Why Not to Save the Best Till Last

May 21st, 2010

Next time you read a sales letter, pick up a brochure or look at an advertisement, take note of how far you read before you decide whether to keep it or throw it away.

People are busy. They’re working, having meetings, looking after children, shopping etc. They don’t have the spare time to read through every page of sales copy that comes through their door or into their inbox each day. At most, the majority of people will read the first couple of lines before deciding whether or not it deserves any more of their time. This is why it’s crucial to make those opening lines count.

There’s no room for teasers in sales copy. The idea to ‘save the best till last’ isn’t a great one when most people won’t get that far. To save your copy from hurtling straight to the bin, you need to make sure you hook your customers from the off. That means putting any unique selling points, special offers, or great benefits at the beginning.

Yes – this is simple stuff and most of us know it. Unfortunately, there are times that we all forget and instead waste our crucial opening lines wittering on about trivialities.

However, there is one place where you can benefit from putting a selling point last – in the PS. On a quick glance, a PS. stands out. Anybody scanning a document will usually read it along with the first couple of lines. So make sure you a) include one and b) make it count.

The idea that you need to hook your customers from the beginning is something that can also be applied to web pages. Most visitors will require some persuasion before they will take the effort to scroll down the page. So, it’s your job to persuade them and you have half a page to do it.

Remember, the world moves fast. If you want to catch new customers you need to be clear, concise and to the point.

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Royal Mail Updates

May 18th, 2010

The Royal Mail has announced that their Mailsort Database 2009 will be replaced by their new product, Mailsort Database 2010. The new database will be available to download from www.mailsorttechnical.com from the 21st June 2010. All users of Mailsort® mailmedia® and Pressstream® will need to download this version before 20th September 2010 in order to continue receiving the benefits which are offered by the pre-sort products.

Users of the Walksort® service will also be asked to download a newer version which will be available from 23rd Augsust 2010, and must be used from 20th September 2010.

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Direct Mail Beats 2013 Target

April 27th, 2010

Great news – the direct marketing industry has drastically cut down the amount of waste caused by direct mail campaigns. Definitely a reason to celebrate!

In 2003 Defra [Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs] introduced recycling targets to help the direct marketing industry reduce the amount of waste they produced. Aided by the Royal Mail and DMA (UK), who have implemented a variety of new industry initiatives, this has already resulted in an astonishing 79% drop in the amount of direct mail entering landfill.

After meeting the set target in 2009, a new report by the Royal Mail shows that the 2013 target has also been beaten. The voluntary target which was set for 2009 required that 55% of direct marketing material be recycled, increasing to 70% in 2013. The industry is currently seeing 76.5% percent of all direct marketing material being recycled – far ahead of expectation.

So how has this been achieved?

Over the past decade, there has been a definite increase in the awareness of environmental damage and measures have been put in place to encourage households to recycle regularly. This of course has helped contribute to the industry’s success. In the past seven years, there has also been an increase in the number of people signing up to the MPS, cutting down on the size of direct mail distributions.

However, the direct marketing industry has taken an active role in reducing the amount of waste which they produce.
The industry has highlighted the importance of accurate targeting in direct mail campaigns. Many data suppliers are encouraging clients to purchase lists which target a smaller cross section of the market, but one which matches their specific customer profile. In this way, the amount of direct mail distribution is reduced and the response rate unaffected, or improved. The Royal Mail’s Sustainable Mail service supports this move, rewarding mailers for better targeted, sustainably produced and easy to recycle direct mail with lower prices.

A combination of new guidelines, introduced to measure the impact of direct mail on the environment, an expansion of best practices by the DMA (UK) and a continued dedication to promoting recycling, has resulted in direct mail now responsible for a mere 0.4 percent of non-recycled household waste. Long may the progress continue…

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Is It Ever Okay to Use Symbols in Your Email Subject Line?

April 1st, 2010

Sometimes it seems that lowering your delivery rate is the route to greater success…

We’ve all heard the rules a million times before: don’t use spam words such as ‘FREE’ or ‘BULK’, don’t write entire words in capitals, be careful of including symbols such as ‘!’ or ‘£’. Those pesky spam filters are on the war path and we have quickly learnt the ways and means needed to get our precious emails out of the spam file and into the inbox.
But, is there ever a time when these rules don’t apply?

Let’s face it, if your email has so much as a whiff of ‘spam’ about it, it’s likely to be whisked off and left to rot at the bottom of someone’s spam folder. So, why risk it?

The problem is, both the delivery rate and the open rate of your campaign are important. This can cause a conflict of interest – after all, what if the very headline that is likely to increase your open rate is also the one that will set off the spam filters? And which one should take precedence?

Research has shown that specific subject lines produce, on average, a higher click through rate than those that are more generic. People tend to respond to clarity, so ‘£20 off ticket prices’ is likely to achieve better results than a subject line which simply promises ‘money off’. But the real question is – will the first subject line increase the open rate enough to warrant any decrease that may be had in the delivery rate due to the use of symbols?

The only way to find the answer is through testing, as various factors will affect the results such as the target market, subject line, and product. However, it’s worth finding out. Delivery rate is the first figure that most people look at in their campaign report, yet in isolation it means nothing. The number of people that receive your email is only important in relation to the improved open rate that usually comes as a result. Therefore, if there’s a chance of increasing your open rate, it definitely warrants some investigation.

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The Pitfalls of Thinking Email Marketing is Simply Digital Direct Mail

March 29th, 2010

So you want to target a select market with a specific offer in order to incite a set response – surely the same rules apply no matter what your channel of communication?

Yes, I know many of you long time email marketers are probably jumping up and down right now, asking, ‘How can you be serious?’ But, many people are still approaching email marketing in the same way as they approached their direct mail campaigns.

Naturally, there are certain principles that remain the same (e.g. careful targeting, personalisation, calls to action), but there are many differences too. These need to be identified and responded to if you are to fulfil the true potential of your e-marketing campaign.

So, let’s start from the top…

Getting your emails delivered. Direct mail, or ‘snail mail’ as it is often referred to, may take a day or two to get there, but most of the time (forgetting about all the postal strikes last year) your mail is delivered. Unfortunately, there’s a little more skill involved with getting your emails delivered.

Due to the increase of spam filters, the content of your emails and how you send them has a huge impact on whether or not they arrive in your recipients’ inboxes. Trying to send mass emails out using your regular Outlook account, particularly if you’re using the CC field for the names of your recipients, can cause you delivery problems. As can sending your campaign from a server with a reputation for spamming. Using spam-like words such as ‘Free’ or writing subject lines in capitals with one too many exclamation marks, all can affect the number of emails that pass through the filters. Not forgetting the heavy rate of bounce backs and changed addresses, which are often changed more regularly than residencies. It can seem a bit of a minefield if you don’t know, and adhere to, the basic rules of email marketing.

On the up side, emails are delivered almost instantaneously; much more useful for last minute offers and breaking news than the old snail mail.

Another point to remember is that emails are much easier to unsubscribe to than direct mail. Recipients are only one click away from opting out of your updates/offers/newsletter. So, it’s more important than ever to make sure that what you send out is relevant to your target group. At first glance it may seem that this is a huge disadvantage of email marketing, but if people are opting out it is highlighting that there is something wrong with either your targeting, or your email content. Identifying a problem and rectifying it could actually help you to reach a higher response rate in the long run.

Along the same point, bombarding your customers/prospects with direct mail isn’t perhaps the most effective method, but it causes significantly less damage than bombarding people with emails. Not only will you cause people to opt out (we have just identified how easy that is), but if continuous emails are sent to large groups of the same people, there’s a chance you will be branded a spammer and your emails won’t get delivered, or worse, your account suspended.

Designing emails as against direct mail, has both its benefits and its downfalls. On a positive note, emails can be a lot easier to design, even if you don’t understand html. If like many e-marketers you use a professional e-marketing system, chances are that you will have free access to some email templates. These can be customised simply by changing colours, inserting your own text and uploading your own images, and takes minimal time and effort. Particularly cost effective when you think about the paper and printing costs of a direct mail campaign.

However, unlike a direct mail design, what you see when you design the email isn’t necessarily what will confront your receivers. If you’re designing an email campaign you need to be aware of how your email will look in different email service providers – the best method of this is through testing. It is also necessary to be aware that some of your recipients may view your email through a preview pane. Again, it is crucial that you design with this in mind.

If you think it’s looking like email marketing is more effort than it’s worth, you couldn’t be further from the truth. If you are aware of how email marketing works and abide by the guidelines, there are many benefits to be had that you won’t get using direct mail.

  1. For one, emails are generally much more cost effective, and arguably, often provide greater ROI [return on investment]. Perhaps one reason for this is that email makes it easier for your recipients to respond to your campaign, they’re only one click away from your landing page/website and replying to an email only takes a few seconds.
  2. You don’t have to wait weeks, or even days, to find out how well your campaign performed. Email campaigns can be tracked immediately and results analysed from as early as 24hours. It also makes it easy to do split testing, giving you instant feedback and helping you to inform your future campaign successes.
  3. There is a lot of information that you can find about your email campaigns. No longer do marketers have to wonder where their budget has been spent, you can track it religiously. Open rates, click through rates, number of web page visits, they all can tell something about your customers’ behaviour and what does and doesn’t work for them.

As with most things in this life, there are pros and cons to most things, and so a varied diet will usually bring about the best results. Direct mail and email marketing can happily work together as part of your marketing mix. Identify the benefits of each, apply them wisely, and sit back and wait for the results to come in.

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Is Social Media Replacing Email?

March 29th, 2010

Not too long back, email was the technology of the moment. After only a few months, people were already wondering how they ever managed with the traditional snail mail, and email mania soon swept up everyone, from kids right through to grandmas and everybody in-between.

As society has continued to speed forward and respond to the needs of the newest generation, we have seen the steady rise of social networking. Facebook was initially a phenomenon for university students, when I first joined only a handful of universities had been hit by the craze for ‘Facebooking’, and yet within months its popularity had spread like wildfire. Soon it was no longer a way for young people to keep in touch with their friends, it was a way for the older generation to rediscover old relationships, a way to make friends with people you’d not yet met and, perhaps most telling, a way for businesses to interact with their marketplace.

Social networking has become a key aspect of marketing, giving businesses a cost effective way to reach a larger audience and develop their brand. Many companies now, large and small, have at the very least a Facebook and Twitter profile. Naturally, these work best for B2C companies, but there are still plenty of benefits to be had for companies with a business market too.

Despite the introduction of sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Linked In and most recently, Google Buzz, (to name just a few), email is still a very important part of the marketing mix. In fact, despite what some may say, social networking has actually placed even more importance upon emails.

It’s strange to me that people feel it necessary to choose their favourite digital channel and stick to it (as though you can only use one or the other). Surely, the very point of technology is to build upon what you already have, in order to provide the strongest and most extensive platform on which to market your product/service.

There is a mutually beneficial relationship to be had between social networks and email. Both can help the other to thrive, and together they give you a dual route through to your market. Whilst many have forecast the decline of email, in reality there is room for them both.

It’s usual for companies, and people, to join more than one social network and so most of us use email alerts to tell us when things have been written or posted on to our profile. Can you imagine the amount of time and effort it would take to constantly check every site individually? But more important than its role as alerter, email also has the potential to grow our social network. Many emails now include links to the network sites, encouraging people to follow your company in another way. Articles/newsletters no longer rely on the ‘forward to a friend’ link, but instead give you the option to ‘share this’, allowing them to be posted straight onto other people’s profiles on networking sites – placing your company in front of a whole new audience made up of that person’s friends and followers.

Social networks are a good way to get to know your customers in a more personable way. They are great for sending out mass updates, and their ability to let you send and receive messages instantly is definitely a pro. However, email still offers important advantages. A lot of people like to feel that some thought has been put in to contacting them. Contacting large groups at once (e.g. using Twitter updates) seems less personal, and even sending a personal message from a networking site somehow appears to show less effort than the process of sending and addressing an email.

Email campaigns allow a level of targeting that is difficult to replicate online. Multiple email lists are able to be managed and saved along with additional information about each recipient. At the moment, tracking an email campaign is still more widely understood, and the analytics available offer more insight into your customers’ behaviour, than a social network campaign.

Reports have shown that, in contrast to people leaving email in favour of social networking, on average, users of such sites check their email much more frequently. This gives your marketing campaign much more chance of getting seen and opened.

So, email’s safe. It has not been upstaged but instead has become part of a rather fabulous double act. Who says you can’t have the best of both worlds?

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Is Open Rate A Good Measure Of Success?

March 29th, 2010

Depending upon what the ultimate goal of your email marketing campaign is, the open rate has limited significance. For a long time, companies have placed a lot of weight upon open rates, seeing it as a measure of campaign effectiveness. However, it is not only unable to provide any deep insight into customer response, but it is also subject to great inaccuracy.

One of the biggest problems with open rates is that they are defined differently by Email Service Providers. Many people now view their emails through a preview pane, something which is classed as an ‘opened email’ in some email reports, and not in others. The line is also blurred by disabled images and non html friendly mobile phones, both of which cause more ambiguity as to whether an email is recorded as having been opened or not.

Even forgetting the weaknesses in determining open rate, the figure still isn’t a very useful tool for measuring campaign success. What is the ultimate goal of your e-marketing campaign – to get recipients to fill in a form, purchase your product or subscribe to a newsletter? All of these actions require the recipient to travel much further down the sales path, and so the open rate is not a very accurate indicator of a campaign’s true performance.

The open rate is unable to provide any information beyond that the email was opened. It does not shed any light on what the recipient did after the email was opened. Did they click off the email immediately when they read the header? How much of the email did they read? The open rate tells you only how well people have responded to a combination of your subject line, and your company’s name, which is in the ‘from’ field.

So, why do we calculate the open rate at all? Because, as with most statistics, whilst the open rate may not tell you much in isolation, as a part of a bigger picture it can highlight important information. The open rate is significant insofar that it is the first ‘hurdle’ to pass over to get closer to your ultimate objective. If you are finding that a large group of people aren’t opening your emails, it may be necessary to test out different subject lines, alter the ‘from’ address, or maybe even double check that your emails are being delivered. After all, anybody that doesn’t get past the first hurdle certainly won’t be making it to the last.

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Time to Reap the Rewards from Your Marketing

March 26th, 2010

Why follow ups are so important…

Over recent years, society has become obsessed with getting immediate results. Most of us demand it as a basic right, expecting to get anything we want, whenever we want it. In many ways, this expectation has helped us to create a faster, more efficient society which can provide for such demands. However, not everything can be delivered here and now – some results take time. This is especially true of marketing. So many companies sabotage their marketing through impatience. If a campaign doesn’t produce results instantaneously, we write it off. Unfortunately, this is the way to a whole heap of failed campaigns.

Not once, not twice, but three times; this is the average number of times a prospect will be contacted before they respond. Selling takes time, as does building up an awareness of your brand. If your company name isn’t readily familiar to your potential customers, expect it to take a while for you to develop a relationship between you and them.

Following up your initial mailing with another letter, an email, or even a phone call, can significantly increase the response rate of your marketing. Some companies have seen between a 25% to 50% improvement on their initial response. Why – because even those who intended to respond initially have probably forgotten. Contacting your prospects again and reinforcing your message, along with a strong call to action, helps your message to stand out amongst the zillions of others and gives people another chance to reply.

So, next time you’re doing your marketing plan, make sure that you factor in follow ups. It’s all about keeping up a consistent contact with your market (without bombarding them), and reminding them about who you are, where they can contact you, and what you can do to help.

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Make Business this Valentine’s Day

February 10th, 2010

Christmas is barely over and already the next celebration is on its way. Sometimes it feels like the entire year is spent hopping from one occasion to the next – no wonder there’s never enough time to get anything done.
Still, with Valentine’s Day looming, it’s the perfect opportunity for all you restaurateurs, hoteliers, venue managers and retailers to give your February profits a big boost. As well as doing your bit for romance (something all too rare in the grey February days).

Whether you’ve got the perfect love nest for couples or the best venue for an anti-Valentine’s Day party, business should be booming this February 14th.

Send Out Invites

Don’t expect people to know what you’ve got planned for Valentine’s Day – tell them! Send invites out via email or post, put up posters or place signs up around your premises. Millions of people across the UK are looking for something to do on this one night of the year, and it’s your job to tell them why they should come to yours.

Create An Impact

With new customers coming through your doors, it’s crucial that you create the right impression. After all, those one off customers could turn into lifetime investments. Think about what you can do to make your customers feel extra special (A rose on every table? A glass of champagne on arrival? A free box of chocolates with every purchase?) Details make up an overall impression. People remember the small things. So a little touch here and there can be all you need to create a big impact.

Improve Sales and Customer Satisfaction

Think about creating a special Valentine’s Day package to make your customers feel special. Creating a specific package is an effective way to up-sell to your customers with relatively little effort. For example, a hotel may choose to offer a more romantic experience than the usual bed and breakfast deal. As part of a Valentine’s package they may provide fresh flowers on arrival, breakfast in bed and a late check out – all things which will make the stay more memorable, and which customers will pay extra for. Happy customers and a bigger profit! It’s all about providing a great experience for your customers, offering good value for money and increasing the average spend of your customers. It’s a win win situation for both sides.

Happy Valentine’s Day!

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Wishing you all a very Happy 2010. Here’s how our year started…

January 27th, 2010

Whichlist Sledging

It takes more than a bit of snow to keep the Whichlist.com team out of the office for too long. With the aid of some heavy layers (and an ice pick) we all finally made it up the hill last week. Yes – the Whichlist.com office is at the top of a rather big hill if you didn’t know. Think Ben Nevis… Everest… you get the picture! So, the whole team was back in the office bringing marketing solutions to companies around the UK.

But, it seemed that after getting up the hill, the excitement of getting back down it proved too much for some of the staff.


Still, it’s not a bad way to spend a lunch hour!

Wishing you a successful year’s marketing!

Love the Whichlist.com Team

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Who we have worked with, both past and present;

Who we have worked with, both past and present
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