Tag Archives: Email Marketing

Social Sharing Links Added to Email-2-Web Pages for All Elite Email Customers

On Friday we released a new feature in Elite Email, which was requested by many customers. (Thanks for all the feedback, as always it is greatly appreciated!)

When an email gets sent out from Elite Email, our Email-2-Web feature kicks in and creates a web-page version of your message. You can use this URL so that you can link to past emails/newsletters from your website or from future emails. This also comes in handy if you want to show someone a past email without having to actually send them an email.

You can find all of these URLs under the EMAILS tab by clicking EMAIL-2-WEB.

Tip: You can choose to hide or display specific emails so emails that you want to stay private can, of course, stay private.

As for the new feature…

We have added social sharing links to the footer of the page.

This means your contacts (or anyone who you give the Email-2-Web link to) can easily share your email on Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, Stumble, Reddit, Delicious and just about every other social network you can think of.

Social Sharing Links Added to Email-2-Web

The goal is to help your email become more viral as people share the content they love getting from you, with people in their social network.

In the coming months, we will be adding many more great features to tighten the link between your email marketing and social network activity.

Gearing Up For The Release of Elite Email Phoenix

Over the past several years we have been working on a brand new version of Elite Email that is scheduled to start rolling out to our customers tonight.

In my opinion, this new version was truly built by our customers. Over the years we have spent hours upon hours talking to thousands and thousands of customers. We have worked hard to learn their business and to understand how Elite Email fits into their marketing mix. We have listened closely to what they liked, what they didn’t like, and what they felt could help them take their email marketing to the next level.

We compiled all of this feedback and our development team worked tirelessly to build it all into our new state-of-the-art system. I honestly cannot express to you just how grateful I am to all the customers that shared their precious time with us to help build, guide and craft this latest version of Elite Email.

This new version of Elite Email, code named “Phoenix”, contains hundreds of new features, a sleek new interface, faster performance, and a few other surprises that I think our customers will really enjoy. The list of new additions and enhancements is so long that I couldn’t even include it here because then this post will scroll forever. But, I am confident that as our customers explore the new version of Elite Email they will stumble upon all the great new things we have worked hard to bring them in an effort to make Elite Email the best email marketing service provider.

Admittedly, Elite Email Phoenix has taken longer to release than we originally planned. I know many people have been looking forward to it for a long time, and I do apologize for the delay. While I don’t want to make excuses, I can tell you that although we probably could have released it months ago, but we instead chose to keep it in “beta” just a little bit longer so that when we did release it, we could feel confident that it was perfect. Our QA Team and beta testers poked and prodded every nook & cranny of the program to find every bug, kink, and loose end. We know how critical your email marketing is, and internally we set the bar for any of our programs at complete perfection.

While I am personally so incredibly excited to be launching Elite Email Phoenix, I am equally (if not more!) excited to hear the feedback from all of our customers.

Best of all, we have two more big upgrades following just behind, so stay tuned for even more exciting enhancements!

New Feature at Elite Email > Automatically Remove Hard Bounces

As always, at Elite Email we pride ourselves on offering industry leading deliverability that gets our customers right to the inbox.

We already employ all forms of email authentication including SPF, Sender ID, Domain Keys, and DKIM. In addition to that, we have relationships with major ISPs around the globe and have active feedback loops with any ISP that offers such a service. And, of course, wherever possible, our IPs are whitelisted or on the Trusted Sender list.

But, even with all that, we are always striving to do more and be better. After all, as soon as we sit back on our heels, we risk slipping and we never want that to happen!

One of the issues that really bothers ISPs is when you try to send to a ‘hard bounces’ address over and over again. This shows poor list hygiene and is definitely contrary to best practices.

A hard bounce is usually the result of sending to an email address that does not exist and is permanently undeliverable. So, if you put yourselves in the shoes of an ISP, you can see why receiving multiple attempts over time to a ‘hard bounces’ address is contrary to the high email marketing standards we expect from all Elite Email clients.

Up until this point, our customers have always been able to clear bounces manually. You could simply click the “Clear Bounces” button on your email’s bounce report and everything would be cleaned for you. But, many customers were forgetting to do this, which we totally understand because we know how hectic things can get!

As a result of much customer feedback and the goal of constantly improving delivery, we have released a new feature that automatically removes hard bounces from your mailing list. This feature was released over the weekend and based on preliminary reports is working well.

Keep in mind that we only remove HARD bounces, so soft bounces (which could be ‘mailbox full’ or ‘temporary server error’, etc) are kept on your mailing list unless you manually remove them. This is because there is a chance that when you re-send to a soft bounced email address that it can be successfully delivered.

Stay tuned for more great features to boost your email marketing that we have planned over the coming months!

Email Marketing Fail by Schulich School of Business

Lately it seems like I’m only blogging about Email Marketing Fails, but I just find them so amusing!

All day long we talk to our customers explaining them about email marketing best practices and how to conduct effective campaigns. So, when I see other people totally throwing some of the fundamental principles out the window, I can’t help but want to point it out.

This particular email marketing fail is really bad and I’m sure when they noticed it, they were really embarrassed.

Before going any further, I want to say that I am a proud graduate of the Schulich School of Business. I had a great experience and think it is a fantastic institution with an excellent student body and top-notch professors.

That being said, here is the email they recently sent out (click image for larger version):
(Note: I added the big red arrow)

Schulich Career Fairs 2010/2011 Email Fail

Yes, this school that tries to attract top talent from across the globe spelled the word “AGAIN” incorrectly.

Email Marketing Rule #1: Proof read your content!

Amendment to Rule #1: This is especially important if you’re a prestigious business school!

Email Marketing Fail By TigerDirect.ca

Everyone who knows me and who has ever spoken to me about email marketing knows that the one thing that I preach over and over again is that ‘content is king’.

It is the content that keeps people opening your email each time and it is the content that ultimately prevents people from unsubscribing because they feel like they are getting some ‘value’ by spending time reading your email.

With that being the case, it’s pretty obvious that your first few emails to a new contact are vitally important because, as they say, ‘you never get a second chance to make a first impression’.

None of this is earth shattering and it’s all pretty obvious, but I guess maybe it’s not obvious to everyone….read on…!

I recently made a purchase at a Tiger Direct store and got an email asking me to confirm my subscription to their mailing list. (Good job so far Tiger Direct!)

After confirming my subscription, I got an email with the subject “Welcome to the TigerDirect.ca Stores List”.

Here is a full unedited screenshot of the email:

Email From Tiger Direct

No need to check your eyes because this email is actually blank.

I’m all for brevity in a welcome email, but this seems a bit extreme!

I’d say this is an epic fail of the ‘content is king’ principal. I wonder if the next email I get will be blank, too? If it’s one thing I need more of cluttering up my inbox, it’s totally blank emails!

Epic Email Marketing Fail > Live Nation

I’ve been in the email marketing industry for so long and in that time I have seem both big & small companies do some amazing and some disastrous things.

But, it never ceases to amaze me when such an epic email marketing fail is brought to my attention, especially when it’s from a company I know and respect. In this case, the company who made an epic fail and proved they really don’t have a clue what’s going on is Live Nation.

Here is the story…
A Simon & Garfunkel concert was scheduled for May 12, 2010 at the Air Canada Center in Toronto.
On April 29, ticket holders were sent an email from TicketMaster saying the following:

Dear Simon & Garfunkel Fan,
Simon & Garfunkel originally scheduled on May 12th 2010, at Air Canada Centre has been rescheduled to July 19th 2010, due to a vocal strain recently sustained by Art Garfunkel.
Tickets originally purchased for May 12th, 2010 will be honored, no action is required.
Customers who wish a refund may obtain one by one of the following methods:
…etc…

So far everything in the story is fine. We are seeing a good use of email to report a very urgent and time sensitive announcement to a mass amount of people.

And then things take a turn for the worse…
This morning (May 17), Live Nation sent out an email with the subject “Thanks for attending Simon & Garfunkel at Air Canada Centre!”

This is the email content:

Live Nation Email Fail
UMMM… hey Live Nation… you didn’t realize that your concert didn’t happen?

No one thought that maybe under the circumstances (since the show was postponed) that sending out a survey asking for feedback might be a little stupid, embarrassing, silly, <insert adjective here>!

I don’t know who Live Nation uses as their Email Service Provider… and I’m not saying they should be dragged in the streets, but someone somewhere seriously screwed up because stopping an email campaign from sending is usually no more than a few clicks.

So, what’s the overall lesson: If you cancel a concert, don’t send out an email thanking people for attending and asking for feedback.

[Special thanks to my good friend Dean M. for bringing this to my attention!]

Email Strategy Matters Even Where You Least Expect It

So often we are talking about the issue of email marketing strategy when referring to somewhat larger scale email blasts to an organization’s contact list. But, email strategy extends beyond the corporate world and can have an impact in places you least expect.

Just yesterday I saw this scenario unfold and I thought it was worth highlighting…

A very good friend is running an American Idol pool this year (which I’m excited about!). He sent out an email to about 20 of our close friends explaining the format to them (you basically pick a team of 4 who you think will last the longest and then each week you submit who you think will be eliminated), the various deadlines, and a request to forward the email to other people who may be interested in joining.

It is this last objective that I am going to focus on.

It makes sense that he suggested that people forward the message to their friends, families, co-workers, etc. After all, the more people who join the pool, the bigger the prize. This request to forward the email is actually a ‘strong call to action’ because it clearly tells the recipient what to do next.

The problem was that my friend accidentally forgot to put the cost of joining the pool. So, anyone who received the forwarded email (and who hadn’t spoken to him directly in the past to know the cost) would be left wondering how much it costs. Is it $1000, $100, $10, etc? This is fundamentally one of the most information pieces of information someone would need when deciding whether they want to join or not and it was left out. This causes a big communication breakdown and ultimately a roadblock for more people to signup.

Now what happens is anyone who received the forwarded email has to either respond to the person who forwarded it and ask a follow-up question or respond directly to the person running it (who smartly put their email address in the message) to get more information. Since people will often chose the least laboring approach, many may just dismiss the email and therefore not join the pool (which is opposite of the original desired outcome), even though if it included all the information they may have joined.

This really does serve as a great example of how leaving out the smallest detail can really cause one of your primary email objectives to fail.

Once I brought this to his attention, he sent out a follow-up email the next day. The follow-up email had the price in it, but did not include a copy of the original message or a re-cap of what was said previously. This is a whole other issue because now anyone who gets this follow-up email has two messages: One with all the core information and one with the price. Having two messages that they need to pair together on their own will severely hurt results because now you are asking the recipient to do extra work in order to take your desired action.

What he really needed to do was send out a follow-up email addressing the information he left out, but include the original message or re-state all the information. This way the recipient has everything laid out in one organized email that answers all their questions.

Even though this year’s American Idol pool will not be as big because of a serious flaw in the email strategy that will hurt registrations, I’m still excited about it!

Chrysler Dealership Breaks Key Email Marketing Rule

One thing I always tell people is that their email marketing campaign should have a mix of pictures and text. The worst thing you can do is send out an email that is largely just one big picture because these days most email programs (web-based and desktop-based) disable (ie. Turn-off) images by default.

Here is an example of an email that I just received from my car dealership:

columbo_chrysler_email

What do you think about that email?

Needless to say, I can’t see this email achieving any of their objectives since most people probably would not click to download the entire message after opening up and seeing it was blank.

In addition, the likelihood of this email going to junk/spam is higher (it actually went to my junk folder) because there is no legitimate content. Everything is hidden in the image, so when contact-based spam filters skew towards the sides of caution, they will most surely raise a red flag at this email.

When I choose to display images, it ended up displaying a dreadfully long flyer.

I get the feeling they took a print flyer and sent it out, which is hardly the best course of action.

This surely isn’t the reason the car industry is struggling, but maybe with better marketing they’d sell more cars!

Excellent Example of Timely Email Marketing Campaign as Balloon Flies Over Colorado

One thing that is great about email marketing is that it allows you to be very timely.

Unlike with traditional print flyers where you have to get your flyer designed, then printed, then packaged for mailing, with email it’s just point, click, send. There is no massive lead time, no waiting for ink to dry, no stuffing into envelopes, no driving to the post office, no walking door-to-door … and, since you’re not using paper it’s also more eco-friendly (and everyone loves an organization that goes green!).

Yesterday, I saw a truly excellent example that highlights this big benefit and really showcases just how quickly a business can blast out an incredibly relevant and timely email to their customers.

While millions of TV viewers were watching as a giant Mylar balloon flew through the air in Colorado apparently carrying a 6 year-old boy (see video on CNN), one of our customers that runs a “Home Safety” store was busy preparing an email blast.

The email featured a summary of the story essentially with the tag line “how safe is your home?” The email then went on to showcase several new products.

While this customer’s email was probably going to send out anyway, the fact that they were able to make a quick last-minute adjustment to include a current event literally as it was happening, makes it a much more effective email when it lands in his recipient’s inboxes. After all, some people may not have heard the story yet and it was their ‘home safety’ email that broke the news.

Being timely in your email marketing campaigns can really take your newsletter to the next level.