Archive

Archive for 2003

New York Times Alerts EMails Switching to Paid-Only

June 2nd, 2003

According to this quick article in Editor & Publisher, the New York Times Digital ceased sending breaking news version of it’s emailed News Tracker service several months ago because “of technical delays resulting from having more than 1 million users.”

On this Wednesday they plan to tell the 500,000 regular News Tracker email recipients that the service will not be free anymore. The service will cost $19.95 year starting June 13th and go up to $29.95 sometime later (which allows NYT marketers to plug a $10.00 off offer for a while now).

This news underlines one harsh fact: Email isn’t no-cost to send. It may be cheaper than postal mail, but it’s not free.

When I joined a NEPA roundtable on the economics of publishing yesterday, the moderator said, “Oh here’s Anne who doesn’t have to worry about spending money on fulfillment.” I immediately objected, “Hey I spend a lot on email list hosting and on email production staff, not to mention building the back-end database and Web design and hosting. Online publishing isn’t cheap or free.” Everyone looked startled. Well, welcome to reality.

http://www.editorandpublisher.com/editorandpublisher/headlines/article_display.jspvnu_content_id=1898063

Sub Site eDiets Now Open to Outside Investors

May 30th, 2003

eDiets, the leading subscription site in the weight-loss category, has been a pretty closely held private company, until
now. They are presenting at the upcoming RedChip San Francisco Investor Conference Wednesday, June 4 2003, at 9:30 A.M. PT.

David Humble, CEO, Robert Hamilton, CFO, and Alison Tanner, Chief Strategist, will discuss the Company’s business strategy, recent
developments and outlook. The Company’s presentation will be Web cast live for investors and will be avail for replay following the conference at:

http://www.firstcallevents.com/service/ajwz382678364gf12.html

Lab discovers people don't "see" right-side links

May 29th, 2003

I have preached in the past that marketers with common sense
would stick some important links on the right-hand side of Web
pages because people read English left-to-right and most people
click using their right hand.

It seemed like a “duh.”

Then I learned that a usability lab in NYC has repeatedly tested
this for loads of prominent sites … and found consumers ignore
the right-hand column almost completely because it’s a spot that
so often contains advertising.

Seems that Web surfers’ eyes have been trained to stop looking at
all places on pages that routinely carry advertising — even if
the site they are on is ad-free.

Whoa.

So last weekend our Web designer Ryan took time out from his
heavy barbeque schedule to begin switching all the links on
MarketingSherpa sites from the right side to the left side.

Now we’ll begin to track to see if it makes a difference or not
in clicks and conversions.

In the meantime, I’m wondering does this rule apply for HTML
email newsletter design too?? If you know, contact me.

Lab discovers people don't

May 29th, 2003

I have preached in the past that marketers with common sense
would stick some important links on the right-hand side of Web
pages because people read English left-to-right and most people
click using their right hand.

It seemed like a “duh.”

Then I learned that a usability lab in NYC has repeatedly tested
this for loads of prominent sites, and found consumers ignore
the right-hand column almost completely because it’s a spot that
so often contains advertising.

It seems that Web surfers’ eyes have been trained to stop looking at
all places on pages that routinely carry advertising, even if
the site they are on is ad-free.

Whoa.

Last weekend our Web designer Ryan took time out from his
heavy barbeque schedule to begin switching all the links on
MarketingSherpa sites from the right side to the left side.

Now we’ll begin to track to see if it makes a difference or not
in clicks and conversions.

In the meantime, I’m wondering does this rule apply for HTML
email newsletter design too? If you know, contact me.

Unwanted Email Hits Around 80% – Filters go into Overdrive

May 22nd, 2003

15 minutes ago I got a call from my Dad.

“I don’t want to bother you at work,” he said, “but you should
know the email you sent me this morning about getting a trainer
for your dog was flagged by my ISP as ‘Maybe Spam’.”

I flipped open my ‘sent mail’ folder and reviewed the note I’d
written him. Even with all of Sherpa’s research on how filters
work, there was nothing, nada, zilch, I could see that would make
any filter system think my little note was evil.

Over the past few weeks, you may have noticed the same thing
happening to much of your sent email – whether it’s bulk mail or
just individual notes.

Over-zealous filters are stopping a heck of a lot of non-junk
mail.

So, when AOL and MSN both announced this week that 80% of the
email their users are getting is unwanted junk, it made me wonder
what part of that 80% is misidentified good stuff – like my note
to Dad.

In the filter world they call it “false positives” and no one
admits how many of those they stop from getting to email users.

In reaction to this, I held a Sherpa-wide staff meeting this week
to announce a new Company policy: if a communication to anyone is
really important, always, always, always follow-up with a phone
call. Never assume email got through.

It so often doesn’t.

Unwanted Email Hits Around 80% – Filters go into Overdrive

May 22nd, 2003

15 minutes ago I got a call from my Dad.

“I don’t want to bother you at work,” he said, “but you should
know the email you sent me this morning about getting a trainer
for your dog was flagged by my ISP as ‘Maybe Spam.'”

I flipped open my ‘sent mail’ folder and reviewed the note I’d
written him. Even with all of Sherpa’s research on how filters
work, there was nothing, nada, zilch, I could see that would make
any filter system think my little note was evil.

Over the past few weeks, you may have noticed the same thing
happening to much of your sent email, whether it’s bulk mail or
just individual notes.

Over-zealous filters are stopping a heck of a lot of non-junk
mail.

Wen AOL and MSN both announced this week that 80% of the
email their users are getting is unwanted junk, it made me wonder
what part of that 80% is misidentified good stuff, like my note
to Dad.

In the filter world they call it “false positives” and no one
admits how many of those they stop from getting to email users.

In reaction to this, I held a Sherpa-wide staff meeting this week
to announce a new Company policy: If a communication to anyone is
really important, always, always, always follow-up with a phone
call. Never assume email got through.

It so often doesn’t.

The death of email is *highly* overrated

May 8th, 2003

“What’s next now that email isn’t going to work much longer?” was
a question I saw posted on a marketing message board last week.

Everyone is fretting, fretting, fretting about whether bulk mail
overload will cause their lists to stop responding.

In the meantime whenever I talk to marketers one-on-one, I always
ask, “Are your response rates plunging?” “Well no,” they
invariably tell me.

After 350 Case Studies, many of them on email campaigns, I can
tell you that the death of email is vastly overstated. Marketers
have gotten so much smarter about their messages, list selection,
segmentation, etc., that it balances out the worst of the email
overload.

A good campaign or newsletter will still work wonders.

Data on Requiring Online Newspaper Reader Registration

May 7th, 2003

Just found a very informative two-part article by Tim Archambault, New Media Coordinator at Bangor Daily News/Bangornews.com. He explains why they decided to require reader registration at their site, and how it affected things.

He notes, “An approximate 12 percent drop in page views occurred during the first month, but the number of pages quickly recovered
to its previous level during the second month. There was no extraordinary marketing efforts to increase our page views.”

Also, although the newspaper’s registration count of 90,000 is bigger than its print circ count of 63,000 circ for the print daily, just 10% of online registered users are subscribers to the print version. To get this fairly high registration rate, they did a promo with a sweeps for $50 worth of lobsters.

Archambault also noted that requiring registration means your customer service will rise dramatically. 66% of customer service
queries in the month of March were due to online reg queries, mostly people having trouble with passwords.

http://www.digitaledge.org/DigArtPage.cfm?AID=4693

SportingNews GM Reveals (Some) Online Business Data

April 29th, 2003

I’ve just interviewed Jason Kint, VP & General Manager Online at SportingNews. He wasn’t able to give me enough data for a full fledged Case Study, but he did share these interesting details:

– Over the past three years, SportingNews online revenues have shifted dramatically from 90% ad sales, to 50% ad sales and 50% “non-ad sources” the majority of which are subscription sales. Syndication and licensing are a small under 10% slice, and bookstore sales of digital and printed docs are another small slice.

– They’ve done lots of price testing on their eDocs (PDFs) and subscription offers, including emailing surveys to registered members and testing prices on live offers. Results have shown they can charge a variety of prices for content. Some products are $5 and others as high as $39. Publishers who just pick a price that sounds good and use it uniformly across the board may be losing out.

– Bundled offers are working well. For example, SportingNews offers three different products for NFL fans, including a pre-season countdown, a “draft central” kit and “pro football matchups” which you can buy separately or bundled together for a discount.

On the other hand, SportingNews is not offering a mega-bundle of everything they sell, mainly because Jason says the price would be too high to be sexy to prospects (at a certain point it’s easier to sell several small things than one big one), and because baseball and football fans don’t overlap all that much.

– While news itself is lower value online, Jason says because SpsortingNews’ editors get it online so quickly, it’s worth the subscription fee to people. The value in that marketplace is the speed.

– Open and response rates to team-specific newsletters blow more generic newsletters out of the water. It can be worth the extra investment to create separate newsletters for each marketplace slice.

– Although SportingNews has enormous offline presence (4.5 million print magazine readers, and 13 million radio show listeners), the Web site with “close to 3 million registered users” is definitely reaching some different people. There’s less overlap than you might think. Jason says, “A very, very high percent of Web users we’re introducing to the magazine and providing a lot of benefit.” The site is a good print sub feeder.

– Just like every publisher I’ve talked to, Jason is ready, willing and able to sell ads by the daypart, but no one has bought any yet. He can’t understand why not, “There’s no question if you’re a beer or pizza company, you should advertise just before the game starts.” I agree, but the only mention of daypart sales I’ve ever been able to find online is in search marketing PPCs. (If you know of another example, email me!)

– Also following a distinct trend I’ve noticed, Jason firmly limits the site’s email list rentals to sponsors. He doesn’t want to wear out his brand’s welcome in the in-box, and only allows about two rentals per month. He says open rates are distinctly better for names that have been on the site and/or registered recently. This might seem like a “duh” but in my experience most email renters don’t think to ask about recency segmentation when they buy.

– I think of SportingNews as “Mikey” in that old Life Cereal TV ad (you know the one, “Let Mikey try it. Mikey will eat anything”) because it seems like whenever I hear about a neat new online publishing format, SportingNews is inevitably mentioned in the press release as one of the beta testers.

I asked how the tests, especially their ActiveBuddy IM test and their Serence NewsKlip, and of course their wireless news distribution.

While Jason was positive about usership for all of these, recipients love them, he said of all three, “How we execute on that to make money is the part we haven’t done yet.”

No matter how cool tech is, you gotta have a biz model to make it work.

http://www.sportingnews.com
http://www.activebuddy.com
http://www.serence.com/site.php

Strange But True: Editor Forced to Resign Blog

April 24th, 2003

It’s long been accepted that if you are a publishing company, your writers and editors will moonlight doing various freelance
articles, writing the great American novel, or perhaps blog. As long as it doesn’t cut into actual daylight working time, or help your direct competition, nobody cares.

Except the proud and wonderful Hartford Courant newspaper who are being remarkably silly. You may ask: For whom the Blog tolls? It tolls for thee.

http://www.denishorgan.com