Commentary

Blueprint For Engineers: They Still Read Email Newsletters, But Are Subscribing Less

Email newsletters are fading slightly as an information source for engineers. And this may indicate COVID-19 has induced email fatigue, according to 2022 State of Marketing to Engineers, a study by TREW Marketing and GlobalSpec. 

Of the engineers polled, 89% subscribe to at least one email newsletter, and 55% to at least three. But the latter number is down by 7%, compared with last year. 

In general, engineers turn to the following information sources when researching a product or service for purchase:

  • Supplier/vendor sites — 69%
  • Trade publications (online) — 46%
  • Industry directory websites — 41%
  • Publication emails/newsletters — 37%
  • Industry/association groups — 35%
  • Vendor emails/e-newsletters — 34%
  • Conferences/trade shows — 29%
  • YouTube — 27%s
  • Trade publications (print) — 27%
  • Social media — 12%
  • Podcasts —4%
  • Other — 5%

Despite their low placement in this listing, podcasts are popular -- 73% listen to work-related podcasts during their work week, a 33% increase over the prior year. And 96% consume video for work-related purposes, with 53% spending an hour or more on these types of videos weekly. 

In addition, 83% are willing to fill out a form in exchange for useful technical content. And that’s where firms have a chance to snare their email address and perhaps get them to subscribe to a newsletter.

Overall, 16% of engineers subscribe to 6+ email newsletters, 39% to 3 to 5, 34% to 1 to 2 and 11% to none at all.

People under the age of 35 are most likely to subscribe to 6+ newsletters. 

What makes a winning email newsletter from a company? The elements include: 

  • In-depth technical information — 70%
  • Industry trends and news — 55%
  • Variety of content topics — 36% 
  • Video content — 17%
  • Other — 4%

Engineers also like email when communicating with salespeople — 53% prefer it when they initiate a discussion.

But marketers should be cautious -- engineers list these issues they encounter when engaging with vendors:

  1. Lack of technical expertise
  2. Poor responsiveness
  3. Contacting me too often
  4. Reaching out to me without permission (unsolicited)
  5. Emails with grammar/misspelling issues 
  6. Lack of presence at industry functions, online, etc. 

On the other side, here are the factors most likely to influence them: 

  1. Technical expertise
  2. Responsiveness and customer service 
  3. Innovative technology 
  4. Price 
  5. Referrals 
  6. Company values/social responsibility 
  7. Financial stability
  8. Awards

What types of content do engineers want? They prefer:  

  • Datasheets — 77% 
  • CAD drawing — 45% 
  • White paper — 39% 
  • Tutorial/how-to video — 38% 
  • Product/service overview video — 37%
  • Product review/testimonial — 35% 
  • Case study — 31% 
  • Trade publication article — 28%
  • Print catalog — 28% 
  • On-demand webinar — 26%
  • eBook — 23% 
  • Conference presentation video — 15% 
  • ROI calculator — 13% 
  • 1:1 interview (audio or video) — 15% 
  • In-depth blog post — 8%
  • Corporate overview video — 7% 
  • Other — 4% 

Here are the types of content for which they will provide their information:

  • White paper — 37% 
  • CAD drawing — 35% 
  • Webinar — 30%
  • In-depth case study — 29% 
  • Product configurator — 28% 
  • Video tutorial — 26% 
  • News article — 18% 
  • ROI calculator — 9% 
  • Infographic — 6% 
  • Other — 5%
  • I am never willing to fill out a web form in exchange for content — 17%

Among social media platforms, YouTube is deemed the most valuable, followed in descending order by LinkedIn, Git’Hub, Quora, Facebook, Twitter, Reddit, Instagram and Clubhouse. 

Drilling down, 81% of the respondents spend some amount of time reading or sharing information with their LinkedIn networks. For 52%, that totals less than one hour per week, but 24% devote between 1 and 5 hours, and 5% to more than 5 hours. 

Over 800 engineers and technical professionals across the globe responded to our most recent survey. Of those, 89% were male, 6% female and 5% non-binary, and 1% did not answer. Also, 53% self-identified as white or Caucasian, 15% as Asian or Asian-American, 14% as Hispanic or Latino, 2% as Black or African American, 2% as American Indian or Alaska Native Native, 0.13% and as Hawaiian or other Pacific Island. Another 5% prefer to self-describe and 13% to not answer. 

Professionally, 85% identified themselves as engineers, 8% as manufacturing staff and 8% as working in product management.  

The primary industries included engineering services (19%), automotive (9%), energy (9%), aerospace/defense (9%) and electronics/electronic components/semiconductors (8%). The remainder verticals were 5% or less.   

 

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