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Free Internet Marketing Lessons
Creating Effective Opt-in
E-Mail Campaigns
by Lee Traupel
It's
been said before, but important to re-emphasize,
e-mail is
the "killer application" of the
information age. According to
the latest Forrester Research numbers, the
permission based e-mail
industry is projected to grow from $164M (USD) in
1999 to $7.3B by
2005. E-mail is also rapidly moving from a textual
communications
process to one that is rich in multimedia content
via server-based
streaming audio or video - virtually anyone, even
those with
extremely low bandwidth, can now view compelling
content. Here is a condensed primer for developing
an effective opt-in e-mail campaign:
1) First and foremost, what is permission based or
opt-in e-mail and
how is it distinguished from Spam? Opt-in or
permission based e-mail
(the terms are interchangeable) means recipients
have confirmed their interest in receiving e-mail
and have signed up (hence the term opt-in) to
receive e-mail about a subject of their interest.
The
recipient may also unsubscribe from the list at any
time and all e-
mail messages are clearly identified as coming from
a specific and
approved vendor or source.
2) We do not recommend Spam (unsolicited bulk e-mail
messages) to our clients, nor have we ever developed
a campaign that is not opt-in based we think
there is a growing backlash to Spam and many of us (author
included) are inundated with it and delete it as
soon as we
recognize it.
3) The actual opt-in e-mail content is very
important, like any
interactive marketing process the subject itself
needs to be
succinct and informative, as this is how most people
filter e-mail,
the text in the message should be concise, with
paragraphs no more than 2-3 short sentences,
customer references should be referred to in the
lead paragraph to drive the rest of the message,
have no more than two hyperlinks embedded in the
content and utilize a close and signature that
thanks people for their time with a link (phone and
e-mail) to a "real" person.
4) Many marketing types don't know whether to use
HTML (rich
media) or textual content a standard rule
of thumb is, if your
target audience is consumers, then many prefer the
HTML format, due to the snazzier graphical content;
but, if your targeting corporate or technical types
the majority of them want a message that is text
only and one that leaves out any/all marketing hype
just the concise facts.
5) Costs can vary dramatically depending on your
target demographics or market segment. A good rule
of thumb is to expect rates of $.05 (USD) to $.25
per message, depending on the size of the media buy
and frequency (the number of times you are using a
list), type of list demographics, vendor selection
(small publisher versus comprehensive services
provider such as YesMail) and market conditions in
the interactive advertising market.
6) What should a good campaign generate in terms of
response rates; i.e. those that clicked through from
your message to a web site or called a toll-free
number? These numbers will fluctuate based again
upon your market segment, product or service you are
selling, type of response rate you are seeking
(download, ecommerce sale, review of materials via a
web site, etc.). But, industry averages are from 4%
up to 20% - unfortunately these numbers are going
south as more and more companies integrate opt-in
e-mail with interactive and offline marketing
processes.
7) Message testing is also a very important
component of this
process meaning, you need to develop 1-3 messages
("creative" in marketing speak) that have
different content and call
to action components. Then test by utilizing 10-15%
of your total
media buy by sending out these test messages and
assessing the
response rates and go to market with the message
that generated the highest return. Be forewarned,
this process can slow the campaign down, but testing
can help you increase your response rates or back
end ROI exponentially.
8) Your interactive ad agency or list partner should
help you
setup "landing page(s)" - the actual page
where people are
taken via a hyperlink in your opt-in e-mail message.
This page should have content that is integrated
with your opt-in message and act as a response
mechanism by capturing sufficient information to
enable you to build your own in-house newsletter,
which in turn helps to leverage downstream media
costs.
9) Finally, the last and most important part of the
process is
setting up tracking reports that will enable you to
carefully analyze
the results from your opt-in e-mail campaign. This
is typically done
by inserting 1-2 lines of HTML code on 3-5 pages of
your web site
(product overview, registration, or home/index pages
for instance)
a report can then be generated that shows the
number of respondents for each page as a subset of
the overall response rates from the campaign. This
critical analysis process will help you understand
the effectiveness of your overall campaign and will
also provide valuable insight about your web site
content, UI (User Interface) and navigation.
Lee Traupel has 20 plus years of marketing
experience He is the co-
founder of a Northern California and Brussels
Belgium based,
privately held, Marketing Services and Software
Company, Intelective Communications, Inc. http://www.intelective.com
Intelective focuses exclusively on providing
services to small to medium sized companies that
need strategic and tactical marketing services. He
can be reached at Lee@intelective.com
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