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HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
Negative Preferences -- A Positive Solution To Segmentation
by Melinda Krueger, Tuesday, July 17, 2007, 2:00 AM

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Everyone agrees that personalizing email according to consumer preferences is a good thing. Most, however, gloss over the challenges:

1. Most consumer databases do not have preferences for all of its members. If you send email only to those with a preference, you limit your reach. Just because I didn't fill out the profile page doesn't mean I'm not interested in X.

2. If you ask for a preference, you must be prepared to provide content for that preference on a regular basis. If I select a preference for topic A only, can you generate regular content on that topic, given staff and budget constraints?

A solution the Email Diva is toying around with is asking subscribers to indicate anything they DON'T want: negative preferences. The goal, after all, is relevance. We want to send email about topics the recipient is or may be interested in, but our worst fear is sending something that is entirely irrelevant --diaper coupons to the childless couple, for example. You think you can do this with standard demographics, but can you? My retired neighbor babysits for her grandchildren regularly and would certainly be interested in diaper coupons. Another neighbor with the right demographics is a firm believer in the benefits of cloth diapers.

The idea would be to give people the option, in every email, to customize their experience by indicating content that is irrelevant.

At first blush, this technique seems like just another way of indicating a preference, but the difference is that it doesn't limit your reach. If I don't have a positive preference, is it because I don't want to read about topic A, or because I haven't filled out a profile or shopped for it on your site or look like the "typical" customer? With negative preferences, you can send email to your opt-ins on a particular topic or product unless they tell you not to. Moreover, it puts the customer in control, which is always a good thing, and far better than any marketer's crystal ball.

One challenge will be getting consumers to follow the instructions and indicate what they don't want, rather than what they do. I've proposed this to one client and will let you know the outcome in a future column. In the meantime, I would love to hear your thoughts and experiences. Write me and...

Good Luck!

The Email Diva

Send your questions or submit your email for critique to Melinda Krueger, the Email Diva, at emaildiva@kd-i.com. All submissions may be published; please indicate if you would like your name or company name withheld.



2 people recommend this article. 

2 comments on "Negative Preferences -- A Positive Solution To Segmentation "

  1. Chad White from Email Experience Council
    commented on: July 17, 2007 at 12:24 PM
    That's an interesting idea, but I do wonder if folks will not read the directions and instead indicate the topics that they are intersted in since that's how other preference pages work. So they could accidently end up receiving only irrelevant content. I wonder if all the consumer training we've done will cause this idea to backfire. I'll be really interested to see the results from your trial.

  2. arthur Einstein from Loyalty Builders
    commented on: July 17, 2007 at 8:33 AM
    The email Diva is one smat cookie (pending outcome of the trial). From the users perspective It's going to be harder to list everything I don't want - but perhaps I can construct my negative profile over time. What I like about the idea is that it keeps my incoming channel open to new ideas - much as it is in a newspaper or magazine.

    As a marketer I'm conflicted. I'd like to target my campaign as tightly as possible in the interest of ROI - but there are times when I'd like to cast a wider net and acquire new customers. This solution may provide a nice middle ground. So I'm anxious to see how the trial turns out.

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Do you have strong opinions and inside knowledge about the topic of this article -- and do you want to share your insights, observations and points of view regularly with the readers of MediaPost? To be considered as a MediaPost contributing writer, please send pertinent info about your credentials, plus several column ideas and one example of your writing on the topic, to pfine@mediapost.com. Please see our editorial guidelines here first.

MELINDA KRUEGER
  • Melinda Krueger is director of email marketing at OgilvyOne. Contact her at mbkrueger@gmail.com


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