by Jordie van Rijn How engaged are your customers with your brand? This seemingly simple question has puzzled email marketers for some time...
by Jordie van Rijn How engaged are your customers with your brand? This seemingly simple question has puzzled email marketers for some time.
Most marketers have customer engagement listed as one of their top priorities. Engagement might even be the core of their email marketing strategy. But at the same time there is never been a clear definition of what email engagement actually is. Let alone what the most profitable way is to increase it.
Engagement email marketing
To actively improve email marketing email engagement we have to define what engagement means in the context of your business. And step two: find the best ways to improve it.
What defines customer interaction and engagement?
First let’s have a look at the stages of email marketing engagement.The DMA discusses the different stages of email marketing engagement in their latest email marketing discussion paper. The stages shown here are (primary) Interest by subscription, Attention by opening emails and Action by clicking. Conversion is shown across all stages, because sales can happen even when not (measurably) engaged via email.
The email engagement stages are concentric circles for a reason. You cannot get to the highest stage of engagement without first passing the outer stages. Think of it as a funnel, but seen from above. A customer first needs to opt-in before they can receive your emails and open and click.
A better way to look at email engagement
Marketers tend to use the most easily accessible metrics, same for statistics that indicate email marketing engagement. The question is, are these the right metrics? Spoiler alert: not quite. Most often email marketers look at:
* confirmed open rate per send,
* click through rate per send,
* conversion rate per send.Problem with these is that we should be measuring customers, not campaigns. So what is the alternative? The DMA proposes different metrics called open reach and click reach when measuring concerning email engagement. (download the email engagement white paper here)– If it is customers we want to engage, then it is customers we must measure – not campaigns.
Tweet thisThe rationale is that customers exist for a longer period of time, receiving a series of communications and interacting multiple times. This means we should move away from campaign (single shot) based process metrics like confirmed open rate to gain insight into this longer relationship and the activity of the database as a whole.
* confirmed open rate per send,
* click through rate per send,
* conversion rate per send.
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