2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

194
FOR THE LOVE OF ALL THINGS EMAIL BUILDING MODERN EMAIL MARKETING PROGRAMS

Transcript of 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Page 1: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

FOR THE LOVE OF ALL THINGS EMAILBUILDING MODERN EMAIL MARKETING PROGRAMS

Page 2: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

• Introductions • Why are we here? • Latest trends and stats on email marketing • How to perform effective email audits • How to select email marketing/marketing automation providers • How to develop short and long-term communications plans with subscribers • How to determine the email metrics that matter • What does the future look like for email?

AGENDA

Page 3: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Name? Michael Barber

One thing we should know about you? I have two Westies, McDoogle & Bowie

Why are you here? To give you all practical knowledge that you can apply at your job tomorrow.

Let’s start with some introductions.

Page 4: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

MICHAEL BARBER FOUNDER // BARBER&HEWITT lover of donuts, ice cream, airplanes, bmw & the arizona wildcats / dog dad / dual-citizen @michaeljbarber

Page 5: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

I’m a big fan of why…

Page 6: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

4.1 billion email accounts across the globe and growing

Source: Radicati Group, 2015

Page 7: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

EMAIL DELIVERS THE HIGHEST ROI FOR MARKETERS

Source: VentureBeat

Page 8: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

REGARDLESS OF INDUSTRY

Source: GetResponse, 2016

Page 9: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

OR SURVEY

Source: Econsultancy, 2016

Page 10: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

EMAIL MARKETING PULLS ITS WEIGHT

Source: The Direct Marketing Association UK

Page 11: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

EMAIL BEATS SOCIAL BY 40X FOR CUSTOMER ACQUISITION

Page 12: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ASSISTS OTHER CHANNEL INTERACTIONS

Page 13: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

AND, INCREASES REVENUE OVER TIME

Page 14: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

BUDGETS ARE OPENING UP

Source: GetResponse, January 2016

Page 15: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

RESOURCES ARE SHIFTING ACCORDINGLY

Source: EmailOnAcid.com

Page 16: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

BUDGETS ARE FOLLOWING FUTURE NEEDS

Source: EmailOnAcid.com

Page 17: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ARE WE SHIFTING ENOUGH BUDGET? MAYBE NOT.

Source: Econsultancy, 2016

Page 18: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

AND, MARKETERS BELIEVE THIS WILL CONTINUE

Source: Litmus, 8 Trends That Will Define the Future of Email Marketing

Page 19: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Email marketing tools are being integrated into CRM, analytics, and digital marketing suites and across functional

areas like sales and customer service. Technology is essentially, at long last, de-siloing email marketing, while

simultaneously bringing us closer than ever to achieving the mythical single view of the customer.

Chad White, Research Director @ Litmus

Page 20: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

CONSUMERS DIG EMAIL TOO

Page 21: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

CONSUMERS DIG EMAIL TOO

Source: Litmus, 8 Trends That Will Define the Future of Email Marketing

Page 22: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

EMAIL PREFERENCE COMPARED TO OTHER CHANNELS

Source: MarketingSherpa

Page 23: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

YEAH, EMAIL & MILLENNIALS SITTING IN A TREE

Source: Litmus, 8 Trends That Will Define the Future of Email Marketing

Page 24: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

MOBILE FIRST

Source: Litmus, 2016

Page 25: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

MOBILE FIRST

Source: Litmus, 2016

Page 26: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

WE READ EMAIL EVERYWHERE

Source: Adobe, 2015

Page 27: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

AND, I MEAN EVERYWHERE

Source: Adobe, 2015

Page 28: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

JUST TWO YEARS AGO…THAT WAS A MILLION YEARS AGO

Page 29: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

BUT, NOW AN EMAIL RENAISSANCE?

Page 30: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

🙋

So, what are you seeing out there?

Page 31: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

BUT, WE GOT PROBLEMSWith all due respect, we (largely) suck at life email.

Page 32: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

On balance, [email is] maybe 10% pleasure and 90% fear of missing out.

Larry Rosen, Psychologist

Page 33: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

78% of email is spam

Page 34: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

94 billion spam messages per day

Page 35: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

$20 billion cost to the global economy

Page 36: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

9 the number of emails I received from one brand on Cyber Monday…WTF?

Page 37: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

HOLIDAY EMAIL AVERAGES

July to Sept. Halloween to Dec. 15

Black Friday

Cyber Monday

Daily average

7

911

12

Page 38: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

80.8% of holiday email was ignored

Page 39: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

UMMM, SUBJECT LINE & WHERE DO I CLICK?

Page 40: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

YOU JUST USED HALF THE SCREEN

Page 41: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TOTAL HIERARCHY MESS

Page 42: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SHARING TESTING IS CARING

Page 43: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

EMAILS EVERYWHERE, WE DON’T CARE!

Page 44: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

NOTHINGNESS

Page 45: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SUBJECT LINE #FAIL

Page 46: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

URL CRAZINESS

Page 47: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

WHAT THE WHAT?

Page 48: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

CAN YOU READ THIS?

Page 49: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

YEAH, NEITHER CAN I

Page 50: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

I MEAN, COME ON!!!!

Page 51: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

WE DON’T WANT TO TALK TO YOU, BUT WE REALLY DO

Page 52: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ARE WE REALLY TRYING THAT HARD?

Page 53: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Email is the office memo turned cancerous,

extended to home and everyday life.

Don Norman, interaction design expert

Page 54: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

🙋

What kills you about email?

Page 55: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

MEANWHILEThe tech around email continues to evolve.

Page 56: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SPAM FOLDERS

Page 57: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

MARK AS SPAM & INSTANT UNSUBSCRIBE

Page 58: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LAYERED SPF & REPUTATION DATA

Sender ID Framework

(SPF)

Inbound Mail Server

Authentication Pass Fail

DNSSPF Record

Lookup

Inbox

Junk

?

Quarantine

Block/Delete

Reputation Data

1 2 3 4

Sender

Internet

Page 59: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LAYERED SPF & REPUTATION DATA

Sender ID Framework

(SPF)

Inbound Mail Server

Authentication Pass Fail

DNSSPF Record

Lookup

Inbox

Junk

?

Quarantine

Block/Delete

Reputation Data

1 2 3 4

Sender

Internet

Page 60: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

MOVED PROMO EMAILS OUT OF THE INBOX

Page 61: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

REDEFINE THE INBOX

Page 62: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

APPS CONTINUE TO EVOLVEOutlook for iOS

• The Outlook app splits messages into two groups: Focused and Other. Over time, Outlook learns who users normally interact with and adds those emails to the Focused group for quick access.

• For users who are overwhelmed by the amount of email in their Focused group, the Outlook app offers a “Schedule” feature that temporarily removes email from the user’s inbox until a chosen time.

Page 63: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

APPS CONTINUE TO EVOLVEApple Watch

• Text is back , baby!

• Not only must we focus on text, need to ensure it optimized for wearables.

• text/watch.html

Page 64: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

WINDOWS 10 UNIVERSAL OUTLOOKUniversal Outlook

• Ughhhh, still issues.

• Images scaled incorrectly

• No CSS3 support

• No HTML5 support

• No support for divs

• No media query support

• Use mobile-friendly layouts

• Use table-based emails

Page 65: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

APPS CONTINUE TO EVOLVEiOS9

• Peeks and pops count for opens

• Watch for engagement drops with iOS

• Consider revamping your content, optimizing your inbox view, and ensuring your messages are mobile-friendly.

Page 66: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

GOVERNMENT GETS SMART

Page 67: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

CASL REQUIREMENTS• CASL regulations apply to any "Commercial Electronic Message" (CEM) sent from or to

Canadian computers and devices in Canada. Messages routed through Canadian computer systems are not subject to this law.

• A CEM is any message that:

• is in an electronic format, including emails, instant messages, text messages, and some social media communications;

• is sent to an electronic address, including email addresses, instant message accounts, phone accounts, and social media accounts; and

• contains a message encouraging recipients to take part in some type of commercial activity, including the promotion of products, services, people/personas, companies, or organizations.

Page 68: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

IMPLIED V EXPRESS CONSENT• Implied consent includes when:

• A recipient has purchased a product, service or made another business deal, contract, or membership with your organization in the last 24 months;

• You are a registered charity or political organization, and the recipient has made a donation or gift, has volunteered, or attended a meeting organized by you; or

• A professional message is sent to someone whose email address was given to you, or is conspicuously published, and who hasn't published or told you that they don't want unsolicited messages.

• Express consent:

• If your recipients don't meet any of the above criteria, then express consent is required before you can send campaigns to them.

• Express consent means written or oral agreement to receive specific types of messages, for example "You want to receive monthly newsletters and weekly discount notifications from Company B."

Page 69: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

EXPRESS CONSENT• Express consent is only valid if the following information is included with your request for consent:

• A clear and concise description of your purpose in obtaining consent.

• A description of messages you'll be sending.

• Requestor's name and contact information (physical mailing address and telephone number, email address, or website URL).

• A statement that the recipient may unsubscribe at any time.

• The requestor can be you or someone for whom you're asking. If you're requesting consent on behalf of a client, the client's name and contact information must be included with the consent request.

Page 70: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

EXPRESS CONSENT• Messages to family or a person with established personal relationship.

• Messages to an employee, consultant, or person associated with your business.

• Responses to a current customer, or someone who has inquired in the last six months.

• Messages that will be opened or accessed in a foreign country, including the U.S., China, and most of Europe.

• Messages sent on behalf of a charity or political organization for the purposes of raising funds or soliciting contributions.

• Messages attempting to enforce a legal right or court order.

• Messages that provide warranty, recall, safety, or security information about a product or service purchased by the recipient.

• Messages that provide information about a purchase, subscription, membership, account, loan, or other ongoing relationship, including delivery of product updates or upgrades.

• A single message to a recipient without an existing relationship on the basis of a referral. The full name of the referring person must be disclosed in the message. The referrer may be family or have another relationship with the person to whom you're sending.

Page 71: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

CASL GONNA GET EM

Page 72: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

KEY DIFFERENCES FROM CAN-SPAM

CASL CAN-SPAM

Address broad range of Internet issues (spam, spyware, pharming, etc)

Address spam only

Applies to all forms of electronic messaging (email, SMS, IM, in-app, etc)

Applies only to email

Applies to “commercial electronic messages” (very board)

Applies to messages that are 1) commercial; or 2) transactional or relationships (more narrow)

Primarily opt-in; permission basedOpt-out; you can technically mail any person at lease once

Page 73: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Marketers are slowly losing our real estate in the Inbox.

Page 74: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Let’s go back to the P’s.

Page 75: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Product, price, place, and promotion. Let’s try some new ones.

Page 76: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PORTABLE“The thumb is king.” Your email must be able to go where the user goes. If it can’t follow the user through his or her day, it's no longer relevant.

Page 77: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SINGLE COLUMN “SKINNY” LAYOUTS.

Page 78: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SINGLE COLUMN “SKINNY” LAYOUTS.

Page 79: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SINGLE COLUMN “SKINNY” LAYOUTS.

Page 80: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SINGLE COLUMN “SKINNY” LAYOUTS.

Page 81: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SINGLE COLUMN “SKINNY” LAYOUTS.

Page 82: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SINGLE COLUMN “SKINNY” LAYOUTS.

Page 83: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

FONTS & BUTTONS, OH MY!

>

Page 84: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

FONTS & BUTTONS, OH MY!

Page 85: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

FONTS

Headlines 30px+

Body copy 16px+

Minimum 13px

Because Apple Yo

Page 86: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

BUTTONS

Buttons 44 x 44 points

Page 87: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

GET TO THE POINT

Page 88: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LET IMAGES DO THE TALKING

Page 89: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LET IMAGES DO THE TALKING

Page 90: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

FOR THE LOVE OF ALL THINGS HOLY, ELIMINATE CLICK HERE

X

Page 91: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

I see interactive as a huge shift in email development. Early analytics have shown far greater engagement from users who receive

interactive messages.

Mark Robbins, Email Developer, Rebelmail

Page 92: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LEVERAGE DYNAMIC CONTENT

Page 93: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

REAL-TIME / CONVERSATIONAL DATA

Page 94: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

DUDE, GIFS FTW

Page 95: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

DUDE, GIFS WORK FOR B2B TOO

Page 96: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

“MAILABLE MICROSITES” VIA @CHADSWHITE

Page 97: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PREHEADERS FOR EVERYONE

Page 98: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TIM JUST MADE TEXT RELEVANT

Page 99: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

NEED INSPIRATION?

Page 100: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TOOLS FOR PORTABILITY

Page 101: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LITMUS

Page 102: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

WHERE DO WE EVEN START?

Page 103: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ALL HOPE IS NOT LOST

Page 104: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

🙋

How would you make this email more portable?

Page 105: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PERSONALThe promise of digital was always and will always be its potential for personalization. Your email must cater to the individual needs and desires of every user—and the experience must be unique to each individual.

Page 106: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SEGMENTED CAMPAIGNS CAN DRIVE A 760% INCREASE IN REVENUE

Page 107: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PERSONALIZATION INCREASES OPEN RATES BY 26%

Page 108: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

HAVE DATA, WILL USE IT

Page 109: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

HAVE DATA, WILL USE IT

Page 110: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

HAVE DATA, WILL USE IT

Page 111: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

HAVE SOCIAL, USE IT TOO

Page 112: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LEVERAGE DYNAMIC CONTENT

Page 113: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

DATA FROM THE MY CROWD

Page 114: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / THE WELCOME

Page 115: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / THE WELCOME

Page 116: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

4x higher open

rate

Source: Emma, 2015

5x higher click

through rate

THE STATS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES

33% increase in long-term

engagement

Page 117: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Source: Emma, 2015

THIS ISN’T ROCKET SCIENCE, BUT…

57.7% of companies send a

welcome email to subscribers

Page 118: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Source: Experian, 2015

Real-time welcome emails see

10x more than the transaction rates and revenue

per email over batched welcome mailings

Page 119: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SAY HELLO

Page 120: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

HELP ME GET STARTED

Page 121: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TELL ME THE NEXT STEP

Page 122: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SHOW ME HOW TO DO BUSINESS WITH YOU

Page 123: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

OFFERS CAN BE GOOD, BUT BE CAREFUL

Page 124: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / ONBOARDING

Page 125: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / ONBOARDING

Page 126: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / ONBOARDING

Page 127: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / BIRTHDAY OR EVENT

Page 128: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / BIRTHDAY OR EVENT

Page 129: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / PURCHASE INTENT

Page 130: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / PURCHASE HISTORY

Page 131: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / WEATHER

Page 132: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / DYNAMIC

Page 133: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRIGGERS BASED ON DATA / TRANSACTIONAL

Page 134: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TRANSACTIONAL EMAILS MATTER

Page 135: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ALWAYS GIVE ME MORE

Page 136: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ALWAYS GIVE ME MORE

Page 137: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ALWAYS GIVE ME MORE

Page 138: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ALWAYS GIVE ME MORE, INCLUDING MINI HORSES

Page 139: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TOOLS FOR PERSONALIZATION (AND AUTOMATION)

Page 140: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

🙋

How would you make this email more personalized?

Page 141: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PRESCRIPTIVE Brands are no longer in control of their email conversations with people. Let people take control or risk destruction of a valuable channel.

Page 142: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

JUST SAY SORRY

Page 143: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SPEAK LIKE A HUMAN BEING (SAY THAT SLOWLY FOR DRAMATIC EFFECT)

Page 144: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ASK AND YOU SHALL RECEIVE

Page 145: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ASK AND YOU SHALL RECEIVE

Page 146: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

CONFIRM OUR RELATIONSHIP

Page 147: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

TELL YOU WHEN I WANT IT

Page 148: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

GIVE ME REASONS TO SAY HELLO

Page 149: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LET’S GET ENGAGED AGAIN

Page 150: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LET’S GET ENGAGED AGAIN, BUT DON’T EVER STOP EMAILING THEM.

Page 151: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

IF I WANT OUT, MAKE IT EASY

Page 152: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

USE SUBJECT LINES THAT WORK• Sample of about 700m emails, across all sectors sectors, primarily from the USA and the UK, with a few Canucks,

Ozzies and Kiwis thrown in for good measure.

• It is all very recent data – from the last two months

• Leverage human heuristics, and then ran millions of Markov Chain Monte Carlo simulations.

• We then applied a predictive Bayesian inference model to expand the 700m sample to billions of plausible outcomes. ******

• ***** Use this research as a brain storming tool, as an ideas shower, as a thought Jacuzzi. And other metaphors as you see fit. You still need to test out your subject lines. Over and over and over… and over and over and over again.

• That said, what did we find?

Page 153: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SUPERLATIVES MATTER, A LOT.• Some phrases affect response rates very positively. Take, for example, “Brand

new,” “Latest,” and “Exciting,” which give open rate lifts of 37%, 24% and 19%, respectively.

• “The perfect gift,” which imperfectly depresses open rates by -28%. Or the most mediocre of adequate adjectives, “good,” which reduces open rates by a not-so-good -20%.

• Consider which superlative phrases add value to your subject lines. Some may be “special” (+12%,) but nothing is “wonderful” (-2%) all the time.

Page 154: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SELL WITHOUT BEING SPAMMY• For a long time, people said that you shouldn’t charge admission to your

emails. “Don’t talk about sales in subject lines… because spam filters will be mean to you,” they’d say. They are wrong.

• “Buy one get one free” deal? This stalwart of sales gets a shocking +89% on open rates.

• When people get emails about sales, they are much more likely to click through. Take, for example, “prices” (+246% CTR), “worth” (+134%), and “deal” (+91%.)

• Bring balance or customers will either get bored or expect sales all the time.

Page 155: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

QUESTIONS MAKE A DIFFERENCE• Questions that start with “can’t” (+25%) or “won’t” (+20%) often do better than

“will” (-27%) or “who” (-41%.)

• When used in context they can work well. Context is key.

Page 156: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SUBJECT LINES - ACTION

Page 157: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SUBJECT LINES - SALES

Page 158: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

SUBJECT LINES - PUNCTUATION

Page 159: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

GIVE ME REASONS TO STAY

Page 160: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference
Page 161: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

DIE PURCHASE LISTS, JUST DIE

Page 162: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

🙋

How would you make this email more prescriptive?

Page 163: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

LET’S RECAPThree P’s, Not the Old Four

Page 164: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PORTABLE DESIGNED FOR OUR LIVES OR JUST STOP.

Page 165: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PERSONAL BE RELEVANT OR BE DELETED.

PORTABLE DESIGNED FOR OUR LIVES OR JUST STOP.

Page 166: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PRESCRIPTIVE PUT PEOPLE IN CONTROL.

PERSONAL BE RELEVANT OR BE DELETED.

PORTABLE DESIGNED FOR OUR LIVES OR JUST STOP.

Page 167: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

🙋

VetOnDemand is an on-demand vet app. Design the email marketing program that would support the

first 30 days for a potential customer.

Page 168: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

EMAIL AUDITHow To Perform & Questions to AskVia @sietsema

Page 169: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PLATFORM/SERVICE PROVIDER• Ultimate Question: Is there a better alternative for sending emails than what is used presently?

• Objective Appropriate

• Are email program objectives aligned with functionality?

• Based on your existing business goals, is the current email service provider (e.g. ConstantContact, Lyris, Campaigner, etc.) a feasible match?

• What important tasks cannot be accomplished with the chosen service provider today?

• Right-Sized

• Is the existing platform big enough or too small?

• Do business requirements call for more sophistication (automation, CRM integration, lead scoring capabilities) from the service provider? Or is the current email tool-to-task match the equivalent of killing a bumblebee with a bazooka?

Page 170: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PLATFORM/SERVICE PROVIDER• Ultimate Question: Is there a better alternative for sending emails than what is used

presently?

• Future Focused

• At what point will there be a need to upgrade to a more advanced email service provider?

• What specific functions and operations will be necessary in the near future as the program evolves?

• Sender Reputation

• What is the current SenderScore for the program?

• Based on this score, should the platform in use today be abandoned, and should the program be migrated to a different email service provider?

Page 171: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

AUDIENCE• Ultimate Question: Are there opportunities for improvement with customer records management?

• Acquisition

• How are new customer records acquired?

• Is the practice of list rental or purchase avoided? Just say “hell no” to buying or renting lists.

• Are contacts informed properly about how their information will be used?

• On-Boarding

• What messages are delivered to new contacts upon sign-up? Are expectations for message delivery and frequency set properly?

• Are there opportunities to improve the content that is delivered to new contacts?

• Are other content assets and methods to connect with the brand (e.g. customer service, social media, mobile applications, etc.) introduced?

Page 172: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

AUDIENCE• Segmentation

• Are customer records segmented in a meaningful way?

• What methods can be used to divide customer records to improve message efficacy and avoid irrelevant email delivery?

• How can the segmentation process be improved by relying upon self-selected parameters (via survey) or behavior monitoring (based on previous activity/engagement)?

• Unsubscribe/Preference Process

• Is the unsubscribe option clear and easy to identify within each message?

• Are requests to unsubscribe handled responsibly?

• Does the program offer a way for email recipients to choose their preferences?

Page 173: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

DESIGN• Ultimate Question: how should design be modified to represent the brand and appeal to

all audiences?

• Channel Appropriate

• Is the current email design right for the email channel?

• Is the design comprised of of one single image? Does it strongly resemble a direct mail piece, a flyer, or an outdoor board?

• Does every email message include a physical mailing address and a subject line that does not deceive (re: CAN SPAM compliance)?

• On Brand

• Is the email design consistent with other brand assets?

• Does the email design conform to existing brand standards and guidelines?

Page 174: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

DESIGN• Optimized for Mobile

• Does the email render well on smaller mobile device screens?

• Does the email utilize the @media query for responsive design?

• How should the mobile version of the email design be modified to appeal to recipients on the go?

• Client Compatible

• How does the email render in all email clients? (Hint: use Litmus or Email on Acid)

• Are their email clients that are more important than others based on their popularity among recipients?

• How does the email look in clients that are traditionally troublesome like the dreaded Outlook 2010, Outlook 2013, and Yahoo Mail?

Page 175: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PROCESS• Ultimate Question: How are various aspects of the email program

managed and in what ways can they be improved?

• Frequency

• How often do contacts receive messages?

• Based on response rates and engagement levels, how should frequency be modified?

• Should frequency for certain audience segments be different from others? Read more on finding the optimal email frequency here.

Page 176: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PROCESS• Message

• Does the overall message align with the motivations of the audience to request email communication in the first place?

• How are brand assets (content marketing productions, events, video, graphics, etc.) utilized to encourage a response from the audience?

• How should the message differ based on audience segments? Is there a need to modify the message for certain recipient groups?

• Are there opportunities to develop a nurture program (or drip campaign) for contacts and prospects?

Page 177: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PROCESS• List Hygiene

• What methods are used to maintain list integrity?

• Are some recipients removed or sequestered after long periods of inactivity?

• Does the program include email verification either at sign-up or after extended time frames?

• Testing

• What email tests have been run with recent messages? What elements have been tested (e.g. subject line, from name, content, call to action, etc.)?

• Does the program entail an A/B split or multivariate approach to testing? What improvements can be made to the testing process?

• How are results from previous tests interpreted and put into play for subsequent messages and campaigns?

Page 178: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PROCESS• Ultimate Question: How is the email program measured today and what methods can be

introduced to gauge success more accurately?

• High Level Performance

• At what rate are email messages successfully delivered to their intended recipients?

• What are the current open and click rates for the campaign/program?

• What has the trend for delivery, open and click metrics?

• What is the monthly/quarterly/annual rate of list growth? List churn?

• Traffic Generation

• What is the click response to key content placed within the email?

• How does email compare to other channels with regard to website visits? Time on site? Pages per visit?

• What kind of messages have a high rate of success when it comes to delivering website visits?

Page 179: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

PROCESS• Ultimate Question: How is the email program measured today and what methods can be

introduced to gauge success more accurately?

• Sales and Activity

• How does email perform with respect to generating sales?

• Does email have a recognizable impact on the bottom line? Does the email channel make it rain?

• What other key performance indicators (downloads, event registrations, product demo views, etc.) have been impacted by the email channel?

• The Correct Gauges

• Are the metrics used to evaluate the ongoing performance of the email appropriate?

• What other performance metrics should be considered given the nature of the program?

• What goals or benchmarks should be set for the email campaign(s) in the coming year?

Page 180: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

BUT, WHY CARE?Three reasons…

Page 181: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

ENGAGEMENT MATTERS#1

Page 182: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

We do not use clicks as a measure of engagement.

User engagement will not affect your overall reputation.

If you remove people who do not open or click, you are leaving money on the table.

Microsoft, Gmail, and Comcast stated that they do not convert old accounts to spam traps.

Email Experience Counsel, 2015

Page 183: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

WHAT ISPs TRACK?• Opens —less relevant metric because images downloaded by default in certain email clients, but

ISPs still track it.

• Replies — replying to a message is a super-strong signal of engagement. So, why are we all using no-reply@? Baffling, I tell you.

• Moves — to junk = strong, negative signal. If your AOL subscribers do this two times, you’re in the spam folder for pretty much life.

• Mark Not As Junk — strong, positive signal that the email should not be considered spam. AOL says this is enough of a signal to “reset” the previous behavior.

• Delete without open — a quick glance at the sender/subject: a somewhat negative signal. So, your from name and subject lines matter.

• Move to folder — if people are moving messages around, it means they care about them. This is strong positive signal.

Page 184: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

POSTMASTER TOOLS

Page 185: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

Engagement is measured at the subscriber-level and based on metrics we aren’t tracking.

Page 186: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

THE FUTURE MATTERS#2

Page 187: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

“MAILABLE MICROSITES” VIA @CHADSWHITE

Page 188: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

GOOGLE’S PONY EXPRESS

Page 189: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

THE INBOX IS THE CART

Page 190: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

We won’t be able to take advantage of email’s future if we’ve screwed up its past.

Page 191: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

FAMILIARITY RULES.#3

Page 192: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference
Page 193: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

The Inbox is the digital place we understand and know how to control.

Page 194: 2016 Digital Summit Pre-Conference

www.barberandhewitt.com [email protected] Los Angeles, CA

THANKS. QUESTIONS / COMMENTS.

February 2016