Network Solutions: Text to Image Ratio

April 2nd, 2011

Many email marketers forget the importance of a balanced text to image ratio. There are many reasons to pay attention to this during design, one of which is blocked images in many email clients.

In a recent email from Network Solutions, it was clear they are putting in some time to balance out their use of text and images. See the screen grab below of ‘images disabled’ in gmail.

Notice the Following:

1. You can still see most of the key copy in a nicer format that traditional alt-text.

2.The Call Now at top almost looks like an image with the use of the black background and yellow font.

3. ‘Get Started Today’ at the bottom also provide the look of a button, which gives it an appearance improvement compared to a simple line of text.

Network Solutions Email: Images Blocked

 

 

Southwest.com Lacks Relevance

March 17th, 2011

I love Southwest.com and when I know Virgin Air does not service my travel needs, they are my first site to check for flights. This makes it even more frustrating when I continue to receive emails that lack relevance.

Back in 2009, we wrote a post on the email shotgun, rifle, and blow-dart, which focused on the importance of relevant and personalized email content. While this post could benefit from a few updates, much of it holds true and serves as a good example of what Southwest could be doing.

I routinely receive an email very similar to the one below that emphasizes their ‘Click ‘N Save Deals.’ This is a great idea, in concept, but when the resulting content doesn’t provide relevance to the subscriber, it does little good. What I mean is that most of the time the ‘deals’ are never in my primary service area. While I may be interested in a nice deal on a flight to Aspen, if the deal is only for Dallas to Aspen, that does me little good.

Southwest Email

The Long-Term Risk of this Lack of Personalization: Subscribers will continue to check if their is a deal that applies to them, but after a while if they consistently see that the promotion is irrelevant, they will be trained not to check. When that perfect deal does come along, it will be too late as they will delete it before checking (or opt-out).

What Southwest.com Could Do:

1. I’m a frequent flyer and have a rewards account with them that is associated with my email address. Why not identify my primary departure airport and have personalized content about my area and corresponding deals. Also include surrounding airports that are within a 60 mile drive.

2. If there is no ‘deal’ for my airport, why not have special alerts for last minute flight availability to prime areas. This of course requires integration with other databases, but it is doable.

3. In addition to my primary airports for departure, identify frequent destinations. This could serve as a reminder of reasons to visit, partner offers (e.g. hotels) and more.

There are also significant improvement opportunities with the overall architecture of these emails, but for the purpose of this post we will stay focused on the context/relevance of the promotion. Southwest has a tremendous opportunity here to provide extremely personalized email content that will improve the customer experience and ultimately increase sales. With a few small adjustment they can have a big impact, and with a larger strategic overhaul, they could really start to better leverage the email channel.

 

Full Tilt Poker Focuses on Video and Usability

February 18th, 2011

Finally a poker brand that is executing winning email. We monitor a lot of email efforts from large B&M casinos as well as online sites, and pretty much all of them receive a low score. FullTiltPoker.com is an exception. With the consolidated online poker market, Full Tilt is one of the major players with their roster of top pros and customer-centric approach.

They have launched an email series that focuses on strategic videos from the pros. Not only is this fantastic content that their subscribers will eat up, but they execute it quite well.

The screen grab below shows the top section of one of their emails.

FullTiltPoker.com Video Email

Some great elements with this top section:

1. They have a clear button to click through and watch the video.

2. The primary topic of the video, description, and button are left-justified so it is easy to see in a preview window, and aesthetically sound.

3. They use text for all copy and not one big image! (you won’t be able to demo this in the screen grab above). This is great for users who have images blocked by default.

4. As mentioned above, they are focusing on the customer both with great usability and by providing solid content.

Areas of improvement

1. Navigation: In a future post we’ll discuss the rest of this email, but on quick glance the email navigation in this example could benefit from some changes. It doesn’t really look like a nav, plus there are alternate/additional options that would likely provide improvement.

2. Testing the Photo: I have not seen any tests run yet on the pro’s photo. I would be interest to see if a video screen grab (with play button) performed better here while still integrating with their branding.

Being a poker player myself, I look forward to seeing more emails from Full Tilt not only for the marketing evaluation, but to actually utilize the content.

 

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