Posts Tagged ‘ECMOD’

Book now for FREE email marketing advice tomorrow @ ECMOD plus at 2.15pm we talk about deliverability with IWOOT

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Come and see us presenting @ ECMOD 7th Oct @ 14.15 email deliverability with IWOOT – sign up here for FREE email advice http://bit.ly/P629m

ECMOD 2009 – FREE advice clinic – on Stand 320a

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Come and see us presenting @ ECMOD 7th Oct @ 14.15 email deliverability with IWOOT – sign up here for FREE email advice http://bit.ly/P629m

Multi-channel home shopping: email marketing opens doors

Tuesday, November 14th, 2006

Following my presentation at last week’s ECMOD event on email marketing, I noticed that most home shopping and e-tail email marketing strategies centre around offering discounts or promotions.

This is despite the fact that one of the major benefits of email marketing is that it is measurable. You can use this information to learn and further refine your communications.

After recently moving into our new house, I’ve been keeping my eye out for any bargains on home ware. This weekend, I found both the answer to over-reliance on promotional based marketing and extra storage in our bathroom.

It was delivered with Saturday’s copy of The Sun. Amongst the numerous pages dedicated to Sir Alex’s 20 years at Manchester United, was a small catalogue for Argos.

Serendipity led me to pick it up and flick through the pages. Before I knew it, I’d found something that would look good in the corner of our new bathroom.

Firing up my lap top, and going to www.argos.co.uk, I discovered that I could reserve the item and go and collect it from my local store, which I did.

On reaching the store, I used the self-service check out. My first human contact with any member of Argos’ staff was when they handed my goods to me.

Apart from this being a completely multi-channel experience, it shows quite how much information could have been gathered on me, as I interacted with technology at almost every point:

1. Product preferences: what other products did I browse on the website before buying, and what sort of complimentary products could I be offered?

2. Geography: where is convenient for me to shop, and what items are/are not in stock there?

3.  Intent: I reserved and showed up to collect and buy, proving that I am a ‘serious’ customer.

4.  Payment preferences: I used debit rather than credit.

If Argos was able to bring this information together it would have a lethal cocktail of information to power targeted and effective email marketing – including:

1. Niche newsletters: I’m buying homeware, so would other ‘mini brochure’ email newsletters on homeware be relevant?

2. Product cross-sell: I’ve both browsed and bought, so could my preferences on individual products be used to power ‘featured products’?

3. Local store: Can specific communications promoting ‘slow’ products in stock at my local store be pushed? Would ‘new catalogue available’ and opening hour pushed drive foot fall?

4. Converted: I have converted into a real customer – could I be pushed to recommend others? Or perhaps surveyed to understand my perceptions of using technology in this way to understand impact on brand value? If I had abandoned without buying, could I be encouraged to convert in the future?

Of course, in many organisations there would be many barriers:

Internal factors:

1. Available resources
2. Integrating data sets accurately and in a timely fashion
3. Internal politics
4. Not enough accurate measurement to prove/disprove the business case

External factors:

1. Is your ESP able to power such trigger based communications?
2. Are your customers happy to be contacted in such a way?

As yet, I have only received a confirmation email only, and to be honest I’m not surprised – my purchase was only 2 days ago. Add to this, that even as one of the more forward thinking catalogue shopping firms, I would fully expect them to will be facing almost all of the challenges above. Over the coming weeks, it will be interesting to see what email communications I receive.

As an email marketing agency with the technology to power many of these communications, I’ve seen a number of our clients achieve significant ROIs and generate the information to build a business case for sensible investments to overcome these challenges.

At the very least, it means that companies do not have to risk brand damage and sales hold back by having to rely on discount based promotions only. This flexibility in the communication plan can only be a good thing and opens the doors email marketing offers to high value companies that cannot use discounting.

Henry Hyder-Smith is Managing Director of UK ESP, Adestra and sits on a key hub of the DMA Email marketing council. More information at www.adestra.co.uk.

Email Q&A’s From The Floor At ECMOD

Thursday, November 2nd, 2006

Last week, I moderated an interactive seminar on email marketing at ECMOD, the home shopping and catalogue event. At the end of each session, we discussed the presentations and the attendees asked any questions they had on email marketing.

I’ve picked three of what I thought were the most interesting questions and I wanted to share with E-consultancy readers my thoughts and invite them to add their own:

When is the best time to send email marketing?

This is a common question that I am asked all the time. The audience were suggesting certain days and times anecdotally but there was no consensus. I ended up completely disagreeing. In my opinion, there is no universal best time to send email.

Instead, marketers should consider these factors:

1. Competition: do you operate in a competitive market with lots of email marketing taking place? Achieving stand out is always more difficult
2. International: are any of your audience in different time zones?
* Available resources: Should you be pushing demand at quieter times for your call centre?
* Life Stage: pushing out campaigns at a certain part of the week works well for some companies. B&Q’s Friday afternoon email marketing always hits me when I’m thinking about the ever lasting list of DIY jobs for that weekend I get handed on my return on a Friday night.
* Response Curves: are you going to reduce the impact of any other campaigns. If you use timeline reporting from your ESP to see when people open emails and how quick from when you send them. If you get all your response within 48 hours (B2B), this may help inform when your follow up campaigns should take place.

For me, one of the biggest indicators is to look at your web analytics and see when prospects use your site most. They are willing and able to browse your site then, so why not use email to begin that customer journey by highlighting key offers etc

How can email marketing support my off line catalogue mailings?

I’ve seen a great number of case studies where email marketing works to support catalogues, and they are best categorised into:

* Teasers: letting prospects know that the catalogue is coming!
* Distribution: circulating digital brochures/ eCatalogues
* Highlight: Creating quick promotional ‘hot offers’ mini brochure
* Focus: Creating specialist niche newsletters which highlight specific product to specific niches. These are used when cost means that offline traditional media simply aren’t viable.

I’ve seen real life examples where it works too. Taking the example of Boys Stuff, who take 75% of its orders via their web site. Interestingly, after the 2m brochure run is sent out, the conversion rate on their site doubles.

Given email is a fraction of the cost of my offline direct mailing, why should I bother to test my email marketing?

Email marketing is a direct marketing channel. It is in its infancy and UK email marketers are getting it wrong. As an industry, we have a lot to learn still.

Access to consumers via email is massive- over 90% of people have access to email once a day and 44% of people have continuous access to email (DMA’s Participation Media Study, 2006). Broadband uptake is forecasted to drive further online sales, and given email marketing’s primary success is as a retention vehicle, this will drive email further.

Yet, UK email marketers are getting it wrong- 63% of people delete email advertising without viewing it (Messagelabs 05) and 56% believe they receive too many email promotions (Forrester 05). We cannot afford to turn people off to email marketing.

This is forcing consumers to fight back. 74% of them claim to have more than one email account, (source: Marketing Sherpa) using specific ones to filter marketing. They’re lying on sign up forms- 53% of them admit to filling in false information. The more they lie, the more difficult it is to target consumers with relevant information, the more they’ll get turned off to email marketing.

UK email marketers need to make sure they are using email marketing properly and effectively and this means testing and learning to improve. It is marketer’s duty to ensure their use of email marketing does not cause long term impact of the medium for everyone.

The seminar was attended by participants from niche home shopping companies through to those with nationwide high street presences. More details on it are here http://www.adestra.co.uk/adestra_at_ecmod and if you’d like a copy of our slides, just email my Marketing Team on whitepapers@adestra.com.

Henry
Managing Director, Adestra

Do eRetailers need to use discounts in their email marketing?

Monday, October 16th, 2006

I’m in the process of moving house at the moment. In my infinite wisdom, after spending my life’s savings on the bricks and mortar, it is the turn of my own wallet to finance a range of home improvements.

To help in this arduous task, I’ve signed up for a number of relevant newsletters including B&Q, Screwfix Direct, Comet and more.

Strikingly, the majority of the email promotion focuses on discounts and offering deals…

What is it that makes the email channel for eRetailers synonymous with offers/discounts/deals?

I’m leading a seminar at ECMOD ( at_ecmod, 25/6th October @ Earls Court) which will focus on email marketing. Interestingly, as a result of my research and talking to the eRetailers in our client base, I’ve come to some conclusions about the use of email marketing in this vertical today.

Many eRetailers use a ‘spray and pray’ targeting technique to push out one size fits all marketing to their database. Despite the intelligence that can be gathered through email marketing including interest areas and behaviour on site/ within the email, the email promotion resembles more mini-brochures and less tailored communications using techniques such as dynamic content. None include any information about any local stores or capture this information on sign-up despite many asking for address.

Despite all the talk of multi-channel marketing and integrating stores, direct mail/catalogues and online marketing, email marketing is being used as a tactical promotional driver rather than a strategic offering. This could be due to how easy it is to measure sales through a web site from your email marketing, but it strikes me that there is very little integration across the channels. This very weekend, I’ve just bought a washing machine from Comet and provided my address and email address to arrange delivery. I’ll be interested to see if the content in the next newsletter changes because of this or any follow-up email communications are sent.

Every Friday, B&Q send their email newsletter just as the DIY-aholics are tuning their minds out of work and into what jobs lay ahead the following weekend. The newsletter states the offers that will be in store this weekend. This is an obvious call to action, but doesn’t include any method of measuring footfall.

Measuring footfall is essential to determining the impact of the email promotion. There are a couple of ways that they can do this:

* Comparisons: woefully at the whim of other retail factors (weather, competitor activity, World Cup etc), this method extrapolates trends
* Exclusive Offers: include in the newsletter an exclusive offer that is only available within the email newsletter. Thus, anyone asking for the offer in store can only have found out about it through the email
* Discount Codes/ Barcodes: Include a barcode image/ a unique code that needs to be quoted to claim some form of offer. Although manual in its administration afterwards, this method will allow you to see the number of people that redeemed the offer you pushed out by email
* Controls: Choose a control area. The email contacts in this area do not receive your email marketing and then you can compare the impact against regions that do receive the offer.

Until email marketers can measure in-store response accurately, then their email marketing will be forced into tactical promotions only.

On the flip side, talking to one of our clients, the offers that these companies use aren’t actually as good as they appear. He was experimenting with bundling complimentary products together for little or no discount. By ‘packaging’ his product portfolio like this, he was driving incremental sales from parts of his catalogue that were traditionally not good sellers.

Email marketing within the catalogue, home shopper and eRetail industry is in it’s infancy. It works and as a tactical channel it is being refined into a very effective medium. Without investments in measurement and integration, it will always stay that way and not reach its true potential.

Henry Hyder-Smith is Managing Director of Adestra.


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