Do You Know Your Domain Breakdown?

August 6th, 2009

We talk a lot about knowing our customers; developing targeted content; and implementing a rifle or blow dart approach with our email communications. These items and more are all key for an optimal program.

One area often overlooked is having a breakdown of your subscriber’s email domains. Knowing this information can be quite helpful when developing your creative. If you find a large portion on one domain, it may justify segmenting them and developing a separate creative optimized specifically for that domain.

Some email platforms will give you a quick graphic breakdown. If not, you can always do a sort in Excel and manually determine your ratios.

Below are breakdowns from 3 different clients I work with

Email Address by Domain 1

Email Addresses by Domain 2

Email Addresses by Domain 3

Here we see some differing stats. In the 1st and 3rd example, Yahoo represents 5.6% at max, while the 2nd client has over 25% of subscribers with Yahoo addresses. We can also see that in the 3rd example at least 22% is represented by education or government addresses.

Looking at these three, I was surprised at the low amount of gmail addresses. We see 9.3% in the 2nd example, but none in the 1st and 3rd!

Takeaways

1. Every list will be different and it’s helpful to know how YOUR list breaks down

2. Knowing this breakdown will aid in testing your email creative on different domains. You should be testing on more than your breakdown, but this can provide priority.

3. If you find a large portion on one domain (25%+), it may justify putting resources into segmenting those users and providing creative optimized specifically for that domain. If you’re list is very small, this will be overkill.

4. Also consider segmenting by domain and testing deliverability. (Note – some email platforms will do this automatically).

Cheers,

Forest

Questions or inputs? Feel free to leave a comment or shoot me an email.

Twitter Badge - Forest Bronzan

eHarmony Misses Segmentation Opportunity

July 17th, 2009

In my preview post, I pointed out how eHarmony.com was doing a nice job of utilizing the preview window. Many email marketers drop the ball here, but the online matchmaker has done well fusing a simple and aesthetically pleasing design with best practices for engagement.

With that said, they are missing a segmentation opportunity. These inputs are based solely on personal experience, so perhaps there was a simple list mistake, but nonetheless – a mistake and lost opportunity.

Background: I’m an eHarmony.com promoter. My girlfriend and I met through the service about 18 months ago, loved the infrastructure and experience and  have been happily living together for a while. We suggest eHarmony to most of our single friends and have also been in contact with the ‘follow up’ folks there to keep them up to date.

Segmentation Problem: All of the newsletters I receive appear to be structured with a nice dynamic content engine. They also have a basic preference center in place, so I’m able to decide which top-level communications I want. The problem is that the content I’m receiving is not quite relevant.

Most of the articles in my newsletters are for ‘dating tips’ ‘pickup lines’ ‘moving too fast?’ etc. These may be great for someone currently using the service or thinking about using the service. – Someone that is in the dating or pre-dating stage.

eHarmony knows that I’ve closed my account, they know the reason, and they know a general time frame of events. So wouldn’t it be a good idea to provide content more relevant for a serious relationship, and also content to encourage me to promote? (I don’t need it, but it should be there). There are many great life-cycle opportunities here that I feel they are missing. It would be a robust email infrastructure, but nothing too overwhelming for the marketing engine eHarmony has demonstrated throughout the years.

I will give them some credit though; the content appears to be getting slightly more targeted, but still some elements in need of adjustment.

A more extreme case from personal experience were the email blunders from 24h Fitness (who later made progress to redeem themselves in a follow up post).

Twitter Badge - Forest Bronzan

The Email Shotgun, Rifle, and Blow Dart

June 1st, 2009

We often discuss the shotgun and rifle approach to marketing, and with email communications it plays an extremely important role. The premise is straight forward, but the approach you implement will have significant implications on the effectiveness of your email efforts.

Every email marketer you ask will likely balk at the shotgun approach and jump straight to a rifle strategy. While in theory this is ‘optimal’ – it’s not always that black and white. Additionally, many email marketers pick up the rifle, put on their sniper costume, and call it a day. While this of course is a great starting point, there are opportunities to have a greater impact with multiple approaches also utilizing a high powered blow-dart.

Let’s Examine the Shotgun, Rifle and High Powered Blow Dart

1. Shotgun Approach

Basics: Your email communications are broad and promotions are developed for a wide and diverse audience. In other email terms; you are sending one general email to your entire list with no segmentation and little or no personalization.

Why it’s Bad: For starters, you are not leveraging the email channel. With available technology, you have the opportunity to create targeted segments and dynamically insert personalized data. With a ‘batch and blast’ approach like the shotgun, everyone receives the same email and promotion.

However: What if you don’t have any data (outside of email address) to segment? Many companies starting off with email don’t implement all the best practices for list acquisition, not to mention proper tracking of email engagement for segmentation purposes. In this case, you may be limited to a broad email – and this creates an opportunity to quickly get important information about your subscribers for more refined communications in the future.

For starters:

A. Make sure you have navigation in your emails — which will help you segment based on click activity.

B. Conduct A/B subject line testing to better leverage that big send.

C. Create an email preference center to get more data from you subscribers.

D. Implement some email segmentation just from email engagement.

We of course want to strive for targeted, ‘rifle like’ communication with our subscribers – and when possible this should absolutely be implemented. But In the event you are unable to do this from the start, do begin collecting information that will allow you to make better use of the email channel in the future.

2. Rifle Approach

Basics: Your email communications are focused and campaigns are directed to a select target audience/segment. Promotions are extremely relevant and timely, and you strive to create the impression of a 1-1 communication.

Why it’s Good: Instead of sending one message to 100,000 subscribers, we may be sending 20 messages to 5,000 subscribers based on strategically defined criteria. Here we place our subscribers into meaningful segments and serve them relevant content. This may be done through individual messaging or utilizing dynamic content to execute our segmentation and content strategies.

This will have tremendous impact on the success of your email efforts, and should be implemented whenever possible. This is an extremely summarized description, but the basic premise is that we want to provide relevant and extremely targeted communications and promotions to our subscribers.

3. High Powered Blow Dart

Basics: The blow dart picks up where the rifle left off. With the rifle approach, we are creating targeted segments, developing relevant and timely communications, and creating a better experience for our subscribers. This may or may not include advanced personalization within the email, but we like to make sure it goes that extra step and utilize a blow dart, if you will, to truly strive for a 1-1 communication.

Here we make sure we utilize dynamic content when possible, and further personalize the communication by inserting data that is relevant.

Example of dynamic content from American Advantage

Example of simple personalization from Wells Fargo

Summary

1. Create targeted email segments and focus your content and promotions. Become a sniper and provide extremely relevant and timely communications.

2. If for whatever reason you don’t have data to segment, then start on a basic level with email engagement, reviewing your acquisition process, and upgrading to a better email platform if needed. There is no reason you can’t segment based on some criteria (historical opens, click activity, list origination, products purchased etc)

3. Create an even more personalized experience and utilize dynamic content, personalization, and even more specific targeting.

Cheers,

Forest Bronzan

Follow me on Twitter

Dynamic Email Content – American Airlines

April 12th, 2009

I recently saw a good use of dynamic email content in my AAdvantage newsletter. The AAdvantage program is the American Airlines frequent flyer/point system that has a bunch of participating partners. One element of the program is their dining rewards.

In this email they had a 9 restaurant locations in my area that awarded travel points. AA is clearly doing some nice geo-segmentation based on zip code and then setting up their email template to serve dynamic content based on a set of rules. This is a great way to send highly personalized and relevant emails to a large list while maintaining efficient work flow for deployment.

Screen grab below (click to enlarge)

dynamic email content - american airlines

- Forest Bronzan

Let's talk email!

Call 909-363-1455 or email us to start improving your email marketing efforts.

Name
Phone
Website
Email