As Internet marketers we live either in the now or slightly in the future (ever ask your neighbour about feeds, podcasts or YouTube?). With that in mind I thought it might be nice to look at the progress on online retailer – “Harry Rosen”:http://www.harryrosen.com/ has made in e-mailing their customer list.
Here we see an e-mail sent from my wonderfully named salesperson Barby Ginsberg back in September 2002:
_(click the image to see a larger version)_
Besides being text only and using non-trackable links, the message has a lot of quirks that caused me to use it as an example of _what not to do_ when teaching e-marketing courses.
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…At least according to “a report published today by Marketing Sherpa.”:http://www.marketingsherpa.com/article.php?ident=27474 And cultural differences extend to the online world – we’re more wired and we spend more time online than our neighbours to the south. We are, according to Marketing Sherpa, “an online market ripe for picking”. The challenges – two languages, tougher privacy laws, and lagging adoption of ecommerce. The opportunities – if you can get around the obstacles – a strong Canadian dollar that allows US retailers to be more competitive and a GDP worth over a trillion dollars. The report also contains some general suggestions for US companies marketing to Canadian consumers, including specific advice for email campaigns, search campaigns and postal direct mail.
While I agree wholeheartedly with much of the information presented, I have to say I’m not 100% on-side with the email numbers – our own client results differ significantly from those reported as “Canadian standard” email response rates. On the one hand, we would consider the 25% open rates reported in one section of the report concerningly low for a newsletter campaign. On the other hand, the 55% average reported by IAB seems optimistic given the limited budgets and resources most of our Canadian clients struggle with. Are the numbers out of context? It isn’t geographical – our client lists include subscribers from across the country. Even so, misleading numbers aren’t the real story here.
Since email began in the early 90’s, there’s been a total revolution in the inbox. First it was all about being a cool new way to almost instantly communicate with anyone and everyone who happened to have an email address! Some emails, those with that real wow factor, even included pictures!
Over the years, best practices, industry norms and trends have evolved. Today, email marketing is a tangled web of permissions, HTML coding and design, ISPs open rates, subject lines etc. Because of this, it’s important for email marketers to educate themselves on the latest best practices. It’s also one of the reasons “cardcommunications”:http://www.cardcommunications.com (my company) has published its first-ever quarterly trends report.