Archive for October, 2007

Might Want to Leave Your Speakers Off When you Check Email

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

From the NY Times:

Spammers Turn to MP3s to Deliver Pitches: Spam is now being served in audio form.

The latest in unwanted electronic communication is an MP3 file that began landing in inboxes around the world last week. It features a spooky, synthesized Darth-Vader-sounding female voice touting the stock of Exit Only Inc., traded on the lower-standard Pink Sheets.

”Hello, this is an investor alert!” the halting, at times unintelligible voice says. Her pitch invokes the growth prospects of Exit Only, a Web site operator that runs Text4Cars.com, which links auto buyers and sellers via text messages.

Computer security researchers say the audio blasts — MP3 files with misleading names attached to spam e-mails — reflect spammers’ need to slip their messages through increasingly sophisticated e-mail filters.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/technology/AP-Spam-MP3s.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

SMS = Email 2.0

Friday, October 19th, 2007

I have been seeing more and more creative ways of taking email to new levels lately. Most of these are done by entertainment or hipster brands. And of course I test them out. If you are not familiar with FlavorPill, you should get to know them. I have long been a subscriber, but actually heard one of the team present on a panel at OMMA East 2007 this fall in NYC. The panel was great as I wanted to learn more about daily emails as we have been doing more and more with new clients like BeThree and others. What I really want to understand is content, frequency and list burnout (aka attrition).

But when I was paying close attention to this email the other day, I noticed something that had been there all along, the ability to send events listed in the email by SMS to your and others phones. It was very cool and worked flawlessly. IPSH was the one that powered it and really the 800 lb gorilla in my mind in the SMS space with entertainment brands. I know Warner Music and others use them.

What was cool to me, and more importantly useful, was the content it delivered to my phone. It was all the relevant info I needed to get to this event and had things like the address, the band, the time and date that made it all easy to add it to my blackberry calendar as well as get the map to pop up in my google maps mobile version. Killer use of email and 2.0 thinking.

Now just to figure out how I am going to use this in a client campaign.

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The Birthday Email Twist

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

Sure we all know about the birthday email. It is used so well by retailers and restaurants alike. But what about using it for a product purchase Birthday? I think that Dell pulled it off well with the birthday of the purchase of your laptop. I mean what is more personal than the personal computer? We tote it everywhere with us, use it for all sorts of personal communication, search, shopping, work, dreams, photos, life in general.

This is great thinking. I have not seen this done before around a product purchase and I think it was a good idea. I am sure that it provides some lift to sales. I actually do not use this Dell as it is one of many that we purchase for employees (I am an Apple guy… and why did Steve Jobs forget my birthday?) but it was relevant none the less, and even more important, unexpected.

When I see ideas that are unexpected they stand out more in my inbox. I have another one from a hotel chain I have been meaning to share and might cue that one up next.

Dell, thanks for “Thinking Different”.

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A Visionary Ahead of His Time

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

Stanley Marcus, who ran the Neiman Marcus empire, had the foresight in 1966 to envision where we are today. He saw a world where ecommerce and customers shopping on demand was going to take place. This is a quote that I have on one of my walls (man if you could actually see my office it is a collection of stuff, maybe someday I will post some photos) that I look to for inspiration. Along with other revolutionaries like Richard Branson, Che Guevera, Castro, etc, it is important in what we all do to thing about challenging the systems we are all comfortable with. I look for ways each day to move clients out of the comfort zone of the marketing routines they are stuck in each year. I think we should all be challenging ideas in email, web, digital and offline communications, personal interactions, brand positioning, etc. Without thinking down the road and setting out not afraid to fail, we all get stuck in punching the buttons. Don’t be a button pusher, be the one that pushes all them them or makes a new button to move you and your ideas forward.

I typed the quote out below, but also you can print the one off if you need to start a wall or area of inspiration in your life.

“I forecast a marketing revolution to come in addition to mail order shopping, customers will be able to call their favorite local or out of town store and see the articles over the monitor that will interest them right in the comfort of their own living rooms.”
- Stanley Marcus, 1966

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Get the Quote for your wall of inspiration >>

If You Advertise Email Marketing, Don’t Build Your Emails Wrong

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007

Now this is not to slam any of the competition. As I am sure the creation and delivery of this email was out of their direct control. But seriously, if you are advertising yourself with the likes of Amex, shouldn’t you make sure that the email creative is going to render right? This example was from Outlook 2007, which is a battle for many people, but I would suggest some simple pre campaign delivery testing. Even if you don’t use the best system on the planet (ReturnPath) like we and many other companies, agencies and ESPs do, set up a simple seed list to test the rendering.

If I was promoting an email solution, I would want to put my best foot forward from a branding standpoint. Wouldn’t you for your brand? When I saw this I had to double take and decide whether to air it or not, but you know me by know and I show you what I see so that we can all learn from it. We actually built a email to promote an inbox rendering webinar and purposely created with RED X’s so that it looked like images were broken. That set off the phones and emails to us from clients and people asking us if our email was broken. Guess it worked, but it was deliberate.

Lesson for today: Use a system like ReturnPath, or set up some test accounts across all email clients. The lat thing you want is to make a bad first impression.

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Bringing Back the Horizontal Email

Monday, October 15th, 2007

It is a rare occurrence when you find someone using the horizontal email format. But when it works, as it does here, it works. I have seen ones for Coors Light and Diesel in the past 2 years but FHM is bringing Sexy Back. This is the Friday email that I was turned on to by another employee in the company. I mean I can’t possibly subscribe to everything out there, although I try.

I have always wanted to try this format, but I honestly have not found the right way to do it OR the client to try it for. I think it really has to be unique and have content that drives the sideways scroll. And just when you thought you were trying to drive everyone down below the fold in your emails, no mix in the scroll right…

What is great about this how it scrolls and navigates. I can’t give it all to you here, but it works. So subscribe and see if it might work for you. When people talk about email 2.0 (for some reason 2.0 and beta is cool) I think trying something different is a 2.0 way of thinking.

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Do You Ever Read All the Copy?

Monday, October 15th, 2007

i wonder sometimes how much or how often the entire copy is read in an email. People skim most emails and look for things of interest, or things that look like action. Well so often the thought and time behind the copy writing skills are missed. This is why I wanted to share this one with you. We are on the board of the Portland Advertising Federation, the oldest ad club in the US (over 100 years, yeah that is a long time) and we are getting ready for the annual Rosey Awards in November where we gather, drink, award, recognized and celebrate the creative and the WORK that drives all of us to do better work.

I love the copy that has been written for the emails promoting the Roseys this year. But I wonder how many people took the time to read it. If you read you can see that there are penalties for not reading the whole email or even thinking of deleting it or adding it to your junk box.

Should we maybe learn from this and add this type of disclaimer to all of our emails? Would be fun to try.

If you are in Portland make sure to come to the event November 7th as it is one of the parties of the year. I know from last year when I was wondering the empty streets of Portland at 4:30am trying to get back to the office to crash for a bit before everyone got in. Man that was pointless. This year I am going to just write that next day off entirely.

Setting Up Campaign Emails

Friday, October 12th, 2007

I had the pleasure of working with a client this week on an upcoming annual campaign we love to work on. I can’t delve too much into the overall details, but what did come to light was interesting. Since we work with 100s of clients on campaign email strategy to support a new site, campaign site or product/event launch we get to test so many ideas, subject lines and frequencies across all sorts of niches, brands and consumers. What I did not realize (at least it was not apparent to me until after the meeting) that there is a real science to the email campaign touch. It is not as much formulaic as it is learned skills. So it is hard to point an exact way for you to put it into action, but here are the things we evaluate and plan.

1. Time of Year: What are people doing right now and up until your campaign is over? Is is warm out? Are there some national or corporate holidays in the mix? Are there times that people are more frequently absent or on vacation? There are always factors of the time of year in play to consider. The Calendar and people’s behaviors around certain times of the year cam sometimes work against you.

2. The Timing: How long is your campaign and do you have a series of relevant actions, tasks or business objectives to achieve? Things like: visit, learn, vote, comment, buy, share, attend, register, contribute, etc. are all relevant actions to plan against. These set into motion a series of unique emails that you must design, write copy for and be clear as to the goal and desired action of the recipient. You must also consider how each touch and message fits together with the brand and the “campaign puzzle” you are building.

If I have a long campaign, I need to plan my touches in email as not to go to long nor to annoy with too many touches.

3. The Frequency: Am I arbitrarily picking dates for the sake of a number on the calendar? The client (from which this post was hatched) had dates like “the 1st, the 15th, the 19th, etc” and they had not taken the time to actually look at a calendar. Does that fall on a Monday? A Saturday or Sunday? And if so will the audience be willing to give you the attention and time you want them to? We report and read studies that show some times and days are better than others to message your subscriber base or audience. Have you looked over the last 6-12 months to see when they are responding, because your subscribers behavior might not match those of a study.

4. The Re-emailer: If you are going to have a series of events in an email campaign, what happens when you introduce the 2nd touch campaign to those that have not read, clicked or converted in the action path you want? Does this push up against a (I like a 72 hour window at a minimum) next touch planned campaign? As the 2nd touch campaign can often produce better results than the first in certain situations, you cannot forget to plan for this. If you have a 2nd touch that bumps up into the next one to all, you risk having multiple emails from your brand stacked up in an inbox that might not get read or checked all the often and you look pushy.

5. The Close: When you reach the end of campaign you need to drive the final copy that brings all the touches, whether they participated or not, to a boiling point and wrap it up. This message is one that might applaud, thank, award, grant access, show a final result or product or even drive them to continue with the next campaign idea. This is a time that you can use to move someone from a campaign to a customer.

These are just some primers to get you thinking about your campaigns and all the factors that got into planning. There are others based on the industry etc, but Iw ill save those for later.

A Day Without Email Is Like …

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

Found this article on the WSJ today. This strikes me as CRAZY. Companies putting “no email use rules in place on Fridays and the weekends”. This article is worth a read for all email marketers. I can tell you that I have some personal rules where I turn off my Blackberry when I pull in the garage at home each night and don’t turn it on until I get in the car in the AM. But I do check email at night after taking 3-4 hours uniterrupted with my kids and wife. My wife is actually worse than I am, and she does not work, but this iPhone I got her has her checking email all day long wherever she is. What would my clients think as an email marketer and an interactive ad agency if I just shut down?

What would you think if all companies just stopped using email on Fridays. Would this affect your b to b campaigns? Your overall marketing efforts? Would you roll out some heavy Friday DM or even mobile advertising (and I mean rolling vans with sign boards or projectors here not phones)?

From the WSJ:

When U.S. Cellular’s chief operating officer, Jay Ellison, imposed a “no email Friday” rule at his company, he thought it would ease workers’ overload.

Instead, he got a rebellion. Among many irate responses, Kathy Volpi, a marketing director, confronted Mr. Ellison and “just ripped me,” he says. “She really gave me a piece of her mind.”

Ms. Volpi says that at the time the ban seemed like a needless obstacle. “I thought, ‘He just doesn’t understand how much work we have to get done, and how much easier’ ” it is when using email.

A growing number of employers, including U.S. Cellular, Deloitte & Touche and Intel, are imposing or trying out “no email” Fridays or weekends. While the bans typically allow emailing clients and customers or responding to urgent matters, the normal flow of routine internal email is halted. Violators are hit with token fines, or just called out by the boss.

Read Full Article on the WSJ

Domain Keys to the Rescue

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

At eROI we deploy DomainKeys for all of our clients. We actually see better delivery for those clients that implement it right ( I say this as there are some challenges that IT teams have at times with it). If you are an eROI client using emailROI and have yet to set up DomainKeys, let us know and we can send you the technical record information to help your email delivery programs. We have been touting that it is important for about a year and we have witnessed more and more ISPs and business email accounts using it as a secondary and sometimes primary email filter/check before allowing it in to the inbox.

The below article demonstrates the importance of using it with your email marketing programs. I can tell you that I am happy to see less fake eBay emails in my inbox and I trust that we will see it used more and more against all email marketing. Be on the right side and get set up today. It only takes about 20 minutes to have your IT dept make the change in your DNS records.

Yahoo Email Encryption Software Purports to Minimize eBay, PayPal Phishing

Stopping phishermen in their tracks
Many of the phishers that deluge inboxes use PayPal and eBay as a hook to obtain user information.

Now the popular online auction house and payment service are fighting back — with the assistance of Yahoo’s anti-phishing technology.

The technology supports DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM), which requires senders to confirm their identity through a digital signature, according to BBC News. Spammers typically use fake email addresses so nothing can be traced back to them.

Read more >>

So Much for RSS in China

Monday, October 8th, 2007

So the power of RSS is being humbled by the powers of the Red Army of China. Now if RSS is going to be medium that trumps email, why can it too be blocked? Any medium is going to have its challenges and it seems that RSS, email and websites all face the same type of treatments from parties that wish to stop them from reaching their desired target subscriber.

China Blocking RSS Feeds
The Chinese Government has added a blanket ban on all RSS feeds, according to a report at Ars Technica.

There have been reports previously that Feedburner feeds have been blocked, but to-date information delivered by RSS feeds has generally gone uncensored, providing Chinese viewers information that would otherwise be blocked if attempting to visit a regular webpage or blog.

Is Email Making Us Busier or “More Efficient”

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

I wonder how much more we work now that we have email. It is on our screens, our phone, and our brains. Check your email, execute campaign, do more work, lather, rinse repeat. I had an amusing email come in to my inbox from an agency friend that I had to post, as he has become ULTRA efficient due to his reliance and IMMEDIATE response time and OVER communication (in humor) due to email.

I am available all hours all days other than Fridays between 7am and 9pm, Tuesday from 10:30-10:45, Saturdays 5am until 8:15 and then from 8:16 to 9pm I have a Japanese Shinto tour, Monday are no good between 11am and 5:30pm due to unexpected family issues that I can’t really go into right now. Then All Wednesdays are booked as a result of a recurring meeting on city planning issues that I am not obliged to go into at this moment as it may jeopardize my membership in the local shriners. (I only ride in the parades, but still). If it’s on a Thursday there could be a conflict with my busy potting schedule. I have to throw seven pots by next Tuesday! Mornings are better than mid-day except Friday’s I am in training for UFC 78 “The Comeback!” from the Amory in Yonkers. If we can meet for lunch, I volunteer at a soup kitchen on all days except Christmas and most other major holiday’s. The soup is a little bland, but it gets the job done. Oh and Monday’s…..

Let me know what works for you. I’m actually pretty open.

Do you feel that email is helping you or a hindrance? I love it personally and what the above example shows me is how VOICE comes through in email. I love conversational voice or one to one instead of corporate forced copy. Try it as people tend to respond better.

Email and Lead Generation

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007

I was on a panel last week in NYC at OMMA East with Ogilvy and ReturnPath and the question is email a lead generation system came up. I know it is and there are good ways to do it with refer a friend campaigns, contests and forward to a friend systems, but I am always a little leary of email list rentals. Now not for any reason of true measure, but I just have a problem with getting emails that I have not opted in to. It might just be me as many of our clients use this technnique to drive new subscribers successfully. Stephanie Miller at ReturnPath was quick to point out how well it works when you use reputable 3rd party list partners and do it right. I would agree with her, but it just isn’t my main focus with growing the email opt in. I am going to trust that she reads this and responds with her take on the way email lists rentals work and what to vet in a list rental partner. Might help all of us a bit here.

I do believe 100% in direct mail to a landing page with our PIN coding system. I know this works, has a better “feel” or trust level to me and has helped many of our clients grow their opt in databases.

What works for you? And do you like the practice of 3rd party list rentals?

“Which is Annoying and Inconvenient….”

Monday, October 1st, 2007

How can this statement be comforting? If you lost 6.3 million records in your database and they were now out in the public domain, would you respond like he did? I hope not. Data theft is a very serious issue. I know that we have a system that logs people in and out and what actions they took by IP Location as well as permissions by user. If you are not keeping an eye on your email databases you should. Last thing you want it either someone getting into your data OR a disgruntled employee or employee of opportunity taking and giving up your list data. I personally know one company that had this happen with an employee that was terminated on a Friday only to login from home and export and delete the entire company email CRM. Fortunately we were able to get the login and user actions in about 5 minutes to put a stop to it for them. But imagine if you never knew…. it could really do some damage.

This quote below still stuns me.

6.3M Names Leaked from Ameritrade Database

Was spokesperson Dennis Hopper to blame?
Online brokerage company Ameritrade revealed this week that 6.3 million names from its database were stolen.

To ease the seething throng, no financial information or social security numbers were reportedly lost, according to DM News.

CEO Joe Moglia said while no financial info was taken, members will likely see an increase in unwanted spam, “which is annoying and inconvenient for them.”