It was bound to happen: Commercial e-mail has turned into a badly
overcrowded jungle. Marketers who once routinely achieved response rates
of 10%-15% on their e-mail campaigns now feel lucky to pull 3%-5% from
increasingly jaded prospects. And the competition for e-mail eyeballs is
getting much tougher: Forrester Research predicts that the volume of
commercial e-mail will triple in the next five years.
So what does it take to survive in the e-mail jungle these days?
The popular (and politically correct) theory is that the winners
will be those who ask "permission" to send commercial e-mail
to an individual's mailbox. In support of this theory, permission
marketing guru Seth Godin points out--correctly--that so-called
"opt-in" lists consistently yield higher response rates than
spam-like lists of raw, unqualified names.
But we suspect the permission lobby misses an important point: It
isn't the act of asking for permission that produces great results,
but rather the relationship behind the grant of permission. In fact,
most people don't even remember which opt-in lists they've
joined: When they see an offer that looks like spam, they trash it (and
sometimes even report the sender to the anti-spam cops). Relevant offers
and trusted senders almost invariably pass the spam sniff test, even if
the issue of permission has never come up.
As a practical matter, of course, relationships have to start
somewhere. In fact, e-mail campaigns that target total strangers tend to
be expensive and relatively ineffective; e-mail is typically not a great
tool for new customer acquisition. (It's no accident that the most
aggressive spammers always seem to be peddling pornography and
get-rich-quick schemes, where there's not much expectation of a
deep relationship.)
At the same time, it's possible to create relationship
campaigns that reach well beyond a narrowly-defined group of
installed-base customers. The seeds of a relationship are planted
whenever someone visits a company's Web site, orders a demo copy,
hears a trade show speaker, or even recognizes a product's brand
name. A company's circle of "friends and family" is often
surprisingly large, and most of the people in this extended circle
don't object to e-mail that strengthens their ties to the company.
We've been looking at how to develop relationship-based e-mail
campaigns, and we've come up with a few guidelines:
* Don't get pushy: Relationships take time to grow, even on
Internet time. From the customer's perspective, a one-time
transaction--a trialware download, say, or a single
purchase--doesn't automatically create trust or confer the right to
collect extensive profile information. Instead, it's important to
build the relationship gradually, with e-mail newsletters, tips,
surveys, discounts, seminar invitations, and other low-pressure offers
that leave the customer with a sense of control over the relationship.
* Showcase a strong relationship benefit: Ideally, customers should
want to stay on your e-mail list--for instance, to get free updates for
products that are evolving rapidly, or to qualify for
"membership" discounts. For software companies, an especially
effective way to build a loyal e-mail list is by offering a regular
tips-and-techniques newsletter. Anything that enhances a customer's
successful use of a product (or service) is likely to be perceived as an
especially compelling relationship benefit.
* Personalize the message: Demonstrating personal knowledge about
the customer--for instance, by embedding the recipient's name in an
e-mail- -can be a powerful reminder of a past relationship. Although
personalization technology and data mining can get very elaborate, often
the same impact can be achieved by sending standard e-mail messages to
easily-identified customer segments. One example: When book buyers look
like they might be drifting away, Amazon.com sends an e- mail that says,
"We notice that you haven't shopped with us in a
while..." and invites the recipient to visit the store again.
* Write like a human being: Tone and style matter a great deal in
the e-mail world. Even when a relationship is well established,
customers are less likely to feel a sense of intimacy when e-mail sounds
like the voice of an anonymous corporation, bureaucratic and formal.
We're more likely to feel engaged if we get a friendly-sounding
note from Sally Jones in customer service or an "important
message" from the CEO. Too much energy and enthusiasm can also be a
turn-off: Hard-sell marketing pitches are as unwelcome as an insurance
salesman who hands out business cards at a wedding.
* Respond to feedback: Personalization creates an illusion of
one-to- one communication, so it's not surprising that an e-mail
campaign will sometimes generate literally hundreds of tech support
questions, feature requests, testimonials, address changes, and other
random comments. No one in a company is ever eager to write personal
answers to all these messages, but ignoring them can create a lot of bad
feeling among people with an above-average interest in the company.
* Stay in touch: Relationships depend on reasonably frequent
communication--typically, at least a half-dozen messages a year
(preferably several brief, single-subject e-mails instead of a few
less-frequent omnibus messages). But if there's nothing interesting
to write about, don't crank out filler material just to meet a
schedule. In the online world, no one has permission to be a bore.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Soft-letter Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights
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