Consumers worldwide will share their email address with a brand more than any other personal detail. But most never open emails they subscribed to, according to The Mobile Customer Imperative, a
study released Wednesday by Airship.
Of the consumers polled, 77% will provide their email address. Next, they will supply their name (67%), interest relevant to the brand (67%) and
communication preferences — i.e., channel, topic, and frequency (59%).
In contrast, 55% will give their postal address, while 53% will provide their mobile number for text
messages, 43% will give their securely stored payment information and 41% will give their mobile number for calls.
Email clearly rules in this area. But having subscribed, consumers are
likely to delete or ignore brand emails — 14% always, 34% often and 30% about one half of the time.
Consumers in the U.S. exceed these averages — 16% always unsubscribe
35% often, and 29% about one half of the time.
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Boomers are most likely to frequently or always unsubscribe — 48% do so, as do 40% of Gen X, 39% of millennials, and 38% of Gen
Z.
In general, consumers worldwide say the following:
- I often unsubscribe from brand emails — 41%
- I mark for deletion by scanning who it is from — 35%
- I mark emails for deletion by screening subject lines — 34%
- I use a secondary email account that I rarely check — 20%
- I don’t check email — 16%
- I provide anonymous
email addresses (e.g., via Sign in with Apple) — 10%
- I provide fake email addresses — 7%
- Other — 1%
Of course, the report is tilted toward mobile apps, and it documents robust growth in app usage, with 75% of shoppers using them more or the same than before the pandemic.
Drilling
down, 51% are using them more for social media, 47% for media & entertainment and 39% for retail.
Why do people opt out from email and other messaging on smartphones? The reasons
are:
- Messages were too frequent — 51%
- Information not relevant/personalized to my needs — 40%
- Messaging was duplicated across channels (same information across email, SMS, app, etc.) — 32%
- Unable to control the types and topic of
messages received — 31%
- Messaging was too promotional — 27%
- Didn’t receive enough value/discounts
— 27%
- Other — 1%
In the U.S., only 34% say the messages are too frequent.
As for opting
in, consumers cite these motivations:
- Earn immediate discounts or loyalty reward points — 35%
- Shipping/delivery
or curbside pickup alerts — 25%
- Order confirmation/receipts — 25%
- Early access to big sales events, or exclusive product
drops — 21%
- Broad sales alerts & discounts — 20%
- Personalized offers based on browsing behavior or past purchases —
14%
- Special offers triggered by your location — 13%
- Product warranties —
13%
- Other — 18%
Globally, German consumers seem to be the most cautious: 36% will give a brand their phone
number for text messaging and 29% for phone calls, whereas in India, 72% will do so for texts and 68% for calls.
Airship surveyed 9,143 respondents from the U.S., the U.K., France, Germany,
Australia, Singapore and India.