It is very interesting to see two sets of research come to very different conclusions this week. First of all, we have
eConsultancy and Adestra's annual review of what more
than a thousand digital marketers in various industries think of their email marketing activities. Then we have an
IBM study, which points out open and click throughs how a sector truly fares
when the data is in.
So with Adestra's survey, publishing and the media is clearly the standout channel. Marketers agree that ROI is high and they are using ESPs to handle campaigns
and are innovating in distributing content that is personalised and mobile-friendly. At the same time, charities and not-for-profits are on the up, as well. Another stand-out is that tech and comms is
way down as an also-ran.
However, when you look at the data, with IBM's figures, media with a 19% mean open rate and 2% click through, media is very much mid-table in the league. The standout
performer is tech, which has a a near one-in-four open rate and a mean click-through of 5%. The latter figure is the best you get, as an industry average, across the entire email marketing spectrum
and coincidentally, is matched by not-for-profits.
So when you ask marketers, tech is not seen as a leader in innovation -- driving ROI -- but publishing is. When you look at the data to see
which sectors are performing, the opposite appears to be the case. In fact, with the top quartile of brands achieving nearly 14% click through rates, tech and computers is a clear winner.
My
first thought on seeing the eConsultancy survey article was that media is obviously going to resonate well with the public because it is bringing them articles they want to see, whereas IT is a
relatively static area. Equipment doesn't change as often as providers email you about it, unlike the news headlines, and generally a tech-related email is trying to sell you something you don't need
to invest in very often.
It would be an easy assumption, but then, automotive should be the same -- but they are up there with both the best performers in IBM's figures as well as the worst.
Interestingly, the automotive sector does well for opens, but the worst email marketing brands within the sector get virtually no click-throughs -- just one in a thousand.
In fact, it's a very
similar story for financial services. The likely explanation is that people want to know what's going on in these sectors but not enough to click through until they are at a point where they are
in-market for a particular car or service. Given the nature of the industries, that is not going to be very often.
However, here's the interesting point. People love tech. They love to keep up
with what the latest gadgets and offers are, even if they don't need a new tablet or iPhone speaker at the moment. That's the likely reason for the sector doing well. The most obvious reason for it
not doing so well when you speak to marketers is that there is a clear disconnect in email marketing about what practitioners believe is good and what consumers tell them they are truly interested in.
When you look at consumer behaviour, tech and computers knock spots off the media, despite what respondents may believe.
I don't know about you -- but I'd suggest the data is the better
means of establishing where brands are going right and where they are going wrong, compared to what email marketers believe to be the case.