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Category: E-mail Marketing

Email Open Rate Declining

I regularly get asked about email industry metrics and best practices like: “what is the average open and click-through rates?” or “which day is the best to send email?” My typical answer is “it depends”. There are so many variables to consider. Furthermore, two companies in the same industry doing the same thing will likely get different results. Marketers need to test to see what their own metrics are and which best practices work for them. This can start with simple testing like A/B split testing and advance to multi-variable testing. The key is to develop an internal benchmark based on the past and then work towards delivering against that in the future.
Since I work with a lot of very smart people at “ExactTarget”:http://www.exacttarget.com I have access to their knowledge and experience. One of my associates, Morgan Stewart, Director of Strategic Services, works with clients to audit their email marketing programs, benchmark them, apply testing and best practices, and optimize results. He has done a lot of research that is now public including his study on the “Best Day to Send Email”:http://email.exacttarget.com/pdf/Best-Day.pdf _(pdf)_. His latest research is the “2005 Response Rate Study”:http://email.exacttarget.com/lp/2006_BestDay_WP.asp covering over 4,000 email marketers, 230,000 email campaigns and 2.7 billion email messages.

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5 Questions For Francois Lane, NewsletterArchive

Francois Lane
_Francois Lane is a Montreal-based Internet entrepreneur. Since 1996, he has spearheaded a number of projects in the French Canadian market, including an e-commerce store for computer equipment, a blog application, a networked community service, a viral contest website, and Web hosting and email marketing services. “NewsletterArchive.org”:http://www.newsletterarchive.org is Francois’s first venture to target a global audience._
*One Degree: Tell me about NewsletterArchive.*
NewsletterArchive.org is like Archive.org’s “Wayback Machine”:http://www.archive.org/, except it’s for newsletters. The goal is to collect, preserve and provide public access to all email newsletters – past, present and future. You could also see it as a giant shared webmail account for newsletter subscriptions.
Unlike Web pages, newsletters aren’t archived and available on the Web. This means that the portion of the Internet’s history contained in newsletters exists only in the personal archives of those who have received them and have decided to keep them. NewsletterArchive aims to gather this common heritage in one place, preserve it and make it available to everyone.
*One Degree: Where did the original idea come from?*

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