5 Email Marketing Twists to Twice Your Business Income
Email is the most powerful marketing channel of the 21st
century. In fact, email is so powerful that the Direct Marketing Association
says that you can get a return on investment (ROI) of $38 for every $1 you
invest in email marketing. Similarly, research shows that email is responsible
for driving 25.1 percent of all Black Friday sales in 2015, compared to just
1.6 percent of sales from social media.
If you want to get results from email marketing, though, you
need to change your approach. The following are some very little tweaks you can
make to your email marketing that will give you a massive boost in revenue:
1. Create and execute an “abandoned cart” follow up strategy
One of the toughest realities you have to face as an online
business is that a huge -- and I mean HUGE -- portion of people will go through
your sales process, from their first visit to your website right to the
checkout, and then drop off.
Data from Baymard, which is based on 34 different cart
abandonment studies, found that a whopping 68.81 percent of people abandon
carts. That's 68 sales out of 100 that disappear at the final step.
Of course, there are many reasons why people abandon carts,
but you can use email to recoup some of these sales.
Radley London recovered 7.9 percent of lost sales simply by
sending cart abandonment emails. Boot Barn generated a 12 percent lift in
recaptured revenue by using email to remarket to cart abandoners.
Devise a means of conducting email follow up with cart
abandoners and consider integrating one of these email marketing systems with
your checkout system to make following up easy.
2. Email cross-selling and up selling
How much is cross-selling worth to your business? For
e-commerce giant Amazon, cross-selling was worth $37.45 billion in 2015 -- a
whopping 35 percent of their revenue.
Amazon’s recommendation engine is one of the most effective
cross-selling systems in the world, but very few people know that email is the
most powerful ingredient of this recommendation engine.
Experts reveal that conversion to sales from Amazon’s
on-site recommendation could be as high as 60 percent, but the conversion is
much higher with email. Play it like Amazon and integrate email into your
cross-selling and upselling efforts, both in introducing offers and in
following up on those offers.
3. Segment your email list and avoid using the batch-and-blast approach
Here are two of the most common approaches to email
marketing:
The batch-and-blast approach, in which everybody is lumped
into one category and emailed.
The segmented approach, in which subscribers are segmented
based on interest and other relevant information.
Which of the two approaches do you think is more effective?
Well, let’s consult research again: According to a study conducted by Marketing
Sherpa, segmenting emails can boost email conversion rates by up to 208
percent.
You can segment by gender, age bracket, interests, activity
on your site, purchase behavior, interaction with your site or a host of other
categories. The more personalized and segmented your emails are, though, the
better.
4. Optimize the timing of your emails
Research shows that there is a best time and day to send
emails depending on your goals. Here are some quick facts based on some
reliable sources:
The best time to send an email is between 10 and 11 a.m.
The best weekday to send emails for high transactions is
Monday, and the best weekend day is Sunday.
The best day to send emails or high open rates and click
through rates is Tuesday.
It is essential to also consider the role the time of your
audience plays; the time zone of California is different from that of Florida,
and that of Florida is different from that of Berlin. So, it is essential to
identify where your audience is mainly based, and then use that knowledge to
optimize your emails.
5. Embrace full-on email automation
All things being equal, most of what I recommended above can
be done with automation.
Most email services let you automate email timing, making it
possible to send emails to different people at different times based on their
time zone. They let you split test various elements of emails. They let you
configure your emails in such a way that one event triggers another and the
experience is different and personalized for each customer depending on what
action they take. You want to familiarize yourself with, and make effective use
of, these features.
In fact, some email services like Send Pulse are already
introducing artificial intelligence for email marketing in a way that does all
the above and more. That said, it is important to realize that full-on
automation is the future of email marketing. You should look into services like
Infusion soft, Active Campaign, Northport and a host of other relevant email
service providers; I did a breakdown of the most popular ones here.

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