Tag: campaign management

Lyris introduces new marketing automation platform called Lyris ONE

email_marketing_lyris_oneLyris, the US marketing automation service provider, has launched a new platform called Lyris ONE. The all caps ONE in the name supposedly means that it all integrates into ‘one’ channel, this is also described in the product description from the product page:

Lyris ONE is the first solution to natively integrate deep behavioral analytics with real-time data processing to provide marketers with actionable insights that optimize targeting, messaging, and campaign performance.

The product tour video gives more insight into the platform: Read more

Timing is everything…or not?

 

timing_is_everything_in_email_marketingFor a while, there has been the assumption of certain sweet spot moments per day to send out an email campaign: 8AM here, 1PM there, 4PM on a Thursday but only if there are two doves on the window sill…you know the drill.

I believe in certain sayings. Timing is everything is one I use every once in a while: to note certain specific situations, photographs happening to have ‘perfect timing’, that stuff.

Is there something like perfect timing in email marketing? It seems it doesn’t matter anymore, excluding some specific timed offers. Tim Watson already wrote about this a while ago, and it is becoming even less of an issue these days. The reasons for this would be diverse, but I can name a few nice candidates.

 

Email everywhere, all the time

 

One of those is mobile. People are not chained to a desk anymore. They read and send email throughout the day, whether early morning while still in bed, on the couch during the movie on the tv or at the office while waiting for coffee to get into the cup.

In the old days, the daily number of touchpoints would be much lower, even if you were a desk jockey and working on a computer. There simple was a lot less email in the old days, so it wasn’t as important as a communications channel as it is now. The telephone, fax and such had much more importance then.

This makes timing less of an issue when it comes to landing in the inbox: it becomes more of an issue when it’s about truly reading and acting upon your email.

 

Where did I put that email from 1999?

 

This is where the second reason would come into play: people revisit emails more and more. It is one of the silent powers of email, compared to many other channels: it is patient. It just sits there, in an inbox, until something is done with it. Read, forwarded, clicked through: it doesn’t matter. You have delivered your marketing message: the receiver now has to decide what to do with it.

Certain emails have a higher chance of being saved: event notifications and reports, registration and login information, invoice or reservation emails. If you send out a lot of those, be sure they are as perfect as you can get them: they will be revisited a lot.

 

This one’s still got a heartbeat, doc!

 

A third reason which plays into mobile and email’s patience is inbox triage: these days more and more people skim their inbox first, sort out emails and afterwards, return to actually handle email. They do it either with tools or their own sanity, but it helps in handling big email volumes.

This last one gives the email marketer of today an advantage: make the intro (subject line, pre-header) of an email interesting enough to have someone at least not delete the message, or better: mark it to read it later. This will make sure that a person will engage with the email content at a moment that suits them better than the moment they receive the message. Awesome, right?

 


I sometimes say that the best time to send an email is when the chances are highest that the receiver will read/engage with the email. It seems the receiving end has slowly grown to that themselves over the years now, and that email marketers don’t have to worry about ‘timing is everything’ anymore – some exceptions about timed offers excluded, of course.

If you have a certain experience about timing and email campaigns you’d like to share, let us know in the comments!

 

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Email as primary marketing channel, not a last resort

karate_email_catch_flies_with_chopsticks_like_Mr_miyagi

Catch subscribers’ attention like Mr Miyagi caught flies with chop sticks!

Just recently I heard about a company that quit their email marketing for a very strange reason: business was doing well, and they’d only need email marketing if things would turn ugly for them. How strange is that?

There are several reasons email is fantastic as a marketing channel compared to other (online) marketing channels in terms of building a relationship with prospects, clients and subscribers. Read more

Helping Klout improve its email marketing score

Yes, Klout is having a bit of a low email marketing score, probably about 10 or 20 if we use their rating system but in this case, for overall email marketing quality of an email message. After some discussion yesterday, I’ve decided to write a post about it. There are a few things wrong with the email they sent yesterday.

Here’s a quick roundup of points that I noticed, and the email from Klout upon which it is based:

1. Sender address: do-not-reply > why? You send me a message via email, I want to respond via email. Simple. Talking about alternative channels really doesn’t do that much good, even when it works: it’s just unfriendly! Even ‘notify@klout.com’ would be better.

2. No pre-header text: online version? Unsubscribe? Tagline? Content summary? Snippet text? It would help in getting people to read on, or even open the email in case of the snippet.

3.  Personalization: Hi Lan, > apparently the name of the marketer sending this email campaign at Klout was hardcoded in the email sent to the list – See Twitter convo here.

4. No text links, only images clickable. That means fewer clicks, especially from people who cannot or do not want to download images.

5. Email Prefs goes to a Twitter/Facebook signin page, not an email prefs page. It should work immediately: the email knows who I am, therefor the link will know, therefor the landing page should know. Don’t make it a hassle for me to adjust prefs by letting me log in to Twitter or Facebook and -then- sign in to my Email Prefs. Read more

Email Marketing Insight: advanced email marketing means total integration

Remember the Email Marketing Insight post ‘How are your basic email marketing skills?‘. I posed that advanced email marketing was all about automation, and high-end about total integration. But looking back to that post I’m actually inclined to say that that total integration part already starts at advanced email marketing.

Here’s why. Imagine having a small email campaign running on your email marketing platform. It’s got some forms, some notification emails and such. The results and effectiveness of that campaign however often do not show up in your webshop platform or your CRM tool. There’s no connection, no integration between the systems: they are silos of data.

What if something goes wrong with the campaign? What if you get odd signups, notification emails are not sent or there’s no followup by your sales people? The only way to keep track of all that efficiently is by having one central point of reporting: a dashboard in your webshop or CRM platform. That way, everything from a simple email campaign as the above example all the way trough to customer lifecycle management campaigns (aka drip campaigns) can be monitored and managed.

Read more