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In 2010, an average of 294 billion e-mails were sent globally every day. Of that number around 90% of them were spam emails. How can a marketing medium, where 90% of its activity is classed as worthless, possibly survive in this world of social media and brand engagement?
Well, Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer of Facebook, doesn’t think it will. In a conference speech last year, she confidently predicted that email ‘was going away’ and that even now people were spending more time on social networks than e-mail.
To further this argument, average e-mail open rates have been steadily declining since 2007 and now stand at around 11%.
In all fairness Sandberg was manipulating her figures a little bit, and was predominantly referring to the teen market, but she still caused quite a storm amongst email marketers. The point she was making is that among teenagers, social networks, IM and texting is by far the prevalent way for them to communicate than e-mail. However, what she did not expand on, is that teenage communication behaviour does not necessarily translate into adult behaviour. I cannot imagine today’s teenager asking their boss for a pay rise on Twitter when they are 25 years old and in gainful employment.
But even with these caveats there is more spam, people are using email less and open rates are declining - so is email marketing really on the way out?
Email marketing is dead, long live email marketing.
In reality email marketing is just changing. Email marketers have to work smarter not harder to combat the distractions of today’s modern social media and spam filled world.
The days of ‘e-mail blasts’ (one generic email to an entire database) are over. They have been replaced by personalised, targeted, relevant and triggered emails that engage users on a level never before seen.
An email database should be well segmented (by age, gender, what they have bought, etc) so that smaller, more targeted content can be sent to them. An email should contain some personalisation, even if it just says ‘Dear <name>’ at the top. Email campaigns should be more reactive. If a particular trade/industry/global event happens that can be tied in with a brand, then that brand should send a triggered email.
Transactional emails are a much underused method of email marketing. Newsletter sign up confirmations, shopping receipts and delivery notifications are all examples of transactional emails that have a much higher open rate than normal emails. So brands shouldn’t waste this opportunity to put marketing in all of their transactional emails.
If brands are engaged in social media, they shouldn’t just put the icons on their newsletters, they could include some content. Email marketing and social media can work very well hand in hand. For example, newsletter sign up could be encouraged on Twitter or Facebook by sharing snippets of interesting articles on whitepapers from the brand website.
Finally with all of the above, testing is the key. Split testing in particular. Test different subject lines, from addresses, content and send times.
Traditional email marketing has been an interruption based tool. It has been very much a ‘Stop and look at me’ form of marketing. The future of email marketing, and indeed most marketing, will be a more subtle and engaging way of integrating into your consumer’s life.
Ultimately, email marketing’s strength relies on the marketers who use it. The greatest threat to the continued prevalence of email marketing does not come from the new generation of Facebook and Twitter users, but from poorly thought out and executed e-mail campaigns that do not take advantage of the mediums possibilities.
Source: utalkmarketing.com
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