Archive for the ‘Marketing/Advertising’ Category

It looks good, but can they see it? HTML text versus graphics in emails

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Image courtesy of preparednesspro.wordpress.com

In the early days of email marketing, one could simply place a well executed graphic into an email template, deploy and be reasonably certain that what the recipient would see is what was sent. Not so today.

With so many different email programs –  each with a different level of graphical support – plus spam filters becoming increasingly more sensitive, there’s a good chance that your images will be blocked.

The problem with images
Most email programs turn images off by default so when recipients first see your message, they will be looking at a bunch of red Xs instead of what you intended them to see. Coding your email with HTML text allows recipients to partially read your message even if images are blocked. For example, let’s say you’re creating an email to promote a sales event and your agency has designed a fantastic logo in support of the event. You want that graphic in your communication because it likely ties into your other marketing materials. No problem, just make sure that in addition to this logo, the name of the event is referenced prominently using HTML text. That way, if the logo is blocked, the recipient will still receive the critical information.

Many spam filters analyze the text-to-image ratio in a message and will block messages that are made up mostly of images. Meaning that the flyer you printed and then repurposed into a single image email to save money, well it may get flagged as spam.

Some web-based email platforms, such as AOL and Hotmail, do not always support image maps. As a result, your recipients may be able to see your email fine, but could be unable to click through to your site, microsite, or wherever else the email links direct them.

Solution: find the right balance between images and HTML text
Given these challenges, you can still design an effective email that looks great and works as it’s intended. Although you don’t want to over do it with imagery for the reasons noted above, you also don’t want to create an email that’s nothing more than text. It will bore the recipient and reflect poorly on your organization.

Avoid using fancy display fonts since they’re not supported on all computers. Instead, stick with standard fonts that come installed on most Windows-based machines and Macs. Some tried and true choices include Helvetica, Arial, Veranda, Times New Roman and Courier.

Finally, make sure to include critical text in the top portion of the email (above the fold). That way, recipients who use the preview pane will see your key points of communication, even if the images are blocked.

The bottom line
A beautiful email isn’t worth the 1s and 0s it was created with if the recipient sees nothing more than red Xs. However, by finding the right balance of HTML text and images, you can ensure that your message gets the point across clearly and effectively.

Don’t argue with your database

Monday, August 17th, 2009
Image courtesy of Instructables.com

Image courtesy of Intructables.com

Common sense, right? If one of your email subscribers requests to be removed from your list, and even mentions that they never signed up in the first place, you remove them promptly with no questions asked. Perhaps you even add an apology for any misunderstanding.

You and I know this, but apparently, not all companies do. Read on.

Testing, testing: The case for A/B email testing

Thursday, August 13th, 2009
Image courtesy of Creative Commons

Image courtesy of smoothtransitionslawblog.com

We’re all aware that email marketing is one of the most cost efficient and effective ways to reach your target audience. But if you’re not conducting A/B tests, you could be short changing your open rates, click-through rates and conversions. Creating two different versions (A and B) of your email and sending each to a different half of your database allows you to easily see what resonates with your target and what doesn’t.

Treat it like science
A/B testing provides an objective way of evaluating message effectiveness in what is traditionally an intuitive creative process. As such, it’s important to approach your tests like a true science experiment. First, send out a well executed eblast that will serve as your benchmark, against which you’ll measure the results of your A/B test.

The next step is to optimize/modify two new versions of the eblast to see how the change impacts the results. For example, you may want to experiment with two different subject lines, the placement of a button, the call to action, or simply the background color. What’s important to remember here is that for a true A/B test, you should only test one change at a time. That way you can clearly determine which change is influencing the target’s behavior.

See what pulls
Once you have these two new and different versions, deploy each to one half of your database and see how the results compare to your benchmark figures. Look at how many people opened each email, clicked through and converted across the call to action. This analysis will help you identify fallout points which influence where and what you should focus on for subsequent A/B tests. From there, you can continue to modify the message or design in your quest for even better results. But remember, only one change at a time.

Broader application

A/B testing isn’t just for eblasts. You can apply the same techniques to landing pages, web banners, paid search ads and more.

The bottom line
A/B testing makes sense for a number of reasons. It allows you to prove a point that may not have been supported by empirical data in the past, e.g. this headline will pull better than that one. Plus, it adds a level of accountability to the process which may, eventually, help you build a bigger interactive marketing budget. And who couldn’t use that?

Pre-Roll Online Video – MTV says Less is More.

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

MTV believes it has found the most effective length and format for online pre-roll advertising. The music network’s recently released, Project Inform study reports that a five-second pre-roll ad combined with a lower-third ad is the most effective and consumer-friendly ad unit for short-form video on sites like MTV.com and ComedyCentral.com.

According to Jason Witt, SVP and GM of MTV’s digital advertising unit, the five-second pre-roll hits viewers in the sweet spot and outperformed longer length videos.

If the ad is too disruptive, users will tune out, Witt said. You don’t have to be in their face to make an impression.

Witt discusses the study in this video originally published on Beet TV.

Long copy vs. short copy in online newsletters

Monday, August 10th, 2009
3d_newsletter

Image courtesy glennbeck.com

Do people scan  online newsletters for quick bites of info that they can click on, or are they looking for more in-depth information? The answer is yes to both.

A recent Cynthia Edwards article in Email Insider explores the different types of information people expect from various newsletters. Read the article here.

Keeping your photos out of Facebook ads

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

images Did you know that Facebook has agreed to let a third party advertiser use your posted pictures without your permission? If that’s not cool with you, just update your settings like this:

  • Click on SETTINGS up where you see the log out link.
  • Select PRIVACY – Manage.
  • Select NEWS FEEDS AND WALL.
  • Select the tab that reads FACEBOOK ADS.
  • There is a drop down box, select NO ONE.
  • Save your changes.

Nothing to it!

Pizza 3G – new iPhone app from Pizza Hut

Friday, July 17th, 2009

No stranger to alternative ordering platforms, Pizza Hut already allows customers to order through its website, a widget on Facebook and via texting. It’s new iPhone app completes the digital picture by letting users build their own pizzas by scrolling, tapping and tilting their phones to choose a crust and toppings. They can also scroll and tap to choose their style and sauce for the chain’s new chicken wings. Read full article

Makes calls and pizza too.

Makes calls and pizza too.

Make email statistics relevant to management

Friday, July 10th, 2009

A recent Get to the Point post from Marketing Profs addresses the need to move beyond open and click rate data when presenting email campaign statistics to management.

“Very few executives give a hoot about opens and clicks,” says Stephanie Miller in a post at the Daily Fix blog. “In fact, very few marketers even look at their email system reports (I can’t make this stuff up!).”

The problem, she argues, is that these types of data cannot be directly connected to ROI; rather, they indicate behavior that leads to ROI. Important to you, perhaps, but not so much to the bottom-line-watchers. To grab your leadership team’s interest, Miller says, you’ll need to also show them metrics like these:
•    Revenue per email campaign
•    Revenue per subscriber (and subscriber segment)
•    Conversion rate
•    Unsubscribe rate
•    Average order size
•    New subscriber growth rate

“To improve performance,” Miller stresses, “[w]e need to see the data at the subscriber level, (or at least subscriber-segment level) and not just in aggregate.”

This means asking your email vendor or IT administrator for even better reporting. “Are you seeing trend reports?” she asks. “Are you seeing response and revenue linked? Are you seeing if email messages actually reach the inbox—by domain and campaign?”

The Po!nt: Dig deeper. Use metrics like these to give your company’s leadership the numbers they want to see—and stats they can understand.

Source: MarketingProfs. Read the full post here.

The decline of direct mail and the rise of social media

Monday, June 29th, 2009

No surprise here, as social media commands more marketing focus and funds, resources dedicated to direct mail are in decline. In a recent Email Insider post, Chad White discusses this shift and its many impacts.

The current recession has accelerated the shift to digital media and marketing. Recently, Borrell Associates predicted that advertising revenue from direct mail is expected to plunge 39% by 2013. Email was singled out as the key beneficiary of direct mail’s decline

Read the entire article here.

Say less and communicate more …OR… Why continuously adorning your brand messaging vehicles with sophisticated, academic-sounding language elements can actually have the adverse reaction as originally intended by authors and key stakeholders

Monday, June 29th, 2009

We use too many words to communicate. If you need convincing, scan a piece of junk mail from a credit card, mobile phone or investment company.  There, hidden among the hyperbole, double speak and legal CYAs, you might be lucky enough to find the intended message. Or not.

This tendency to overwrite probably started back in middle school, when teachers began attaching minimum length requirements to written assignments. That’s when so many of us found new and creative ways to stretch three pages of content into ten. It’s amazing how many adjectives you can string together when you really try. And today, lots of us are trying our best.

What’s the harm? Words make us sound smart, cultured and qualified. So more must be better. Not always.

As marketers, we have a small window of opportunity to catch our target’s attention and communicate our message. If we don’t engage them within the first few sentences (at most) and waste their time with unnecessary verbiage, we risk losing their interest. We miss striking while the iron is hot.

Another reason to keep it simple is that people don’t read as much as they use to. Just look at the current state of the newspaper industry. Given this reality, why would any savvy marketer make a prospect work hard to understand the message?

As a writer, I know the value of using words sparingly. Even so, I still tend to overwrite. So, before I present any work, I give it to a colleague to read. Preferably one who knows nothing at all about the subject. If I see that this person doesn’t “get it,” there’s a good chance I have too many words and too little content.

The solution? Surgery. I cut words, cut more words and finally I cut more words again. Nine times out of 10, what’s left over when I’m done is more easily digestible and persuasive than the original draft.

Give it a try. Next time you’re preparing an eblast, advertisement or blog post, look closely at the content and start deleting those extra words.  You’ll find that less really can be more.