Friday, 19 August 2016

Why Email Marketing Is Still Effective

Time for Friday Five, a curated collection of five recent industry-related articles on one topic. This go round it's Email Marketing. 



6 Reasons Email Marketing is Still an Effective Tool



For some reason, “older” has become synonymous with “obsolete.” But this is not always the case. For example, did you know today's LCD screens are based on technology from 1968? It's true. Many companies shy away from email marketing because they think it's an outdated approach, but 59 percent of B2B marketers said email is the most effective channel for revenue generation. And in 2014, email marketing was listed as the most powerful tool for customer retention. You should still use email marketing for these six reasons.



Read the full story on Business2Community.com.



7 Email Marketing Tips For Marketers



Marketers should always use email marketing to stay connected with their target audience. Regardless of the different strategies open to marketers today, you'll find email marketing to be integral to your marketing campaign. This is still the leading channel for getting the best ROI.



Read the full story on Forbes.



Email Marketing Is a Double Win for Customer Acquisition, Retention 



For most small- and medium-sized retailers in the US, email marketing is tops when it comes to both customer acquisition and retention. According to research, four-fifths of these professionals said email helps contribute to this outcome. 



Read the full story on eMarketer



Unlocking the full potential of B2B email marketing



A lot has been written about persuading consumers to click and buy. You probably know of some of the popular B2C (Business to Consumer) best practices. But Business to Business email marketing is different in many ways. Yes, there is a person on the other side reading your email, granted. But he finds himself in a business context, this makes that many of the precooked B2C marketing “rules” don't apply. Whoops! So what does a strong B2B email campaign make?



Read the full story on emailmonday



What Pokémon Go can teach us about email marketing



Last month, Pokémon Go exploded onto the scene, mainstreaming augmented reality and blowing engagement rates out of the water. Now, talk of augmented reality is everywhere, especially in branding and marketing circles. Pokémon Go is not the first app to integrate augmented reality technology into its platform, but it is certainly the most popular. And it's the first time we've seen AR scaled to a mass audience at this level.



Read the full story on Marketing Land.



Email marketing remains a very important tool in a marketer's arsenal. However, if a given email never arrives at its intended target, it won't make any difference. That's precisely why you need to download Email Deliverability: Guide for Modern Marketers.





Thursday, 18 August 2016

5 Reasons You Need a DMP

With more companies seeking to implement a digital marketing strategy that reaches their target audiences in more effective ways while delivering high-quality traffic, the need to incorporate a data management platform (DMP) for your website and apps has become more critical. This is the most efficient process for managing one-to-one relationships. The idea behind the DMP is that it provides a way to collect more data and intelligence on the market, audience, and competition in order to enhance these relationships and build an advantage.



How a DMP Works

A DMP takes first-party and third-party user data from numerous digital marketing channels, including your own digital properties, and aggregates it. In order to understand these relationships it is necessary to know that although the third-party data collection often involves a purchase or affiliation agreement, it provides critical information on demographics or behaviors on the sites you don't own. There's also second-party data, which is data that is brokered between two brands or organizations that provides better targeting for both and more opportunities.



If you simply rely on first-party data, you can benefit from its exclusivity-but you'll be missing out, to some degree, because of its limited reach. Second-party data offers some advantages in its opportunities but generally does not involve any public data. Third-party data has become increasingly taped to get involved in programmatic advertising. If you were to combine all these types of data within a DMP, you can then narrow down your target audience and sharpen your focus for messaging, communication, and engagement; so it's more meaningful and successful.



Why Your Business Needs a DMP

If you think a DMP just manages data, then you are missing a large part of its true value and the reasons why your business needs one. Consider these five reasons why this is the way to go:




  1. Improve your ad buying return: With leaner budgets, but more options available to reach your audience, you want to make sure you have created the campaigns and selected the spots for ad purchases that deliver the most return on investment in the form of greater response rates, higher conversion, and increased brand recognition.

  2. Streamline data: Rather than scattering data across email, e-commerce platforms, customer loyalty channels, and social media; you can bring all that data together into one place, providing a better picture and understanding of your audience, results, and overall marketing environment. The results are more effective business decisions and a better picture of what your marketing strategy needs to look like. A DMP also lets you take in new data and fold it into your existing pool of data simply by adding tags to your website, emails, mobile apps and ads to retrieve new types of data. A DMP gives you greater control over your data and organizes it in the most effective way for you so you don't miss any critical patterns in the information that you could use to drive more revenue.

  3. Effectively budget marketing spend: With access to hundreds of data vendors and more intelligence about the data you have within your DMP, you will be able to more appropriately budget how much you spend on marketing and through what types of marketing vehicles. Every action and cost within your marketing budget has to be accountable and connected to a strategic objective, so a DMP provides the framework of staying on top of those results to continue working within the budget and determining what future spending will look like.

  4. Correctly manage multiple campaigns across devices: The more campaigns and devices you add to your digital marketing strategy, the more complex and cumbersome the marketing process becomes despite the opportunity to maximize your reach. However, a DMP serves as the hub for that activity and can disseminate the necessary data and track the various messaging and devices while gathering more data from each campaign that can be studied later on. This system does the heavy lifting for you and delivers the data in a way that you can easily understand while minimizing mistakes and eliminating duplication in information and effort.

  5. Identify new potential audience segments: A DMP often provides new ways to look at segmenting the audience, which then can call out different groups that you had not previously seen or that you knew existed. It's robust segmentation features slice and dice the available data through rapid processing of information that a human marketer could not get through in years. Therefore, a DMP can identify new patterns and ways of looking at an audience that drills down much farther in terms of audience groups to provide a picture of what they look like and how to create messages that resonate with them.



The benefits of adding a DMP to your marketing structure are awaiting you. Download Mobile DMP: The Backbone and Brain of Successful Mobile Marketing, to help you through the process. You'll enhance your digital marketing efforts and deliver a cost-effective solution for handling and leveraging the massive amounts of data now available. 



Mobile DMP:The Backbone and Brain of Successful Mobile Marketing



Friday, 12 August 2016

How To Run An Effective SMS Marketing Campaign

SMS has become a popular marketing platform for businesses in recent years and for good reason. Its affordable cost and high ROI make it an irresistible marketing strategy. But marketers should be aware that SMS is not a DIY marketing plan.



There are lots of ways to do a texting campaign right and lots of ways to do it wrong, too. To make sure you get the most out of yours and end up in the first category, here are some best practices to make SMS work for your business:



Make Exclusive Offers For SMS Customers

Today, businesses have many points of contact with their customers. Social media, foot traffic, television and radio ads, email newsletters, coupons, pop-up ads and more. With all of these different ways to access your sales and promotions, why would they want to sign up for your SMS as well?



That's where exclusivity comes in. If customers know that they can get access to sales, notices, VIP passes and other goodies only through your SMS loyalty program, then they're more likely not only to sign up but to respond to your promotions.



Personalization

Clients' histories with your business are the building blocks of a great SMS marketing campaign. The more relevant your messages are to the customer, the higher response rates your messages will get which means higher ROI, which means profits. It all starts here.



By analyzing the data you have available on your clients - their geographic location, shopping habits and purchase history - you can aim your texts to them accurately instead of launching a blanket “hit or miss” campaign. A client who shops at your grocery store every Monday may appreciate a “Monday special” of 5% off purchases or a free coffee at your market's cafe.



When you reach out to customers with something that shows you're paying attention to them and know what they like and what they need, you'll not only create more loyal customers, you'll create a more successful SMS campaign.



Offer Useful Services

There are a lot of ways that SMS can be helpful to clients:




  • Advice and tips. Have you just sold your customer a new iPhone? Tips on how to improve battery life or how to use the various features might be welcome. How about someone who just bought some anti-aging products? They might like to know the best tips on how to eliminate crow's feet. What information can you offer your clients that will answer the questions implicated by the products they bought?

  • Appointment reminders. Who doesn't like help remembering all the things on their busy schedule? Support your customer by reminding them about an upcoming appointment by texting. Relying on timely email reminders can be a mistake: customers have overflowing email inboxes and email campaigns show less than 30% open rates.



The day before the appointment is usually the best time to send them SMS reminder - not too far in advance that they'll forget again, but so last minute that they don't have time to make it.




  • Delivery status. Customers want to know what's happening with their purchase orders arriving by delivery. Keep them updated with SMS messages to avoid fielding phone calls or emails which cost your company time and manpower.



Time It

One thing that's easiest for marketers to get wrong about SMS is the timing. Texting is immediate. It won't take hours or days for a customer to check your text. In fact, they're 90% likely to open it within a mere 3 minutes. With this in mind, it's best to send messages that are SMS-timely.



A restaurant wanting to promote dinner to their customers should send the message at the end of the work day when clients are making dinner plans and might be most temped to take advantage of a last-minute promotion at one of their favorite restaurants.



Retailers should also avoid sending a promotional message too early. If your event is on Saturday, don't send a message on Monday, send it on Friday or even Saturday morning. SMS messages are opened and read at record speed, but that also means they're easily forgotten. Send messages when you're ready to receive your customers, and not before.



One thing to be extra careful about is not crossing the line into inappropriate by sending customers messages very late at night or very early in the morning. Generally, if you stick to working hours, you can avoid overstepping the timing boundaries.



By keeping these ideas in mind while creating your SMS marketing plan, you'll get better results with your business and your customers.



SMS marketing campaigns can be a great addition to your mobile marketing strategy. Download the Modern Marketing Essentials Guide to Mobile Marketing and learn how to market to the customers who are glued to their mobile devices.





Friday, 5 August 2016

How to Write Marketing Emails That Get Results

To some, email marketing can seem antiquated and even prehistoric when compared to more cutting-edge tactics such as SEO, social media, and mobile optimization.


Although it may not be the sexiest of strategies, there's no denying that it still gets results.


In fact, “email is 40 times more effective at acquiring new customers than Facebook or Twitter.” Just take a look at how it compares with other methods:


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Also, you are six times more likely to get a click-through from an email campaign than you are from a tweet.


What about ROI?


For each dollar spent, email has an average ROI of $38. Impressive. Here's how Adobe paints the picture:


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And it gets better.


Email marketing is easy.


Check out this data from MarketingCharts.com:


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Email tops the list of “most effective” digital marketing tactics. But look! It's also easy!


Results? ROI? Easy? Effective?


Email marketing is killer. It works. It's awesome. You need to do it.


But in order to truly harness the power of email marketing, it's important to understand the psychology behind it and to know how to write emails that get results.


The statistics say that email marketing is effective. But statistics tell only part of the story. Statistics can't predict whether your email marketing efforts will be effective.


In order to create a successful email marketing campaign, it's crucial to know the tricks of the trade. Getting people to notice your emails, open your emails, click on the stuff in your emails, and respond to your emails is tricky.


Here are the fundamentals of what I've learned over the years.


1. Getting emails opened


Half the battle is getting prospects to open your emails.


Research from HubSpot found that companies with 1-10 employees typically receive a median open rate of 35.3% and companies with 26-200 employees receive a median open rate of 32.3%.


Here's another look at the stats from SmartInsights. Find your industry in the list, and see how your open rates compare:


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These numbers aren't exactly staggering.


I've found that the key to maximizing my open rate is making my emails as personal and interesting as possible.


For instance, I suggest using your first name as your from address.


Why do I suggest this?


The data says so. In one survey, researchers asked “What most compels you to open a permission based email?”


I know what would get me to open an email: the from line!


Do I trust the sender? Do I want to hear from them? Do I like what they write? Is it going to help me in some way?


The best way for me to find that out is by looking at who sent the information.


Just take a look at these numbers. The from line is leading the subject line by double!


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Most people are already drowning in emails and don't want to open something from some questionable corporate entity. But many are willing to open something from a real person, who is reaching out to them one-on-one.


If you are signed up to receive emails from me, you expect to see “Neil Patel” in the subject line.


image05


I wrote the email, so I might as well be the one sending it.


Besides, it gives you, the reader, the authentic sense that you're hearing from me as a person, not some disembodied email marketing software.


2. Writing a captivating subject line


If your subject line is uninteresting, uninspiring, or mediocre, your email is likely to get passed over. Also, if it gives off a spammy-used car salesman-kind of vibe, it's probably going in the trash.


How do you grab attention with the subject line?


I've found that addressing a common issue or concern works well.


For example, you might promise that the contents of your email can help solve a problem, provide readers with valuable information to improve their lives, or make them happier.


Buffer knows that their audience wants to hear about social media tips. That's why they use subject lines like this one:


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Throwing in some power words that stimulate readers and appeal to their emotions can have a tremendous impact as well.


Here are just some of the power words you can use:



  • amazing

  • mind-blowing

  • jaw-dropping

  • blissful


You get the idea. I recommend that you check out this list of 317 power words from Smart Blogger for more ideas.


Here's something I do to save time and effort and increase effectiveness of my email campaigns: I use or repurpose my blog article titles as my email subject lines.


This doesn't work for every industry or email marketing campaign, I know. But it works for me. The goal of my email marketing efforts is to help people with great content. That content, of course, lives on my blog. So, I might as well use the title of my article as my subject line.


3. Pique their curiosity


Finally, you'll want to make it so that readers are so intrigued by the subject line that they can't resist opening your email.


You'll want to pique their curiosity and leave an information gap that can be filled only by clicking.


For instance, a B2B company might use a subject line such as “How to Double Your Sales in Just 30 Minutes.”


One of my highest open rates came from an email I sent asking for people's help. I genuinely needed and wanted the response of my readers.


When I asked for readers' help, it created an information gap between my request and the point of my request. Why did I need help? The result was an insane level of open rates.


I've seen other great marketers do the same thing. Jayson DeMers, for example, created this email subject line that caught my attention:


image03


He even used a smiley face.


4. Writing a killer opening line


Now that you've gotten readers to open your email, you need to draw them in deeper with an awesome opening line.


This is probably more important than you might think.


Why do I say this?


Because the subject line isn't always the first thing that people see!


GASP!


Yeah, I know you've been told that the subject line is the most important element of an email. As I explained above, however, the from line seems to have a higher level of impact on whether or not the email gets opened in the first place.


But is that all? The from line and the subject?


No. The first line of the email is important too.


Most email browsers today display a portion of the message directly in the email browser. You don't have to open the email to read a small section of it.


image00


Depending on the length of the subject line (and the viewport of the browser), the body of the email has two or three times as much visibility!


It's not just desktop email programs that do this, though. Don't forget about mobile devices!


Most mobile email apps show the opening line.


image12


So, what do you write in your opening line?


I like addressing each reader by their first name. This comes across as being personal and authentic, which is key for getting them to read on.


I also like to avoid the classic “Hi, my name is…” routine.


Instead, I prefer to opt for something like “I noticed that you…” or “I saw that we both…”


This approach helps the reader relate to me better and faster. I gain their attention by drawing upon a shared experience.


Make sure you get to the point of your email from the get go. Preliminary chatting might turn off people who simply want to find out what the email is about.


Just get right to the point so that you can make an instant connection.


Notice how Jacob McMillen did this in his email:


image09


Writing like this will earn the respect of your readers. You value their time. You give them what they need. They get on with their lives.


5. The body


This is where it's time to really connect with your reader. It's your opportunity to show how your product/service can provide them with real value and improve their life.


I suggest keeping it short and simple and not overloading your reader with extraneous information.


Remember, the point here is to gain their attention and build some initial rapport. You're just looking to warm them up to advance them through the sales funnel.


You're not necessarily going for the jugular right away.


Be sure to break up text into short, digestible paragraphs.


I also suggest speaking in second person and using you when speaking to readers.


Ask personal questions to give your email an intimate feel as if you're talking face-to-face.


I think HubSpot gives some good examples of this:



  • Do you have unanswered questions about [topic]?

  • How, if at all, would you like to improve your strategy?

  • Is [benefit to them] a priority for you right now?


If you've ever read Ramit's emails, you know he does a great job with this. The paragraphs are short. The tone is personal. And the whole point of the email is spot on: it's filled with helpful, actionable information.


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6. Nailing the closing


Besides the subject line, the closing is arguably the most important part of an email.


It's the point where a reader will decide whether or not they want to act on your offer and proceed any further.


The goal here is to wind down and transition into a well-crafted call to action (CTA).


What do you want them to do next?


Maybe it's to check out a landing page, sign up for a course, download an e-book, or straight up buy a product/service.


Whatever it may be, your CTA needs to be crystal clear.


Tell them exactly what you want them to do next, and make sure there's no guessing what that action is.


Some of us have the mistaken idea that we need to sneak in the CTA or somehow hide it in the email so it's not so obvious. Please don't make this mistake.


Your CTA is the money of your email-the reason why you're sending it in the first place. Make it strong, unmistakable, and absolutely clear.


This email from StackSocial, while not exactly personal, does have a great CTA. You can see it directly in the body of the email-the place where my eyes are first going to look.


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7. Creating urgency


Here's another thing I've learned.


Many people have a tendency to procrastinate. Maybe they're wrapped up in something at the moment or just aren't in the mood to complete your desired action right now.


This is no good because once they close an email, the odds they'll come back to it are slim to none.


That's why it's vital to create urgency so that they feel compelled to take action right away.


Most marketers complain that the “most challenging obstacle” to their email marketing is getting people to take action by clicking on the call to action (or whatever the click goal of the email is).


image11


I've found that setting a tight deadline tends to work well for this.


For example, you might say that an “offer expires tomorrow,” or “get it before it's gone,” or “only 10 spots left.”


This is essential for getting a prompt reply.


Conclusion


The bottom line is that email still matters and can be just as effective as many of the newer marketing tactics.


It's easy to get distracted by creating a sizzling-hot Twitter strategy, building a Facebook group, or starting your live video channel.


Those are all great things, and I don't discourage you from implementing them.


But email still works-although not on its own.


To truly get results, it's necessary to follow the right formula and understand the mindset of your readers.


By following these techniques, you should be able to increase both your open rate and response rate.


How does email marketing stack up against your other primary marketing channels in 2016?