Archive for December, 2008

When It Snows in Houston…

I had the good fortune of attending MediaPost’s Email Insider Summit this week in Park City and will be sharing some observations from the event in the coming days.  At the moment, however, I have a different story to share — and bear with me, it will have a lesson for email marketers.

He's Mr. Snow Miser (and he owes me six hours of my life back!)

He's Mr. Snow Miser -- and he owes me six hours of my life back!

For those who follow my personal Twitter feed (@jkrohrs), you may have seen that I had quite the return trip from Utah yesterday.  After an on-time, uneventful flight from Salt Lake City to Houston, I was pleased to see that my connecting flight from Houston to Cleveland was on schedule despite the crazy fact that it was snowing in Houston.

Yup. Snow in Houston.  Last time that happened?  December 24, 2004.

With a snowfall total around an inch, I was optimistic that the impact on my connecting flight would be minimal.  When we boarded early, I was even more optimistic.  When they closed the door and the seat next to me remained empty, I was ecstatic and embraced my newfound elbow room.

As it turns out, I would need the room because I remained in that grounded plane in Houston for the next six hours.  The pilot spoke to us a total of six times during that period, each time apologizing for the delay and chalking it up to a long queue of planes waiting to get de-iced.

During those six hours, all the passengers in coach were offered was water.  That’s it, water and six announcements from the pilot.  When we finally got to the de-icing crew, they ran out of solution after only de-icing half of our plane.   When the pilot shared that factoid, I thought for sure it would trigger a full-on passenger revolt.

When I did finally arrive in snow-free Cleveland this morning — at 5:00AM — I was still on tilt about the experience and thought about what the crew could have done differently to make the experience less frustrating.

They could have offered food.  They could have offered beverage service.  They could have advocated more forcefully to the tower that we be allowed to return to the gate without losing our place in the de-icing line.

Yes, all of those things would have helped, but the number one thing they could have done was COMMUNICATE BETTER.  Hourly announcements are simply insufficient to diffuse the growing frustration when you’re stuck on the tarmac in a sardine can.

And with that realization, it hit me.  There are a lot of companies that are figuratively “stuck on the tarmac” due to our uncertain economy.  On board are customers who aren’t sure when (or if) the company is going to get back up off the ground.  Instead of treating these critical audiences like adults who can handle truth and uncertainty, the “pilots” of these companies are clamming up — and in return, the customers worries and frustrations are being heightened.

Case in point.  Two of the banks with whom I have accounts have been the subject of headline-grabbing takeovers in the past month.  Despite the fact that this is BIG NEWS, I have yet to receive so much as an email from either bank explaining to me what this situation means to me and whether my accounts are safe.

Email should be on the front lines of crisis management for any company.  Your email subscribers are like the passengers on my plane — they have opted-in to be there, and they are hungry for information.  Instead of letting their imaginations run wild and frustrations build, companies would be wise to OVER communicate in this economic climate.  Be candid, clear, and honest.  Admit that you don’t know what you don’t know — but you’ll be certain to let your email subscribers know when you do.

Email subscribers are the elite frequent flyers of your marketing ecosystem.  They are your best customers, and it’s high time that troubled companies pick up the email microphone to do more than share the latest marketing offer.  They need to use that microphone to let us know about the weather outside and their plans to get back into the air.

We frequent flyers are hearty souls, after all.  We can handle the truth.

Jeff Rohrs

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SR! Photo Contest Winner

As I tallied the votes for our SR! Photo Contest, it struck me that perhaps I had too many “cat people” on the roster of judges.  Don’t get me wrong, I love both cats and dogs, but our winning entry from Joanna Freeman at CareerBuilder.com is a bit too sedate for my alt-rock loving sensibilities.

That said, majority rules and per the SR! philosophy — to each their own.  With that, I give you the winning entry, a.k.a. “Subscripurrrrrrrs Rule”:

The Winning Photo: "Subscripurrrrrrrs Rule!"

The Winning Photo: Subscripurrrrrs Rule!

Joanna assures me that no foam hands or blankets were injured during or after the taking of this photograph.  I also trust that the feline pictured will be compensated with an appropriate modeling fee paid in Cat Chow and catnip (if it’s still legal in Illinois).

Thanks again to all who entered our SR! Contests, and look for more to come in 2009!

Jeff Rohrs

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SR! T-Shirt Slogan Contest Winner

After receiving over 1,000 entries, the votes have finally been tallied in our SUBSCRIBERS RULE! T-Shirt Slogan Contest.  Congratulations to Dan Heimbrock and his team at Hyperdrive Interactive for their winning entry:

The winning entry: "I'm unique. (just like everyone else)"

The winning entry: I'm unique. (just like everyone else)

If you’d like to wear Dan’s slogan on your chest, surf on over to our SR! Cafe Press store and pick one up later today (we’re currently wrestling Cafe Press demons to fix our store…so patience will be rewarded).  And yes, I am contractually obligated to make such a blatant plug.

For their efforts, Dan will be receiving a Sanyo Xacti HD video camera with which he is certain to capture an untold number of SR! worthy moments.

Thanks to all who entered — it was a neck & neck race, but I think what pushed Dan’s entry over the edge was the fact that it reminded judge Morgan Stewart of the following SR! inspired moment from Monty Python’s Life of Brian:

YouTube Preview Image

Tune back in tomorrow as we announce the SR! Photo Contest winner.  Until then…stay unique!

Jeff Rohrs

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Mobile email burnout, already?

I had an interesting discussion with one of my wife’s close friends today who has shut off her mobile email service recently. A technically savvy, stay-at-home mom, much like the “Young Homemakers” group that we outlined in the Messaging Behaviors, Preferences, and Personas Whitepaper ExactTarget put out last month.

Basically she said, “Why pay for a service to get email on my phone? Once I realized how much it cost to get interrupted all day, I decided to get rid of it. It’s not that urgent!”

Wading through a pile o' mail.

She's got junk mail sorting skilz!

While this represents one person’s opinion, it encapsulates the attitude we saw in our research. Email may be urgent for business people, for email marketers, but for many consumers, they don’t want the interruptions. They want to be in control when they look at their inboxes. As lowly as it may sound, email offers may simply be simply a digital form of direct mail where they wade through the “junk mail” they receive one day (or week) at-a-time. (Disclaimer: in our home, we wade through the prior weeks junk mail on the weekends).

Some email subscribers are quick hitters (like us marketers) where the trend toward immediate dialogue and social marketing is going to get played out. To be relevant, speed and immediacy will be at the core. For this group, it is about interaction in addition to information.

Others subscribers will be like this mom who wants to go through her inbox in a single sitting. That requires a different approach. Interaction is less important because they aren’t constantly waiting to respond. For this group, it is about finding the right information when they want it.

I see a divergence coming in email strategy around how we facilitate responses… and you guessed it, SR! is at the core!

Morgan Stewart

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