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ClickZ Weekly: 1.3 Billion People Say They Don't Want to Search Anymore - Now What?

ClickZ
April 25-29, 2011
Experts Weekly
Follow ClickZ on Twitter
Monday, Apr 25
The Gamification Hype Cycle
When considering whether or not to "gamify" your brand, it's important to apply the lessons learned from previous hype cycles. Part two in a two-part series.
Sean Carton  |  Trends  |  Full story  |  Print version

Valuing Conversions: How You Count Matters
Learn the differences in testing your landing page between fixed value vs. variable value and single goal vs. multiple goals.
Tim Ash  |  Conversion & ROI  |  Full story  |  Print version

The Renaissance of Email
Email proves it's here to stay as it becomes the connected hub to other nascent text-based marketing channels, such as mobile and social.
David Daniels  |  Email Marketing  |  Full story  |  Print version

True Value of Technology
Factors to consider when selecting an ad technology platform.
Eliza Nevers  |  Networks & Exchanges  |  Full story  |  Print version

Back to the Basics of Keyword Selection
How to go about determining which keywords are right for your business to bid on.
Julie Batten  |  Search Marketing  |  Full story  |  Print version

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Tuesday, Apr 26
1.3 Billion People Say They Don't Want to Search Anymore - Now What?
The problem with search - it's neither a good journey nor a satisfactory destination.
Chris Copeland  |  SEM  |  Full story  |  Print version

Latinos and Facebook: The Marketing Gap
Do Latinos engage with brands as actively as they do with other people?
Gustavo Razzetti  |  Marketing to Latinos  |  Full story  |  Print version

Unlocking Mid-Funnel Metrics With Dynamic Video Ads
By leveraging in-banner video advertising and dynamic content, marketers can establish three uniquely robust and repeatable mid-funnel metrics.
Anupam Gupta  |  Instant Insights  |  Full story  |  Print version

In Analytics, the Price of Light Is Less Than the Cost of Darkness
What portion of an online company's marketing budget should be allocated to research and measurement?
Neil Mason  |  Analyzing Customer Data  |  Full story  |  Print version

How Twitter Makes Money
A look at Twitter's advertising opportunities.
Harry Gold  |  Media Planning  |  Full story  |  Print version

Wednesday, Apr 27
Standing at the Edge of the Precipice of Consumer Trust
If consumers don't believe they can trust you with their data, they won't give it to you.
Rick Buck  |  Email Delivery  |  Full story  |  Print version

Cutting Through the Remarketing Clutter With RTB
Three real reasons every marketer should be buying real-time bidding display remarketing.
Jeff Green  |  Behavioral Marketing  |  Full story  |  Print version

Tuning Your Content: Social Media for Content Publishers
As you continue to build, refine, and optimize your content streams, you need to tune your content publishing as well as your content presentation.
Dave Evans  |  Social Media  |  Full story  |  Print version

Thursday, Apr 28
8 Tactics to Optimize Welcome Email and Welcome Series
Got new subscribers? Start here to build a relationship with them.
Matthew Hayes  |  Email Marketing Optimization  |  Full story  |  Print version

Branding Lessons From the Middle East
Digital marketers have much to learn from the rapid and fundamental shifts in power. Consider these four takeaways
Howard Belk  |  Strategies  |  Full story  |  Print version

The Planner's Guide to Not Planning Your Career
Where do you see yourself in five years? Maybe it's better not knowing.
Anna Papadopoulos  |  Careers  |  Full story  |  Print version

Harnessing the Need Medium
A look at how one Canadian company has taken on businesses' social media monitoring efforts, and added social media lead generation.
Tessa Wegert  |  Media Buying  |  Full story  |  Print version

Getting It Right Is a Moving Target
Learning how to find the optimal way to design a website for your target audience.
Jim Sterne  |  Verifying Business Value  |  Full story  |  Print version

Experiential Marketing
Consumers are savvy and informed; they won't just take your word on a product. Experiencing the product is more important than ever.
Augustine Fou  |  Integrated Marketing  |  Full story  |  Print version

Friday, Apr 29
Is an Email Address Personally Identifiable Info?
Organizations must protect customer email addresses. The alternative could end up being costly.
Anna Maria Virzi  |  What's the Buzz?  |  Full story  |  Print version

Always Play the Trifecta
If you are in digital publishing, you have three powerful forces that all play a role in defining what your strategy should be, and how to best drive success.
Jeanniey Mullen  |  Publishing  |  Full story  |  Print version

Death of the Google Tag
What prompted Google to "retire" Google Tag and how will this affect your advertising campaign?
Kevin Lee  |  Paid Search  |  Full story  |  Print version

Decentralization of the User Experience Case Study: Pinterest
It is now possible to extend the reach of our brands beyond our domain and onto any site the user is visiting. See how Pinterest is accomplishing this.
Jack Aaronson  |  ROI Marketing  |  Full story  |  Print version

The Biggest Issues With Mobile Web [Video]
A continuing discussion on where mobile web is now and where it is heading.
Tim McLaughlin  |  Mobile Marketing  |  Full story  |  Print version

This week from ClickZ.asia
The Death of Digital Advertising
It's time the industry paid attention to these six signs.
Eric Phu  |  April 26, 2011  |  Social Media  |  Full story

Audience Segmentation and Targeting Using Search Behaviour
A step-by-step approach to segment and target your audience using search data.
Hari Shankar  |  April 27, 2011  |  Analytics  |  Full story

The Tweet That Was Retweeted 8,000 Times and Other Stories
How Google gets it and Bing got it so wrong using Twitter in response to Japan's disaster.
Vijay Sankaran  |  April 28, 2011  |  Social Media  |  Full story

Chasing New Mobile Technology May Not Lead to the Best Ad Campaigns
Here's how Nike and Starbucks use mobile technology to effectively reach out to Chinese consumers.
Joshua Maa  |  April 29, 2011  |  Mobile  |  Full story

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Email Marketing Optimization: 8 Tactics to Optimize Welcome Email and Welcome Series

ClickZ
April 28, 2011
Experts
Email Marketing Optimization
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8 Tactics to Optimize Welcome Email and Welcome Series
Matthew Hayes  |  Contact Matthew  |  Comment  |  Print version


If you adopted the three quick-win tactics for email acquisition I outlined in my previous column, you should have a whole group of new subscribers by now. This is where your real work begins.

Post-acquisition represents your most critical time. New subscribers are more likely to respond to email and present a huge opportunity for engagement, data collection, and conversion.

The first email from your brand should be a "welcome" email (ideally, one in a serious of welcome or warm-up messages). This email sets expectations, is relevant, and ensures that you stay top of mind in the inbox.

If your first email falls short, your newly acquired subscriber could unsubscribe or disengage, becoming part of the segment that never responds to email.

Create a Great First Impression

My top optimization tips will help you create an effective and engaging welcome email and welcome series.

1. Send the first email immediately (or as soon as possible) after sign up.

When subscribers sign up, they expect a welcome email. Especially if the welcome email contains a discount or offer. Try not to wait longer than 24 hours to send the welcome email. Sooner the better. The longer you leave it, the more chance the subscriber will forget they signed up and forget your brand.

2. Set email expectations.

Don't send just a text-only message, or one with just one big image. Set expectations by sending a beautifully crafted, optimized email that highlights what the subscriber can expect from future emails.

3. Use easy personalization.

If you have different acquisition sources (Facebook, in-store, etc.), personalize the greeting to reflect where your customer signed up. This is a great way to add relevancy and drive engagement: "Thank you, Matt, for signing up to email through our recent Facebook sweepstakes."

4. Drive engagement.

New subscribers are more likely to respond to email. Therefore, the welcome email or welcome email series should be optimized for the following levels of engagement:

  • Open the email. A well thought out pre-header and subject line will drive the customer to open the email and download images.
  • Click a link. Have a strong call to action that drives them back to the website.
  • Add to address book. So, not many people actually do it. For those who do, this is a great time to ask and highlight the benefits.

Getting engagement early can ensure inbox placement (such as with Gmail's Priority Inbox) and will help with ongoing deliverability.

5. Collect preferences.

You have a great opportunity to ask these highly engaged new subscribers what they are interested in. Have a strong call to action encouraging them to visit your preference center, complete progressive profiles, or both.

6. One welcome email is not enough.

Why stop with one welcome email? A series of three to four welcome emails is a great way to drive conversion. Think about sending a series of three emails over five days after sign-up, targeting the new subscriber that has not converted.

To optimize this further, dynamically version components of the email series based on the date you already have about your new subscriber. You can use previous purchase data, preference data or indirect and direct profiling.

Exclude new subscribers from other promotional email as they go through the welcome series.

7. Why give the offer away so soon?

If your welcome email includes an incentive that you didn't promote during sign-up, remove it now. Provide the incentive on the second or third email in your welcome series. Give subscribers a chance to shop without it. Add the incentive back in to the second or third email in your welcome series.

8. Think cross-channel.

The welcome series is also a great place to encourage social following. Include links to your Twitter account and Facebook page. If you have an app, give your subscribers the option to download it in this email.

These and other tactics will help you optimize your welcome email and welcome series to drive conversion, engagement, and data collection from your new, highly engaged subscribers.

Final Note: Test and Track

Testing is crucial. Elements to test include different versions of your email creative and the offer and timing of an incentive in the welcome series.

Also, track overall performance by data source to see which acquisition source performs most efficiently.

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Webcasts Upcoming Events White Papers
SES Shanghai SES Shanghai
May 24-25, 2011
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May-November 2011
SES San Francisco SES San Francisco
August 15-19, 2011
SES Hong Kong SES Hong Kong
September 20-21, 2011
Incisive Media © Incisive Interactive Marketing LLC. 2011 All rights reserved.
120 Broadway, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10271
Data protection ClickZ is contacting you at the following address - getsolat.asep@blogger.com

If you prefer not to receive this email, please unsubscribe.

Need to change your newsletter subscription preferences and personal information? Update your details.

Mail filter If your ISP filters incoming email, please add the following email address to your list of approved senders: no-replies@clickz.com. This will ensure that you receive the email alerts and newsletters to which you have subscribed. View instructions on how to approve senders.
Contact us If you have any questions or comments regarding this email, please contact: newsletterhelp@clickz.com.
Privacy policy View our Privacy Policy for Incisive Media
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