Why Email Marketing Matters
According to a study by the Winterberry Group, email marketing
brings in $15.50 per dollar spent . This is about 17% more than
direct-mail campaigns and 73% more than telemarketing campaigns. In
short, email marketing matters and if you’re not sending out at
least monthly email newsletters to your subscriber base, you should
be. The true cost comes from acquiring the prospects and clients,
not the three or four hours needed to create a monthly newsletter.
Many organizations, once they have spent the thousands of dollars
acquiring their clients, fail to market to their existing base. I’ve
met quite a few marketing managers who would rather continue
spending $200 a pop for new qualified prospects rather than $0.01
per person to build the relationship with their existing clients and
recommend new products or encourage re-orders. I’ve found that
sending relevant email communications to persons who have requested
to receive them is the single most effective way of cultivating the
type of relationship needed to turn your prospects into customers
and your customers into lifetime product evangelizers.
As a reader of this article, chance has it that your organization is
one that already sends out a newsletter, or at least is considering
doing so soon. Once you began sending your own newsletter, however,
it is important to follow two important rules that will increase
your likelihood of achieving your marketing goals, whether they are
to increase repeat orders, convert a higher ratio of prospects, or
obtain top-of-mind brand awareness.
The first and most important rule is to only send relevant content
to persons who have requested it. What does this mean? Well, let’s
say you are a travel and adventure planning company. If someone has
subscribed to your Kayaking Monthly Newsletter, don’t move them over
to your European Vacations list and send them an article on Dining
in Tuscany. In most cases, you will very quickly lose any prospect
or reduce the lifetime value of your relationship with an existing
client. If the person also subscribed to it, it would be okay to
send him or her a monthly company newsletter that from time to time
had information on other topics, but don’t mix newsletter bases just
to increase mailing volumes.
It is important to note that just setting up an interest segment and
adding it to your sign up form doesn’t require you to create a
monthly newsletter on that topic, but once you get a few dozen to a
couple hundred people interested in that area (depending the value
of the product or service you are providing), it will likely pay to
have quality content developed on that topic for distribution in
interest specific newsletters. This can be easily done within the
IntelliContact Email marketing software by either creating a list
specifically for persons interested in a topic or creating a segment
of persons with a specific interest.
The second rule is to be consistent with your sending frequency.
Depending on your type of business and your subscriber interest
level, the right volume for you could be weekly, biweekly, or
monthly. Once you find the frequency that is right for your
organization (and this could vary newsletter to newsletter), stick
with it. We see a lot of companies whose email strategy can only be
defined as “ad hoc.” Rather than blasting out a promotion whenever
sales are lagging, we recommend having an emailing schedule for each
newsletter and sticking to it, whether it be every Saturday, every
other Wednesday, or on the 15 th of each month. As an example our
company newsletter, the Permission-Based Email Marketing Monthly
goes out on the 28th of each month.
What type of results can you expect from regularly sending out
regular email newsletters? Here are two examples from users of
IntelliContact the Email marketing software my company Broadwick
provides. Biotage is a company based on Massachusetts that provides
DNA sequencing instrumentation. They send out event notifications
and company updates to 20,000 or so subscribers each month. David
Shultis, Marketing Communications Manager of Biotage, notes, “We've
seen open rates at around the 38-42% mark for our large mailings.
There has also been a 'pass-along' quality of our emails, as we've
noticed new names that were not originally on our mailing lists
responding to offers.” Another IntelliContact user, Julie Ibrahim,
Vice President of the Tiger Sports Shop says “The monthly newsletter
keeps us and our inn at the forefront in the minds of our past and
potential guests. Thus with the continuous news from us and our
region, we are kept in mind, with no sales effort or pressure.” If
your organization wants to see marketing results like these, it may
be time to start or expand your usage of permission-based email
marketing.
If you stick with sending relevant, high quality content-rich emails
on a consistent basis to persons who have requested to receive your
emails, you will increase your prospect to customer conversion rates
and customer lifetime value at a fraction of the of the cost of
traditional methods and take advantage of the best type of marketing
possible—free marketing through authentic customer word-of-month
by Ryan P Allis
http://www.email-marketing-software-resource.com/
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