Not to be harsh, but you might be one of the biggest stumbling blocks to success if your email program isn't producing the results that you know it should.
After years of working with email
marketers, I've compiled a list of 20 work habits or mindsets that stop progress in its tracks. Here are the first 10. Do any feel familiar?
1. Relying on meaningless metrics: "Process"
metrics like opens and clicks are easy to measure and have value, but "output" metrics like conversions and revenue per email measure email effectiveness more accurately and resonate with
management.
2. Data laziness: Are you drilling deep into the numbers to gain useful insights -- or just scanning the default reports from your email technology? High-level reports and
dashboards are great for taking the temperature of your program, but for making decisions and truly understanding your customers, you need to transition to a deeper analytics and business intelligence
mindset.
3. Benchmarking bunk: Stop obsessing about the latest benchmark study that claims the average open rate has declined 0.7% over the previous quarter. Hogwash. "Average" is the new bottom. Benchmark yourself against the best performers, like-minded companies, similar email
program types -- and, most importantly, against yourself. Then hold yourself accountable for acting on your findings -- otherwise, what’s the point?
4. Underutilizing your technology
vendor(s): When you selected your latest ESP, you chose it because of its great APIs, dynamic content, advanced segmentation and program automation features. But, there you are, still stuck in
batch-and-blast mode. Take advantage of those great features, and take your program to another level.
5. Overlooking intra-department resources: Could you piggyback on staff resources,
databases, software and knowledge in other departments? You're all trying to get revenue from the same customers; find where you can join forces to do it more efficiently and effectively. Audit what
marketing technologies your company is already paying for, and figure out how you and your team can leverage them.
6. Underinvesting in staff education: Education is key to enabling
growth of your team’s knowledge and skills. Fight -- fight really hard -- for budget and resources that will allow you and your team to attend vendor and industry conferences. If you can’t
get the travel budgets, take your team to local seminars, and watch recorded sessions from conferences. Turn free Webinars into group training and discussion sessions.
7. Waiting for
consensus on best practices: The email gods aren't going to hand you a single set of best practices on engraved tablets. Educate yourself instead. Use common sense, starting with generally
accepted best email practices, and then testing and figuring out what works best for your customers, product and culture.
8. Institutional ignorance: When was the last time you
engaged with your own emails and Web site processes? Gather your team together regularly to audit your entire email program, from pre-opt-in to post-opt-out, on every email reading device. Click every
link and test every procedure so you are seeing what your customers see.
Don't forget the Web experience, from preference center, landing pages and account registration to shopping cart.
Review every key page or function, even if your department doesn't own it. If it doesn't work properly, your email-marketing program suffers.
9. Settling for status quo: In a lot of
companies, email marketing is hot again, having survived the faddish social media threat. Use this heightened awareness and your knowledge of email's power and revenue to become a change agent inside
and outside your department. Don't let others dictate email's place in the revenue-generating hierarchy.
10. Ceding control: Did your progress stall because you had to wait for another
department to make a decision on something like a new CRM platform? Ask to get in on the discussion, because it affects your email program. Email marketing probably plays a critical role in your
company’s CRM initiatives. So, don't sit back and let other departments make key decisions on vendors and initiatives without your significant involvement.
In the next column we'll look
at the final 10 bad habits.
Until next time, take it up a notch!