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Email Marketing

We have opinions. Lots of them. Some of them are even correct. Find out what we have to say about what’s new with digital marketing and strategy, pat us on the back when you agree, challenge us when you don’t.

Top 10 Tips To Becoming Rich and Famous Online

by Niall McKeown on 22.08.2011

The title of this blog is said with tongue-in-cheek.  It’s as if there were buttons you could press to make fame happen, a set of rules to follow or a certain combination of technologies that enable riches to simply tumble your way.   The web is falling down with websites offering easy answers to the complex question: “How do I become more popular on-line?”  Well dear reader this blog illustrates what you need to do and what you should avoid doing.

Examples of some dubious recommendations from ‘get famous quick’  blogs include:

50 ways to get more people to like your Facebook page

10 surefire ways to get more Twitter followers

The most curious suggestions in the lists of quick fixes for stardom include:

Get Verified like the Dalai Lama

dalai1 Top 10 Tips To Becoming Rich and Famous Online

Only helps when you're already famous...

 

Buy Suckers and Hope They Are Too Stupid To Unsubscribe

buyfriends Top 10 Tips To Becoming Rich and Famous Online

...how many new Twitter followers will fall for that?

 

Link your ‘tweetbook’ to your ‘faceblog’

twitblog Top 10 Tips To Becoming Rich and Famous Online

Content on Facebook Rarely Reduces Successfully to 140 Characters

I’m a scientist at heart.  I like to use evidence to prove my theories and as such I’ve selected several individuals, consumer brands and business-to-business service providers on which to conduct my research into Top 10 Tips To Become Rich and Famous Online.

wall of fame1 Top 10 Tips To Becoming Rich and Famous Online

Lee Munroe is a successful, creative, self-employed 27 year-old web designer that works part of the year in Belfast and part of the year on the west coast of the USA.  Some might say he’s living the dream.  I would be one such person.

Why has Lee got so many followers on Twitter?  Probably because he writes a blog , “Designing User Experience and Interfaces for Websites”.  Lee’s labour of love over the past five years has earned him respect from his peers.  His peers see him as a web leader and re-publish his work causing others to follow him, increasing his readership.

 

Gerry McGovern has only 3,420 followers, so why has the Irish author of four successful books on Customer Top Task analysis so unpopular by comparison?  Probably because the 16,000+ subscribers to his email newsletter prefer to read his weekly thoughts on the niche topic he leads via email.

 

Katrina Doran leads Northern Ireland’s beauty and fashion community.  Her online persona, Sasha Sugah has 2183 friends and the Sugahfix.com website has over 4500 opt-in email addresses from ladies looking for fashion inspiration.  Such is the depth of relationship with its readers, Sugahfix.com has the power to mobilise the fashion elite to attend fashion shows, bars, clubs and restaurants and can anoint an establishment as being ‘the place to be seen’.  This can dramatically change the fortunes of an outlet.

 

Sugahfix’s power extends far beyond that of a print publication.  They converse using social media with the leading influencers in their sector on first name terms.  This massive influence didn’t happen over night, it has taken Katrina and her team years and selecting to take a leadership role to gain such level of respect.

 

CERN, the world’s leading physics laboratory, Jimmy Choo, a leading fashion designer focusing on the niche of high fashion shoes, and E-Consultancy, a UK leader on digital marketing all have two things in common.  They don’t follow most of the tips offered in the ‘get famous quick’ websites and second, they lead and have strategically built and lead a tribe.

 

10 Tips To Becoming Rich and Famous Online

  1. Stand for something!  Get a niche
  2. Proactively lead and challenge your niche audience.
  3. Write stuff people want to read, not stuff you want them to read.
  4. Be original and offer a unique perspective.
  5. Gain respect over time. It’s a long game.
  6. Treat followers as intelligent strangers, not ‘web traffic’.
  7. Excite and please your readers and let them spread the word.
  8. Understand that the technology is much less important than what you say.
  9. The influence of the follower is more important than the volume of followers.
  10. Ignore ‘Get Famous Quick’ tweets, blogs and Facebook postings.

 

Follow the author Niall McKeown on Twitter

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Everything I hold is either crying or melting

by admin on 18.07.2011

It may come as a surprise that much emerging online customer journey planning theory has lots in common with traditional retail theory.  A look under the bonnet suggests that they share convenience as a critical success factor and sales driver.

I don’t have an in-depth knowledge of retail theory, but I know enough to know that customers’ buying patterns will change if you put the milk beside the cheese beside the butter in the cooler, as opposed to the butter beside the milk beside the cheese.  The layout of supermarket shelves has become an evidence-driven science and many salespeople for big consumer brands spend a lot of time trying to convince supermarkets to put their products in the prime positions.

convenience layout Everything I hold is either crying or melting

If the theory isn’t of particular interest to you, you might at least be familiar with the practice.  This typically takes the form of small children wanting the crisps being displayed by the counter at an adult’s knee level, or adults chomping into a chocolate bar they didn’t need because it was located beside the till.

Nothing in a large supermarket happens by accident, every aspect of your experience when you’re in the door has been planned, implemented, monitored and improved over many years.  The result?  Those pesky supermarkets are so darned convenient they get the maximum from us they possibly can every time we visit.

Some years ago I spent some time with a marketer for a major FMCG brand who was explaining to me that they were enjoying tremendous traction with one of their products across many customer segments, but the product just wasn’t getting bought by a key group for them – mothers shopping with toddlers and young children.  They observed, watched and experimented, but regardless of what they did, sales of this product just weren’t going up amongst this key demographic.

Eventually they realised they were going to have to commission some market research to get to the bottom of all of this and sent out their best clipboard armed team of researchers.  They asked both qualitative and quantitative information, and one of the answers a young mother provided was so good that it became the title of the report.

When asked why she didn’t buy this particular product she explained “your company has to realise that when I am doing my shopping everything I hold is either crying or melting.”

patience motivational poster Everything I hold is either crying or melting

If ever there was an image which we should hold in our minds when we are designing search, social, mobile, email and web communications for our customers, it is the idea that as we try to market to them they are balancing a hundred other things which are screaming for their attention.

You conduct email marketing.  Think of the Inbox it arrives into.  How are you going to get your customers’ attention above what their bosses and customers have sent them?

You conduct social marketing.  Think of the Facebook wall or Twitter feed it gets published to.  How are you going to be more interesting that Saturday night’s photos or the latest industry news?

And so on.  Search Engine Optimisation.  Pay Per Click Campaigns.  Mobile websites.  You are dealing with a ruthless, impatient customer who already has too much information.  Plan all of your online marketing activity with the overriding characteristic of your customer in mind.

You are marketing to a customer in a hurry.

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Good stories not Facebook cause messages to spread

by Niall McKeown on 06.04.2011

James owns an Insurance Brokers.  He has several offices dotted around the country with a reasonably healthy but declining book of business.  His business is under pressure as many of his loyal customers check out prices online before renewing their insurance with him, driving down his margin and thus the level of service he can offer.

“If I get my existing customers to like me on Facebook then their friends will see my posts and my message will have a much greater reach” James claimed.  His hope is that using social media will amplify his voice and allow him to reduce his marketing budget.

James has several challenges that he may have overlooked.  Assuming he can get customers to like his business on Facebook this action in itself does not create viral activity.  His posts to Facebook appear on his customer’s Facebook wall, but the friends of the customer don’t automatically see James’ post.

His business, while massively important to him has little interest to his customers.  Insurance is often a once-a-year purchase, a necessity, certainly not a year round fascination.  So the challenge is – what will James say to his customer that is of year round interest?

Finding customer context and quality stories are key components when creating a social media plan.  It can take hours of effort and a lot of talent to create quality content that resonates with customers and unless customers engage with the content and start to share it, the message has no viral component and doesn’t spread.

Stories travel and become viral.  The ultimate challenge is to move customers from being mere spectators to becoming engaged, sharing participants.  My advice to James would be to try email marketing; it is likely to be a more successful channel than social marketing.

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The Symphony of Online Marketing

by Niall McKeown on 07.01.2011

A conductor doesn’t need to know how to play every instrument to lead an orchestra. She just needs a comprehensive understanding of music and how to implement the musical plan with the ability to read ahead. Online Marketing is the same.

In my experience, rarely does a successful online marketing strategy work on a single channel. I have yet to come across a strategy, promoting a company, charity or a movement that just uses social media or another channel in isolation, and has produced successful results. It nearly always requires a multitude of channels allowing potential customers to receive information and engage on a platform they are familiar are with.

But the skill of performing online marketing doesn’t just mean knowing how the technology works. You have to know how to leverage the same content and message across multiple channels and platforms to satisfy the needs of those that have gifted us with the consent of opting-in.

I am seeing more and more small businesses attending social media events in search of the golden ticket, those elusive buttons to press to make their internet fortune. There is no magic app or social media plug-in. Marketing a small business is hard.

For me, understanding the big picture and the culture of all the channels is more important than knowing how the technology works.

To make beautiful music a successful marketer need only focus on leadership and being different, they need to take a holistic approach and know what instrument to play and when.

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The Online Marketing Strategy Funnel

by Niall McKeown on 06.08.2010
funnel The Online Marketing Strategy Funnel

Use the funnel to determine the marketing tools & content needed for each part of the customer journey

Creating an online marketing strategy is as much to do with balance, as it is to do with tactics.

I created this funnel to help me check if I am addressing the entire customer journey when constructing an online marketing strategy. Whether you are after customers, votes or donations, the process is the same.

Driving traffic to a website isn’t the same as converting a prospect to a customer. Many marketers feel that if they had more traffic they would get more customers. My experience tells me that if you focus harder on converting prospects already on your site the outcome is much more profitable.

For many businesses, the sales process doesn’t take place online so the purpose of the web presence is to drive sales opportunities to the phone.

Some businesses, like hotels for example need a blend. A hotel may wish to promote and sell hotel rooms online without ever speaking to a customer, whereas for conferences and weddings the hotel would like to get customers to visit their premises as this is a consultative sales process.

Understanding the customer decision making process determines how you create a successful customer journey and eventually determine the tools needed and the emphasis you put on each channel.

There is evidence left at every stage of this funnel to allow for forensic analysis of the sales process. Perhaps it’s time to get CSI on your web strategy.

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Email Marketing: Connecting the Reader with the News

by Niall McKeown on 16.12.2009

 


news Email Marketing: Connecting the Reader with the News

Connecting The Reader With The News


Email Marketing: Connecting the Reader with the News

I often display this picture at seminars I have the good fortune to present at. After the laughter dies, a serious message follows. When broadcasting your message especially via email marketing, you need to make sure there is a connection between the reader and your news.

Many email newsletters are used for sales and not marketing. They are easy to spot. They usually have a corny strapline then mention the product/service accompanied by a price, an image and a link to go and buy. These email broadcasts do work for commoditised products or services but the emphasis is always on price and margins are typically low. These emails play a numbers game and rarely require much thought. Even good retailers don’t lead with price, they lead with lifestyle promises and create aspirations. Price lead email selling will give you back what you asked for, low margin sales.

On the other side of the coin we are often tempted to put in news stories about our latest award or accolade, the company golf day out and the chairman’s welcome. Stories often make our newsletters that have appeared in the mainstream media and are republished verbatim.

As a reader, I often don’t care about your award or golf day (although these activities do play a marketing role just not right now) and I sure as hell don’t need to read another “Welcome to our newsletter/website/snorefest” from the chairman. And yes, the industry news may be of mild interest to me, but I want you to translate it into what it should mean as features, benefits or drawbacks to me. I want to know your opinion on the news.

It’s hard to make our email marketing customer centric and not price lead. Our enthusiasm about what we do is rarely identical to your customers. As a marketer it is our job to put ourselves in the reader’s position and ask, ‘is there a connection between the reader and the news?’

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The New Count of Online Marketing

by Niall McKeown on 14.10.2009

“My open rates and click through rates have dropped”. Jenny explained how she used to constantly get increased success in her email marketing campaigns.

Jenny is an ultra experienced and highly intelligent marketer. She runs the online marketing for an Irish online retailer and has sent more email marketing campaigns than most; yet she still craves for higher open rates, click through rates and more opt-in subscribers to her email promotions.

On review, it appears that Jenny is comparing the open rates of her Back to School offer with that of her Father’s Day promotion. One email appeals to mothers with kids between the ages of 4 and 12 and the other appeals to anyone with a Dad still alive. The first email has four embedded links; the second email has eleven links. So how can you compare these campaigns? You can’t! Not even sales converted or revenues earned is a worthy metric for comparison.


count The New Count of Online Marketing

1 million click throughs Booohahahah!


The new metrics of email and online marketing are based around your audience and your influence over this following. How many times do they blog about you, re-tweet your content, recommend you to others? What level of engagement are you having with your followers, friends or fans and what is the quality (not quantity) of your following?

Audience, their loyalty, your influence and engagement levels are all measurable. They are a true comparable measurement of your marketing skills. This new method of counting exposes those that are just collecting names compared to marketers that gain a following and who show uniqueness and leadership.

For Jenny it’s a numbers game of hits and clicks. The new count is much more revealing.

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Email marketing on a Sunday!

by Niall McKeown on 15.12.2008

Guess what – it works! The fact is, with a massive increase in mobile email and better spam filtering, many top executives prepare for their Monday morning on Sunday evening. Interestingly, emails sent on a Sunday evening can get much more attention than they would during the week.

Business-to-business communication has often been rumoured to work best sent sometime between Wednesday morning and Thursday afternoon, which isn’t necessarily the best time to catch the attention of a top performer within a business. At this stage of the week, they are already well through their plans, dealing with the multitude of inbound communication and filtering out as many non-essential emails as they can.

If you do decide to market on a Sunday afternoon or evening, make it look deliberate. Call it your “Sunday Digest” so it doesn’t appear as a marketing error. Ensure the tone of your copy is more relaxed and reflective as opposed to the punchy and forthright content you would send mid-week. Ensure that the articles are short and thought provoking and above all give the reader something to add to their to-do list for the following week that involves your company!

This advice flies in the face of traditional email marketing advice, which is probably why this sweet spot of attention still remains. Doing what everyone else does is the sure-fire way of reducing the odds of it getting the attention it deserves.

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Pigeonholed…

by Niall McKeown on 02.12.2008

In my recent travels, I have pigeonholed Irish companies into 3 compartments:

1. Those looking to the Internet to help save their business as the phones stopped ringing in October 08. Typically, this type of business needs a panic solution in a desperate attempt to try and breathe life into their sales funnel.

2. Businesses that need to improve their marketing as they now realise that big budget, off-line marketing rarely moves a potential client to take affirmative action and pick up the phone to talk to them.

3. Organisations that are ever expanding simply because they have aligned their entire business to work on the web. They recognise that this is where potential clients check out what others think of their product or service and the web is where potential customers take affirmative action and make contact. This can be a charity, IT solutions provider, an architect or even a restaurant.

Moving from a 1 or 2 business to a category 3 business is not a matter of money, it is a change of heart coupled with understanding and recognition that change is never easy, but always for the best.

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Email list rental, whom should I go to and how much should I pay?

by Niall McKeown on 18.11.2008

I have a very clear-cut opinion on list rental.  Don’t do it, regardless of the legal or ethical situation and no matter what the list renter says!

Put yourself in the position of the recipient; pretend for a moment that it’s you.  How many times have you signed up to an email newsfeed and deliberately clicked a box stating “your email address will be sold to others so expect to get inundated with unsolicited email – do you accept?”  It simply doesn’t happen; you never give your consent to receive interruption messages from sources you don’t know.  If it doesn’t happen to you, why do you think others would give such permission?

The result is that those that have inadvertently managed to get onto “opt-in” email marketing lists, spend their time filtering and ignoring your message.  In many cases those you are trying to interrupt feel negative and disrespected by your brand.  If a recipient didn’t ask to hear from your organisation, it is simply considered as spam!

Permission marketing is based around respect and understanding the recipients needs, with the full understanding that permission does not transfer. It is better to talk to 50 people that want to listen to your message than 50,000 that don’t.  And if you are really lucky and manage to get someone’s consent, the moment you disrespect him or her, they are gone – opted-out. Permission marketing is not easy, but it can be extremely powerful.

The secret is to build your own list.  Create a devoted following of customers and potential customers.  Give them something of interest in your newsletter; make it informative, funny, quirky and memorable, then watch your opt-in list grow.   No doubt it will take time and no doubt it will not be easy, but the business that is derived from talking to people that want to listen will substantially outweigh the business you would ever get from shouting at people that don’t want to hear.

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