Archive for the ‘Email Marketing’ Category

Mobile and Email Marketing for Myrtle Beach Golf Courses

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Myrtle Beach is one of the most popular golf resort locales in the U.S. and people come from all over the country to golf for recreation, business, and tournaments. For course owners, that is the good news. The bad news, unfortunately, is that being part of one of the most attractive golfing regions in the country means that your competition is at its peak. Myrtle Beach visitors have access to over 100 nearby courses. How will they know to choose yours?

To stand out from your competition, you have to market aggressively and with an eye toward long-term loyalty. Paying attention to shifts in consumer behavior will give you an edge over your competitors and allow you to use technology to reach likely golfers in ways that are both direct and cost-effective.

Three solutions:

Email Marketing

Sending out email messages that advertise exclusive deals, discounts, and event announcements is instantaneous and the cost is nominal. But blindly emailing tons of people who may be totally indifferent to your offer is a waste of time and money and may weaken your brand by creating an unfavorable impression of your business as a spammer. Instead, develop a targeted email campaign in which your clients are invited to opt in to receive information about your course. Golfing can become an expensive habit for the true enthusiasts, many of whom will be attracted to the idea of exclusive deals available only to those on your email list. OIR offers complete management of your email campaign, including designing, sending, monthly reporting, and data analysis.

SMS

Billions of text messages are sent and opened each month, and SMS offers a method of advertising faster and more direct than any other used today. Typical text messages are opened within only minutes of receipt, and thus make an excellent way of communicating with your clients about short-notice tee times or last minute deals designed to bring people to your course that very day or weekend. OIR offers all the tools you need to start and manage an SMS campaign that lets you craft text messages and send them out at whatever frequency suits your marketing goals. We also track the effectiveness of your keywords and advertising venues so that you can adjust your campaign utilizing only what works.

txtMB

If you are new to mobile marketing or want to test its effectiveness before launching your own campaign, consider joining txtMB, the area’s newest interactive campaign designed specifically for Myrtle Beach visitors. txtMB is a cooperative marketing campaign that gathers together promotions from many area businesses and sends text-message deals directly to interested people’s cell phones. txtMB offers its subscribers exclusive deals to area events and attractions, and it offers advertisers a cost-sharing model that enables them to participate in a text marketing campaign without absorbing all of the expense. Upon joining txMB, a subscriber has the option to select announcements about Golf deals specifically, and will then start receiving text ads (no more than three per day) for area courses. txtMB ensures that all people who specify a golf interest (and only those people) will receive your message. Tourists often like to try out different courses, and txtMB can make sure yours is on their radar.

For more information about how OIR can help you make use of technology to attract more clients and reward the ones you have, contact us at 843-628-1619, or email us at sms@oirinteractive.com

An Argument for Email and SMS Marketing

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

As SMS marketing becomes more widespread, businesses are looking for ways to integrate new mobile campaigns into the more traditional marketing strategies they already have in place. Email marketing is a pervasive and time-tested marketing strategy but one that has limits; SMS marketing campaigns can be used in conjunction with email marketing or as a stand-alone method.

Benefits of Email Marketing

Cost: For one thing, email is very inexpensive. Saving thousands of dollars on paper and postage, email allows companies to invest less and reach more. One email message can reach thousands of subscribers instantly and cheaply, making email a smart investment for advertising budgets of all sizes.

Targeting: Email messages are received almost instantly, and, unlike many traditional print mailings and circulars, well-conceived email marketing is targeted, thereby reaching only those consumers who have demonstrated interest. A huge benefit to email marketing is that consumers can be segmented based on interests or shared traits, making the targeting even more effective. Depending on the product or service under promotion, a company can choose to send out a mass mailing to the entire subscriber list, or just to a segment of specific users. Multiple lists can also be combined whenever it is advantageous.

Tracking: Technology used in email marketing campaigns enable companies to track the campaign’s performance by ascertaining which users actually opened the message—as well as which users followed links and/or forwarded the message on to friends. This kind of information, not available with more conventional advertising venues like print or broadcast, provides instant information about the effectiveness of the campaign for future tweaking or changing.

Proliferation: The nature of email allows marketing to become viral very quickly. If an offer is compelling, advertisers will see it passed around very quickly. This makes email one of the more effective means of expanding market reach.

Email’s Loss is an SMS Gain

The biggest downside of email marketing, any advertiser will tell you, is the low open/read rates of email messages. While email campaigns have success in reaching thousands of subscribers quickly, the promotions are meaningless if the message is deleted or filtered as spam without even being opened. And with less than a quarter of wireless users owning smartphones (and only a percentage of smartphone owners using their device to check their email), email marketing is not ideally suited to take full advantage of the current mobile advertising climate.
These limitations, however, are where the emerging SMS advertising medium can shine. People have their cell phones with them almost all the time and change their phone number far less frequently than they change their email address. Additionally, text messages have a 95% open/read rate, which virtually guarantees that your clients will at least read your message. Consider too that the typical text message gets opened within 15 minutes of receipt. This means even quicker delivery than an email message, which, while instant, must still wait for the user to reach a computer before it can be put to use.

Though currently not as cheap as email, SMS is very cost-effective for its return, and it enjoys or surpasses most of email’s aforementioned advantages. Like email, SMS is highly viral, allowing users to pass good deals or contests on to friends. Applications such as TextBoard will also segment users based on common traits while tracking the effectiveness of keywords so that brands can optimize their campaigns based on what has proven to work. The interactive nature of text marketing allows companies to try different keywords in different advertising media and determine which keywords and media generated the highest response rates. And since SMS is still a bit of a novelty, companies that make use of it get that extra advertising edge over their competitors.
Coordinating Email and SMS

Combining mobile with marketing tools already in use gives advertisers maximum opportunity to reach consumers. Legends in Concert, a live performance tribute show located in ten cities all over the US, held a recent contest that successfully blended their email and SMS marketing strategies. In an email sent to over 20,000 subscribers, they invited users to text ELVIS to a short code for a chance to win 2 VIP tickets. In only 72 hours, Legends saw a 30% opt-in rate, which even surpassed expectations. Their case shows one way that email and SMS can work together, enabling email’s rapid and highly viral nature to give visibility to an SMS campaign.
The opposite type of approach can be used as well, whereby a mobile campaign designed to draw people to it through its promotion can then prompt the user to give his or her email address, and in this way, SMS can be used to grow the company’s email subscriber list of interested consumers.

Savvy businesses should not miss the opportunity to develop a mobile component to their advertising. This includes not only mobile ads and a mobile adaptation of their website, but also well-planned SMS campaigns that complement other advertising practices to maximize the opt-in rates and market reach.

OIR Interactive to Speak at The American Marketing Association Charleston

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Pack your bags! It’s time to head down to Charelston, SC and join us for an American Marketing Association Charleston presentation. The show starts at noon on February 11, 2010.

Justin Rockwell, Owner and Web Strategist of OIR Interactive, LLC an interactive marketing agency in North Myrtle Beach, S.C. and OIR’s E-mail Marketing Specialist Teri Backfield will dive into the world of mobile and e-mail marketing. They’ll be taking a look beyond basic digital marketing and focusing on what new digital methods marketers can use and the analytics that go along with them for the best possible impact and return on investment.

While mobile marketing is still in the beginning stages as compared to the more mature advertising mediums such as television, radio, print and even the Internet, mobile is quickly emerging as an advertising channel with full-impact. Rockwell will explain the various methods of mobile marketing, who is currently using them, and what works and what doesn’t so marketers can get started with mobile today.

Backfield will take a hands-on approach to interpreting e-mail marketing analytics and reading between the lines to maximize your e-mail marketing exposure. We have all sent an e-mail for a business, now it’s time to do it right by following examples of industry leaders and encouraging you to create new trends to help your brand’s e-mail marketing messages grow.

UPDATE: The luncheon was great and was one of the biggest crowds the AMA has had! As promised here is a link to the presentations should anyone interested in viewing.

presentation

Text-to-Win! Include a mobile contest with your SMS marketing strategy

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Including a promotional contest is a perfect way to maximize the effectiveness of a mobile marketing campaign. Using a text-to-win promotion can create a positive buzz for your company and make you look like an early adopter (not one that follows the lead of other businesses) all while building your ever growing list of mobile subscribers.

The way a text-to-win contest works is by having your respondents text to your short code within an allotted amount of time for a chance to win a prize. Of course, the more interesting the prize is, the more interest people will have in entering. At the end of the contest, one mobile number is chosen at random as the winner. You can then send them a text telling them where/how to collect their winnings.

The beauty of this method of texting is that it allows people to participate though a  medium that is convenient to them.  Rather than forcing them to fill out a piece of paper, or directing them to your website to enter, participants can enter quickly and effortless right where they are. Using a SMS based contest can be most effective at large-scale events such as concerts or sporting events where the message to enter can easily be broadcast to a large amount of people at the same time.

Once your contest is complete, the benefits don’t stop there. You can use the new contacts to your advantage. Advertising your company in the weeks following the promotion informing the entrants of upcoming special events and future scheduled promotions. Keeping communication between your patrons simple and convenient to all.

Understanding Email Marketing Metrics

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Collecting and evaluating metrics from an email marketing campaign is very important.  The open, delivery, and response rates of your email campaigns can determine if your email marketing strategies are successful or failing. Trending strategies can be applied after these metrics are accumulated to determine if as a whole your email campaigns are on the up or downswing. Here’s what you should know:

1. Total Delivered:
This is the first metric that you should always calculate if your ESP (Email Service Provider) does not do it for you. The total delivered tells you the total number of emails that were successfully delivered into recipient inboxes. We will need this number to calculate other email marketing metrics below.

The total delivered can be calculated like this:
Total number of emails sent (–) Total number of bounces (Hard + Soft)

The total number of emails sent refers to how many recipients you initially published your email to. If your sent number is 10% or more lower than it should have been you may have had a problem with your segmentation. If you download your active list and the list that your email was published to we can give you a list of emails that did not receive the message. Bounces are explained in further detail below.

2. Delivery Rate:
The delivery rate tells you the percentage of emails that were successfully delivered into recipient inboxes.

The delivery rate can be calculated like this:
Total delivered / Total number of emails sent

Unless you are delivering to a list for the first time your delivery rate should be 90 to 100%.

3. Bounce Rate:
Bounces are not always easy to understand, here are the basics.

A hard bounce is a delivery failure of your email because of a permanent error. For example a hard bounce is an email address that does not exist or was abandoned. To optimize your email campaigns you should always remove hard bounces from your active delivery list. By doing this your email campaign metrics become more reliable, you are not sending an offer to an invalid lead, and best of all you are only paying for active leads.

A soft bounce is a delivery failure of your email because of a temporary error. For example AOL’s mail servers were temporarily down when you sent your email; this would be a classic example of a soft bounce.  These emails should stay on your active delivery list. Some ESP’s will remove soft bounces after the third or fourth time the same error has occurred. This is ok because the mail server may not exist anymore. For your protection it is always a good idea to keep a close eye on this. If the soft bounces seem unusually high you might want to start a discussion with your provider. Or you can always ask us to examine your bounce report and we can determine what may have happened.

The bounce rate for a campaign can be calculated like this:
Total number of bounces (Hard + Soft) / Total number of emails sent

We divide this one by the total number of emails sent because we want to know of the emails we published how many bounced back, not of the emails we delivered how many bounced back. We know that none of the emails we delivered bounced back.

4. Open Rate:
Open metrics of your email campaigns usually consist of two elements unique opens and total opens. A unique open refers to the number of unique recipients that opened your email newsletter. A total opens, on the flipside refers to the cumulative number of times that your email was opened all together. So for example lisa@gmail.com a loyal subscriber opens the email newsletter while she’s at work and reads through it and notices a sweater she is interested in purchasing. She closes the email and flags it because she doesn’t have time to investigate further. When she gets home she opens the email newsletter again and proceeds to buy that sweater that she liked so much at work. She is counted once and only once in your unique open tally, but twice in the total open tally because she opened the email at work and at home later.

The open rate for a campaign can be calculated like this:
Unique opens / Total Delivered

Open rates are continuing to decline and becoming an unreliable metric in today’s email marketing environment. Open rates are calculated usually based on a one by one invisible pixel at the bottom of an email campaign. This pixel is turned on when images are turned on by users and the open is counted. Handheld devices block image downloading and prevent an open from being recorded. No method exists for tracking opens from text versions either. Major ESP’s insist that today open rates should only be used to identify large problems such as no opens on a major domain (like MSN) or sudden drops outside your normal open rate. When you use open metrics in conjunction with delivery data it can help to determine missing bounces that may have been blocked at the firewall level, or bulk SPAM folder delivery. If you notice a problem with your open rate, feel free to have us help you investigate the problem.

5. Click-Through Rate:
Click-through metrics also consist of two elements unique clicks and total clicks. A unique click refers to the number of unique recipients that clicked on a link in your email newsletter. A total click refers to the cumulative number of times that a subscriber clicked on a link in your email newsletter. Sounds easy, but it is actually complicated because email newsletters typically contain more than one link. Let’s try to explain this better with an example. lisa@gmail.com opens the email newsletter when she gets home from work and clicks on the sweater that she liked and she also clicks on a pair of pants. She is now counted once on the sweater link and once on the pant link in BOTH unique and total clicks. She abandon’s the website and decides not to purchase the pants or the sweater. The next day she opens the email newsletter and clicks on the pants and the sweater again. She is still only counted once on the sweater link and once on the pant link in unique clicks BUT she is counted as two for both the sweater and pant link in total clicks. Your unique click metric will be two, while your total click metric will be four.

The click-through rate for a campaign can be calculated like this:
Unique clicks / Total Delivered

The click-through rate is the most important, most reliable metric in any email campaign. Think of your click-through rate as your email campaign’s impact. This number tells you how engaged a consumer was by your email because it was worth it for them to click. This number also gives you an indication of how many active subscribers you have. This metric unlike the open rate includes data from BOTH the text and HTML versions of your email campaign.

If you want to further analyze click-through metrics you can determine delivery rates at specific domains. If one domain performs drastically different than another domain it might indicate a problem. These problems could include things like SPAM folder delivery, or a new template not engaging your customer. If you don’t have time to do in-depth click analyses have us analyze your click-through report for you.

6. Unsubscribe/Opt-out Rate:
Your unsubscribe rate is very easy to understand. Of the people who received your email how many decided that they didn’t want to get the email newsletter anymore. Having an opt-out (unsubscribe) method on an email newsletter is required by CAN-SPAM legislation. Unsubscribe rates are a reliable metric because the unsubscribe method is almost always a link.

The unsubscribe rate for a campaign can be calculated like this:
Total Unsubscribed / Total Delivered

You want the opt-out number to be low, but it should never be zero. Sorry to those of you who thought you sent out the perfect email. When evaluating unsubscribe rates and comparing them to other campaign unsubscribe rates, you can determine if customers are generally happy with your mailings. Don’t get too fixated on these results, it is very likely that people are just deleting your email and not reading it. Also be aware of people clicking the SPAM complaint button. SPAM complaints often do not show up in the unsubscribe totals for ESP’s yet people should actually be unsubscribed when they click this button. That gives you two very important questions to ask your provider.

7. Referral Rate:
What is a referral? If you have received an email newsletter with a ‘Send to a Friend’ or ‘Forward to a Friend’ or ‘Pass Along’ at the bottom that is a referral. When someone clicks that links and sends the email on to someone else, then you are in the business for referral metrics.

The referral rate for a campaign can be calculated like this:
Referrals / Total Delivered

Referral rates are typically very low. Speculation tells us that people just ignore links in the footer of an email and this may be the reason why. Either way it is nice to know people have this option. You might want to try to put the referral link in a different place than hidden in the footer. Sometimes experimentation is the best way to get results in email campaigns.

A word of caution about referral email addresses: it is unethical to collect these email addresses and add them to the email database. Our suggestion is to allow the person to opt-in with a standard opt-in box that you put specifically in the referral.

8. SPAM Complaint Rate:
SPAM complaint metrics consist of people who click on the SPAM complaint button in webmail clients. Almost all webmail clients have this email marketing annoyance. Ok, it can be worthwhile for true SPAM but people reading this post are likely not SPAMMERS. AOL, Hotmail, Gmail, and Yahoo all have it, if your email marketing database is like most that covers 90% of your reading base. The button happens to be located in a prime location right at the top. Internet Service Providers (ISP’s) do know that people use this method to unsubscribe frequently, that’s the good news.

If your SPAM complaint rate is too high ISP’s can content filter your emails and not deliver them to email addresses at all. They can also randomly pick an email address from your list and make you verify that it was collected from a website or legal method.

The SPAM complaint rate for a campaign can be calculated like this:
SPAM Complaints / Total Delivered

Aim for a SPAM complaint rate that is less than 0.1 percent. That is one out of every thousand that you send out. If you go over that you might not immediately be at risk for being blocked, but you should work on bringing complaints down. Also be aware that ESP’s don’t like high SPAM complaint rates at all because it affects everyone on their servers. Some even have strict zero tolerance policies if you go over 0.1 percent on too many campaigns.

9. Response/Conversion Rate:
A response or conversion rate indicates the number of people that actually did something as a result of your email blast. Some emails drive purchases, other just have a call to action. Both of these can be measured in conversion rates. Sometimes people call response and conversion rates action, donation, or advocacy rates. The terminology you use all depends on what industry you are providing the information for. If it is for a charitable organization you would likely call this metric a donation rate on the report.

The response rate for a campaign can be calculated like this:
Conversions (aka: # of Actions Taken) / Total Delivered

This metric is one of those metrics that you can’t benchmark. You can’t say, for example, that a 3% response rate for an online clothing retailer is bad versus the 5% response rate that the electronics store received. It just doesn’t make sense to compare this metric to data other than email campaigns within the same company.

10. eCPM:
This crazy sounding acronym refers to effective email cost-per-thousand. This metric is useful for anyone who uses an ESP or rented list. It basically answers the question: “Based on what I’ve spent how much bang did I get for the buck?” Sounds like it wouldn’t come in handy, but you would be surprised.

The eCPM  rate for a campaign can be calculated like this:
((Email Revenue – Email Cost) / Total Delivered) * 1000

Here is an example of how it actually works:
You sent out an email that cost $500 to 20,000 recipients. Your revenue generated from that email was $1000. You spent $25 per thousand emails that you purchased.  ((1,000 – 500) / 20,000) * 1,000

Now your company is contemplating sending to a purchased list of 40,000 recipients. Based on your last send you can accurately project that this email will generate $1,000 in revenue.

Here is how we got that number:
Your going to send to 40,0000 divide that by 1,000 because we are doing cost-per-thousand multiply this by $25 which is what you made on the last send.  This gives you $1000. Remember we subtracted your overhead last time, so this is a projection of pure revenue without overhead cost.

11. Creative Effectiveness:
This metric should be used when changing the design of your emails. The unique people that clicked the email divided into the unique people to open the email explains the way the subscriber viewed the message. If links were not as noticeable or sparse we might see a drop in this metric. Keep in mind that we established earlier that open rates do not provide profound evidence of subscriber activity.  When comparing an email from the old template, to an email with the new template, however, this is an accurate metric. Especially if the email blasts were sent out within a month or so timeframe to the same list.

The creative effectiveness can be calculated like this:
Unique Clicks / Unique Opens


12. Engaged Customers by Domain:
This metric is just another way of measuring an open rate. Instead of using the unique opens we are using the total opens this time. This metric is very useful for measuring engaged people on domains where images are turned off by default and users have to click to turn them back on. Downloading the list and analyzing it is the only way to effectively do this.

The most engaged customers can be calculated like this:
Total Opens (Separated by Domain) / Total Delivered


13. Landing Page Effectiveness:
The landing page effectiveness is a very interesting metric. This will help you optimize your website landing pages where people are making purchases and donations. This metric answers the question “Of the people who clicked on the email, how many responded and how many did not?”

The landing page effectiveness can be calculated like this:
Conversions / Unique Clicks

If you sent an email to 500 people and only 50 responded, your landing page’s effectiveness was at 10%. By the same regard your landing page’s ineffectiveness was 90%. This indicates that the landing page is really not doing as well as it should.

Five Great Reasons to Try Email Marketing

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009
  1. It’s CHEAP: Recession got you down? Don’t worry you can still send out that fall promotion. Email marketing has virtually no production cost, no shipping cost, and no excessive time delay. Traditional mailers can take up to three weeks to produce, why wait when you can send an email that has a same day impact on your revenue.
  2. It’s EFFECTIVE: Email marketing is the proactive way to approach customers instead of waiting for them to read a magazine with your advertisement, or come back to your store. With database integration you can target your emails by source, interest, or purchase history. Email marketing keeps your customers in touch, and increases brand awareness and loyalty.
  3. It’s IMMEDIATE: Response and ROI typically occur within the first 48 hours of sending an email marketing message. If you need to advertise that last minute deal absolutely no other method allows you to do so as quickly and easily.
  4. It’s MEASURABLE: When an email marketing campaign is sent out subscriber activity and response is tracked. Find out how many people opened your message, how many people clicked a link, and what the most popular story or item was. Imagine being able to tell what product is going to sell the best by doing and exclusive online pre-sale and then adjusting prices when your products go to market.
  5. It’s EASY: You focus on your strategy we’ll take care of the details. Our services include programming , delivery, reporting, and consultation. What more do you need?

Maintain a Clean Email List, Even When Purchased

Monday, August 17th, 2009

You may have setup a couple sign up forms in your web site to encourage people to receive your email newsletters and promotions. You want to use email technology because it is cheaper, more efficient and you can track the results better than with traditional marketing channels.

For reasons beyond your control the total subscribers maybe low, you want to take advantage of an email campaign and reach as many  people as possible so you do a quick search for ‘list buying/renting’ and in a matter of minutes you’ve got yourself 10,000 plus new subscribers! You send your email campaign and the results are not near what you thought they would be. Even worse, you noticed that a major ISP (Comcast, AOL, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc.) bounced a significant portion of your subscribers emails.

What happened is that when you made the decision to purchase a list you probably bought it from an unreliable source that told you that the records where opt in. But did they explain to you how their opt in system works? Did they show you where in their process they tell subscribers that their information will be sold? Most likely not. The truth is that buying list doesn’t help your cause; it actually hurts your reputation and ISPs won’t deliver emails to inboxes from non-trusted senders. The ISPs know you are a not a trusted sender when they see complaint rates going up and surprisingly it doesn’t take more than a handful of complaints to become part of the dreaded blacklists.

Obviously the best case scenario is to not buy a list to begin with, but since this practice is becoming more and more popular,  you should know what to do to clean your list and make sure you become white listed from the ISPs. It is simple and it will help building a customer relationship with this new subscribers:

  • Always honor unsubscribe request as soon as possible. It is better to have unsubscribed request than have you subscribers clicking the spam button in their email client.
  • Remember to have the name of your company in the FROM line as well as the subject line, it helps recipients to identify who you are right away.
  • Let the recipient feel like they are in control and allow them to tell you how often and what type of information they would like to receive from you.
  • Remind subscribers how you got their email: such as from sign up forms in your website or through a “partner” that you purchased the list from.
  • Send frequency plays an important roll when building your reputation. Establish an email campaign that goes out in a timely and consistent manner.

Your reputation is important to have a successful email campaign. Test and find the balance between what works and what doesn’t for your company. Keep your subscribers happy by sending them relevant information in a timely manner, but most important your subscribers must have given you unambiguous consent to contact them through email, and even then you should expect complaints because people often forget when, where, why they subscribe.

Email Marketing and Why It Works So Dang Well

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Smaller business still may not have grasped the power of an effective email marketing campaign. Feeling that with all the spam that exists in today’s world, won’t their message get lost in the noise. On top of that, hasn’t competing with blogs, Twitter and the other numbers of clever ways to communicate online made this whole email thing been outdated?

If you’re still in doubt, or haven’t taken the plunged into email marketing for you business we’ll help provide some answers as to why email marketing is working as well as it is. Here are some facts that could whet your appetite.

  • Resent research conducted by the Direct Marketing Association, email marketing generated an average return on investment of $48.34 for every dollar spend on it in 2007. This number outperforms all the other direct marketing channels such as print catalogs and direct mail pieces.
  • The Ad Effectiveness Survey commissioned by Forbes Media in Feb/March 2009 revealed that email and e-newsletter marketing are considered the second-most effective tool for generating conversions, just behind SEO
  • In Datran Media’s 2009 Annual Marketing & Media Survey, 80.4% of industry executives said the email channel performed strongly for their company. This was the top result.
  • A February/March 2008 retailer survey by shop.org revealed that email marketing has the second lowest cost per order (CPO) of any online marketing tactic. The CPO of $6.85 compares favorably with, for example, paid search’s CPO of $19.33.
  • In August, 2009, Veronis Suhler Stevenson’s annual Communications Industry Forecast suggested total spend for email will grow from $11.9 billion in 2008 to $27.8 billion by 2013.
  • In Datran Media’s 2009 Annual Marketing & Media Survey, 58.5% of industry executives said they planned to increase investment in email. Only 5.7% planned to decrease it.
  • In a 2008 survey of 200 corporate marketers, 74% said they would increase spending on email campaigns over the next three years.

So the real question is not how well it works, but WHY it works so well. Email marketing works for number of reasons. It allows the direct targeting of clients, it’s data driven, builds relationships loyalty and customer trust and can even support sales through additional channels.

Because email marketing supports database integration, segmentation it allows for advanced methods to generate on the fly emails customized to an individual recipients.  On top of that, every message that is sent inside of a campaign provides you with a mountain of data that can be used to adjust and tweak your campaign to maximize your ROI.

Email promotions and offers generate immediate action: sales, downloads, inquiries, registrations, etc. Informative email newsletters and other emails send people to offline stores and events, prepare the way for catalogs, build awareness, contribute to branding, strengthen relationships, encourage trust and cement loyalty.