What makes an email successful? Delivering the right message to the right person at the right time on the right device. As a communicator, I like to think of these attributes as
context. Here
are some ways to get the context right and improve your program.
Meet the customer on his path. You don’t necessarily need massive customer data files to get messages out that
are contextual and meaningful to recipients. Much of your CRM strategy can be based on common sense.
Consider the following emails I’ve received that contain messages that apparently
suited the vendor but were wildly out of context for me.
-- Travel offers for a hotel located two miles from my home. (I’ve
heard of staycations, but this is ridiculous.)
-- Promotions for pricey sound systems months after I had already bought one. (How
many do they think I can use?)
-- An invitation from a local political writer to join a wellness class about essential oils. (I always knew
politicians were slippery, but still ...)
In terms of existing customers, the right context for an alluring continuing conversation, such as attempts to upsell, resell, or cross-sell, is along
a reasoned path of usefulness. If the customer has just purchased a sound system for her TV, ask her to consider adding or upgrading a different device next. If she bought that sound system three to
five years ago, maybe she’s ready now to buy a new one with the latest technology. Timing your offers well is another key element of the context.
The perfect cross-sell line is,
“Do you want fries with that?” Because that’s the essence of getting the message in context. They’ve bought the burger, so now they need a side dish or a drink to go with it.
They don’t need two hamburgers.
What about new customers? What might they like to hear from you? There’s only one way to find out for sure: Ask them. Every brand’s sign-up
page should be both a welcome tour and a preference center. Show them around the range you offer. Distinguish yourself from competitors. When you ask for their email address, also ask them what
they’d like to know next. Capture those preferences and apply them to the specific email stream they will get.
Remind them who you are, every time you meet. Another important
aspect of context that you need to nail every time is your identity. Don’t be lulled into thinking that in the midst of today’s frantic, fragmented media world, every subscriber remembers
your company or why he/she signed up for your emails.
Consumers are bombarded with nearly 1,000 commercial messages per day. The next time the consumer meets you, she may need clues to your
identity to enable recognition. Remind her of the context in which she signed up for your emails and brand every email with your unique voice, look, and differentiation.
On your unsubscribe
page, use some of the web real estate to reintroduce yourself. It might be just the memory jog a customer needs to stay on your list.
Leverage the physical context. There are two
important considerations here. First is the context of the inbox. Follow best practices to make your message stand out in the clutter. The whole art and science of email is to draw the reader
progressively into the message. Pour your creative effort into crafting a subject line, pre-header, headline, hero image, and introductory copy that work together to pull readers in and get them
engaged with your message.
The second consideration is the device your customer uses. Behaviors vary depending on whether the customer is using a smartphone, tablet, or laptop/desktop. Find
the correlations in your data that show what your customers do on which device: reading, browsing, clicking, buying. Consider how you might tailor the email to take advantage of the context of each
device.
Ultimately, your best strategy is to focus on the point of intersection between your audience’s habits, needs, and desires and the products or services you supply. That’s
the winning context.