Don’t Miss This One: Connecting Social Media and Email

August 10, 2010 11:49 by dmacdonald

Thanks to my colleague James Davidson, Vice President, Digital & Community Strategy at 7Summits, here is a great blog on social media and e-mail.

I find it interesting that most organizations don’t realize that e-mail marketing is the original ‘backbone’ of social interaction and should always be part of the social mix.  Simply adding some ‘integrated’ content will aid in elevating your brand – not to mention ROI for your social campaigns. 

Take a peek:19 Ways to Connect Social Media & Email Marketing Together by Infusionsoft

A word about Infusionsoft 

Infusionsoft is revolutionizing the way small businesses grow. At Infusionsoft, we're all about liberating and empowering entrepreneurs so they can enjoy doing business, wow their customers and better serve their families and communities.

About 7Summits

7Summits is a Social Business Agency focused on helping clients apply social media to drive measurable business value. Whether you're a B2C or B2B business, 7Summits will help create your Social Business Strategy & Plan and then help you execute and measure the results being delivered  

Best

Denice MacDonald 


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E-mail Marketing: Still Viable Strategy for Second Half of 2010

July 6, 2010 03:16 by dmacdonald

With budgets still tight, how are companies managing to stay connected while bringing engaging and relevant messages to customers?  

Successful companies are learning that if they use interactive elements such as video, polls, FLASH and RSS feeds within their e-mail marketing campaigns, they see higher conversion rates and a stronger connection to their customers.

Video, if created properly, can really enhance your e-mail message and recipient interactivity. By using an enticing image with descriptive impact statements, recipients will be eager to click and link to the video. Include the file size, length of video or formats supported. Use flash video (FLV) whenever possible to achieve higher compression rates. 

Polls are a great way to entice recipients and engage audiences that want to be heard. Create topics or subjects that will resonate with your intended audience. Provide immediate results, along with associated support material, newsletters or additional links.  

RSS feeds are another way to keep customers connected post e-mailing especially if your company has a blog, dedicated community or news section. RSS feeds provide the right amount of content to recipients on their terms making it the perfect connection outside of targeted e-mails.

In summary, once you have created an on-going e-mail campaign with customers, remember to include interactive elements and content that will continually engage your customers. Remember to measure the effectiveness of each campaign and refine where necessary.

Best,

Denice MacDonald


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Maintaining E-mail Marketing as part of the Social Mix

May 9, 2010 12:04 by dmacdonald

Social media and social media marketing are quite the buzz these days. My user groups and close business colleagues remind me how ‘hot’ this topic is.  Although social media can be the silver bullet for some, e-mail marketing is still quite viable for others.

Customers still want to hear from you

Your strongest (and most loyal customers) still want to have a personal interaction with you. E-mail allows a strong format for segmented content to your customers – reminding them of your products, services or news. 

Some prefer to have the message delivered to their in box

Undeniably, no one can underestimate the power of a third party sell through a strong social networking community – but believe it or not, some prefer to have targeted information sent to them routinely, if not daily through e-mail.

E-mail can be delivered based on opt-in parameters from your mail list (what, when and how content is delivered). That way, there is a win/win for both parties: customers get the content they want and you have a way to stay connected - intimately.

Social Media – some not getting it quite right

Overzealous fan pages, corporate pages with no viable links, as well as poor content will lead to a marginal social media experience – possibly eroding any chance that your company will get noticed – nonetheless virally promoted. 

In order for social media to be successful, there needs to be a strong integrated interactive marketing strategy.

Until a strong social media plan is place, continue some form of e-mail marketing to stay connected to your customers. 

Other exceptional thought leaders who agree: 

Social Media vs. Email: Which Is A Better Marketing And Communication Channel? By Robin Good, MasterNewMedia  

Social Media Marketing Vs. Email Marketing By John Chow Dot Com 

Is Email Marketing Endangered? By ExactTarget (White Paper Download) 

Best

Denice MacDonald


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Staying Nimble: Social Media 2010

April 19, 2010 06:36 by dmacdonald

According to several leading experts, social media has been the number one priority in 2010. Social media will be used by organizations to lift their brand, stay connected to customers while using networks to grow their lead-gen pipelines. To learn how your organization can capitalize on what others are doing, check out these ‘top’ resources, articles and blogs from leading subject matter experts.   

Social media on marketers' menu for 2010 by Helen Leggatt, Biz Report   

"It looks like social media is on the menu for most marketers this year. A survey of almost 2,000 MediaPost subscribers found that over half plan to have "a presence on social networks" as part of their marketing mix in 2010..."  

10 Ways Social Media Will Change In 2010 by Ravit Lichtenberg from Ustrategy.com

"It is impossible to separate social media from the online world. Facebook reached 350 million users last month -- 70% of whom are outside the US -- and it accounts for 25% of the Web's traffic, according to Pew nearly one in five people on the web use Twitter or some other service to check status messages, and 94% of enterprises plan to maintain or increase their investment in enterprise social media tools. The social media conversation is no longer considered a Web 2.0 fad -- it is taking place in homes, small businesses and corporate boardrooms, and extending its reach into the nonprofit, education and health sectors. From feeling excitement, novelty, bewilderment, and overwhelmed, a growing number of people now speak of social media as simply another channel or tactic..."

Why You Need A Social Media Policy in 2010 by Vanessa DiMauro, Customer Think   

"Policies are dull. No one wants to create them, no one likes to read them and certainly, few desire the job of enforcing them.  But they can play an important role in outlining the rules of engagement around a particular set of online behaviors and have a strong role to play in the face of new situations where the there are no standards.  This is especially true with the wild west world of social media in business..."  

Six Social Media Trends for 2010 by David Armano, Harvard Business Review   

"In 2009, we saw exponential growth of social media. According to Nielsen Online, Twitter alone grew 1,382% year-over-year in February, registering a total of just more than 7 million unique visitors in the US for the month. Meanwhile, Facebook continued to outpace MySpace. In 2010, social media will get even more popular, more mobile, and more exclusive — at least, that's my guess. What are the near-term trends we could see as soon as next year..."

Best,  

Denice MacDonald 


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Measuring Your E-mail Reputation

March 11, 2010 09:21 by dmacdonald

You’ve completed several highly charged e-mail campaigns and have come up short on conversion and high on complaints. Where to you go for help? You can use Return Path’s Sender Score Monitor tools to figure out how reputation is affecting your individual campaign results

Return Path’s monitoring suite provides real-time feedback on how your campaigns actually fare in the inbox. It also tells you why a campaign failed. For example, if you see that the campaign generated a high complaint rate, you should take steps to stop complaints by making sure subscribers understand what to expect from you and that you are sending e-mail that is of benefit to them.   

This includes segmented content by audience type, relevant and noteworthy links to resources or other valuable information along with other interactive functionality. 

Lastly, poor infrastructure hurts your reputation because it makes you look like a spammer. Or, at the very least, it makes it appear as if your system has been or could be compromised by hackers effecting both open rates and credibility. 

Resources: 

Sender Score Lookup (free) - A Sender Score is a measure of e-mail sender reputation.

Reputation Rules Series (free subscription) – Four week e-mail series on how “E-mail is a Relationship”.

Reputation Monitor - With Deliverability tools and services from Return Path, more of your e-mail can reach the inbox-which means more responses.

Webinar and Events – Includes both hosted and industry events.

More about Return Path: 

Since 1999, Return Path has helped some of the world’s most successful companies use email more effectively. Return Path began with the notion that there was a better way to do things: that email marketing didn’t have to be a war between marketers and consumers, that it was possible to do more with less, that the smartest email solutions were the ones that not only impacted your bottom line in the short term but also benefited your reputation for the long term. 

Sources and Excerpts

The aforementioned comments are abbreviated highlights from Return Path’s Reputation Rules Series. I highly recommend that you subscribe to this free learning and/or contact Return Path if reputation is affecting your e-mail campaign outcomes.

Best

Denice MacDonald


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Get to the point: E-newsletters

March 11, 2009 11:16 by dmacdonald

With budgets taking a hard hit these days, online marketers are reverting back to e-newsletters as a viable way in which to keep in front of customers. But how do you know if your impending e-newsletter campaign will be relevant or effective?

Simply, make it worthy.

The single most important way you can improve your e-newsletter performance is to increase relevance through greater use of segmentation and dynamic content.1

Focus on defined goals. Although open rates are important, consider concentrating on business-focused goals. E-newsletters provide brand exposure, company awareness against competitors and an opportunity to soft-sell.

Create trust. Trust drives everything from the initial opt-in to engagement and on through preference updates and even unsubscribing. If your e-newsletter-related processes and messages don't create trust, recipients will unsubscribe – and even worse, virally complain to others.  

Communicate-don’t sell. E-newsletters are as close to a one-on-one conversation as you'll get with your customers. You have more to say than just "buy from us." Customers want and expect more from their relationship with you – specifically content that is important to them.

Measure, measure, measure. Integrating e-newsletters with Web analytics and other behavioral data will pay off in more relevant content, engagement and ultimately conversion.

In summary, e-newsletters should contain useful, relevant content and reflects what it's like to do business with your company. The e-newsletter should focus on solidifying relationships with your clients and prospects over the long term, not on hard sales and quick promotions.

Source: 

1 Forrester Research, March, 2009

Best

Denice MacDonald


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Surviving in 2009 - Stay Focused

December 17, 2008 11:02 by dmacdonald

As dollars get scarce and competition grows fierce, marketers are now pondering the direction and mode of maintaining their customer base and market share. Let’s face it, tough times force tough choices – what to keep, what to slice, what to start anew.   

Here’s a few suggestions on channels that will aid marketers to stay ‘in the game’ for 2009:  

Online advertising 

Although price competitive, there will be many ‘opportunity buys’ for online marketers willing to take the plunge.   

Search marketing

Still touted as the best deal, search can be measured and refined – allowing targeted and niche campaigns.   

Integrate

Collaborate online branding with search initiatives resulting in a cohesive and measurable strategy. 

E-mail

No it’s not dead – it's resurrected as a viable and affordable means of staying connected to customers and prospects. 

Service is marketing

The best thing you can do to keep customers and potentially increase sales is to focus on customer service.   

Online video

Video engages and can become a viral strategy. Videos also are well poised for repurposing at trade shows, online and within e-mail campaigns. 

Metrics 

Test, test and retest. You can’t get enough statistics to help gauge and refine both online and offline initiatives.  

The only economic constant is change -- it will be paramount for marketers to stay agile relative to initiatives for 2009.

Best,

Denice MacDonald 


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IAB: "E-mail Data Management Best Practices"

September 24, 2008 10:07 by dmacdonald

The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) announced the release of “E-mail Data Management Best Practices,” a document with a series of far-reaching privacy and data security recommendations intended for publishers, marketers and service providers.  

Focusing on protecting consumer privacy while improving effectiveness in e-mail marketing executions, the document was released at TARGUSinfo’s Online Lead Quality Summit. 

Some of the document’s key recommendations are: 

 √  Senders should send commercial e-mail only to individuals who have provided informed consent.

 √  A global unsubscribe mechanism should be implemented for all companies sending e-mails. Advertisers and marketers should authenticate their e-mails by publicly registering the domains from which they send the e-mail.

 √  A company cannot transfer a consumer’s permission to receive commercial e-mail to another company without the transfer being referenced in the new company’s e-mails. 

About the IAB 

Founded in 1996, the Interactive Advertising Bureau represents over 375 leading interactive companies that actively engage in and support the sale of interactive advertising. IAB members are responsible for selling over 86% of online advertising in the United States.

From my perspective, the IAB is a 'must-have' resource for any web marketer.

Best,

Denice MacDonald


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E-mail Marketing IS Social Networking

June 20, 2008 01:29 by dmacdonald

As you know, e-mail was, and still is, the key component of ‘social interaction’ – yeah, it’s not wrapped as nicely as other social networking initiatives but it is still viable as an integral part of the customer/employee communication.  Not only is it affordable, it offers you an opportunity to stay connected – on your terms.

Here are a few great tips from the trenches:

REWARD: Identify e-mail forwarders and reward them – they are your best brand ambassadors.

PERSONALIZE: Personalized images can increase conversion by 50% - especially if a subscriber/recipient’s name is highlighted.

LIST SIZE: The larger the list, the less effective it is – lists typically become obsolete in six months (a big reason to keep up the database).

AUTHENTICATE: Insure that the program and your e-mail/domain meet standards to preclude spam issues or getting black listed - provide instructions on how recipients may add you to their white list.

EASY TO SUBSCRIBE: Create a preference center so subscribers can say how often they'd like to receive emails, what they're most interested in etc.

INCREASE OPEN RATES:  Scrutinize the “Subject Line” within e-mail campaigns.  Reason simply, most recipients (even if they know you!) will react to a subject line with a topic that offers subject matter that is relevant to them. Think long and hard about what that subject line should be.

INCREASE CONVERSION: The actual layout and design of the e-mail itself will determine open rates and ultimately conversion.  Consider less graphics and more text in the upper most portion of the e-mail real estate.  That way, one or two lines of text will appear in the recipients "Preview Pane" -- offering them a quick view of the e-mail content.  


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Ready or Not? Consider E-mail Marketing Before Site Revamp

June 5, 2008 08:25 by dmacdonald

I recently completed a project for a client that was a wrap-around before delving into a full blown web site revamp.  What did we do?  We customized several on-going e-mail campaigns to target customers based on product selection - cross-selling where appropriate.

Oftentimes, large manufacturers are hesitant to revamp their sites as the content inventory and collaboration between departments seems too daunting. (See recent blog: Who Owns the Web Site.)   Therefore, e-mail marketing is still very attractive to large organizations - especially if their client list is vast and diverse. It is a quick way to stay connected while measuring feedback and interaction within the campaign that will quantify and qualify strategy for the site revamp. 

Where to start:

Designing the template(s) is critical to the success of your campaign. Determine a specific content purpose offering subscribers/recipients value. This is also a good time to roll-out a new product, company annoucement or elevate new hires.

Next, determine the various audiences and segment content and interaction appropriately. C-level may want case study metrics while product end-users may want to see tools and testimonials.

Lasty, design for the various audiences. This may include segmenting the subscriber list to maximize ROI of the various campaigns.  If necessary, you can tweak the e-mail template(s) moving forward based on interaction.

This create-it-once/use-many-ways approach offers a unique way in which to stay in front of clients before a critical web site revamp.

Suggested e-mail programs worth reviewing:

ExactTarget (provides both web-based and self-service, rich media)

Campaign Monitor (great for organizations that want to pay as they go, includes great newsletter templates)

Arial Software (enterprise level solutions, large bulk etc.)

Great Resource:

E-mail Newsletter Best Practices by Larry Chase

Best Permission-granted E-mail Lists:

Hoovers

EmailLabs


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Successful B2B Marketing for 2008

April 17, 2008 07:29 by dmacdonald

Ahh….great white paper on 2008 trends by MarketingProfs 

Based on the perspectives shared by executives and marketing managers across a broad range of industries, sectors, companies and marketplace situations, the report found a continuing escalation of the focus on "new media" – tactics enabled by and based on Internet technology – and a somewhat less pronounced emphasis on many traditional tactics. 

Of particular interest, e-mail marketing is still high on everyone's list – followed by trade show activity and online video! See how you, your clients and your organization fare in the war on B2B Marketing.

MProfs_B2B_2008.pdf (177.22 kb)


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