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HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
Email Open Rates: What's the Alternative?
by Loren McDonald, Thursday, May 8, 2008, 2:01 AM

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My previous column, "Why the Email Open Rate Must Die" spawned a spirited debate, mainly on these three topics (click here to read the first column and all 17 comments):

  • Don't kill the open rate, but view it in the proper perspective.
  • PLEASE let it die!
  • What can we replace it with? You don't offer any suggestions other than to say we can do better.

    I stand guilty as charged of not offering an alternative to the open rate in that first column. I will remedy that in this column.

    The Open Rate: Rename, Rethink, Redefine

    So, what are the alternatives to the open rate?

    1. As I understand it, none exist today or in the near future. Some have suggested using CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) to track opens, but many email clients also block CSS. The major email providers (Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail/Live Mail, Gmail) can more accurately track "open or read rates" because the email client resides on their servers and does not have to hit an external server. But, the chance of these email providers sharing open data is as likely as world peace.

    2. So, let's rename it the "Email Render Rate" or something similar that reflects what the tracking images really measure. My proposed "render rate" would more accurately reflect what occurs when images are loaded in a recipient's email client. This includes in preview panes, software clients such as Outlook or Web-based services such as Gmail and Yahoo Mail.

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    This redefinition (nothing else changes) will benefit retailers and others for whom product images are important to conversion. A render rate of 25% lets the sender know that their email rendered with images in 25% of the messages seen by recipients' inboxes or smart phones.

    Analyzing the subscriber base by render rate over time would help the marketer better optimize creative for subscribers who normally view images and for those who don't. As smart marketers and the industry make this shift, I'm sure dozens of other creative uses of the render rate would also emerge.

    3. Next, let's de-emphasize the open rate and focus the email scorecard on output and business metrics. I'm not devaluing email process metrics. In fact, I find tremendous value in spam-complaint and unsubscribe rates, for example.

    But ultimately, the only metrics your CEO and CFO care about are those that measure how the email program supports business goals such as growing revenues, increasing margins, improving customer retention and lowering communications costs.

    Use the open rate if you understand its limits and can derive key lessons to improve your email program. More important: Find the key metrics that will enable you to gain a larger share of the marketing budget.

    4. Finally, let's set an industry-standard definition for "open rate." I don't expect the render rate or other ideas to replace the open rate anytime soon. And, to be clear, my employer Silverpop is not fast at work to rid the open rate from our reports.

    But I do hope those of you who are passionate about this topic will join the discussion and process to help shape a better version of the open rate.

    While many of you disagree with me on its value, I see near-unanimous agreement that the open rate has many flaws and needs to change. Please join me on the Email Experience Coalition's Measurement Accuracy Roundtable.

    Let the discussion continue!

  • 10 comments on "Email Open Rates: What's the Alternative?"

    1. Jon Maddison from EPSILON
      commented on: June 09, 2008 at 1:49 PM
      This is an interesting topic and I'm certain that you're right Loren/David about open rates becoming less valuable for the measurement of a campaign's true impact upon brand.

      But for me there remains a real value in using open rates to determine how to improve a future iteration of your message.

      Irrespective of the 'true' number of opens you get you can still use the open rate metric to compare campaign A with campaign B. (Provided at least the segmentation is largely the same for both campaigns, otherwise the proportion of users that employ image blocking could skew your results).

      CTRs will allow you to compare campaigns as well of course, but open rates have the benefit of only assessing your subject line (and to a lesser extent the time of deployment and From address). That means that you can use open rates to identify more accurately what's good and what's not so good about your message.

      If the open rate for campaign B is better than campaign A then the Subject line, from address or time of deployment are driving this rather than the myriad factors in the body of the email.

      The CTRs might also tell you that campaign B is better, but it's difficult to be sure which factor is having the effect. Multi-variant testing would tell you, but be honest - who runs MVT in every campaign. And would you want to?

      If the CTR is better and the open rate is worse in campaign B, then think about changing your subject line - your results may improve even more. And you would have never known this if you'd only been tracking CTR!!

      So, for me the open rate continues to have a real value for direct marketers - granted it's role has changed over the years, but is that any reason to consign it to the emarketing scrap heap?

    2. Email Insider from Email Insider
      commented on: May 21, 2008 at 10:03 AM
      how on earth did we get from open rates to retna scans... :)))) I do think the terms need to better reflect the intent and action... so I'm in agreement... and it shoudl conform with other advertising standards as well, so don't think simply about email when applying this... the EEC roundtable should get good feedback from media professionals and thought leaders on this as well...

    3. Andrew Kordek from Sears Holdings
      commented on: May 09, 2008 at 5:28 PM
      Loren as always...a great suggestion. However..if someone can invent a retina scan on an email, whereby a system or something invisible would through the monitor scan for a retina to show readership..that would be a million dollar invention. Then we can declare a retina scan rate!!

    4. Nikki Golden from Prism Business Media
      commented on: May 09, 2008 at 5:13 PM
      Why not click-through rate? To me, what's more important than someone who might have opened the e-mail to glance at it before discarding--or whose e-mail system automatically opens the next e-mail when one is deleted--is how many of those people who opened it actually clicked on something within that e-mail. That's the percentage I think we need to focus on.

    5. steve ballmer from microsoft
      commented on: May 08, 2008 at 10:03 PM
      Open Rates have to go, we have a replacement in mind!

    6. Mark Brownlow from Email Marketing Reports
      commented on: May 08, 2008 at 2:59 PM
      I like the idea of "rebranding" the open rate under another name. I suspect a lot of misunderstanding among those new to the field comes from making assumptions based on the word "open," which implies a lot more than it actually measures.

    7. Neil Squillante from PeerViews Inc.
      commented on: May 08, 2008 at 12:07 PM
      Some agencies claim they can track opens with a special tag generated by an ad serving system. The tag apparently doesn't need the user to load images to function. Perhaps this can work in HTML, but I don't see how it could work in plain text. Anyone have the skinny?

    8. Loren McDonald from Silverpop
      commented on: May 08, 2008 at 10:24 AM
      David, Great comments as always. We had a great first eec Measurement Accuracy Roundtable call yesteday and some of the discussion centered on a similar point to yours. The idea that, particularly for publishers who sell ads, there needs to be a reliable metric to report back to advertisers - so we starting discussing thngs like "email impressions" that would convey "total" opens in the old lexicon.

      My sense is that what we are saying is not that there is absolutely no value in a metric that attempts to measure opens/reads/impressions/renders - but simply the definitions and names need to more accurately reflect what is actually being measured. So in a branding sense, think it of it more in terms of a company changing its name to better reflect its current product portfolio and market environments.

    9. David Atlas from GOODMAIL SYSTEMS
      commented on: May 08, 2008 at 10:22 AM
      We have this issue all the time: As soon as someone tests CertifiedEmail they compare to open rates and voila, open rates go through the roof, 30-40% higher on average with CerifiedEmail. David B is right -- this is measuring something useful, for sure -- but to Loren's point, does open rate measure "opens" or really more rate of rendering images? Since CertifiedEmail automatically renders all links and images on default, that means all the tracking beacons are rendered, and so what you get is a measure really more of "rendering lift" than "open lift" -- useful as a metric of improvement in the service level agreement of the deliverability system, but not really a measurement of consumer engagement per se.

      We routinely tell our senders to ignore open rates; since opens have historically been used, they still track them of course. But the real metrics showing lift in user response come through click throughs and any downstream business metric -- conversions, average order size, rev and profit per email.

      Interestingly the direct marketers get this; they look at CTR's and the rest, but I've noticed the brand marketers are the ones who still tend to cling to opens equally strongly. I guess it comes down to whether your orientation is "impressions" (which "opens" or "render rate" certainly improves -- they see it in a preview pane) vs. "responses" -- assuming we have educated senders, we could be seeing a difference expressive of brand v direct orientation ...

    10. David Baker from AvenueA|Razorfish
      commented on: May 08, 2008 at 9:27 AM
      Don't you think this varies? If you are in AOL and you click to open the message, click to enable images, you get a measured impression... that's a VALUABLE metric in some terms.. it does show an intent... if you are outlook and images are blocked by default (which is pretty standard), and someone enables images, isn't that a valuable metric if someone takes that initiative?

      I agree it's less valuable as a critical KPI, but it still has reach value and we won't get away from it until media people quit putting values on CPM and impressions in media that don't show user intent ..

      It's not that easy to say it's not important any longer, since it's been a held metric and benchmark for years... I use it for total reach more than campaign over campaign value...but it's also more useful to look at in the domain breakouts and then you can discount the value by environments that are more skeptical in how they render images automatically. But if an email is clicked and opened (Hotmail, Gmail, AOL and alot of other environments that don't support preview panes), it's still valuable as an engagement value. Especially if you are a brand marketer...

      Don't discount it too quickly...

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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.

    LOREN MCDONALD
    • Loren McDonald is vice president of industry relations for Silverpop, a leading provider of engagement marketing solutions for both BtoC and BtoB marketers.


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