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Apr
27

What drives your campaigns?

As a marketing executive for an Internet retailer, it’s a good habit to ask what you want to accomplish from your next email marketing campaign. One or more of the following categories can be used as a strategy or objective to drive your next campaign.

  • Branding or awareness
  • New customer engagement
  • Demand generation
  • Up-sell or cross-sell
  • Re-engage dormant customers
  • Pre/post – purchase communications
  • Encourage purchase completion
  • Promote partner offers

These could be fresh campaigns created from scratch or automated/trigger campaigns that kick in because of customer’s actions or lack thereof.

Please remember that we are not talking about email blasts here that go out to everyone on the list on a regular basis. Instead, these are well thought out campaigns with clear goals targeted at specific segments of your customer base and can be effectively measured during as well as at the end of the campaign. We strongly believe that having these categories will help the marketing executive of an Internet retailer effectively use email as a vehicle to retain customer base and grow revenues in a cost effective way.

 

Written by Suda Madabusi
April 27, 2011 10:51 am
Posted in Campaign Strategy, Email Marketing, Internet Retail
No Comments »
Oct
21

Are your marketing campaign practices helping or hurting you?

I made some quick observations looking at the campaigns I receive in my inbox:

  • First, the subject linesĀ from the same brandĀ do not vary much from one campaign to the next. There is one mid-major retail+online brand that sends me campaigns with the subject line – “x% of Everything …..” – every single week. It’s a cue to the subconscious mind that if I don’t open today, nothing is lost. There is one coming in the next few days.
  • Second, the subject lines lack personalization and what I mean by that is it addresses the general populace and not me in any specific way. Of course, you may need to send some campaigns that is not addressed individually such as timed demand gen offer, new product introductions, etc.
  • Third, when I open these emails, it’s very clear that it is a generic campaign that was sent to hundreds or even thousands of customers or subscribers and often includes a graphic that’s on the sender’s home page. It’s a generic, demand gen campaign. Not that there is anything wrong with it. However, the more often a marketer sends these, the sooner it loses relevancy to the recipients.
  • Fourth, there seems to be very little effort exerted to mine a customer’s past purchase history when creating campaigns. I am referring to those businesses, such as an Internet retailer, which do have end user transaction data and history. Yes, there are good brands that use web analytics software & automation to track your moves and send campaigns. Still, a number of these fail to stay relevant.
  • Fifth, is campaign frequency. This ranges from 2 a day to no specific frequency at all. A west coast wine firm sends me 2 campaigns a day even when it’s been months since I opened any of their campaigns. Not that I don’t like their product offerings but I am disenchanted with the rapid fire frequency and have no way of managing it other than completely unsubscribing from the list.
  • If you are a marketer and have embraced some campaign practices that result in some of the issues mentioned above, I encourage you to contact us for a free consultation to discuss about the limitations and challenges you or your team faces and how they could be managed better.

    Written by Suda Madabusi
    October 21, 2010 11:09 am
    Posted in Campaign Strategy, Email Marketing, Internet Retail, Marketing Communications, Retail
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