How to Reengage Inactive Email Subscribers
|
| ||||||||
| Compare: | Web Design Calculator | Web Design Cost Guidelines |
Are you an E-Commerce Web Designer? Add a Free Listing
Inactive email subscribers. The ones that you mail, mail and mail again for months or years, and never an open, never a click. Removing them can help your sender reputation, as too many inactives can be a flag to ISPs and hurt your overall delivery percentage. But cutting them off prematurely could mean lost future revenue. What should you do?
The rules of engagement
ISPs track both positive and negative engagement activities which can impact your deliverability.
Positive engagement
Negative engagement
Source: Responsys Email Engagement Study, 2011
Measuring clicks is the most accurate way to determine engagement, as open rates are not fully accurate due to image suppression and preview panes. And clicking something suggests the content was interesting enough to spur action. (Another reason why you should never send a retail email that doesn’t have a clearly clickable call to action).
Notice that clicking an unsubscribe link appears on neither list, so it’s a better idea to make it easy for a user to unsubscribe than to minimize this call to action in hopes nobody opts out. If anything, the click to your unsubscribe page or “update your preferences” is a sign of positive engagement – even if that subscriber ultimately drops off.
Inactive subscribers defined
We see there are a number of signals that indicate an uninterested subscriber, but how long they have gone cold is important, yet variable. ISPs will tolerate 18-24 months of inactivity, but your own analytics may reveal a tighter window. Segmenting the disengaged from the engaged and testing frequency, offers and time of day along with a re-engagement campaign can help you determine the tipping point.
“In tests that we’ve done with clients, the vast majority of reactivated subscribers were inactive for less than 18 months,” says Responsys’ research report, which includes a case study where the optimal engagement window was half that, at 9 months.
Also note, there’s a difference between an inactive email subscriber and an inactive customer or “lapsed buyer.”
Are inactives unvaluable?
The Smart Insights Digital Marketing recently posted an article by Dela Quist of Alchemy Worx, who offered 5 reasons why an email subscriber might be inactive.
1. They want your email, but haven’t needed your product for a while.
2. You’re receiving false negatives – your email is optimized to be read with image blocking on, so some subscribers could be opening it without you knowing.
3. The subscriber doesn’t want your email, but doesn’t care enough to unsubscribe.
4. Email address churn – the subscriber no longer uses or rarely checks that email address.
5. They don’t see your email because it goes into the junk folder.By far the largest group is the first one – we call these people the unemotionally subscribed. They will happily ignore your emails until they’re ready to buy, because it’s easier than unsubscribing and having to remember your URL or Google you later.
We’ve gathered plenty of evidence on this group and demonstrated that while they might not read an email, they’re still a very important customer base. For example:
• One of our clients generated $120,000 from subscribers who had not opened or clicked on the previous 25 to 40 emails.
• Another saw 14% of revenue generated by subscribers who did not open or click a single email.”Common marketing advice would have been to delete those subscribers after a year’s inactivity. But by retaining unemotionally subscribed addresses, the client brought in a significant amount of additional revenue.
Inactive subscribers can become customers, so the answer is to make efforts to reengage the subscriber before removing them.
Reengagement strategies
Reduce frequency
Responsys recently completed a 3+ year experiment, subscribing to 100 retail email lists using fictional personas. Testers opened and clicked regularly for a period and then stopped. After 40 months, 31% were still mailing at full-throttle frequency, while 23% reduced frequency, 14% had stopped, and the remaining 32% stopped mailing after reducing frequency.

Sending inactives email less often reduces your overall negative engagement scores with your ISP. It also allows you to see if engagement improves among this segment simply by appearing in their inbox less.
Don’t wait until subscribers are inactive for 18 months – by then, chances are you’ve already lost them. 3, 6 or 9 month windows are a good place to start. Your goal is to re-engage them and move them back in your actives file.
Mix up the content
So you’ve reduced frequency, but how do you determine which campaigns to send and which to suppress? These are a few of Responsys’ tips:
1. Send only your best offers and deals.
2. Send exclusive offers to this segment.
3. Test different subject lines (with trigger words like “come back” or “we miss you”)
If reengagement doesn’t work, remove the subscriber after 24 months (your ISP’s threshold). You may lose some “false negatives” that never turned their images on, but if they haven’t clicked, you’re better off cutting them loose.
Additional tips to protect sender reputation
Build up your positive engagement signals, and reduce your negatives with these best practices:
1. Have a clear call to action in every email. And make your links / buttons / banners look clickable. I’ve said it before, and again, and now I’m saying it…again.
2. Send welcome emails that ask customers to update preferences and add your sender name to their address books / safe lists. (Hey, while you’re add it, why not segment out subscribers who don’t engage with your welcome email and keep these items prominent until they do?)
3. Design for images off, with enough teaser text that subscribers are motivated to turn their images on, and ultimately, click something.
4. Test headlines and always be closing testing better headlines! Learn what wins an open and what gets ignored, on average, over time, and to various segements.
5. Segment!!!!! Yes, I’m yelling. Find useful ways to better target offers so that your campaigns are as relevant as possible. I’ll get you started…segment by geography and exclude non-US residents and do not send them Turkey Day mailings in November.
6. User test creative to find out what compels people to scroll. It’s a sign of engagement.
7. Clicks are the most important engagement signal. Did I mention make things look clickable? Even if you’re only directing people to visit you at a physical store, give them something to click and ask them to click it. How about social sharing links if you’re stuck for ideas?
8. Research shows people often misuse the report spam button, simply to indicate they are not interested in a particluar email (even if they opted in to your list!). First, allow subscribers to provide feedback on their interest level in your campaign:

Second, make your unsubscribe link uber-prominent (at the top of the page and the bottom) so the no-longer-interested can stop mailings without hurting your sender rep.
9. Have a preference center, and periodically include a call-to-update in your campaigns. There’s pros and cons to asking for preferences upon sign up – the extra questions may reduce your conversion rate, but it gives you much better targeting afterward. Someone who takes the effort to fill out a longer form is more likely to want to hear from you anyway.

10. Pick your sender name with care. Nondescript ones like “nobody” or XYZ are not going to stand out when users scan their inboxes. And don’t switch your sender name frivolously. You’ll mess up the “safe” lists of your existing subscribers and potentially confuse them to boot.

Looking for help with ecommerce strategy? Contact the Elastic Path Research & Strategy team at consulting@elasticpath.com to learn how our ecommerce strategy services can improve your business results.
Source http://www.getelastic.com/?p=13839Mon, 28 Nov 2011 08:03:12 GMT
Tags: Email Marketing,
NOIDA E-Commerce | Saddle Brook E-Commerce | New Castle E-Commerce | New Rochelle E-Commerce | Grayslake E-Commerce | Miami E-Commerce | Charlotte E-Commerce | Provo-Orem E-Commerce | Haddon Heights E-Commerce | Lakeside E-Commerce |
Email Marketing
Give Customers A Little Credit
Inboxes are overflowing with discount-oriented subject lines – “Take $10 off your next purchase” or “Save $5 on the JuiceMaster 5000WKRP.” Do customers even care anymore? Did they ever? The problem with these subject lines is
14 Ways To Optimize Your Ecommerce Marketing
Ecommerce marketing covers a lot of bases, from on-site improvements to testing to search engine marketing and social media. Today’s post gives a very brief overview of 14 disciplines in emarketing for online sellers, with links to further resources if yo
Do You Segment Email Subscribers Upon Sign Up?
What if you knew more about your email subscribers and what they’re interested in buying? Or where they are located? Or how often they’d like to receive messages from you so you don’t barrage them to the point of unsubscription? Is there
Need E-commerce Design? Check out our member profiles:
Cheung Vong is a graphic/web designer who specializes in print, web, video and multimedia.
Bellingham, Washington US
Full service website design and website management company. Specialing in website design, Ecommerce, SEO, social media, cms development, programming, consulting and training.
Bonita Springs, Florida US
E-commerce sites with easy content management in the Carbondale, Glenwood Springs, Aspen, Vail, and Rifle, Colorado area. We also create and manage web sites worldwide. Call for a free quote!
New Castle, Colorado US
E-Commerce Websites from 20 to 20,0000 products! Same quality, affordable website with Customer Satifaction always our number one goal! SEO and User-Friendly.
Montgomery, Texas US
Experienced web coaching, web consulting, internet marketing, SEO, SEM, and video production services near Savannah, Georgia.
Richmond Hill, Georgia US
Web site design and development-eCommerce,customer management systems,SharePoint 2010,customer relationship management,product lifecycle management,supply chain management,extranet,intranet
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma USCool Websites and Tools [May 25th]
Check out some of the latest MakeUseOf discoveries Most of the listed websites are FREE or come wit
How To Get Your Facebook Birthdays Into Google Calendar Without Apps
Are you sometimes a little forgetful when it comes to your friends birthdays Or do you just like h
5 Tips For Navigating The Craigslist Jobs Jungle
Unemployment is an issue in much of the world today There are many people looking for work but not
Facebook Messenger Launches On iPhone & Android [News]
Facebook is trying to make sending messages an easier and more streamlined process if you are an iPh
Markup-Service:Converting Your PSD to HTML Made Easy Now
Markup Service com provides a fast high quality conversion of your PSD to HTML and its extensions
The Beauty Of Urban Decay: 50 Mindblowing Photography
The branch of photography that particularly deals with the capturing shots of abandoned and desolate
4 Things To Remember For Your Next Technical Interview
I recently had an interview for a summer internship for which I was told beforehand I needed to br
Article Tags
E-commerce Design Articles
Web Apps & Internet (369)
News (290)
Web Apps (129)
Inspiration (128)
Music (119)
iPhone / iPad / iPod (114)
cool web apps (108)
Mobile Tips (100)
Google Android (100)
Announcements (99)
deals (88)
Games & Gaming Tips (84)
Tech Deals (82)
Opinion & Polls (76)
Cool Software Apps (76)
Browser Tips & Tricks (66)
iOS (66)
Social Media (65)
iPhone Apps (59)
Photography (58)
Freebies (58)
geeky fun (58)
iphone (55)
Google (53)
troubleshoot (53)
android (52)
Photoshop (52)
Graphics (51)
facebook (50)
How-To Articles (50)
Friends:
E-Commerce Website Pricing
Web Design Quote
Website Design
Graphic Designers