Welcome | View My Profile | Sign Out
MediaPost Home About MediaPost Privacy/Terms Media Kit Sitemap
Publications Home News
Online Media Daily Media Daily News Marketing Daily Mobile Marketing Daily Search Marketing Daily
Daily Feed> Email Daily Feed> Video Daily Feed> Social
Online Blogs
Online Spin Email Insider Search Insider Behavioral Insider Online Publishing Insider Mobile Insider Video Insider Gaming Insider Performance Insider Metrics Insider Social Media Insider Just An Online Minute Daily Online Examiner Raw Blog
Media Blogs
Research Brief Diane Mermigas:On Media TV Watch TV Board Magazine Rack Media Creativity Notes From the Digital Frontier Digital Outsider Mad Blog Red White and Blog
Marketing Blogs
Engage:Hispanics Engage:Kids 6-11 Engage:Moms Engage:Boomers Engage:Gen Y Engage:Teens Marketing:Green Marketing:Sports
Magazines
OMMA Magazine Media Magazine
Subscribe
Feedback Loop RSS Feeds Archives Subscribe
Feb 24 OMMA Metrics Measurement (NYC) Feb 25 OMMA Behavioral (NYC) Mar 17 OMMA Global (San Francisco) Apr 14 Search Insider Summit (FL) Apr 18 Email Insider Summit (FL) Apr 27 Outfront Conference (NYC) May 12 OMMA Mobile (NYC) May 13 Digital Out-of-Home Awards (NYC) Jun 15 OMMA Video Jun 16 OMMA Publish (NYC) Jun 17 OMMA Social (NYC)
Recently Concluded Events
Jan 26 OMMA Social (San Francisco) Jan 25 OMMA Performance (SF) Jan 12 MEDIA Agency of the Year 2009 (NYC) Jan 11 OMMA Agency of the Year 2009 (NYC) Dec 6 Email Insider Summit (Utah) Dec 2 Search Insider Summit (Utah) Nov 3 OMMA Adnets (NYC) Oct 30 OMMA Video (LA) Oct 29 OMMA Mobile (LA) Oct 29 OMMA Mobile & Video (LA)
All MediaPost/OMMA Events Event Blogging Past Event Videos
Industry Events Calendar
2010 Digital Out-of-Home Awards
2010 MEDIA Agency of the Year 2009 2010 OMMA Agency of the Year 2009 2009 Creative Media Awards 2009 OMMA Awards 2009 Digital Out-of-Home Awards 2009 Media Agency of the Year
All Awards
Employment Situations Wanted Services Offered Post a Job
Briefs Reports Online
MediaPost Directories
Mobile Insiders Group
People Finder Edit My Profile View My Profile My Contacts My Calendar
HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
Sorry We Missed You
by David Baker, Monday, October 3, 2005, 1:00 PM

SHARE

TOOLS

RELATED ARTICLES

MOST READ

So you've tried just about every attention-getting gimmick, tactic and approach to raise response through e-mail, and now you are at your wit's end. As I've said many times before, there are only so many variables in e-mail that you can test, including open rate, click-through rate, subscription rate, conversion rate, transaction rate and viral rates.

The sought-after utopia of marketing is recognizing that the formula for success is to generate the right mix between contextual and promotional content. The e-mail channel -- even with all the bad press and threats from legislation, consumer backlash, and new technologies like RSS -- follows the same principles of any marketing medium, and has and will continue to have consumer value for many years. What's changing is how smart, considerate, witty and "out of the box" we must be to compete within the overloaded inbox.

Thus, I'm continually looking for opportunities to communicate with consumers in ways that are not necessarily promotional in nature. For years, I have provided re-marketing activities (re-sending e-mail campaigns to non-responders) as a method of testing timing - for example, they didn't open it on Tuesday, but did when I re-sent it on Friday. Through this technique, you can get to know which consumers you can possibly reach, and try to eliminate all the barriers (pole position, filtering, etc.). We've tested subject lines as well, balancing the promotional theme with a message that is more simple and personal, such as "Sorry we missed you" or "While you were out." I've used this tactic across many clients and many industries, and in many cases I've had a 30 to 50 percent better response rate than I did using a traditional promotional subject line.

I'm continually amazed at the success of what I like to call "honest" approaches to communications. You see this all the time with apology messages, which often return a 200 to 300 percent better response than the norm. Why? Well, for one thing, most consumers are conditioned to incentives, so they feel any apology or disclosure will deliver some reward. But perhaps most importantly, the messaging is honest and to the point -- it's personal instead of promotional.

Promotional messaging alone will create a numbing effect on your audience over time. And you can, in many cases, condition your users to expect increasing offers before they buy; thus, over time, raising the cost of the sale and the "bounty" to gain response. The retail industry is a prime example of how out-of-control this strategy has become. You can hardly sell anything anymore unless you put a SALE sign on it or offer deep discounts.

As a case in point, I had a client a few years ago that was interested in acquisition through third-party lists. They wanted to test couponing and running promotions through the likes of CoolSavings and MyPoints. We felt the challenge with acquiring customers through these sources was that the consumers were conditioned to rewards, and the cost to continue to market to them was substantially more than other direct methods of acquisition. In this particular case, it was true. We tracked the 30,000 names we acquired over a course of 14 months, and the average response rate diminished to a point where only five percent of this list was responsive, quarter over quarter.

This doesn't mean that you shouldn't use these services and sources, as they have great value. But you should consider how you source contacts-leads, and the curriculum strategy you will use once they enter your digital communications world.

E-mail, while quite linear and static in delivery, is one of the only advertising channels that has the focused brand impact of mainstream advertising (like TV) to communicate unique messages. Yet it has the added value of being inherently measurable, more so than most direct response vehicles. I can hear the advertising strategists screaming now that e-mail will never have the same impact as mainstream advertising, yet those same strategists also don't know the true value this channel offers of alternate channels through complementary messaging and contextual exposure. Life's not a continuous advertisement, so why should your relationship with your customer be one?

By organizing content and messaging into paths that are informational, impact-driven, contextual and peripheral to promotions and offers, you'll begin to find that ideal mix that generates, cultivates and fosters a customer relationship value.

1 person recommends this article. 

Leave a Comment

You must be signed in to comment. Sign In

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.

DAVID BAKER


AUTHORS

ARCHIVES

RECENT VIDEOS
Recent Email Insider Articles
Three Keys To Creating Actionable Insights   
Three numbers: 90; 10; 0. 90 is the percent of total time spent on an email...
Facebook: Friend Or Potential Freak-Out?    
I have come to terms with the fact that not everyone's intentions are as honest as...
It's Not ALL About ROI   
54% of marketers plan to increase email budgets in 2010. Another 43% plan to keep their...
The Most Oopsy-Prone Elements Of Email Marketing   
As an industry, we can learn a lot from the mistakes of our peers. That's the...
Fishy Business   
My encounter with the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife has troubling repercussions for the...
Your Newest Challenge: Mastering The Small Screen   
Thank you, Steve Jobs, for giving me the perfect news peg for my Email Insider column...
Email Campaigns Bloom With Social Media   
Pepsi recently became one of the first companies to pull its Super Bowl ad spend and...
How Did I Get Here? Let's Talk Landing Pages   
Whether you send your subscriber to a customized landing page, a search result page or a...
Hierarchy Of Optimization   
As Abraham Lincoln said, "I walk slowly, but I don't walk backwards." We've made amazing strides...
The Email Humanitarian Effort   
What happened in Haiti is devastating on so many levels, and you can't venture far from...
>> Email Insider Archives 
ABOUT MEDIAPOST • MASTHEAD • MEDIA KIT • RSS FEEDS • PRIVACY/TERMS & CONDITIONS
©2010 MediaPost Communications. All rights reserved.
1140 Broadway, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10001
tel. 212-204-2000, fax 212-204-2038, feedback@mediapost.com