Archive for September, 2009

Demystifying Email

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

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What is email?

Email is the foundation of modern business communications, not just to those in your business but also to your customers.

A recent survey showed that 1 in 2 UK businesses send at least 50,000 marketing emails per month, and just over a fifth send at least half a million emails per month. The importance of email as a marketing communications tool and a valuable part of a customer relationship marketing (CRM) strategy cannot be overlooked.

Email is now a part of our everyday lives; from communicating with friends, to arranging meetings, so how do you ensure your marketing communications will always stand out?

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Five key areas to make your email a success

There are many factors affecting how successful a mailing will be. Even if one email increases sales there is no guarantee the next will do the same. So here are five key areas we recommend you consider in order to maximise potential:

Data Segmentation

If you wish to increase open rate, it’s important to split your data and tailor the message. Targeting customers of different ages, sexes, demographics or even geographic locations can improve the open rates.

Subject line

From the subject line alone, recipients will decide whether to open the email or delete it. This decision will be made in seconds, so it’s important the subject line packs a punch.

Timing your sends

Early-birds or Night-owls? The best time to send an email depends on many factors, including your audience, the email proposition and date relevance. However, research has shown that Tuesdays to Thursdays usually prove the most successful days. It’s also important to find the correct balance between contacting customers too often or not often enough.

Content

Ensuring you have resonant and relevant content goes without saying, however, it’s also vital to consider the amount of images you use, the length of the email, where your links will be placed and most importantly the call to action, the purpose of sending it in the first place.

Testing

As market dynamics fluctuate on a regular basis, continued testing is vital for any emailing campaign. It’s vital to test subject lines and content and to review the segmentation and statistics from each send. Combining these results will inform future campaigns and improve the effectiveness of your emails.

How can you increase the ROI of your email?

Maximising ROI involves looking beyond open rates and clicks. The destination of the email needs to complete the consumer journey.

Rather than clicking through to a home page, it’s important to make the customer journey relevant by taking them straight to the page or product page they are interested in. By keeping everything as simple as possible, you’ll find that consumer interest and engagement remains as high as possible.

When everything is in place, it’s time to send the email. A reputable sender and a cleansed list will increase the amount of emails reaching a recipients inbox, as each incorrect address or blocked email effectively eats away at the marketing budget. Once you’ve created a successful template, ROI can be further maximised by A/B testing, whereby your template variables, e.g. subject line, colour palette or fonts can be individually tested and tweaked.

Contact McCann-i

If you’re interested in finding out how to implement Email Marketing, or you want to know more about McCann-i, give us a call or arrange a breakfast meeting with:

Claire Banks
Head of Interactive
McCann-i
Claire.banks@europe.mccann.com
07816 271 162

Demystifying Web Development

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

dev_header3Build it and they will come??

What does Website Development mean?

Website development traditionally refers to the coding part of creating a webpage, but as online solutions have become more and more complex, the term web development has become shorthand for a raft of development techniques.

To the marketeer, having a website means 24/7/365 days a year exposure at arguably the lowest cost per thousand touch point in your marketing plan….so it’s worth knowing how to get it right.

So how do you start a web development project?

The first thing to decide is what you want your visitors to do and what you want to tell them. Being mindful that visitors’ intentions might not marry up with your objectives – you might want visitors to purchase, they may want to price compare – you need to ensure that your site supports all the decisions a visitor may make. If you already have a website, a Usability Study that records visitors’ responses to set tasks can validate the positive and negative elements of a sites’ usability, and help inform any updates that need to be made.

The next stage is referred to as “Information Architecture”, where we determine how best to take your visitor through your content in a non-linear way (which can be quite a task if you have a large product portfolio or complicated service offering).

The result is a master plan for the website – known as the functional specification. This document explains to everyone involved how the website fits together and specifies how it all works. It’s vital to get this stage right, as it becomes the foundation on which everything is built.

As soon as the specification is approved, it’s time to start designing. There’s a lot for a digital designer to consider such as will the design work across different platforms? Will it be useable and fit for purpose?

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So you’ve got a website already, what more do you need to know?

That technology never stands still. Developers are improving coding techniques and building functionality that was once thought impossible in the online space. A website is a living and breathing thing, and for visitors and search engines to value your content and keep coming back, it needs to offer them a reason to return.

A successful ongoing web development strategy, like all marketing endeavours, should be validated by consumer insight. Website analytics, Usability Studies, creative and functionality testing all offer transparent ways to monitor and learn from online activity. Sometimes the simplest change can make an astonishing difference… take the well-told example of a major eCommerce website’s decision to remove its pre-purchase registration form, which they claim earned them $300m in increased sales!

Contact McCann-i

‘Build it and they will come’ is a nice thought but the digital space is competitive and increasingly sophisticated. Creating a site that delivers a fulfilling and effortless user experience is a process that we’re passionate about. If you are interested in developing a new website or you’d like to know more about improving the customer journey of your existing site, then please call or email to arrange a meeting with:

Claire Banks
Head of Interactive
McCann-i
Claire.banks@europe.mccann.com
07816 271 162