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2011: Year Of The Trigger?
by Loren McDonald, Thursday, January 27, 2011 1 PM
Marketers often talk about using sophisticated triggered emails to drive revenue to a higher level, but if the predictions in Silverpop's newest benchmark survey come true, eight in 10
marketers will actually be deploying cart and browse abandonment emails this year. Up to 83% of marketers responded in September 2010 that they either had already added cart reminders to
their email programs or were planning to in either 2010 or 2011. Cart Reminders: Good Start But Improvements Needed If respondents carry out the plans they
reported in the survey, "How Retail Marketers Are (And Aren't Quite Yet) Using Triggered Emails," cart-recovery reminders will become the norm for etailers, putting those who don't
participate at a potential disadvantage:
- 40% said they were already deploying cart reminders as of September 2010.
- 29% said they planned to add them by the end of
2010.
- 14% said they planned to add cart recovery emails in 2011.
- 17% said they had "no plans."
Cart reminders are a logical and lucrative way to
add triggered messaging. They can generate conversion rates of 25% or more and capture more potentially lost sales. Marketers' experiences show that cart reminders live up to the
promise of better performance:
- Higher click-through rates: 87% of respondents said their cart reminders generate average CTR rates of 10% or higher,
compared to only 38% for broadcast emails.
- Higher conversion rates: 86% of marketers said their broadcast emails generated 10% or lower conversation rates. In
contrast, 45% of survey responders reported that their cart recovery emails yielded a conversion rate of 11% or higher-nearly four times that of broadcast emails.
However,
many are missing out on potential revenue by not following best practices:
- Only 17% send a series of three or more email messages. Six in 10 of marketers (67%) send one
message.
- 90% of abandoned carts go cold within an hour, according to MIT research. However, 61% of marketers wait 24 hours or longer to send their first (or only) reminder.
Post-Purchase Emails: Popular but Underutilized While interest in cart-recovery emails is growing, almost 75% of marketers already send at least one (of
eight we listed) post-purchase messages. The customer-satisfaction survey was the most popular kind of post-purchase email, sent by 50% of respondents, followed by an invitation to review
the purchase (43%) and a recommendation based on the previous purchase (29%). However, the survey also uncovered a vast field of untapped potential. Only 2% of marketers who send
product-review invitations follow up with notices that the review has been posted. Fewer than 20% of surveyed marketers send birthday or anniversary greetings, cross-sell/upsell messages or
reorder/replenishment reminders. Why bother with these? Because they represent another opportunity to contact your customers with relevant and personalized messages. Triggered
messages might constitute 10% or less of your total email volume as they do for 63% of Silverpop's survey respondents, but they can generate a disproportionately large part of your revenue in
addition to the positive email metrics I mentioned above.
Next on the Horizon: Browse-Reminder Emails Cart-recovery reminders were once an exotic species
among email marketers but are becoming the norm. Their success is sparking interest among marketers in browse-reminder emails, triggered when a customer browses products on a page but leaves the site
without buying or putting items in a cart. Only 7% of marketers report sending browse-reminder emails in 2010, but 64% said they planned to implement the trigger either before the end of 2010
or sometime in 2011.
Are You Pulling the Trigger in 2011? The numbers are pretty clear: Triggered messaging is on its ways to becoming the norm for email
marketers, mainly as a supplement to a broadcast program. Marketers who wait to dive in are likely to find themselves losing ground to competitors who don't leave as much money lying unclaimed on
a table. Are you planning to implement or expand triggered messaging in 2011? And if not, why not? I'd love to hear your thoughts in the comments. Until next time,
take it up a notch.