Posts Tagged ‘social media’

Subscribers Speak: “How would you like marketers to communicate with you?”

In July, we sent a group of 12 ExactTarget to the streets of cities around the midwest to ask them how they wanted marketers to communicate with them. Here’s a video showing some of what we heard:

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Interested in more on this topic? Check out the Marketing Preferences Research Bundle featuring Customer Knowledge is Marketer Power, a commissioned study on marketers approach to mulitchannel marketing conducted by Forrester Consulting on behalf of ExactTarget, and the 2009 Channel Preferences Study, ExactTarget’s proprietary study on the communication preferences of subscribers.

Morgan Stewart

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Inbox Insanity: The Future of Email

After three weeks on the road at conferences (OMS and eec) and speaking engagements (MIMA), it’s good to be back home — and back behind the SR! blog machine.  All the travel has provided ample fuel for thought which I hope to share at least somewhat coherently here one the pages of SUBSCRIBERS RULE!.

Today, I want to start by sharing the deck from my Wednesday morning presentation to MIMA.  I don’t know what they put in the water up there in Minnesota, but it makes for an amazingly interactive crowd for 8:00AM in the morning.  Seriously — if your regional interactive marketing association is looking for inspiration, look no further than MIMA.  They have built something special up there.

But I digress…MIMA was kind enough to invite me to do a presentation called, “Inbox Insanity: The Future of Email.”  For longtime readers of SR!, you’ll recognize the title as being partly drawn from a post I wrote back in October 2008 called “Inbox Insanity or Why 23 May Be Enough.”

The thesis of the presentation is pretty simple: the future of marketing is the future of email marketing.  I base this on the following observations:

  • Social media is not new.
  • Every communication advance over the past 15 million years yielded a new “social” media.
  • Email is a social media — indeed, it is the most utilized social media in the world.
  • The social media explosion has led to inbox fragmentation.
  • As a result, I have over 23 inboxes that I check with varying regularity (email, VM, FB, Twitter, etc.).
  • This inbox explosion is not sustainable because time is a precious resource.
  • Therefore, consolidation of multimedia messaging into a single dashboard is quite likely.
  • In a way, such”dashboards” already exist — just look at the iPhone or Yahoo’s  beta Social Inbox where email, VM, SMS, IM, and social updates commingle.
  • The social inbox gives consumers more control and marketers less control (if they ever had it).
  • Accordingly, marketing communications increasingly exist by consumer invitation.
  • And all such invitations are easily revoked.
  • As a result, all marketing is increasingly going to be governed by the same consumer attitude that surrounds email marketing today — namely, if you send something irrelevant, unrequested or untimely, you will be considered a spammer.
  • Therefore, all marketers would be wise to embrace the SR! philosophy regardless of the medium in which they work.

For an outside perspective on my presentation, check out Interactive Snack’s overview of the session.

While I probably raised more questions than I answered, I think that’s probably a good thing.  We all need to distrust anyone who says they have the answers right now.  We don’t live in a period of answers — we live in a time of creative destruction, rapid evolution, and downright confusion.

Through it all, however, there is one thing of which I am sure.  Making your marketing communications more relevant, timely, and personal — regardless of medium — can only improve your results.

Thanks again to the great folks I met up in Minneapolis.  I hope to be back soon with more things to ponder (and yes, perhaps a few answers too!).

Jeff Rohrs

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How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Social Inbox Concept

Fear Not, Brave Email Marketers!

In the course of my career, I’ve come to realize that email marketers carry a disproportional amount of FUD (fear, uncertainty & doubt) compared to marketers in other disciplines.

I’m no psychoanalyst, but I’m guessing it’s due to the fact that email marketers exist at the whim of the ISPs and the myriad of ways in which they render, filter, and block emails.  I also suspect that despite the medium’s unassailable ROI, we all have a little bit of a complex because the cost-effective nature of email means that we command less of the marketing budget (and therefore, in-house respect) than our counterparts who wield large advertising budgets.

The FUD cloud that hangs over email marketing becomes all the more evident when you stand us side-by-side with the social media crowd.  Talk about extroverted!  Those folks love to talk, link, share, and pontificate — and they do so despite the fact that social media is struggling itself to command more of the overall marketing budget.  My colleague Morgan Stewart summed it up perfectly in his article for MediaPost’s Email Insider this week when he stated:

Social media folks understand authentic interactions with customers, they get customer relationships, they just haven’t figured out how to make money! Contrarily, email marketers know how to make money, but too many of us consider a deliverable email address a “relationship.” Let’s face it, we are socially retarded.

If only we could create that X-Filesque alien/human hybrid — the best of the email marketer and the social media guru — we might have an unstoppable force in the marketing department.

Well, guess what.  It’s happening.  As I discussed earlier this week, thanks to Yahoo, Microsoft, Gmail, and even AOL’s Bebo, 2009 stands a good chance to be the year that delviers us a viable social inbox — a space that brings all of our email and social interactions together in one place.

With email and social merged for consumers, email marketers and social media gurus will have no choice but to collaborate.

While this sounds wonderful to some, email marketers will have to fight off their FUD instincts.  It’s easy to see how social inbox features (such as the “From Connections” view in Yahoo’s social inbox beta) will strike fear in the hearts of email marketers who seek to sell rather than serve subscribers.

My firm belief, however, is that the social inbox holds great promise for email marketers.  Here’s why:

  1. It’s an Inbox. Who in the online marketing world understand the inbox better than email marketers?  Our understanding and respect for the inbox environment should prove to be a tremendous asset as we seek to increase consumer engagement and response no matter the medium.
  2. More integration means more use. The more communication tools that the social inbox can integrate into a single dashboard (email, IM, SMS, Twitter, social networks, etc.), the more consumers will remain in the inbox, and the more responsive they will become to relevant, timely messaging of all types.
  3. Email’s strengths will shine. Email supports images, attachments, archiving, search, multiple recipients, and messages more than 140 characters.  The social networks depend on email to drive engagement, send account notices, and alert you as to new friends and followers.  In the social inbox, email’s strengths will shine as part of the expanded suite of communication tools that users have at their disposal.
  4. Relationships will rule. The social inbox will reinforce the importance of relationships.  As a result, companies who take the time to understand and serve their email subscribers needs will be rewarded with above average response and an opportunity to extend those relationships into the social media (or vice versa).

While the social inbox will bring change, it will also bring opportunities to those who remain focused on the “four rights” — sending the right message, to the right person, at the right time, through the right medium.  So, set aside the FUD fellow email marketers, and focus on the fundamentals.  Subscribers will still reign supreme as the year of the social inbox unfolds.

Jeff Rohrs

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Gary Vaynerchuk Loves His Subscribers

This humble blogger & Gary Vaynerchuk throwin' some SR! love.

Gary Vaynerchuk and yours truly throwin' some SR! love.

For those of you not familiar with Gary Vaynerchuk, he is the spitfire, whirling dervish of marketing passion behind Wine Library, Wine Library TV, GaryVaynerchuck.com, and some of the best keynote presentations that I’ve seen on the digital marketing circuit in the past year.

Thanks to the good folks at MarketingProfs, Gary not only keynoted today’s Digital Marketing Mixer in Scottsdale, Arizona — he also participated in an excellent session entitled “Email & Social Media: True Love Always.”

For someone such as Gary, who has made his name in large part thanks to social media, his take on email’s place in the marketing ecosystem was truly refreshing.  His team at Wine Library doesn’t treat it as “cheap paper,” but rather a critical part of their customer service and communication efforts.

Here are just a few of the email marketing-related bits of wisdom Gary shared with attendees:

  • Wine Library trains all sales associates to ask for email addresses at time of purchase.  Consistent failure to do so has resulted in the termination of several employees.
  • If your content is rich and your audience is passionate, your emailing frequency can break all the rules.  In fact, Wine Library emails its subscribers 7 days a week while still maintaining a stellar sender reputation and deliverability rates.
  • If someone unsubscribes from Wine Library’s email program, Gary or another staffer will personally call them to determine the reason and make sure that they are aware of their monthly and more segmented email subscription options.
  • Gary still personally responds to all the email he receives — some 1,000 messages a day.  Why?  Because if they care enough to write, you should care enough to respond.

The bottom line is that Wine Library treats email as it should be treated — a two-way communication channel.  And perhaps more importantly, they don’t forget that the email relationship is just one of many a company should have with customers.  By supplementing their email interactions with face-to-face and telephonic follow-ups, Wine Library builds the kind of life-long loyalty that far bigger brands struggle to attain.

Jeff Rohrs

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