The old belief in mail order was that you tried to acquire new customers in a strong economy, then worked your customer list during a weak one.
If that still holds true, the economy must be
booming. Acquisition is now an investment priority for 81% of all ecommerce companies, according to How Leading Retailers And Direct-to-Consumer Brands Are Investing In Digital, a study by
CommerceNext, sponsored by Oracle Customer Experience Cloud.
Retention/loyalty marketing is a priority by only 43%. That, presumably, is where transactional emails would fall.
Further
down the list are brand optimization (26%) and mobile optimization (32%). Even lower are seamless omnichannel marketing (21%), unifying data to get a single view of the customer (20%) and
personalization (19%).
This means companies are going all out to pull in new customers, without necessarily conducting due diligence on the data front. But the results differ by the type of
business.
CommerceNext surveyed 100 executives, and conducted follow-up interviews with three.
Overall, 65% are increasing their marketing budgets this year, and 25% are holding
steady. Only 10% are lowering their spend.
Digital-first DTC companies, those that started out as pure ecommerce brands, are more bullish — almost 80% are spending more. And theyare
allocating more of their total budgets to marketing than traditional retailers.
Among other things, DTC firms are much less inclined than traditional brands to have aging legacy systems (7%
versus 41%).
However, 77% of the traditional players are budgeting more for acquisition, versus 70% of the DTC brands. That may not be a sign of confidence on the part of the former.
Moreover, 70% of the DTC retailers are spending more on retention, versus 64% of the traditional companies.
Otherwise, spending patterns seem to be based on results. Of those
polled, 24% exceeded their acquisition expectations last year, and 53% met them. Only 23% said they fell below the forecast.
In contrast, only 13% exceeded their retention expectations,
while 38% met them. But 42% were disappointed.
This may have less to do with the economy than with the challenge of personalization. Indeed, 65% will boost their investments in customer
data platforms, and 52% in personalization technology.
In another sign of change, 47% are spending more on alternative payment systems, whereas few are allocating dollars to voice-enabled
search or virtual reality.
Where does transactional email come in? It should not be sidelined in the budget.
Case in point: Hammock Gears pulled a 164% increase in Black Friday
and Cyber Monday sales last year with a redesigned website and a more “granular approach to abandonment emails,” Retail Touchpoints reports. COO of Hammock Gear Sally Brown said the
company took "a softer approach to it, adding that “rather than just going right at them and saying, ‘Hey, we know you stopped by, and we know you looked at this thing —
come back and we’ll give you a discount,’ it's generally a courteous, ‘Hey, thanks for stopping by, we appreciate you.’”
Follow-up emails include a 10%
discount offer. And newsletter signups get the same discount, although they haven’t yet purchased anything.