Thoughts on email marketing

holtrefrewfailEvery so often I feel stabby… okay fairly often. But one of the things that makes me most stabby is bad junk email. Advertisers seem to think they still live in the age of television. That they must pump a message out to as many people as possible and that the message must be the same. If find this extremely frustrating given the vastness of data available at our fingertips.

For example this showed up in my inbox today.

While the woman is attractive (and the $280 shirts arguable). I am neither a woman, straight, nor an Yves Saint Laurent shopper. While I have shopped at Holt Renfrew, provided them with my personal details and handed over my email address I have done so with the expectation of some customization in the email.

You may recall, dear reader, my previous posting on this topic. Holt Renfrew has tripped on the same hurdle that Shoppers Drug Mart did. At least they didn’t pretend to customize the email instead they just blasted it without regard to everyone on the list. Since the email is of no relevance or interest to me it was deleted. If Holt Renfrew does this too often I will simply remove myself from the list.

The shame is that email is very cheap, so little or no thought is given to blasting out this sort of advertising. If it cost them $3 per email I bet they would be a lot more selective about who gets it. There would also be a follow up strategy for those people who respond. The data is available to make marketing emails meaningful and so each customer could receive an offer that targets them.

chapters

Now compare this email to the one that was sent by Chapter/Indigo. This email is also un-targeted. However, rather than make an offer I am not interested in, they simply inform me that they are having a sale.

In this case, while not something I am interested in per se, it might be about something I am interested in. By keeping the email simply about a sale Chapters/Indigo hits the massive market they are after. However, if it is too vague, and vague too often, then I will unsubscribe from this as well.

It is a shotgun approach to marketing.

Amazon gets a little better at this, but there is no follow up or modification of the targeting. They clearly appreciate the value of data and customization. Amazon sends me emails based on the types of books I have purchased before, however that still segments me into a group even if I don’t respond.

I get an email for business type books, I get another one for gay books, I get another one for music, I get another one for fiction all because I have purchased one of each of these books on Amazon at sometime in my life.

The problem is the system seems to be is stupid. Just because I have purchased a baby book on Amazon in the past, doesn’t mean I have a baby or want additional baby books. If I don’t respond to the twenty other offers you have sent then don’t send it again because it was probably a one-time thing.

I know the data is out there, I know the development can be done, now we just need someone to put it all together and rock the market with some kick-ass, relevant marketing.

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6 Comments

  1. Hey Dave — great post. Did you know… we do preference based emails too? If you log in to your account online, you’ll be able to tell us what you want you want to hear about specifically. We’ll still send more general emails about sales (like the one you received) but we’ll also tell you about the types of books/other products you specifically want to know about. If you want to know more, shoot me an email at [email protected] or connect with me on twitter: @indigo_renee We appreciate being mentioned!

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  2. admin

    I am thinking of a system where if I got a Chapters member card could it tie my purchases to a profile and then send me emails based on an what I have purchased. And then it would change what it sends based on my responses for those emails.

    As luck would have it an article was just published on the WAA’s website on the sort of thing I am thinking of. http://www.webanalyticsassociation.org/en/art/756/

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  3. The most recent email in my inbox…

    “As an Amazon.com customer, we thought you might be interested in shopping on Amazon’s special website for shoes and handbags–Endless.com. ”

    Yep, that appeals to me as a married male with 2 kids. A new amazon site with shoes and purses.

    Goodbye Amazon.

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  4. admin

    I had an interesting thought. What if we charged advertisers for junk email? If organizations like Amazon had to pay a nickel for every email they send what would the result be? I mean ignoring the whole net neutrality issue…

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