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Friday 29 September 2017

Twitter Testing 280 Character Limit, Apple Switches To Google and Revised Adwords T & C: Weekly Forum Update

Much of the big discussion this will was around Twitters testing a character limit that is double their existing character limit.

Beyond that, there was some interesting discussion around Apples switch to from bing to Google as the search engine for spotlight and Siri.

Twitter tests 280 character tweets

View full discussion here
Twitter  announced that it is testing upping the twitter character limit to up to 280 characters.

Over on Webmaster World the sentiment seems positive or neutral on the change but over on CEO, Jack Dorsey’s twitter – long time users were not keen on the change and felt that the character limit was part of the essence of what Twitter is. Jack Dorsey responded to the criticism with the following:

Apple switches from Bing to Google for Siri web search results on iOS

View full discussion here

A lot of the discussion on Webmaster World surrounding the switch was why Apple has not tried to buy a smaller search engine or build their own. One member commented seeing Applebot on their servers for a couple of years.

Google Adwords Updating Terms & Conditions

View full discussion here

Some of the changes highlighted as part of the new Adwords Terms and Conditions include:

  • Allowing Google to test campaigns without notifying advertisers
  • Disputes to be settled by binding arbitration and blocks advertisers from joining class action lawsuits

On Webmaster World the discussion was around how users don’t ever read terms and conditions. Also, it was noted that with ‘deep enough pockets’ arbitration clauses can be challenged.

 

Best way to link to site in a Facebook post?

View full discussion here

Over on SEOchat, a photogprapher asked about the best way to link back to her site from Facebook, without being spammy.

Member Mike Hoklin provided the following advice,
This is what I do. When I come back from a trip (like I’m doing tomorrow), I post the photo on my blog with the details. Then I create a new Facebook Page entry with a short teaser and/or title of image….something like that. The paste that copied link into that FB entry. I usually share that FB Page Entry into my personal FB account and some of the FB Groups I belong.”

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The post Twitter Testing 280 Character Limit, Apple Switches To Google and Revised Adwords T & C: Weekly Forum Update appeared first on Internet Marketing Ninjas Blog.



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Thursday 28 September 2017

How to Use Influencer Marketing to Build Stronger Content for Your Blog #InfluencerDays

How to Use Influencer Marketing to Build Stronger Content for Your Blog #InfluencerDaysThis week I was in NYC speaking about influencer marketing and how it helps creating stronger content assets for your blog. Here’s my recap of the presentation:

First of all, content marketing is ALL about influencing – not just your potential customer – but also about influencing the influencer, i.e. those people who can effect buyers’ decisions.

And what’s a better way to accomplish that than to actually get that influencer create content for you?

According to the Association of National Advertisers (ANA) report, The Value of Influencer Content 2017 from Linqia, 57% of marketers indicated that influencer-powered content outperforms brand created content:

  • Influencer-powered content is more authentic and trusted than brand-created content (because influencers are real people who have already earned that trust);
  • Influencer-powered content sparks audience engagement (because people engage with people)
  • Influencer-powered content provides higher ROI (because it’s more trusted and authentic and spread easier with help of participating influencers)

A few case studies and examples:

  • ShaeBaxter: Here’s how an influencer-powered articles led to over 80% boost to the blog’s organic search engine traffic
  • Robbie Richards: Here’s another case study on creating an influencer-powered roundup that got the host 11,065% more organic traffic in 6 months
  • And here’s how Sam Obrart increased his inbound links by 310% in 21 days by having influencers contribute for his blog

Tools to Identify Influencers:

  • MyBlogU is always a place where I start my outreach because it’s full of people who are actually eager to participate in your content ventures. When you have a few participating experts, it’s easier to branch out to more influencers. MyBlogU also helps with many other stages of putting collaborative content together: It allows bulk emailing and auto-notifies participants of published piece.
  • A good place to find more influencers is BuzzSumo: Search your primary topic of your future article and use “Interviews” filter to find people who don’t mind contributing their answers to blog roundups.

Ways to Keep in Touch with Influencers:

  • Use Twitter lists to monitor all of them on Twitter. For example, back when I was managing contributors for Search Engine Journal, I made sure I added each of them to a separate Twitter list. Then, using my Twitter manager Tweetdeck I was able to add a separate column to monitor that list and made it part of my weekly schedule to engage with them on Twitter.
  • Use Private groups (Facebook, Slack, etc.) to keep in touch with those influencers on a regular basis. For example, we invite all the influencers we interview on #VCBuzz Twitter chats to a Private Facebook group where we encourage them to ask for help, shares or anything else they may need.

Common Mistakes When it Comes to Influencer-Driven Content

  • Doing too many expert roundups: An expert roundup is the most popular type of content collaboration which is quickly becoming overused. It’s simple to replicate the tactic, so too many marketers and media outlets are jumping into the bandwagon.
  • Scaling too much: it’s really more about relationships than the content you get. Instead of trying the tactic too often, try investing more time into managing those relationships, connecting to those influencers more, interacting with them more, making sure those relationships will become stronger.
  • Failing to find an interesting and engaging topic for your content. Content is still king! Influencer-powered content has been widely used recently, mostly by people who don’t get it. They don’t get personalized outreach and relationship building, but more importantly they don’t get what lies at the foundation of a successful influencer-powered content. The key to influencer-powered content is finding an interesting and engaging topic. In fact, most people who plan to include influencers into their content marketing strategy think too much about influencers and totally forget about a more important part of the process: What the content is actually going to be about. It’s still content, so unless you find an interesting question to discuss in your future article, you’ll see:
    • Most influencers ignoring your pitch
    • Much fewer shares from social media users

Invest a lot of time in topic brainstorming, focus on current trends, events and interesting tools. Avoid boring topics everyone else is covering.

Bottom line

Stand out. Don’t do what other people are doing. Play with formats and topics. Note that mega live show example from David Bain in the deck above? No one did that before in our industry, so it did very well! Think out of the box!

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The post How to Use Influencer Marketing to Build Stronger Content for Your Blog #InfluencerDays appeared first on Internet Marketing Ninjas Blog.



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The Demand Generator’s Guide to Maximum Lead Conversion

Picture this: You think you’re sitting on the hottest lead this side of the Atlantic Ocean. You’ve put your heart, soul, time, and resources into generating this one. But is it as hot as you think? Will it convert and let you retain the title of Demand Gen Superhero in the office?

That’s where we come in! We know there’s a lot to think about when it comes to enterprise-class companies turning leads into customers faster, so Vidyard and Ascend2 have assembled the Lead Generation to Increase Conversions Report. This ultimate tool for today’s demand generation leaders will help answer these burning questions:

  • Did you generate the lead using the most effective and strategic tactics possible?
  • How are you going to convert this hot lead into your #1 customer?
  • Do you have the most effective strategy with proven tactics in place to succeed?

The data in this edition of the study exclusively benchmarks the opinions of 75 enterprise-class companies with more than 500 employees who participated in the survey. There is too much goodness in this report to cover here, so we’ll give you just a sneak peek into what you will see within our findings.

Most Important Objectives for Lead Conversion

More than two-thirds (68%) of enterprises consider increasing lead-to-customer conversions a top priority of a lead-generation strategy. Achieving this will also require improving lead data quality – an important objective for more than half (56%) of enterprises.

Important-Lead-Gen-Objectives

Source of the Highest Conversion Rates

57% of enterprises, content download forms generate leads with the highest conversion rate. The type of content downloaded also impacts the rate of lead-to-customer conversions. Webinar registration is another top lead-generation form for 48% of enterprises.
Source-of-the-highest-conversion-rates

Content Development Resources Used

The types of content generating the highest conversion rates often require specialized skills and capabilities not available in-house. That’s why 92% of enterprise-class companies outsource all or part of their content development for lead generation purposes.
Content-Development-Resources-Used

This report is jam-packed with resources specifically catered to the Lead-Generation audience that you won’t find anywhere else. You’ll also learn about important research into Lead Generation Success Strategy, Sales Cycles Encountered, How Conversion Rates Are Changing, Content Producing the Most Conversions and much more!

And of course, we want you to use all these valuable research findings. So go ahead and pull stats for your next strategy review, use the graphs and charts in your next blog post, or post the findings on social media. Download the guide and share this research credited as published!

The post The Demand Generator’s Guide to Maximum Lead Conversion appeared first on Vidyard.



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3 Takeaways from INBOUND 2017 that Impact Video in Business

INBOUND took over Boston this week uniting 20,000+ marketers, sales leaders, execs and entrepreneurs hungry for the latest insights on how to accelerate business growth. Like a great piece of video content, it did an impressive job of educating, inspiring and touching the hearts of attendees through an artful blend of keynotes (Michelle Obama was omazing), comedians (Judd Apatow OMG), experts (Rand Fishkin, Trish Bertuzzi, maybe one or twenty more) and of course, savvy practitioners. With lots of news from the event host HubSpot, three core themes stood out as strong indicators of where the market is heading. And each of them have important implications for how we think about video and it’s expanding role in the customer experience.

1. Alignment and value creation throughout the entire customer lifecycle

During INBOUND, HubSpot announced major updates to its Sales Hub solution as well as a brand new Customer Hub product line, making it clear they’re placing big bets on helping businesses create more value throughout the entire customer experience. This continues to be a major theme amongst customer engagement technology giants as they expand their capabilities for acquiring and retaining customers while federating the back-end processes and data that manage the entire customer lifecycle. This comes at a time when customers are interacting with brands in entirely new ways while expecting immediate, personalized customer service that aligns with how they want to converse and consume information (think chat and video vs. email and phone). To thrive in this new era, businesses need to align their marketing, sales and customer service organizations to work together as a well-oiled machine in a way that makes it easy for customers to find the answers they’re looking for. And they need a well integrated technology stack to power it.

Social and video are two of the hottest topics in this conversation around customer experience (I’ll get to the social piece in the next section). By its very nature, video is often the best way to educate at each stage of the customer lifecycle and to connect with customers in a more personal way. Embracing video as part of your customer experience strategy is much more than adding explainers to your website; it’s using engaging and personalized content throughout every step of the customer journey to better connect, educate and support customers. It’s about empowering customer-facing teams to create, access and share rich video content as a natural part of how they do business. To support this trend, Vidyard announced expanded capabilities for its video messaging app, Vidyard GoVideo, that now enables anyone in marketing, sales or customer service to easily capture, share and track personalized videos in a way that’s seamlessly integrated with email, CRM, sales acceleration and customer service applications.

2. Customer engagement models are drastically changing

Email, phone, blogs and website forms aren’t going away anytime soon. But all the trends seem to suggest that businesses need to pay more attention to new ways of engaging with prospects and buyers. Customers are increasingly moving towards social media and real-time chat messaging as a way to interact with brands. Prior to INBOUND, HubSpot announced their acquisition of chatbot builder Motion AI, and this week they unveiled a free Conversations tool for powering multi-channel, one-to-one communications at scale. HubSpot also announced enhanced social tools as part of HubSpot Marketing Hub for interacting with audiences on Facebook and Instagram. It was also great to see a new integration with Terminus, a leader in Account-Based Marketing (ABM) technology, that enables marketers to serve customized digital ads to specific target accounts in an automated fashion. And not surprisingly, video was highlighted as another key channel/medium that businesses need to embrace to meet the shifting expectations of today’s buyers.

During his mainstage product keynote, HubSpot’s VP of Product, Christopher O’Donnell, spoke about the importance of having a strategy for video content creation as well as a platform for video hosting, distribution, optimization and analytics. He highlighted HubSpot’s expanded partner ecosystem in this space that includes the likes of Animoto, PowToon, Shakr and Vidyard GoVideo for content creation and of course Vidyard and others as integrated video platforms. The most important take-away was the need to have solutions for both content creation and distribution/analytics that integrate seamlessly with core marketing, sales and customer service tools to enable video to become a seamless part of customer engagement strategies.

 

3. The MarTech stack is more important than ever

With shifting customer expectations and so many new ways to engage with audiences, the concepts of a marketing technology (MarTech) stack and a strong partner ecosystem are more important than ever. For most businesses, no single solution standing on its own will offer the full range of capabilities to keep up with the changing market dynamics. In recognition of this, HubSpot announced rapid growth in their HubSpot Connect partner ecosystem as well as the addition of MarTech thought leader Scott Brinker as their new VP of Platform Ecosystem. As a member of the HubSpot Connect ecosystem, I applaud this move and am excited to see HubSpot putting an even greater strategic emphasis on growing their partner community and expanding their platform capabilities. Vidyard announced a similar strategy this week by unveiling its Vidyard GoVideo partner ecosystem in an effort to make video capture and sharing an integrated part of any business application.

From a video perspective, the opportunity here is to see platforms like Vidyard and apps like Vidyard GoVideo become even more closely integrated with marketing, sales and customer service workflows to help businesses realize the true promise of going video in a way that is tightly coupled with the apps they use every day.

The post 3 Takeaways from INBOUND 2017 that Impact Video in Business appeared first on Vidyard.



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Content Pros: Proof That Your Content Needs Fewer Facts and More Story

Teaming up with the team at Convince & Convert, Vidyard’s VP of Marketing Tyler Lessard hosts the Content Pros Podcast. For this week’s episode, Tyler is joined by Doug Landis, Growth Partner at Emergence Capital, to share his journey of becoming a bonafide storyteller and what that means for content marketing. Check out the full podcast:

Here’s a few of our favourite moments:

Why don’t you introduce yourself, give a little bit of that background and is being a chief storyteller actually as glamorous as it sounds?

Well, one little caveat to that is that I think everybody is a chief storyteller in their own little world. So you can take that title if you like it as well. Take it with you up to Canada. It’s all yours.

Interestingly enough, this notion of the chief storyteller is the title by the way I created myself when I was at Boxed. And it came out of this need for … that I noted over the course of four years that as an organization, as a company, we needed to get better at telling stories. And the reality is we needed to get better at telling our story as a company. Who we are and what we stand for. We needed to get better at telling our pitch, if you will, or our story to our customers as far as what value is delivered to them. And we needed to get better at telling our own story, our own personal story. Why do we actually work there? What gets us excited about it? About working at Boxed. And then finally, we needed to get better at telling our customer’s story.

So if you think about it, throughout the entire sales process every time you’re engaging with a customer or prospect you really are storytelling. And here’s something interesting I found over time, shifting to the role that I’m in right now at Emergence and working with all these great startups is what typically happens is you have a founder CEO that identifies a problem and they build this product to solve this problem. They gain some customer traction and then they go and build their pitch to go raise money. And when they raise the money and with that money they go out and hire a bunch of sales people and they take their pitch, which they use to go raise money and they kind of modify it a little bit and they give that to their sales team and say go, here’s the pitch.

What happened to the humanity of telling stories instead of all facts?

It’s this idea of the weekend self. You leave work and you go home to your family, you go home to your friends, you go out for the weekend and people are like so how was your day? You might even go home today and be like so I did this podcast today and it was really interesting and you tell a story about our experience just this morning and all of the sudden you go back to work the next day and what do we do? We go back to speaking in facts and figures and bullets and these truncated phrases. We wonder why people don’t remember things, we wonder why we have to take so many notes, you wonder why we have all these collaboration tools because we can’t remember shit with just a bunch of facts and figures because you know facts and figures fade and stories stick. It’s just remembering that the ethos of a great story is something that should be woven into every piece of content. Whether its content marketing content, whether it’s your first callback, whether it’s your website, whatever it may be, we should be thinking about the stories that we tell.

If you want to hear the full podcast, we’ve posted it above, and you can read a full transcript of this talk on Convince & Convert, where it was originally posted!

The post Content Pros: Proof That Your Content Needs Fewer Facts and More Story appeared first on Vidyard.



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Wednesday 27 September 2017

How LucidChart Used Kissmetrics to Drive Growth

LucidChart, a SaaS-based diagramming application with over 9 million users, wanted to make sure their site was more than just pretty to look at. They wanted to ensure that it was leading users down the path to purchase. This is how they used Kissmetrics to leverage the behavioral data their users were leaving behind and increased conversions by 30%.

The initial step LucidChart took was to dive deep into data to better understand and evaluate the customer journey across their site. They learned what users were doing, where they were going and where they were dropping off across their site. Using insights from Kissmetrics they found key areas in the journey where they could drive efficiency and which pages they wanted to test a redesign.

After creating the new pages LucidChart used the Kissmetrics Funnel Report in correlation with the A/B Test Report to determine the effectiveness variation of the new pages both as a stand alone and part of the customer journey. Until they locked in on the best performing pages and process to drive conversions.

Funnel Report

Growth and marketing teams use our Funnel Report to see where dropoffs occur before conversion. This report is entirely customizable and can be used to track any conversion path you’d like. Furthermore, you can segment the data based on lead source, location, referring links, etc.

Used for illustration purposes. This is not LucidChart’s data.

LucidChart was able to track different segments across the customer journey and compare one another as well as use the A/B Test report to test the new design against the old.

A/B Test Report

With this report, you’ll create your test in an A/B testing tool, such as Optimizely, and track the results in Kissmetrics.

All data is imported from A/B testing tool and stored in Kissmetrics. Note: this is not LucidChart’s data.

What makes this Kissmetrics report unique is that you’ll be able to see how a test impacts any part of your funnel. Want to see if a new headline on your homepage leads to more purchases? Or see how a test in the middle of the funnel impacts the bottom line? Get your answer in just a few clicks in Kissmetrics. Having both reports coordinated in the same tool allowed LucidChart to measure the effectiveness of the new pages’ impact on the customer funnel with the old pages.

The Results

The outcome? By combining the power of the Kissmetrics A/B Test Report with the Funnel Report, LucidChart discovered that 2 pages in particular, their new homepage and new product page, were driving a huge 30% increase in conversions.

“Insights from Kissmetrics drove a 30% lift in our conversions. All of our key customer behavior data lives in Kissmetrics, for both our product and website, so we can quickly identify and take action on any roadblocks across our growth cycle. Kissmetrics is essential to Lucid Software’s growth efforts.”

Spencer Mann, VP of Growth at Lucid Software

Every time a prospect visits your site or uses your product they’re leaving a digital trail of their behavior – showing what they’re doing, where they get stuck, what they like, don’t like and why. There’s tremendous value in that data and it’s critical for driving growth.

Kissmetrics enables you to capture and leverage all that behavioral data to increase conversions, acquisitions and retention.

About Kissmetrics

Kissmetrics’ Customer Engagement Automation platform helps product and marketing teams turn insights into growth. Our software is comprised of 3 key features:

  • Analyze: A set of behavioral reports and metrics. Monitor your growth KPI’s across the customer lifecycle. And dive deep to understand user behavior and discover key insights.
  • Populations: Segment your users based on key growth initiatives and track their progress.
  • Campaigns: Behavior based email automation. Fully customizable editor puts you in complete control of customer engagement throughout the entire customer lifecycle.

kissmetrics products

Get, keep and grow more customers with Kissmetrics. Request a demo below to learn more.


About the Author: Jonathan Cabin is a Growth Analyst at Kissmetrics focused on initiatives that create sustainable growth. His background covers sales, project management and marketing. In his free time you can find him surfing, golfing and asking his boss for time off to travel.



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How to Get E-Commerce Customers Coming Back After Their First Purchase

Getting prospects to convert to customers is one thing. But how do you get customers to buy again and again after the first purchase? This is where attentive, customer-focused emails come on. Despite some heralding the “death of email” over more modern platforms like texting and social media, good, old-fashioned email remains one of the best ways to seal the deal, engage customers and encourage repeat purchases.

So what kinds of emails should you send? How often should you send them, and what should they contain? Here are a few of the best examples of e-commerce follow-up emails and why they work so well.

The Repurchase Reminder

Oftentimes, when you make a purchase on a website, they email you immediately after encouraging you to buy again. This marketing strategy is rooted in the idea that customers are likely to come back and purchase while your brand is still fresh in their mind. But oftentimes, companies send emails out immediately and when the customer (naturally) doesn’t respond, they no longer follow up.

If your repeat purchase numbers are flat-lining and your emails are stale, why not wait until more time has passed (depending on how often the customer uses the product) to remind them? Here’s a great example from Sephora, which reminds the customer to restock based on how much time has passed since their first purchase:

Sephora reminds the user to restock based on their past purchase. (Image Source)

Another creative spin on the restock email comes from Clinique. Since their data likely shows that women tend to shop online for beauty products more than men, they wouldn’t have as much luck sending a shaving gel refill reminder to men — so they advertised a refill reminder for him, to her. See how they did it:

An advertisement for men’s shaving gel — targeted to women, who are likely the ones shopping for beauty products. (Image Source)

We Miss You!

One alternative on the restock/repurchase follow-up email is tailored to the bargain hunter, like this email from Starbucks. There’s no better way to stay top-of-mind than with a coupon, and many customers actively wait to purchase until they get a deal. Knowing this, why not reach out with a discount?

This reminder from the Starbucks Store gets right to the point with a discount for customers that haven’t shopped in awhile. (Image Source)

Bodybuilding.com sends customers an email if they haven’t repurchased after about 3 months:

bodybuilding.com come back 10 percent off order

Another common tactic is to follow up with customers asking them to review their recent purchase. Again, this is extremely common and almost expected — but customers don’t always have the time at that very moment to write up a lengthy review. So how do you get them clicking? Here are some creative ideas that take feedback to a new level.

Going Beyond “How Did We Do?”

For the customer who doesn’t have time to write up a huge review, but the company still needs their feedback data to work with, I present to you the Amazon 1-click review:

amazon customer email

Amazon encourages busy customers to simply click to review the size of garments they’ve purchased online. (Image Source)

Of course, you’ve likely received plenty of emails asking for your feedback, and even some that go the extra mile by giving you a discount coupon, entering you into a contest and much more. But this one is noted for its pure simplicity plus its unobtrusive style. It doesn’t get in the way — one click and you’re done.

And speaking of Amazon, you already know that they’re the e-commerce leader simply because of how much they test, monitor, tweak and track everything about their site. One of the more famous changes was adding in the “Customers who bought X, also bought Y” feature. Now much more commonplace on e-commerce sites, this “Frequently purchased together” option often encourages greater purchase volume per customer.

But what happens when they don’t purchase all of the items together? Is emailing them about it a lost cause? Not exactly…

Frequently Purchased Together (But It’s Not What You Think!)

Not all “Frequently Purchased Together” emails have to be a sales pitch. And if the customer didn’t buy them when they were originally presented, there must have been a reason.

Of course, the reasons why customers choose not to buy could be a whole other blog post in itself, but knowing what you know, why not steer the customer more toward educating them about the product add-ons or accessories rather than simply presenting them?

An example of a Thank You follow-up email from BabyFirst. (Image Source)

Since, in the example above, the customer is shopping for baby-friendly TV shows, the company naturally recommends a couple of DVDs that a baby or toddler might like, as well as a coupon and directions on how to get it for free.

The Warranty Expiration Notice

This type of email normally applies in cases where you sell parts or electronics that are under warranty. When making a purchase, customers sometimes don’t opt for the extended warranty, preferring to rather stick with the original manufacturer’s timeframe. But reminding them that the original manufacturer’s warranty has almost expired, and inviting them to extend the protection on their purchase might be just the thing they need to keep their original purchase in good working order:

An official-looking email regarding a car warranty.

Here’s another example offering an enhanced warranty on a lamination machine:

A warranty announcement included on new products. (Image Source)

The “Just Looking” Reminder

With all of the email examples showcased so far, you’d need the appropriate data based on what the customer bought previously. But what if they haven’t bought yet, and are only looking? Are you out of luck? Not at all. Provided you have the prospect’s email address, you can still send them reminders, even if they haven’t added a product to their cart:

Recommendations on shirts and a reminder based on shirts and slacks previously looked at, from Calvin Klein. (Image Source)

Here’s another example that reminds the user of the products they browsed in case they want to take another look and don’t want to have to sift through their browser history:

An email reminding the user of the products they looked at. (Image Source)

Use Demographics to Sell

As opposed to many of our other example, these emails do not rely on previous purchases. They start fresh with new product recommendations based on the demographics.

For example – has it been raining in Minnesota for the past few days? Find all your prospects located in Minnesota and send them an email showcasing your umbrellas.

Many of your prospects are likely either searching for one because a) they don’t have one or b) the one they have is old, has holes, etc.

This can go beyond weather. Many political radio broadcasts will have “doomsday” meals when the inevitable apocalypse comes. When Barack Obama was president, Glenn Beck and many other conservative pundits advertised “4-week emergency food supplies”:

Image Source

Does this profit off irrational fears? Yes.

But it also means understanding your audience. If they’re afraid, what are they willing to buy? Sell it to them. If it’s snowing, what are they willing to buy? Offer it up for sale.

Marketing is all about targeting the right people, when they are most receptive to your product. What better product to advertise to those that fear end times are near?

New Product Recommendations Based on Past Purchases

Finally, we have the “new product recommendations” email. Rather than always notifying customers every time you have new items in stock (and hoping they might like some of them), why not segment the new product announcement emails based on what the customer has purchased previously? They’re much more likely to buy, and they’ll welcome the added personalized attention!

Despite the different products and industries, all of these emails have one major thing in common — and that is a dedicated — almost fanatical attention to customer orders, browsing habits and preferences. And although you may be doing a great deal of e-commerce by email, there are still, as these emails demonstrate, new ideas and approaches that can be capitalized on.

Do it all with Kissmetrics Campaigns

Kissmetrics Campaigns is a behaviorally-triggered email platform. Combining our behavioral analytics with Kissmetrics Campaigns makes it easy to find segments that need converting, and targeting them is done in a few steps. And best of all – it’s all done within Kissmetrics. There’s no need to export and import lists and mess around with APIs or databases. It’s all done in the same platform.

 

And if you are using these strategies in your email announcements and customer lists, how have they worked for you so far? We’d love to hear your thoughts and comments. Share them with us below!

About the Authors: Sherice Jacob helps business owners improve website design and increase conversion rates through compelling copywriting, user-friendly design and smart analytics analysis. Learn more at iElectrify.com and download your free web copy tune-up and conversion checklist today!

Zach Bulygo (Twitter) is the Blog Manager for Kissmetrics.



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