continue to grow in double digits. More specifically, it is predicted that for the next five years, e-mail will grow at a 18.5% rate. They forecast that the total e-mail spend by 2013 will be a $27.8 billion business!Will these stats make you rethink your marketing plan for 2010? Source: Dmnews.com, 8/04/09 Labels: Email Marketing, Internet Growth, Internet Statistics 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Spam Splosion!Everyone with an e-mail account knows what spam looks like. But where does it all come from, and where does it go? One thing is certain—there is a lot of it. According to MessageLabs, the percentage of worldwide e-mail traffic that is spam has been falling over the past few years, dropping from 86.2% in 2006 to 81.2% in 2008. ![]() ![]() Source: eMarketer, June 2, 2009 Labels: Email Marketing, Industry 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Brand Mentions Preferred over Ads51% of Internet users are likely to take action after reading online ads. Pop-up ads are unpopular with users with only 13% likely to take action after viewing. Click on image to see full break out. To a degree, these stats are affected by demographics. Older Internet users and whites are less likely to respond after reading an online-ad, compared to younger users and African-Americans and Hispanics. Click on image to enlarge and see all demographics. Source: eMarketer, April 20 2009Labels: Email Marketing, Internet Demographics, Internet Statistics, Marketing Trends 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Why Now Is Not a Good Time to Slash Your Marketing Research BudgetAccording to eMarketer, increasing or maintaining search marketing is very important in these economical times. Click on the image below to see the 2009 breakout of change in online marketing spending.![]() Below shows the different areas of market research spending for 2008. Click image to enlarge. Source: eMarketer, March 31 2009Labels: Advertising Spending, Email Marketing, Marketing Trends 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Social Nets and Blogs More Popular Than E-MailAccording to Nielsen Online, E-mail is no longer the most popular activity online (besides surfing the web for info). Social networks and blog sites are now getting more attention. In December 2007, E-mail was ahead of social networks, but by the end of 2008, fell behind. Social networks and blogs beat out E-mail by less than 1%.Click on images to enlarge. ![]() Source: eMarketer, March 17 2009Labels: Email Marketing, Internet Statistics, Social Media 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Email Increases Likelihood to Buy by 50%American consumers value companies who send them e-mails, according to an Epilson study. The study also showed more than half of respondents (67%) said they have purchased products in stores as a direct result of an e-mail received by that company. Other information found in this study showed that 84% of respondents "said they like receiving email from companies with whom they register, because even if they don't always read the message, it's good to know the information or offer will be there when they're ready." For companies, these findings are quite stimulating. Source: Marketingvox, February 23 2009 Labels: advertising tactics, Email Marketing, Internet Behavior 1 comments. Click here to post comments. Why Retail Loves E-MailPromotional e-mails sent by retailers were slowly increasing throughout 2008. The largest numbers came in at the end of the year in December with 14.6 e-mails sent on average to consumers, doubtlessly due to the holiday season and recession.![]() As you can see below, the majority of consumers e-mail grew during the 2008 holiday season Note: *November 8-December 19 2008![]() Source: eMarketer, February 23 2009 Labels: Advertising Spending, advertising tactics, Email Marketing 0 comments. Click here to post comments. E-Mail Performance Steady![]() Source: eMarketer, January 30 2009Labels: Advertising Spending, Email Marketing 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Inventory: Moving Products OnlineIncreasing spending to reach viewers![]() Source: eMarketer, January 9 2009Labels: Advertising Spending, advertising tactics, Email Marketing, Online Video, Social Media 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Learning to Work with Social Networks![]() ![]() Source: eMarketer, December 2 2008 Labels: E-commerce, Email Marketing, Mobile Web, Social Media 0 comments. Click here to post comments. E-Mail Marketers Get in the Spirit![]() Source: eMarketer, November 26 2008Labels: Advertising Spending, E-commerce, Email Marketing 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Consumers Opening Fewer E-Mails Source: eMarketer, November 14 2008Labels: E-commerce, Email Marketing, Internet Behavior 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Mom Bloggers Fuel Online Brand Talk Note: n=264 Note: n=8,586 conversationsSource: eMarketer, October 30 2008 Labels: Blogs, Email Marketing, Internet Behavior 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Marketing to Moms Source: eMarketer, October 16 2008Labels: Email Marketing, Internet Demographics 0 comments. Click here to post comments. E-mail marketing tactics Source: B2B special issue 2008Labels: Business-to-Business, Email Marketing 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Change In E-mail Marketing Use 2007-2008![]() Source: B to B magazine Labels: Email Marketing 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Reasons That U.S. Markets Use E-mail Marketing![]() Source: B to B magazine Labels: Email Marketing 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Strongest Media Buys![]() Labels: Advertising Spending, Email Marketing, Internet Statistics, Media Buying, Online Media, Paid Search 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Email Marketing ROI Expectations Source: Datran Media, January 2008Labels: Advertising Spending, Email Marketing, ROI 0 comments. Click here to post comments. Email Marketing GrowthAccording to Datran Media, companies largely plan to increase spending on email marketing in 2008 compared to 2007. Source: Datran Media, January 2008Labels: Advertising Spending, Email Marketing, Internet Growth 0 comments. Click here to post comments. |
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