Natalie Myers

Divorced Moms: They’re Overlooked Consumers

September 8th, 2008
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While interviewing sources for MarketingSherpa’s two-part special report on Marketing to Moms, I had quite a few bits of information that didn’t “fit.” I can’t resist sharing one from Bridget Brennan, Founder of the Female Factor Corporation.

Bridget says there is a lack of attention being paid to divorced moms. In research she conducted for a new book about the rise of female consumers, Bridget discovered that slightly less than half of marriages end in divorce. Yet few marketers target this demographic.

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Anne Holland

SherpaBlog: New Email Rule: Nonresponders May Still Love Getting Your Email

September 8th, 2008

The old rule of thumb in email marketing was “the purpose of email is to get a response, such as an open, and a click.” So, most marketers measured their success rate by opens, clicks and, possibly, conversions.

If an opt-in didn’t click in a long time period (30 days for a daily, 90 for a weekly, 120 for a monthly), then marketers started to worry. Was the name a dud? Did the recipient think you were spamming them? Had their interests changed? Had your past content disappointed them?

Nonresponders are worrisome. It may mean you’re doing a bad job at relevancy. It may be because you may be flagged as a possible spammer by reputation filters, which then stop further email from being delivered.

New anecdotal evidence from MarketingSherpa’s own experiences suggest, however, that nonresponders may not be as big a problem as you think. Our editorial team conducted a test that every marketer should consider; we picked up the phone and called some nonresponders. “Why don’t you open anymore? Why don’t you click?”

The most common answer shocked us. “I do. I like your email. Don’t stop sending it. I may not always have time to read it, but I want it.”

Next we looked at our own response data. Online advertisers know that 40% or more of their responses may be delayed response “view-throughs.” This means the responders saw the ad, but didn’t click on it. Instead, they responded by going to the website (or using another media, such as phone) on their own from a few minutes to as much as 30 days later.

We wondered – doesn’t it make sense that email responders may behave in a similar fashion? They may not click on your email, or even open it. But they see your brand name in their in-box, as well as a subject line. Those two items alone may trigger a delayed response later.

When I consider my own personal use of email, that’s certainly true. I sign up for certain emails just as a reminder to go visit that brand’s site or retail store when I need something. It doesn’t mean I want to actually read or click on their emails all the time. Their presence in my inbox alone is enough for me.

I’m not saying you should ignore your non-responders. Given reputation-based filter concerns alone, you should be at least decreasing frequency to nonresponders so you’re not pinging them all the time. You might also want to survey them by email and/or by other methods. And, cross-reference your other customer records with email. Find out which of your “nonresponders” may actually be responding like crazy through other channels than the email links you send them.

The new email rule is: Don’t fire nonresponders before asking first. Until you know why, you can’t fix things.
Have you surveyed your nonresponders or run other tests with them? Let me know by commenting below.

Adam T. Sutton

Entice Consumers to Your Website with Their Photos

September 5th, 2008
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My parents and I went to a day game at Fenway Park the other day. Early in the game we were sitting in the bleacher seats, baking in the sun, when a photographer crept up and snapped our picture. He handed my mother a card with a special code and told us we could go to the Red Sox website to see the photo.

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Sean Donahue

Tracking the Impact of Google’s Chrome on Search

September 5th, 2008
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Google made news again this week when the search giant released Chrome, its first Web browser. We’ll be following Chrome over the next few weeks, and will report back soon on what impact the new browser might have on your search marketing campaigns.

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Natalie Myers

Marketing to Moms: What Are You Waiting For?

September 3rd, 2008
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It was interesting to find out that many companies started specific marketing to moms campaigns only during the past five years. The M2Moms Conference and BlogHer Conference launched just three years ago. Agencies large and small started specializing in the mommy market as late as 2003. Read more…

Adam T. Sutton

‘Free Stuff’ Can Lead to Brand Goodwill and Consumer Research

September 2nd, 2008
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Getting “free stuff” makes me feel good about a brand. Many of us feel the same way. And all we have to do is give up a phone number or a mailing address.

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Anne Holland

SherpaBlog: Warning! Another Internet Scam Targeting Marketers

September 2nd, 2008

by Anne Holland, Founder

If you, like many marketers, are in charge of deciding which domains to buy for your company or brand, this news is for you.

Over the past week, several Sherpa readers received emails purportedly from Internet domain officials in various Asian countries. The letters explain that someone in that country is trying to register a local version of the domain the US brand already has registered as a “.com.” So, for example, if your brand held “widgets.com,” the letter might tell you someone is trying to register “widgets.co.jp” for Japan.

The letter then explains that you as the .com owner have first dibs on international versions, and can stop the other guy from registering your brand in that country by simply registering it yourself right away. “Just click on this link!”

Yeah, it’s a scam.

That doesn’t mean that your domain might not be registered by someone else in a foreign country. Just probably not right at this moment. And the country’s registrar would not email you a warning note in English with a handy ‘click here to buy the domain yourself’ hotlink if it happened. It’s your job (or your legal department’s) to patrol domains, trademarks, and other branding conflicts internationally.

Should you register your domains in other countries? It depends. Consumers and businesspeople overseas are definitely used to going to ‘.com’ addresses. In fact, a lot of businesses based outside of the US have a “.com” as their primary home. People don’t assume a “.com” must be American; .com has become more of a universal term for “commercial web site” for many countries.

However, if you have a specific presence in a particular country – a division dedicated to that country or at least an office and/or dedicated customer service reps there — you may want to own a local domain extension as well as the .com. This is especially important for giant multinational brands. By creating sites with local domains, you show you really do care about the regions you’re doing business in. You add the power of local to your global brand.

One last note, as a part-time resident of Serbia I’m very aware of something that your Web team may not know yet. That is, the old “.yu” domain extension which was originally invented to represent “Yugoslavia” and is used for both Serbian and Montenegrin webites, will stop working shortly.

Yugoslavia no longer exists, of course, and Sedia and Montenegro are no longer a single country. Domains (and matching email addresses) for Serbia should now end in a “.rs” — short for Republic of Serbia. Domains for Montenegro should end in “.me” until such time as they switch to “.ru” (Not really. That’s just a little local real estate industry joke.)

A couple of online resources about international domains:

DNXPERT Daily Domain Blog
http://www.dnxpert.com/DomainsInfo English language version of international site

http://www.domainesinfo.fr/english.php

Update: Emailers Using Gas Prices In Copy

August 26th, 2008
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In an earlier blog post, I wrote about my hunch that email marketers would be using the rising gas prices and our slumping economy as copywriting tactics this summer. What do you know? I was right – at least when it comes to the gas prices.

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Sean Donahue

Are White Papers Still Effective for B2B? Absolutely!

August 26th, 2008

Last week, we invited 35 MarketingSherpa Members to a virtual roundtable discussion to tackle a question we’ve been hearing quite a bit about recently: “Are white papers still effective?”

From our standpoint, the answer is a resounding “yes.” Data show that white papers are still an integral part of the business buying cycle:

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Natalie Myers

PR Tips: What Bloggers Want

August 26th, 2008
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PR misses the mark when it comes to pitching bloggers. It’s a complaint I’ve heard over and over again in almost every blog-centric interview for MarketingSherpa’s Fame newsletter.

Complaints range from how much bloggers hate receiving cut-and-paste press releases to how often the press releases are off topic. I think this confirms the conclusion: PR isn’t about pitching press releases any more. It’s about building relationships.

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