Effective E Communications - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 46
About This Presentation
Title:

Effective E Communications

Description:

Adopting established techniques to match content to reader ... mollis, quam sed ornare condimentum, purus eros mattis ipsum, eget bibendum pede ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:155
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 47
Provided by: peterl157
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Effective E Communications


1
Effective E Communications
  • Being an In-box must have
  • Being clear about what the communications about
  • Adopting established techniques to match content
    to reader
  • Using good direct marketing practice in E
    communications
  • Taking advantage of unique features of the
    channel
  • Peter Larsen.Digital Strategy Consultant _at_
    Nurtural and WorkWithus
  • Alastair Dutton.New Media Manager _at_ Workwithus
    and SCVO

2
Effective E Communications.
  • Some handy hints to help you move to a more
    targeted, subscriber based approach to your E
    communication strategy.
  • Keeping it clean using 5 basic principles
  • PERMISSION.PURPOSE.CONTENT.RELEVANCE.TIMIN
    G
  • Using a few examples of NFPs who have gained a
    distinct edge

3
Our 5 principles.
  • PERMISSION.Getting It.Keeping It.Developing it
  • PURPOSE.Clarity . Mediating overlap with other
    communications
  • CONTENT.Tailoring around interests.preferences.
    usage
  • RELEVANCE.Targeting.Personalisation. in
    practice
  • TIMING.Delivering. just when theyre most
    likely to use it.

4
So youve got Permission.
  • 1. The Opt-out
  • Click here if you do NOT want to receive our
    email newsletter.
  • 2. The Opt-in
  • Click here if you would like to receive our
    email newsletter.
  • 3. The Double opt-in
  • Click here if you would like to receive our
    email newsletter, then respond to a verification
    email in order to subscribe.
  • 4. The Personal Preference opt-in
  • Please select which types of information you
    would like to receive from us.Campaign Updates
    Research Events Local Groups and when you want
    it

5
Permission.Good Opt In
  • Clear Statement of Intent
  • Preferences
  • Other Salient Data Capture

6
Permission .Legal Framework
  • In the UK 2 main pieces of Legislation
  • Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations
    2003 (PECR)
  • Data Protection Act 1998
  • In the US CAN-SPAM
  • Important as most ISPs Spam software base their
    AntiSpam rules around it

7
Permission. Legal Definitions
  • In short, campaigns must be permission based
    either collected using your own methods or
    purchased from reputable list suppliers
  • Individuals must have opted-in
  • Receive the email as part of a commercial
    relationship
  • There must be an opt-out mechanism. MAKE IT EASY
  • Personal email addresses should not be shared
    without permission
  • The Information Commissioners Office (ICO) has
    the power to impose a5K fine for each breach
    sending without consent.

8
Permission. Making the most of it
  • We have an audience of subscribers
  • What do we know about them ?
  • What do we know about their preferences ?
  • Who emails them ? Campaigns.Trading.Fundraisin
    g.Events.All of these?
  • What do they get.....Standard Newsletter ?
  • Whats in the Newsletter?....Whatevers
    newsworthy at the time. ?

9
Permission. Making it Count long term
  • Talk to people in the medium they prefer
  • About the things that interest them
  • Reflect their use / non use and some of their
    other behaviour
  • Take account of the types of people they are and
    where they are

10
Or to put it another way....
  • Allow them to choose how they want to use the
    channel
  • Get them to tell you about their Interests and
    preferences
  • Measure transaction history, value , stage
  • Be aware of Implicit or observed behaviour
  • Impose Demographics, Lifestyle, SIC.any
    classification is better than none
  • Because a Subscriber based approach is
  • About what they want to hear
  • .Its not about what we want to say
  • ....and its about when they want to hear it

11
So....who are our we talking to ?
  • UK 38,000,000 or 70 of all adults
  • India 40,000,000 or 5 of all adults
  • UK Reach / Penetration of Interactive Services
  • The main place for internet use is at home (86)
  • 46 said they use it at work
  • 28 said they used it at another person's home
  • 16 use the internet at a place of education
  • 10 use it at a public library
  • 2/3rds of those using the internet have bought /
    ordered online
  • 25 - 44 year olds the most likely to do so (73)
  • Office for National Statistics 2006

12
Lies, damn lies and.the office PC
Source Nielsen//NetRatings, Oct 2004
13
With everybody on-line you need to understand the
audience
  • Like traditional Direct marketing its about
    targeting segmentation
  • Use their Interests Preferences .did that at
    subscription right and now ?
  • Implicit or Observed Usage / Behaviour .monitor
    content used / unused use
  • Track their origin.(search engine
    /banner/referrals reflect other behaviour?
  • Create Information.Incorporate data held on
    other databases in the organisation
  • Its effective.
  • Watch for Experian and a leading Internet
    provider merging soon..
  • Be aware of the pitfalls
  • Email allows vast creative segmentation but watch
    out.
  • Look beyond single instances of activity (.e.g.
    Christmas gift purchases)

14
Improving your understanding.....in practice
  • From the Database -
  • AgeGenderGeographyRecruitment.FinancialsInfo
    requests
  • If they only appear on the E subs list plug the
    Information gaps with online questionnaires..Der
    ive what you can from what you have..
  • Their Digital Interaction
  • First, last, regular, most recent interaction
  • What was it about?
  • When was it? (i.e. Time of day)
  • Where were they (at home or work)
  • Whats opened
  • Whats NOT opened
  • What sort of feedback
  • Cant be sure ? .Infer patternsLook for trends
    Create Rules
  • more right than wrong

15
Using your subscriber Knowledge.developing the
relationship
Rules Information gathered Behaviour
Tracking ? Highly Targeted Communications
S U B S C R I B E R R E L A T I O N S H I P
Life stage triggers Emergencies
Referrals Advocacy Committed Giving
Upgrade Donations
1-to-1
Promotional Campaign Updates Discrete E
Information Rewards Soft ASKS
Group
Information News Service Information
Gathering Involvement Education
Mass
E BROADCAST SOPHISTICATION
16
Moving swiftly along Getting the Email into the
Inbox
  • A few pointers to help optimise delivery
  • And a few more to improve usage
  • And some guidance on what not to do
  • Basically trying to stack the odds in your favour

17
HTML and Plain Text.

Cities Tattler The free monthly
e-bulletin of the Smith County Federation March
2005 Easter Special Edition http//www.
SmithCountyFederation.org
Lorem ipsum
dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit.
Mauris id dui at est consectetuer blandit. Nunc
auctor tincidunt libero. Phasellus rhoncus, felis
sit amet cursus interdum, lacus tortor tincidunt
lacus, in tincidunt nunc pede et est. Fusce
mattis. Fusce sit amet velit vel sapien
condimentum bibendum. Integer in nunc. Etiam
mollis, quam sed ornare condimentum, purus eros
mattis ipsum, eget bibendum pede enim imperdiet
libero. Sed cursus. Maecenas convallis. Nam diam
nisl, venenatis ac, condimentum et, interdum ut,
dolor. In ut neque nec dui suscipit laoreet. Cras
convallis, mi vitae placerat vehicula, nulla diam
dapibus ligula, id pharetra odio mauris et est.
Sed sollicitudin est eu
18
The Multipart/Alternative MIME Format.
  • Your mail transfer agent bundles your HTML code,
    PLUS a plain-text
  • version of the message, together into one
    email.
  • If a subscriber cant view your HTML email, the
    old fashioned plain-text version of your message
    is auto-magically displayed.
  • Write a script to send email in multipart /
    alternative MIME format, or get someone to do it
    for you

19
The Good and Bad HTML .
  • Better Response
  • Brand Integrity
  • Tracking
  • Converge with other media
  • Loss of formatting
  • Spam Issues

20
What you need.
  • Basic Image Editor
  • Resize, Compress and Crop (Free Online Tools)
  • Advanced for Splice and Creative
  • HTML Editor
  • Basic online WYSIWYG
  • Dreamweaver or Front Page
  • Dont Use WORD
  • Somewhere to Host Graphics
  • A few Test Email Accounts (web and client)

21
Style.7 Common Elements
  • Five points/sections
  • Brand Identity
  • File size under 60K
  • Limit Colours, Fonts and Case
  • No wider than 600 pixels (550-600)
  • Simple Layout

22
Physical size.how it appears in a browser
23
Style.Different Settings.Different Looks
24
Style.A Happy Balance ?
25
Style.Different Email Clients.Different Looks
26
Good Health Newsletter. What's in it?
  • Your Orgs Name in the From
  • Relevant Subject Heading
  • To Field Personalised
  • Easy Opt Out
  • Links to Privacy Statement
  • Valid Postal Address

27
Subject Lines.that get the email opened
28
Personalisation.please leave Dear John alone.
29
Designing around spam filters.
  • Bayesian Filtering
  • Compares to emails subscriber called junk,
    and looks for common traits in the subject line,
    the content, the hyperlinks and the sender.
  • Blacklists
  • List of the IP addresses of the servers that
    sent spam
  • Email Firewalls
  • Corporate filters
  • Challenge/Response Filters

30
. and avoid them by
  • Ensuring permission of recipients
  • Benchmarking against your own Junk Mail folder.
  • Not going crazy with formatting.
  • YELLING WITH ALL CAPS!!!!
  • Avoiding contentious words like
    loansmortgage.viagra..
  • Click Here FREE
  • No text just pics
  • Always including that plain-text alternative
    message

31
Above all .Test your templates on the big
carriers
  • AOL
  • Apple Mail
  • Microsoft Outlook (various)
  • Yahoo!Mail
  • Hotmail
  • Gmail

32
Structure the Relationship ..say plan a 12 Month
Campaign Cycle
33
Examples of that 12 month Campaign Cycle.
A
34
Special Editions are fine.
35
Measure.MeasureMeasure..Campaign Metrics
36
What do I get out of all that measuring then
  • More E communications in the inbox at the right
    time
  • Better levels of usage
  • Less bounces, undelivered and Unsubscribes
  • A stronger, longer term relationship with your
    subscribers

37
Email blends with other channels ..Quick Case
Study..Background
  • Number of Emails available80,000 of 350,000
    members
  • Annual cost to manage E communications 225,000
    (ex. creative)
  • Biggest Membership Service cost Annual Report
    350,000 units ( 3 each )
  • Proposition using a scheduled direct mail
    carrier ( ie that years Report).
  • Please help reduce cost wastage.
  • If you dont read this costly piece please tell
    us via secure page.
  • We will make the publication available online for
    Subscribed members and provide more hard copies
    to your local/ special interest groups.

38
Email blends with other channels ..Quick Case
Study..Outcomes
  • They gathered 100,000 new Email address (almost
    all) with Permission
  • They linked almost 100,000 Individuals to special
    interest groups
  • Around 180,000 supporters said Dont post the
    Annual Report to me
  •  
  • Benefits
  • The cost of the Annual Report almost halved
  • They gathered key INFORMATION (not data) about
    their supporters
  • Initiated the process of mediating supporter
    relationships more cost effectively starts

39
Email in harmony with other channels ..Quick
Case Study..Better than that
  • They reduced e-mail running costs from 225k a
    year to 90k a year
  • (and thats after adding 1½ new staff !)
  • They motivated supporters on the basis of saving
    the ORG money
  • They changed the interaction behaviour of key
    supporters
  • In 3 years they have converted 80,000 Standing
    Order payers to their online COMMITED GIVING
    program using the same cost saving maxim

40
But Im working off spreadsheetshow does it
apply to me?
  • 2007..Investment in CRM bottoms out because it
    hasnt returned the massive investment.
  •  
  • Possibly because SMT thought it was a technology
    issue ?
  •  
  • Its not. Its about procedure. Its about
    process.
  • And its the same with E-communications

41
Quick Win 1 Find out who is behind the Inbox

42
Hopefully you captured the day/ date/ time of
their opt IN or the 1st click through. If not
start now . Monitor the time and location -
behavioural patterns will become apparent.
QuickWin2 Busy, Busy, Busy people.Recognise it
Win

43
Using those simple criteria to create your E
subscriber profiles
  • They use a masked ID like smellywhatsit_at_USbasedfre
    e-Email.com
  • They always do it in work hours before lunch
  • They only do it once a month
  • They didnt respond when you asked for some basic
    info.
  • They click through every item in every Email
  • They dont exist on any other database in your
    org.
  • Compared to
  • They click Thursday lunchtimes via n inbox at a
    well known NGO
  • They are aged between 30 35 (told us when we
    ran a wee survey ! )
  • They click on International campaigning content
  • They sign E-petitions
  • They have requested information about a local
    event
  • They occasionally forward our Email when prompted

44
Dont forget the Landscape is changing
quickly.Take Advantage
45
Virals can amplify your voice
quickly cheaply
46
Thats all folks.. Thanks for joining us today.
  • Peter Larsen. . . .Digital Strategy Consultant _at_
    Nurtural and WorkWithus
  • Alastair Dutton. . . . . . . . .New Media Manager
    _at_ WorkWithUs and SCVO
  • Tel 44 (0)870 803 2099
  • Tel 44 (0)131 474 8027
  • Web www.nurtural.co.uk
  • Web www.workwithus.org
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com