Tag Archive 'Industry Trends'

Dec 02 2011

Integrating Email and Display Advertising: An Email Insider Summit Preview

While marketers have historically used similar creative or targeting methodologies with email and display ad campaigns, few have truly integrated the two efforts in a seamless process. In-line with Experian’s Digital Advertising Services’ efforts to pioneer addressable advertising online, Experian CheetahMail has been rapidly developing integrated opportunities for clients to leverage their existing email subscriber intelligence with display advertising.

On Wednesday, December 7, I’ll be participating on a session at the Email Insider Summit about integrating email campaigns with display advertising. For those of you who cannot attend, or for those that plan to attend but want a sneak preview, here are a few key points I’ll be making about the future of these integrated campaigns:

  1. Emailers have always used pixels and cookies to better analyze open or click-through activity, or more recently with transaction reporting and remarketing efforts. In addition, most emailers have tested or implemented third party tools using pixels for analytics or creative optimization. So adding a new third party pixel to email campaigns for display advertising can be easily understood and implemented.
  2. Many online marketers have integrated website re-targeting into their suite of display advertising efforts, and leveraging email pixels to enable re-targeting is similar to using a web based pixel. This is bolstered by the fact that most email recipients are now using web-based programs, which can render this type of pixel (and associated cookie) for use with display ads. However, as with any re-targeting effort, this type of display advertising is considered to be ‘behavioral’ and falls under the Digital Advertising Alliance (DAA) Self-Regulatory Principles for Online Behavioral Advertising . As a result, marketers must make sure their privacy policies reflect this practice, and provide advertising recipients with in-ad notice and choice through the ‘AdChoices’ icon.
  3. The benefits of integrated campaigns are many, and include consistent messaging across channels, improved relevancy for online display ads, and increasing performance of re-targeting efforts by extending the reach to email recipients who may not be visiting your website. In addition, future integrated display ad campaigns will be able to leverage the same segmentation schema as with email, transactional data, and addressable demographic or psychographic data, all of which in a privacy-centric way.
  4. The potential drawbacks of these campaigns includes making sure you are working with a large enough display ad partner to be able to reach these types of ad recipients , making the investment of time and resources to upgrade your privacy positioning, and avoiding over-personalization with display ad creative.

I look forward to sharing more with you in the future about this exciting topic, and welcome your comments or questions. Learn more about Experian Digital Advertising Services.

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Oct 14 2011

What’s going in holiday email …. right now?

Published by Erin Geoghegan under Industry Trends

Projections for this holiday season called for a 15%-20% increase in email overall volume, according to my last post. I’m happy to report that – so far, those projections are right on the money! Experian CheetahMail client data indicates that this first week, September 30 – October 6, hit that mark exactly with a 17.5% increase in all industry email volume.

Also worth noting…the words “Christmas” and “Black Friday” were used in subject lines in the first week of the 2011 Holiday Season, just as they were in 2010.

Stay tuned for more updates on emailresponsibly.com and the marketing forward blog as we watch the holiday marketing season surge!

 

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Sep 29 2011

Thinking of including unusual discounts in emails? It might be best to keep it simple

Unusual email subject linesIf you’ve been keeping a close eye on email offer and subject line trends over the last year, you may have noticed that ‘odd’ or unusual offers, such as 14 percent or 56 percent off, have started to appear more. The offers, such as ‘14% Off Limited Time Only!’, ‘Our weekly deal 71% off of today’s item‘, ’56% off Membership‘, and ’Famous February Artists + 22% off‘, are just a few of the examples we noticed at Experian CheetahMail.

These promotions may catch the eyes of subscribers, but return mixed results for mailers. Experian CheetahMail’s Strategic Services Team has proof – included in a recent benchmark analysis. Specific findings include:

  • Subject lines with ‘odd’ or uncommon percent discounts (ex: 14%, 53%, 47%) were compared the email performance of traditional discounts (ex: 5%, 10%, 25%, etc)
  • Subject lines with traditional discounts reported higher open, click and transaction rates for over 60% of the brands who also deployed odd discount offers.
  • Not all of the campaigns with odd discount offers were unsuccessful.  The highest performing campaign in this study had open rates over 34 percent, click rates as high as 12 percent and transaction rates over 0.80 percent.

Tempted to try this tactic out? Go for it! But, test first. Testing is necessary before making these a standard part of your email marketing program. How can you test, you ask? Check back next week for my post entitled, ‘Dare to be different? Test first!’

Methodology: A selection of 23 clients that deployed odd discounts in Q1 2011 were analyzed, and the results were compared to promotional mailings with more traditional offers in the subject line from the same brands.

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May 20 2011

The Results Are In – And the Winner Is?

Published by Sara Ezrin under Industry Trends

The winner is email marketing. Consumers may be engaging with other online channels such as social media, but they are also responding to email campaigns with a resounding yes.

The Experian CheetahMail Q1 2011 Client Benchmark Study clearly reports that while email volume remains higher than in Q1 2011, total and unique open and click rates increased year-over-year at 3% or more and 6.5% or more respectively.

Revenue per email remained steady at $0.13 as it has been since Q3 2010. Specific verticals in particular saw strong trends across all engagement and transaction metrics such as the Home Vertical. Grocery & Pharmacy, Shoe, and Telecom & Technology Verticals also saw nice increases in transaction rates. The positive trends might reflect a slightly healthier economy or that email marketers are getting smarter. Marketers are investing more into segmenting their email file by email response as much by traditional RFM rules as well as by incorporating more lifecycle driven triggers and optimizing their subject line and creative on an ongoing basis to maintain a healthy file and strong metrics.

Congrats, email!

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Jul 28 2009

Sometimes, Rules Were Meant to Be Broken

Published by Ben Alschuler under Creative Standouts

Less than 4 days after our Creative Director, Steve Sharp, explained how to design emails to be width-compliant on this very site, something very strange began happening to my email inbox. Every so often I would open my new messages, just minding my own business, when the strangest, most eerie feeling would come over me. I felt as if I was moving into a land of both shadow and substance, of things and ideas. Seeing the contents of my inbox, I realized what had happened. I had just crossed over into…the Twilight Zone.

What could cause such an unusual feeling? Why, it’s the latest Abercrombie and Fitch emails of course!

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Yes, just days after Steve explained the rules of keeping email width limited to the tidy confines of the preview pane, Abercrombie went ahead and broke the rules, sending some of the widest side-scrolling emails I have ever seen. And I for one, think that this is a really clever idea because of the smart way in which it was executed.

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Jun 25 2009

Less is More in 2009

Published by Stephen Sharp under Industry Trends

Mies Van Der RoheStephen Sharp is the Creative Director at Experian CheetahMail. Every so often, he’ll be popping by to update us on the state of creative design in the email marketing world.

Over the last couple months, the email design world has seemingly evolved into a very safe and clean environment. Several designs that have come across my desk lately have all trended towards subtle and straightforward vs. aggressively eye-catching. Even direction from the client has been geared towards “tone it down” rather than the usual “make it pop” feedback. Not coincidentally, I’m currently working on a design concept that resembles a magazine grid rather than the typical flowing content structure of an email.

Is this design shift a reaction to the need for change and simpler times? Are we taking direction from the economy rather than the brand?

Before panic totally sets in, let’s examine this topic a little further from a tactical point-of-view.

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May 06 2009

Blind Item: How many marketers utilize preference centers?

Published by Natalia Rybicka under Blind Item

benchmark_coverIn the new 2009 Digital marketer: Benchmark and trend report, Experian CheetahMail explores trends and tactics utilized by the industry’s largest emailers. The data collected in this report comes from a client survey taken in April 2008. Be sure to have a look at the report to see what’s happening in the world of email and beyond.

Let’s see if you can guess the result of one of the questions asked in the survey regarding email marketing.

What percentage of email marketers do NOT capture preferences as part of their registration process?

View Results

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