Jun 09

As the old saying goes, timing is everything.  I can’t think of many areas that this is more true than in email marketing.  Great email marketing is all about timing.  Prompt welcome messages, great educational messages, instant confirmation messages, and relevant and timely offers are the basis for good programs.  It’s a good idea to do a periodic “timing tune-up” to make sure things are flowing smoothly.

I believe there are a few key times when you can get your message out and establish a strong relationship with your customers.

  • The Welcome Message – A quick thank you message is crucial.  Acknowledge that you have my information.
  • Education Messaging – I love the series of messages after sign-up that do nothing but tell the customer about your site, where to get help, what to expect from the email program, and other great things you offer.  Customers are open to this type of dialogue after they sign-up and appreciate the fact that you aren’t hard selling them right away.
  • Confirmation Messages – These are so critical from a timing perspective.  When we make a purchase, we’re conditioned to look for a confirmation email right away.  If we don’t see it, we start to panic.  Panic leads to a call to customer service, which leads profit right down the drain.
  • Relevant Messaging – Nothing better than a company anticipating what we want before we want it.  It’s impressive to the consumer and keeps you top of mind.
  • Cadence – Do you send too many messages?  Do you not send enough messages?  A thorough statistical analysis of your numbers can help you determine cadence.  Sometimes less is more, and sometimes more is better.

I encourage you to put yourself in the shoes of one of your customers.  Walk through the sign-up process and make a purchase as if you were a new customer.  What do you think?  Do you pass the timing challenge?

May 20

Writing effective subject lines is one of the most critical pieces of the Email Marketing process.  Visualize your Inbox.  What do you see?  You see a from name and a subject line, that’s all that you’ve got.  Talk about making a first impression, the subject line is basically it.  You want to improve your open rate?  It’s all about the subject line.

Here are some tips for writing great subject lines.

  • I like to Identify Yourself – It shouldn’t overwhelm the recipient, but I believe familiarity is good.
  • Keep it short – 50-60 characters is about right for the subject line.
  • Strong Call-to-Action – Open rates are almost entirely based on the subject line, tell me why I should open your email.
  • Choose Your Words Carefully – Stay away from “spammy” words like FREE, LIMITED TIME, CALL NOW, CREDIT, AMAZING, and other similar words.
  • Tell the Truth – Don’t even think about writing a misleading subject line.
  • Test – This is one of the easiest variables to test, try different things.
  • Adapt – Don’t remain stale.  Familiarity is different from burn-out.

I encourage you to take a new look at your subject lines.  Think about the subject line in the context of a brand-new customer.  Do you recognize the sender?  Are you interested in finding out more?  Do you trust the content?

Happy subjecting!

May 17

If you work with me at all, you’ve heard me ask this question.  Why do you send email? I will usually preface it with something like.   This is going to sound like a an odd question, but… It IS an odd question, but one that almost all of the time, doesn’t get a real answer.  It seems strange that we wouldn’t know the reason we send email, but most of us just do it because that’s what other companies do.

Let’s dig a little deeper into my question.  Here are some reasons why a company or organization would send email marketing messages.

  • Acquisition
  • Transactional messages
  • Traditional Marketing
  • Build Brand Awareness
  • Newsletters
  • Revenue Generation

All of these are very valid uses of the email channel, but they are all very different.  Knowing what you want to accomplish before you actually start trying to execute can make a huge difference in the route you take.  Strategy is something that every email program needs.  Everyone doesn’t need to spend 50 hours per month analyzing each open and click, but you should have some type of plan.  The end-goal dictates what content you will send, how often you will send it , and the construction of the messages.  Your audience can differ greatly based on the types of messages you want to deliver.  Certification requirements can change based on the types of email delivered.  Strategy can mean many different things, but above all it means being prepared with a beginning, middle, and a long-term plan.

You have a budget each month based on how much you make and what you have to spend.  That’s all a basic email strategy needs.  You know how much of what variable you need to produce, and the strategy is a plan (or budget) of how you need to get there.

I hope when I ask the question in the future, I get some snappy responses.  The better prepared we are, the better our email marketing results will be.

May 12

Please allow me to introduce myself.  My name is Kevin Senne, and I am a Senior Strategic Consultant here at Datran Media.   I am focused on the Email Marketing side of our business with StormPost.  I have been with Datran since February, but I have been around the Email Marketing business for over a decade.  I am looking forward to sharing my experience and knowledge with all of you.  I wanted to start today, by telling you a little bit about me and the things that make me tick.

I live in Fort Worth, Texas with my wonderful wife of twelve years, and our two children ages 7 and 4.  I have worked in the technology/internet industry since 1995.  My first internet gig was doing support for the original version of MSN.  I also worked for GTE Internetworking and did a stint as a developer focusing on Cold Fusion.

My email career started in 2000, when I was hired to start an Email Marketing team at Travelocity.com.  Travelocity was a great place to work and l arrived at a time when email was on the verge of explosion.  When I started, we had a single L-Soft (remember list digests?) machine that I could feed about 3,000 messages at a time.  If you dropped too many messages, it would take hours to “unspool.”  I was tasked with sending campaigns of 10+ million messages just like this. The drops would take 30+ hours.  Everyone would leave the building except me, and when they came back, I was still there.  It was great fun!  That is the email definition of “kickin’ it old skool.”  Sleeping on the floor under the desk was an adventure, but also a wake-up call to the future.  I began building a system that would exceed the demands of highly targeted messaging to a massive audience.  I stayed with Travelocity for 7+ years, and in that time we built one of the most advanced email programs around.

I left Travelocity in 2007 to run Deliverability for Premiere Global Services on the ESP side of the business.  Premiere was also a great learning experience for me.  Coming from the client side, it gave me a unique perspective on the email world.  While at Premiere, I worked on Strategy, Deliverability, Social Media, SMS, and sales support.  I learned that most companies who send email have a great opportunity for growth.

I arrived here at Datran Media this February.  My focus is on Strategy, Deliverability, and Social Media.  I am a Email Marketing geek.  I have 300+ social media profiles, and subscribe to more email marketing programs than I care to admit.  I am looking forward to sharing some of the tricks and tips that I have picked up over the last several billion messages delivered.  Our world is all about conversations, and I can’t wait to begin this one.

Apr 21

What does it take to be a great email marketer? We’ve asked you to have and maintain a great reputation. We’ve asked you to be honest with your recipients. You have to be exactly who you say you are and send what you say you’re going to deliver. You can’t pretend to be something cool like a doctor or stuntman to impress potential recipients. As if all those requirements aren’t tough enough, we’re now going to ask you to make one final commitment: engagement.

We only just met. Now we’re talking engagement? I know the mere thought of commitment makes some of you break out in a rash. Understandably, engagement can be a pretty scary prospect. But take it from me, there’s nothing to fear. Now is the time to embrace engagement in a big way because engagement is the new black, the way of the jungle, the bee’s knees, and the cat’s meow all rolled into one. Engagement will be the single most important buzzword you hear in email marketing this year.

Here’s the skinny on engagement. Every day, the path to your customer’s inbox gets more and more narrow. ISPs are now not only looking at your reputation, mailing history and content before deciding to deliver to the inbox or the bulk folder, they now want your recipients to actually engage with your messages. Engagement in its simplest form means that when an email arrives in an inbox, it is actually opened and clicked. If messages aren’t engaging to their recipients, ISPs have started to help recipients out with inbox maintenance. You read that right. Messages that don’t generate clicks and opens will be filtered to the bulk or spam folders.

So what does this mean for senders? It means we’ve got to make ourselves presentable very quickly. Our reputation still matters. Our identity and infrastructure still matter. But, now we also have to be charming. You can put your best foot forward in email by following some of these best practices:

  • Only send messages with a clear purpose and message — all email should have a clear and identifiable call to action
  • Email templates should resemble your Web site to help with visual identification
  • “From” names should clearly identify your company and not change
  • Subject lines should clearly explain what your message is about

Commitment is good once you take the first step to building a long lasting relationship with your customers. Go out and get engaged!

Dec 09

Looking for unique ways to drive increased visitor traffic to its Web site, PGATOUR.com. reached out to Datran Media to explore testing live, streaming videos within the body of their emails. Having never leveraged video in email before, embedding live video snippets within the email was a unique challenge, one that certainly paid off with increased clicks and a DPAC award for Best Email Marketing Campaign in 2009.

Last night in New York City, both PGATOUR.com and Datran Media were honored by DPAC as one of the innovators in the rapidly morphing media and marketing industry. Congratulations!

Using state-of-the-art technology with its email platform, StormPost, Datran Media helped PGATOUR.COM deliver groundbreaking email messages with live streaming video embedded within the body of the email. PGATOUR.COM discovered its fans favored video emails over the static email message. Initial campaign results revealed that emails with video received a 34 percent click-through rate versus a 14 percent click-through rate for the emails without embedded streaming video. PGATOUR.COM now plans to integrate additional KPI metrics into the measurement plan it employs as it embeds video into more of its fan-focused campaigns.

Click here to see a summary of this campaign:

http://www.datranmedia.com/pgatour/

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