Royal Screw up from UC San Diego

April 1st, 2009

Oops! UCSD Sends Acceptance Email to Wrong List!

Originally Posted: http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/Youre-Out-Youre-In-No-Youre-Out.html?yhp=1

Article In a Nutshell:

  • About 17,000 student were offered admission for the fall
  • 29,000 were not accepted
  • Acceptance email was sent to all 46,377 students who applied for admission — including the 29,000 rejects — welcoming them to the campus.
  • Almost two hours after the first note went out, a second e-mail was sent, apologizing to 28,889 freshmen applicants for the mistake.

When I see an article on the front page of Yahoo that deals with email marketing, I get excited. This was most notable during the general election with commentary on the effect of President Obama’s email list.

Today’s front page article had an eye catching preview: UC San Diego sends a warm welcome email … to the wrong list of students.

ucsd-2

Come on now. We’re not talking about a complex segment here. We have Group A: Accepted Applicants and Group B: Unaccepted Applicants. This task does not need an email marketing expert, but shows how even simple mistakes can happen to large companies.

I’ve seen blunders from top retailers, sending a test message to a live group, leaving personalization tags in a subject line, typos in body copy, and even sending to the wrong list. But the outcome in most of those cases is rather minimal. There may be a few opt-outs or confused customers, but most will forget about it and move on (providing it is not a constant mistake).

In the case of UCSD, the fallout from a simple mistake is more devastating. On one end, you’re dealing with anxious email recipients that are now frustrated, confused, and possibly hurt. I bet the open rate on that email broke records. On another end though, the sloppy mistake gets the school national attention (and likely a lot of angry phone calls).

Fortunately they caught it relatively quickly and issued an apology statement. Think about the outcome if this was not caught for several weeks, students pass on other schools, make plans etc.

Outside of the intensity of this mistake, mistakes do happen. I have not met one email marketer that has never made a blunder. You need to learn from this and make sure it doesn’t happen again. Review your deployment process. Review your segmentation methods. If you have a very sensitive email like this, you must have more than one eye on the campaign before deploying. I would be surprised if an organization like UCSD didn’t have a fairly lengthy approval process for blast emails. But something obviously went wrong.

This definitely makes it into my red flag mistakes category.

- Forest Bronzan

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Sloppy Email from Goop

March 31st, 2009

I read last month that Gwyneth Paltrow launched a lifestyle brand and new website: Goop.com From the few reviews I skimmed, there was nothing but bad things to say about the project; so I joined the email list to see how that department was doing.

So far, the email efforts have been sub-par and somewhat sloppy. A recent email showcased a few of these unfortunate elements.

1. In the screen grab below, notice in the upper left: ‘Having trouble reading this email?’ This of course is a good best practice that every email should have (a web-based version for someone to click through to view). But in this case it is incredibly small. I had to squint to make sure I was reading it correctly. Why not make this just a little bigger so your subscribers don’t have trouble reading it.

goop-1

2. This next screen grab is with images enabled (in Gmail). On first glance, it just looks sloppy.

  • The logo takes up a lot of real estate and looks slopped on
  • There is no subject heading (for the content or this particular email) outside of the DO logo that integrates with her site
  • The font is fairly large and spread out
  • There is no navigation (or other links for that matter)
  • There is not  much design here at all

goop-2

So much improvement needed with this campaign. Hopefully they are just going through some ‘new email marketing campaign’ jitters and will turn the initiative around. Time will tell.

SEOmoz Wins Big – Personalization, Promotion and More

March 4th, 2009

Search engine optimization (SEO) is such an important component of online marketing. If I had to pick the top 3  initiatives that most companies should allocate resources to, they would be (in random order): SEO, Conversion Optimization, and Email Marketing. I’m obviously a bit biased on the last one.

For SEO, one of the best resources on the planet is seomoz.org. (note: I’m not affiliated with or compensated by SEOmoz in any way — just a happy customer). It turns out that the crew over at SEOmoz has some email marketing know-how up their sleeves as well. For a company that isn’t overboard with email marketing (compared to retailers such as Sephora, Victoria’s Secret, and Toys R’ Us) email marketers can take some notes from a recent campaign that SEOmoz had in early February. I’ve heard now that Scott Willoughby at the Moz was the mastermind of this piece.

Below is the February 4th Email (click to enlarge)

Subject Line: Try SEOmoz PRO For Just A Dollar!

seomoz-email4

4 Elements That Were Great

1. The Subject Line: Specific and juicy. I’ve been a ‘basic’ member for a while and have been thinking of upgrading to a pro membership ($79/month). This subject definitely grabbed my attention.

2. Simple Design Layout: They could have easily pushed out a flashy creative heavy with imagery. They instead opted for plain text with a simple header and footer for branding. This has two major wins: first, it’s much more personal and pleasant to read, and second, the content is actually viewable to the recipient. In a previous post I discussed how sexy retailer Victoria’s Secret had an ugly view with their email — no one could see it with images blocked. The prettiest picture is worthless if the lights are out.

3. Going off of the plain text, the tone of the copy is very comfortable. While a bit heavy with sales, it’s not too stiff — and it’s written in the voice of Rand Fishkin (the wizard of moz).

4. P.S.: In my own tests, I’ve seen exceptional engagement with the use of a post script message to re-state the primary call to action and promo. Nice use of it here.

A Few Ideas for Improvement:

1. Personalization: the format of the email is already quite personal. In the opening line it says: Hi (username). This is better than a general greeting, but why not use the subscriber’s actual first name? a username appears more ‘batch blast’ while a first name is personal and closer to creating the impression of a one-to-one communication.

2. I’m a huge fan of plain text (at least testing it against other formats) and have seen exceptional results in my own tests. There is a decent amount of copy here and to make it easier on the eyes it probably couldn’t hurt to have an isolated summary of sorts above the fold. Something to the effect of:

Here’s the Skinny

Full Month of SEOmos’z Pro Membership

Only $1.00 for a limited time

Promo Code: SUCCESS09

Get Started Now: www.seomoz.org/trypro

With more visual creative pieces it’s easier to package up certain CTAs. With simple text, we need to do our best to quickly communicate our desired action and organize copy in a way that is easy to engage with.

3. Video: I noticed on the landing page a video of Rand discussing the benefits of Pro membership. I’ve seen great engagement from having a video screen shot within an email that links to the actual video. Helps mix up the copy and provides another juicy entry point to the site for increased CTRs.

Now back to the good stuff…

What was truly impressive was the follow-through and personalized experience after this email was sent. I was traveling when this email went out and was too busy to act. When I finally came up for air I had missed the deadline. I replied to the email thanking them for the promo but stating that I unfortunately missed the deadline. That day I received a reply from the wizard (Rand Fishkin) himself saying that while the offer had expired, they would find a way to get me on board. In a marketing environment these days where there is often a lot of disconnect between company and customer, this was a pleasant surprise. The result of a little extra time and customer service can be a new promoter and long-term customer. The crew there made me feel valued, and their customer-centric attitude stood out with shining lights.

This brings up a point I’d like to close with regarding the email channel. Too many marketers treat it as a vehicle to blast out unpersonalized messages. Some marketers ‘get it’ and start to implement segmentation strategies, advanced personalization with dynamic content, and complex behavioral retargeting programs. Even with this though, there is still often a barrier between subscriber and marketer/company. The email channel (and other social media channels) give companies a fantastic opportunity to engage with their customers, learn more, mediate problems, manage the cross-channel brand experience, and create the impression of a one-to-one interaction. The technology is there, we just need to use it properly and re-focus our program strategy.

- Forest Bronzan

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