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Email Marketing Basics Part2 The Rise of Email as a Marketing Tool
Email Marketing Basics Part2 The Rise of Email as a Marketing Tool
Email Marketing Basics Part#2: The Rise of Email as a Marketing
Tool by
Mischelle Weedman Davis
Email is proving itself to be one of more cost-effective marketing
tools available – which is why some 68 percent of medium- to
large-sized U.S. firms incorporated email into their marketing
strategies in 2000.
Several attributes account for the rise of email as a marketing
tool:
Faster Prep Time
Depending on the campaign creation tools that you use, email
marketing programs can be quick to create and may arrive in the
customer’s inbox immediately.
More Flexibility
It is much easier and less expensive to create multiple offers and
test various creative and copy schemes in email than in traditional
“snail mail."
Reduced CPM
Email messages cost only a few cents per recipient compared to
traditional direct mail costs because email campaigns don’t
incur printing or postage costs. Email costs range from $.01 to
$0.25 for per message, compared about $1.70 to $2.00 for each item
mailed in traditional direct snail mail.
Greater Acceptance
Some 73 percent of U.S. consumers say they prefer email as their
method of contact with online merchants. (Virtually the same
percentage also say they prefer rich-content media email –
with graphics and typography – versus plain-text email.
Quick Response
Responses from recipients usually arrive within 48 hours rather
than taking days or weeks via printed and posted mail.
Higher Response Rates
It is easier and more inviting for someone to respond to an email
message than to pick up the phone or mail a response card. And
email has a much higher average click-through rates (between 5-15%)
than online banner ads.
Accurate Reporting
Electronic forms of delivery and response make tracking and
reporting fast and easy. It is much easier than waiting weeks for
responses and returns.
Email marketing can use a variety of tactics – including
offers, coupons, contests, newsletters and other value-added links
and information.
Those tactics can basically be divided into two types –
permission-based marketing and spam.
Spam is the electronic equivalent of junk mail or that annoying
telemarketing call during dinner. It is unsolicited and unwanted.
Unfortunately for consumers, today spam represents 10% of all
email.
In response to this invasion, email users have created inbox
filters and dummy email addresses.
Permission emails are those messages that users have requested.
This can take the form of newsletters, or a checkbox in the
registration process on various Web sites giving the marketer
permission to deliver product updates or other marketing
information.
Forrester Research predicts that the number of solicited emails
will grow to 250 billion in 2002. Permission emails have higher
success rates than spam – both in terms of ROI and in
preserving a company’s reputation.
Permission email can take the form of acquisition or retention
email – that is, mailings whose primary objective is to
prospect for customers or whose objective is to forge a
relationship with an existing customer base. In 2000, some 57
percent of permission email dollars were spent on retention and 43
percent on customer acquisition.
Mischelle (Schelly) Weedman-Davis has over 15 years of marketing
experience with high tech and internet businesses such as
Microsoft, Primus, Summit Software, Qpass, and others. She recently
left the high tech world behind to focus her energy and attention
on being a mother and supporting her husband’s Seattle law
firm. To learn more about Davis Law Group visit http://www.InjuryTrialLawyer.com
or http://www.washingtonaccidentbook.com
.
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