Permission based Email Marketing Management
Permission-based e-mail is essential to both establish customer loyalty
and increase customer lifetime value. However, done incorrectly, it
can easily erode your relationships with current customers. Here
are some important things to consider:
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Get permission
This seems like a simple step. But for some companies, doing this
poorly or skipping this step altogether has resulted in major losses
of business and customer trust. |
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Don’t let other businesses
have access to our customers’ e-mail addresses
This step may seem obvious as well, but many businesses
fail to see the trust broken by such practices. |
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Don’t bombard your customers
with information
If your customers have opted to receive your special offers, limit
contacting them to no more than two, maybe three times a month. |
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Make it easy to unsubscribe
These two steps not only reassure your customers’
trust, but reinforces your reputation as an honest, thoughtful and
responsible business. |
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Display your privacy statement in a prominent
spot
Don’t hide your privacy statement from customers,
let them know what your practices are up front. |
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Build a House List
The first step in permission-based e-mail is building
your e-mail list. Before you build the list, determine what info
is needed from your customers. The information you collect can address
their specific needs. The most basic of lists includes your customers’
name and e-mail address. But if you want to really narrow your target,
dig deeper and find out such things as age, sex, location, household
income, as well as their interests and hobbies. Once you gather
that information, put it in a database.
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of common customer characteristics: |
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• Name • Age
• Sex • Household income • Location
• Occupation • Married/single/divorced •
Ethnicity • Household size
• Hobbies |
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Great ways to build your list
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Phone calls
When your customer service reps contact your clients, create a script
that asks customers for permission to collect information or send
them something of value. |
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Invoices
Use invoices to advertise and cross-sell to customers. Your invoices
can advertise a certain product or service that would appeal to that
particular customer, and hopefully entice them to sign up for it online. |
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Clinics
Clinics and seminars are great places to gather sign ups. Use these
opportunities to get customer permission to communicate with them
further. |
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Order Confirmation
When an order is placed on your Web site, provide a checkbox that
asks your customers if they want to receive more information. Additionally,
when the order confirmation is e-mailed to customers, you can ask
again if they would like to receive further info about products, services
and other items. |
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Internet Advertising
Need a swift, cost-efficient way to build your list? Use Internet
advertising. You can quickly build a list through lead generation
programs, e-mail list rentals, banner ads, content integration, sweepstakes
or newsletter sponsorships. |
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As with anything, practice restraint
We recommend contacting each customer no more than two, maybe three
times in one month, excluding order confirmations, of course. |
Here’s a list of types of e-mail to send
your customers
Company newsletters – send
them monthly and only if it’s double opt-in
Company sales offers – either monthly or
in response to inventory
Unique alerts – Specific information a customer
requests
Determine Email Objectives
Before beginning an e-mail campaign, first
develop your objectives and set goals to measure your success.
Goals you should consider
Reinforcing your brand
Practically every e-mail campaign should be created to meet
this objective. But remember that a brand is so much more than the look
or feel of what you send, even though e-mail enables you to reinforce
this with text and graphics. To truly reinforce your brand, focus on your
quality of service, the sense of value you create and the benefits you
provide your customers. E-mail is a great way of reinforcing those values.
Timely confirmation notices, special offers to your online customers,
quick handling of e-mail requests and responses, and conveniently delivered
information are just a few ways to build your brand through e-mail.
List Building
There are a few great ways to build your list. Use a permission-based
list generated through a third party (preferably an opt-in
e-mail company), or grow your list through viral marketing programs.
Remember that consumer response to poorly conceived opt in e-mail marketing
programs has not been entirely positive. Customers have responded negatively
to campaigns where current list members can sign up other people, because
this goes against permission practices.
Converting prospects to customers
Sure, you have plenty of names on your list, but remember how
many have not bought anything from you. The most successful technique
for converting browsers into buyers is enticing customers with something
extra. Common examples include free shipping and price discounts. Other
examples? Free gifts with purchases, bonus points, or special offers that
target their specific interests.
Cross-sell or up-sell your current customers
Acquiring new customers is always a good goal. But maximizing the value
of current customers should not be overlooked. Current customers are not
only your most valuable sales prospects, but your most highly qualified
leads. You offer incentives to new customers, why not offer them to current
customers? Ideally, your database should contain the purchase history
of current customers so you know which targeted products or services to
offer next.
Develop customer loyalty
Unless your e-mail program is solely created to get new prospects, developing
customer loyalty should be one of your top objectives. To achieve this
goal, create a sense of relevance and value to your customers.
Drive click-throughs to your Web site
If you run an ad-supported Web site, this might be a primary business
objective. If your site is designed to drive online purchases, then this
may be an ancillary objective. But remember: getting people to click through
is usually the first step toward a purchase.
Drive subscription renewals
E-mail is an easy, low-cost method to deliver subscription renewal
notices. Adding a clickable URL in the message that links subscribers
to a pre-populated.Web form delivers an additional measure of convenience
and good service.
Educate and inform you prospects and customers
Every e-mail you send does not need to have a commercial objective.
In fact, if you simply provide useful information, you will most likely
inadvertently meet your other goals including improving customer loyalty
and building your e-mail list. Consumers are more likely to stay tuned
to your messages if they’re not always exclusively promotional.
Communicate with other businesses
Companies are starting to realize the value of online business-to-business
communication. Just as e-mail builds and improves relationships with customers,
it’s also an ideal medium for forging solid relationships with business
partners.
Pre-campaign check list
Perform a lengthy internal check
Now that you’ve covered your bases, it’s almost
time to aim and fire. But before you pull the trigger, make sure you perform
a thorough internal check ensuring that all departments affected by your
e-mail campaign are also ready to go. These departments may include sales,
inventory, customer service, your Webmaster, etc. Make sure each department
is just as prepped to go as you are – there’s nothing worse
than sending a convincing e-mail to sell a certain item, only to find
out sales department is not prepared to make the transaction.
So, when to send?
Which day of the week? There are numerous
theories about which is the best day of the week to deliver your message.
Some experts recommend targeting customers over the weekend. If you’re
launching a business-to-business campaign, many experts swear by avoiding
a Friday send. A recent survey by eROI shows that the best day to send
b2b e-mails is Monday or Tuesday. For business-to-consumer (B2C), the
answer is more elusive. There are no set-in-stone rules, so you might
just want to test and see which day (or days) of the week yield higher
response rates.
What time? Mid-morning or right after lunch
is historically the best time for an e-mail to arrive in somebody’s
inbox.
Get ready to monitor
Once you’ve sent out your message (or messages), you should immediately
start monitoring the responses. This includes everything from bounced
e-mails to replies to unsubscribes. Early monitoring can solve a slew
of problems including broken links and spam issues.
Deliver the E-mail
The final key to your campaign is perfecting your e-mail interface –
literally the “face” of your e-mail. Is it easy for your customers
to navigate? Does it help you gather the most information about them?
The most effective interfaces enable you to do many things: segment your
customer database, deliver personal messages to customers, track the results
of your campaign and move forward accordingly. Benchmark e-mail’s
tools help you track this information.
Great tips for successful e-mail marketing
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Offer something to your customers
In exchange for their contact info, offer your customers something
in return. This can include a free newsletter, a free seminar, or
more information about your products and services. |
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Be economical about the info you
gather
When gathering customer contact information, only ask for the information
you need. Asking for unnecessary information not only annoys customers
and slows down the process, but it discourages them from signing up. |
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Make it easy for them to unsubscribe
Make absolutely certain you provide a way for customers to unsubscribe
from your e-mail campaigns. Unsolicited e-mail or spam will not only
damage your reputation as a business, but jeopardize your future e-mail
campaigns. |
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Constantly manage your contact
lists
Think of your list as an ever-evolving document. When someone opts
out or wants more info, make sure you update that info on your master
list in a very timely manner. Also, since e-mail addresses change
frequently, maintain the integrity of your contact list by carefully
tracking the number of bounce-backs or undeliverable e-mails after
every single campaign. |
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Don’t bury your privacy policy
Make sure your privacy police is clear, concise, and easy for the
customer to find. Respect the terms of your privacy policy and you’ll
never breach your customers’ trust. |
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