Thursday 30 June 2016

Want a Bigger Marketing Budget? Optimize Your LTV to CAC Ratio

Almost every head of marketing, whether they be a CMO, VP, or Director of Marketing is thirsty for a larger marketing budget. With more money to spend, marketing can (theoretically) drive more growth.

But all too often marketing budgets are set without much rhyme or reason – there tends to be a huge correlation to how many sales were made in the previous month or quarter, or worse yet they are set as a percentage of the company’s revenue. This is particularly common in product driven SaaS organizations. But for growth oriented companies, these means of setting marketing budgets are simply not serving your growth agenda appropriately.

How much do SaaS Companies invest sales and marketing?

Take the chart below as an example. Based on a sampling of 300+ SaaS companies with greater than $2.5mm in revenue, the median sales and marketing spending as a percentage of revenue is 32%.

sales-marketing-spend-growth-rate-chart
Image Source

Does this mean all SaaS companies should simply set their sales and marketing budgets at 32% of their revenue? Absolutely not. There are a number of companies spending as much as 43% of their revenues on sales and marketing, with these companies achieving growth rates of 80%+.

While some of these companies may be spending so aggressively because they are heavily funded and are looking to capture market share, the companies that are the true darlings of the SaaS space are those that have such a strong ratio between the Lifetime Value (LTV) of their customers and their Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) that they’ve built a compelling case to pour more dollars into their customer acquisition engines. They’ve built Ferraris and have a valid reason to believe that additional sales and marketing spending will keep their growth rates accelerating.

In your quest to obtain access to more financial resources, it’s the marketing leader’s job to educate the rest of the organization. And simply put, the idea of a “marketing budget” is outdated if growth is truly what you are after.

The Formulas Your SaaS Company Needs

Instead, you have two levers at your disposal – both of which can be optimized, and both of which are not typically considered areas of your business that marketing alone should own. The Lifetime Value (LTV) of your customer is impacted by many factors, including but not limited to:

  • Sales selling to buyer personas that have the best chance of being successful with your product
  • Product organizations delivering truly valuable features that make the product “sticky”
  • Customer success teams working with your clients to make them successful after purchase
  • Marketing developing pricing and packaging that pushes longer term contracts over month to month agreements.

The formulas:

Lifetime Value (LTV) = Average Customer Lifetime X Average Revenue Per Account

Average Customer Lifetime = 1/churn rate (expressed in months or years)
Ex: 1 / 5% monthly churn = 20 month average customer lifetime

Average Revenue Per Account (in a given period) = Total revenue /total customers added

So for example, if last month you made $200,000 in revenue from 25 customers, your calculation would be $200,000/25 = $8,000.

And if customers stay with you for an average of 20 months, you multiply 20 x $8,000 and reach the lifetime value of $160,000. So the cost to acquire a customer (CAC) should be no more than $53k. ARPA = $200,000/25 = $8,000

In this example 20 months X $8,000 = $160,000 LTV

Just as there are many ways to extend your customers’ LTV, there are also a number of different strategies that you can employ to lower your Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC). Marketing can focus on more cost effective lead generation strategies like organic search, conversion optimization, and developing customer advocates. Sales teams can learn to more efficiently move prospects through the customer acquisition funnel and can do away with expensive events and client dinners in lieu of more cost effective inside sales techniques.

To calculate the cost it takes to acquire a customer, you simply divide the total sales & marketing spend by the number of customers added in a given period. So if you spent $100,000 in a year and acquired 10 customers during that time frame, your CAC would be $10,000.

As a general rule of thumb, a SaaS business with a LTV:CAC ratio of 3:1 is considered healthy – meaning you get $3 in customer revenue for every $1 you spend to acquire them. If you have this ratio or better, you have a customer acquisition engine that is performing well. It is important to mention that this is simply a benchmark – not a magic bullet. This ratio had held up well and provided a valid target at a number of companies I’ve worked with, but every company’s unique situation in terms of funding, growth rate, burn rate, and business goals should be considered. Never put all of your eggs in one basket by looking at any SaaS metric in isolation.

3:1 Ratio is Your Benchmark for a Higher Marketing Budget

With a ratio of better than 3:1, you have a strong argument for investing more money in customer acquisition programs if maxing out your growth potential is your objective. You can make a simple argument to the CEO by saying, “we know that for every $1 we spend to acquire a customer, we get $3 back in revenue.”

So it’s the job of the marketing leader to relentlessly look for ways, across the organization, to lower customer acquisition costs and extended the lifetime value of the customer. If you’re able to do so, you’re making a compelling case for marketing to be given access to whatever financial resources are available, whether you’re a funded or bootstrapped company.

In fact, a strong LTV:CAC ratio is one of the most important metrics you can show if you are trying to raise funding. In my opinion, perhaps the most valid reason a SaaS company should raise funding is if they have a very healthy LTV:CAC ratio and their growth is only limited by access to capital.

Gone are the days of marketing leaders waiting until after a big sales month to nervously ask for an increase in marketing budget. And gone are the days of the marketing leader advocating for marketing spending to represent a larger percentage of the company’s revenues. Relentless focus on increasing customer lifetime value and decreasing customer acquisition costs will blow the top off or your marketing budget (as it should!) indefinitely.

About the Author: Geoff Roberts is the Vice President of Marketing at Bizness Apps. Bizness apps is an app building platform used by small marketing and design agencies to build mobile apps for small business clients.



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The Undeniable Mobile Effect On Holiday Shoppers

Today is June 30. Summer only officially launched 8 days ago yet here I am talking about holiday shoppers. No, I am not crazy from the heat. Retailers across the land are either knee-deep in their holiday plans for the coming season or about to start or are somewhere in between.

And based on results of a survey conducted by Oracle Marketing Cloud and Edison Research it would be wise for the same retailers to not just talk mobile but to actually be mobile - literally and figuratively. 

A little backstory to the research before we get mobile. 

In 2014, Oracle Marketing Cloud and Edison Research embarked on an initial exploration of the holiday shopper, by looking at their planned behavior prior to the 2014 holiday season, and then by examining what those consumers actually did by conducting similar research immediately following the 2014 holiday season.

We learned a great many things about consumers— particularly that their best-laid plans often go awry.

For this year, we revisited that research in order to determine which behaviors are trending, whether mobile is continuing to grow, how online shopping is impacting offline shopping, and other important shopping behaviors. 

Since mobile affects pretty much everything today, it should come as no surprise that it has a profound impact on holiday shoppers and how they shop, as witnessed by the following.

First a series of video interviews of consumers on their thoughts when it comes to mobile and holiday shopping, which is part of our qualitative part of the research. 

And the following findings which are based on the quantitative part of the research. 

The truth is none of the above should come as any surprise to ANY marketer, retail, B2C, B2B - whatever. The world is mobile. Period. 

However, one of the biggest increases from our 2014 post-holiday study to the 2015 post-holiday study was the percentage of holiday shoppers who told us that they had ever used an app to make a purchase. For the 2014 holiday season, 25% of consumers indicated they had used an app to make a holiday purchase—in itself a significant number—but in 2015 that number jumped markedly to 40%. This is nearly the percentage who indicated that they had made a mobile purchase in the 2015 holiday season using a website.

Clearly, the app has become a very important part of the transactional holiday shopping economy. 

Julie Lyle, the current Chairman of the Board for the Global Retail Marketing Association and former CMO of hgregg, Prudential Corporation Asia, and Walmart has a very direct message for marketers when it comes to mobile: 

"In today’s highly mobile environment, retailers who do not adopt a “mobile-first” roadmap do so at their own risk. In addition to the feature usage outlined above, consumers now use their smartphones to check availability or source out of stocks from other sellers, compare loyalty program rewards for purchases, confirm/compare warranty or return policies, seek inspiration/ help for product usage and more!"

The Happiest of Holidays 

Regardless of where you are in your 2016 retail holiday planning you can benefit from all the findings from this extensive research. Download Making Spirits Bright: Increase Holiday Results With Retail Shopping Research and enjoy your own version of a winter wonderland. 



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Content Pros Podcast: Reap the Strategies and Secrets of the Best in the Business

Wouldn’t it be nice to hear from the best content marketers in the world in the comfort of your home or office, without having to make preparations to sit down with them? You’re in luck! Randy Frisch, COO at Uberflip, and I prepare the questions and reveal the strategies and secrets of these content marketers every Thursday at ContentProsPodcast.com. All you need is a pair of headphones, and you get access to the learn the pros’ successful approaches to strategy, operations, measurement, staffing, and more.

Is thus your first time listening in? We've gathered the last month's worth of shows here in one place for you.

We dive into some hot content marketing topics including the emergence of social video, the rise of experience optimization, a revolutionary approach to free content marketing, and the importance of prioritizing analysis for content strategies.

Content Attribution and Positive

Proving ROI for content marketing is difficult for even the most seasoned of marketers. The numbers bear this out as 79% of content marketers confess to being unsuccessful at proving ROI. It seems impossible to know how somebody gets from Point A to Point B when they have 50 paths to choose from. So how do you measure the unmeasurable?

We start with Dave Rigotti, the Head of Marketing at Bizible. He is one of the 21% that have figured out how to measure and then apply learnings from content ROI.

His ahead-of-the-curve approach to content ROI will help you measure your marketing plan’s effectiveness and grow your B2B brand organically through content.

Just released, hear Dave talk about:

  • Why making every marketing dollar count means measuring content
  • How educational content leads customers down the funnel
  • Why proving ROI means content attribution
  • How mapping your content leads to a profitable content team
  • Why compounding returns on your marketing means owning your community
Acquire and Nurture With Social Video

For a seasoned marketer the thought of unscripted, uncontrolled, and unpredictable consumer engagement can be a terrifying prospect. Brian Fanzo, CEO of iSocialFanz LLC, understands those fears but is here to put them to rest—because social video is here to stay. It’s definitely not a passing fancy and the stat of the week outlines just how important mobile video will become in the next five years.

For Brian, succeeding in this medium is about embracing the cultural shift to casual, trusting your employees, and thinking like a fan.

It’s not too late to hear from Brian about:

  • Why an evolving culture means a more casual, humanistic approach to content
  • How a growing variety of social video platforms leads to social marketing segmentation
  • Why a successful social engagement strategy means thinking like a fan
  • How building a community doesn’t mean building a following
  • Why live video needs its own strategy
The Fall of Keywords and the Rise of Experience Optimization

Mike Templeman, Founder and CEO of Foxtail Marketing, joins the Content Pros Podcast to discuss the advantage of experience optimization and tailoring content to fit the reality of your customer’s behavior.

To sum it up nicely, data rules everything around.

Mike is a strong believer that everything is quantitative and data can measure anything. Even something as theoretical as customer experience can, and should, be analyzed and used to build organic growth. The days of SEO are over and we now sit squarely in the era of customer experience.

Here are 5 lessons you can learn by listening to Mike now:

  • Why a perfectly optimized keyword doesn’t automatically mean a huge increase in sales
  • How a close review of your lead sources can lead to a complete reframing of your website focus
  • The necessary disappearance of your marketing secret sauce
  • Why quantifying experience means following the actions of your customers
  • How looking at bounce rate and pages per session leads to vital data for optimizing experience
Why Gated Content and Lead Forms Are Killing Sales

Imagine a world where all marketing content was free. Nobody had to fill out long lead sheets and gates to content were a thing of the past.

Does that make your skin crawl? Give you a tight feeling in your chest? Have you already pushed back on the idea based on the fact that it’s simply just not done?

Dave Gerhardt, Marketing Lead at Drift.com, is here to crash a Drift wrecking ball right through your notions of traditional marketing. Drift has truly turned the process upside down by making all of their content free and accessible to all.

Go to ContentProsPodcast.com or click here for more on Dave’s revolutionary approach:

  • How gated content leads to lost sales from the modern consumer
  • Why succeeding in marketing means remembering what it’s like to be a consumer
  • How simplifying metrics leads to clearer and more obtainable marketing goals
  • Why using product qualified leads (as opposed to the standard MQLs) means more organic growth
  • How a change in email tone and appearance can lead to more appealing content on a human level
How to Energize Customers With Effective Content Planning

As a marketer, it can feel a little like digging in a sand dune to keep on top of what’s hot, what’s not, and how to continually engage an evolving client base. Every time you make progress, more sand trickles in and fills the space you just made.

In my last appearance as guest, as I transition to becoming the new co-host, I share my approach to balancing strategy with action. This will help guide you to finding the right content methodology for your field. It also pulls back the curtain a bit on the Oracle Marketing Cloud.

Listen in to hear as I goes over the following content insights:

  • Why good content strategy means higher-level focus
  • How repurposing old successful content leads to increased customer engagement
  • Why planning for next year means working in a state of constant analysis and evaluation
  • How MQLs indicate content plan effectiveness
  • Why gated content isn’t the only way to capture a prospect’s information

Once you are done listening to all of these great podcasts and you want to settle in and do some reading, take a look at the Future of Content Marketing. Econsultancy also interviewed a whole bunch of experts and practitioners to where this every changing world of content is going.

 



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Celebrate Independence Day

Barbecue! ‘Merica! Fireworks! Summer is in full swing and the 4th of July is right around the corner. Now is a great time to add some seasonal flair to your email campaigns and capture your customers’ attention; celebrate the long weekend with some fun, snappy subject lines full of summer spirit. In a writing rut? Check out some of our favorite subject lines in our inboxes right now:

  1. Go America, It’s Your Birthday! (Birthday treat inside!) | Farmgirl Flowers
  2. Your new delivery is here – Celebrate up to 30% off red, white, and blue and sparkly looks for July 4th | Rent The Runway
  3. Oh Say Can You Eat | Tasting Table
  4. America’s Pastime on the 4th of July | SF Giants
  5. PREPARE FOR FIREWORKS | Carbon38
  6. Grilling Secrets from the Pros – Plus red, white, and blue berry desserts | Fine Cookin
  7. Flag this: $6 styles + EXTRA 50% off | LOFT
  8. Let Freedom Ring: Free Shipping Now Through Sunday | Kaufmann Mercantile
  9. Buttermilk Layer Cake, Fresh Blueberries & Stone Fruit Pie – Sweet Red, White & Blue Pie Party in the USA! | Good Eggs
  10. Top 20 Fourth of July Recipes | F&W: The Dish
  11. Proud To Be An American | Under Armour
  12. The Perfect 4th of July Weekend | Travel + Leisure
  13. Must haves for the 4th | Etsy
  14. 6 Big-Batch Cocktail Recipes for the Fourth of July | Liquor.com
  15. Everything You Need to Make the Most of July | Barneys New York
  16. The Ultimate Pork Tacos – Our favorite no-cook summer pastas, pies for 4th of July, and more | Epicurious
  17. 25% Off Makes Sunday Way Better – Ends Today. Stock Up for the Fourth | American Apparel
  18. ‘Mericas For The Whole Family | Chubbies
  19. Grilling Secrets from the Pros – 4th of July party menu | Fine Cooking
  20. Happy Birthday, America! Out the red, white & blue | Express

Ready to get writing and send out your Fourth of July email campaigns?

VerticalResponse is easy to use and free to get started. Sign up and send up to 1,200 emails per month for free.

Sign Up

© 2016, Tori Tsu. All rights reserved.

The post Celebrate Independence Day appeared first on Vertical Response Blog.



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SEO Defined in 60 Seconds [Animated Video]

content marketing glossary - what is SEO?

How do people find what they’re looking for on the web?

Search engines.

And in order for business owners to ensure that their content appears as the most relevant resource for prospective customers, they must optimize web pages to show up in search engine results for specific keywords.

But let’s say you’re a beginner when it comes to search engine optimization (SEO).

What exactly is SEO?

Watch our short, fun video about SEO

With help from our friends at The Draw Shop, we whipped up 12 definitions from our new Content Marketing Glossary into short, fun whiteboard animated videos.

Check out our video for the definition of SEO:

Animation by The Draw Shop

And for those of you who would prefer to read, here’s the transcript:

SEO stands for “search engine optimization.” It’s a process of getting traffic from the “free,” “organic,” or “natural” search results generated by search engines.

Google and Bing are the biggest search engines, and they use algorithms to examine the content on a given page in order to decide what that page is about. Then, based upon more than 200 factors, they decide how relevant that page is to certain keywords.

The job of a search engine, like Google, is to find content that matches your query — or, the basic question you’re asking, like:

  • How far is the earth from the sun?
  • Who is the lead singer of Led Zeppelin?
  • What is a freemason?

Those questions contain keywords. The more your content matches those questions, the better the experience for the user. When you make people happy, you make Google happy.

Share this video

Click here to check out this definition on YouTube and share it with your audience. You’ll also find 11 additional Content Marketing Glossary videos.

SEO resources

If you’d like additional information about SEO, visit these three resources:

Learn more from the Content Marketing Glossary

Ready to master content marketing essentials? Watch all of our animated whiteboard videos right now by going directly to the Content Marketing Glossary.

By the way, let us know if there are any definitions you’d like us to add to the glossary! Just drop your responses in the comments below.

The post SEO Defined in 60 Seconds [Animated Video] appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Wednesday 29 June 2016

5 Steps to Recovering from Low Landing Page Conversions

Landing pages are intended to be simple and straightforward – a single page designed to get a specific audience to take an action.
Marketers use landing pages to get people to:

  • Make a product purchase
  • Opt-in to get a promotional product like an ebook or report
  • Request more information or a consult
  • Urge an audience to subscribe

You’d think that creating a page for such simple tasks would be easy, especially when you consider the wealth of tools at our disposal for building out landing pages.

And, in fact, the act of producing landing pages is actually not complicated – at least, until you factor in the human component of your audience.

People, the ones you want to get to take a specific action, muck up the entire process and make landing pages much more difficult.

There’s no specific way to design or configure a landing page to ensure it’s going to perform a certain way or deliver favorable conversions.

All you have is your research and whatever knowledge you may have picked up about copy and landing page best practices, so you go on intuition.

You’re not alone in that. Over 60% of marketers optimize sites based on intuition alone.

Then the testing starts. And despite everything you feel you’ve done correctly, you go through what many others experience: lackluster conversion rates.

There are a lot of changes and tweaks you can make, but don’t approach your landing page like a master control panel where you start pulling levers and pushing buttons blindly.

There are 5 key areas where you can start making small challenges to positively influence your conversion rates.

1. Trust Signals

Simply put, if you don’t have trust, then you don’t have sales. You may have been funneling traffic to your landing pages as a result of lead nurturing, but chances are you’ve got some fresh landing page traffic made up of people who have no idea who you are.

Even if you’ve been nurturing your leads via email and building a relationship, you still need strong trust signals to boost the confidence of your audience and help tip them over into a conversion.

perry-marshall-endorsed-trust-signal

Social proof

Social proof tells your audience that you can be trusted because other people have trusted you and made an investment of time and/or money. If you’ve got the attention and business of these other people, then you must be credible to some degree.

Some of the most common ways of adding social proof to a landing page include highlighting social shares, number of purchases, subscriber counts, or social followers.

Supplier/manufacturer affiliation

If you partner with any brand, be it a major organization or an influencer, getting their name or logo on your landing page creates an affiliation in the mind of the audience.

The audience will perceive you as more trustworthy and credible because you’re working with X brand, which must mean that X brand trusts you.

You’ll see this a lot with brand mentions that include “As seen on” logo placements.

Third-party certifications

They may not seem like much, but certifications can put a lot of people at ease, especially if you’re asking them to give you money or personal information. Using third-party certifications such as the Better Business Bureau and VeriSign create a perception of authority around your landing page and brand.

Testimonials

Testimonials are another form of social proof, and are one of the strongest trust symbols. According to Nielsen, 83% of consumers trust recommendations from people they know, and 66% trust consumer opinions posted online.

If you can, share the full details from customers, including their name and city if they’re comfortable with it. Because it’s easy to fake testimonials (and many online consumers know it) it pays to be as transparent as possible.

most-trusted-ad-formats

2. Fix Your Call to Action and Make it Obvious

Remember what I said above: your landing page has a single goal. The only way you’re going to get your audience to take action is if you make that goal 100% clear to the people landing on your page.

If you don’t have your call to action where it’s visible, above the fold, then it’s virtually impossible to direct people to take action.

The reason for this is because most people spend less than 15 seconds on any given web page, which means most won’t even bother scrolling. They’ll glance, their brain will decide whether you’re relevant or not, and they’ll bounce.

If you hide your call to action below the fold, bury it in clutter, or don’t make it stand out, then you’ll lose a considerable amount of conversions.

lean-startup-landing-page

Eric Ries’ Lean Startup keeps the call to action above the fold and clearly visible.

Everything your audience needs to make a decision should be above the fold, but don’t necessarily try to put all of your content above the fold.

Likewise, it takes more than the placement of the call to action to make it effective. It also needs to be compelling.

Use power words

Avoid using corporate babble and industry jargon. Stick with practical language and power words that are proven to compel people to take action.

Use active language

Remember that your call to action is telling your audience to do something. Use verbs that inspire that action, such as “Join,” “Subscribe,” “Download,” etc.

Make it stand out

You want your call to action to stand out from everything else on the page, but you also want it to be consistent with the design and theme.

Tim Ferriss uses a great CTA design that clearly shows his audience where to begin.

4-hour-workweek-landing-page

I also want to point out the trust signals he uses on his landing page.

Use brevity

The best CTAs say the most in the fewest words, so limit them to around 90-150 characters. That’s about 5-7 words. If your call to action is too long, then you lose the hook, and if it’s too short, it may not clearly convey what step visitors should take (or why.)

Make it personal

Avoid using broad calls to action like “Start today.” Instead, personalize it to the user so it reads more like “Start your trial today.”

my-perfect-resume

3. Remove the Ability to go Elsewhere

Clear navigation and links are great to use in your content marketing and on your website to help you expand on concepts and help the audience get to a destination, but they don’t belong on your landing page.

Your landing page is the destination.

You never want to give visitors the ability to click out of this endpoint in your funnel. Remove the navigation from your landing page, and avoid adding links to your content at all costs.

no-navigation-variation-page

I also recommend adding in an exit pop-up that will appear based on user behavior, such as if the user moves their mouse toward the top of the browser. This pop-up should encourage them to stay and focus their attention on the main call to action.

social-triggers-get-subscribers

4. Add Visual Engagement

If you’re getting great traffic but the conversions are low, try to incorporate visual elements as a way to improve engagement and keep the attention of your audience.

People who view video are almost 2x as likely to make a purchase, and, according to another study, the addition of video to a landing page can increase conversions by as much as 80%.

video-crazy-egg

Even if you can’t create high-quality video content, you can still use relevant images to seal the deal with your audience. Include high-definition product photos, illustrations, or quality screenshots for digital services that show some behind-the-scenes product/service use.

cheezburger-showcase-your-humor

Think like a shopper – people often want to pick up, look at, and handle a product before they purchase it. Visuals make the audience feel like they’re doing just that. This is why e-commerce sites rely on detailed and numerous product photos to help sell their goods.

5. Improve the Copy

Your copy consists of every written element on your page, especially the headlines. It should be compelling, free of errors, and written in a way that makes an emotional and psychological connection with your target audience.

It also needs to be presented in a way that’s easily scannable, with the most critical points standing out with formatting and design elements like bullets and callouts.

money-like-an-expert-landing-page

I can’t tell you what you should say – that’s going to be based entirely on your audience and what they need to hear, so that’s where your own research comes into play.

Test Everything You Do

Every change you make is going to have some kind of an impact on your conversions. Hopefully you’ll see a lift in conversions, but it’s possible for a change to cause them to drop.

That’s why testing is so important. There are two ways to test the work you’re doing.

A/B testing lets you pit two elements against each other so you can test one or two updates, such as a headline or call to action. Once you have a winner, you can test again or move on to another element.

Multivariate testing lets you evaluate a larger number of changes across your page at the same time, helping you find the best combination. It’s more complex to do, and many marketers prefer A/B testing over this method, but it can get you through testing a lot of changes more quickly.

If you’re getting low conversion rates, you don’t need to scrub it and start over. Make small, strategic changes to your copy and calls to action, and monitor your performance using the recommendations above. With the right approach, you should begin seeing substantial lifts in your conversion rates.

What kind of changes tend to bring you the best results with your landing pages? Share your success with me in the comments.

About the Author: Aaron Agius is an experienced search, content and social marketer. He has worked with some of the world’s largest and most recognized brands to build their online presence. See more from Aaron at Louder Online, their Blog, Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and LinkedIn.



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Autoresponders 101

Say the words “marketing automation” to the average consumer, and what comes to mind (if they know the term at all) are the dreaded robocalls that disrupt family dinners every night or the shotgun-style junk emails that clog inboxes across the country. As a small business owner, you probably have no desire to be associated with anything like that.

Yet email automation can be an effective, non-intrusive marketing tool for small businesses. We know email marketing works — the numbers bear it out. Email works three times faster than display advertising, stays in the minds of consumers better, and increases the likelihood of purchasing in 47 percent of consumers, according to a study by Teradata. Email marketing is an essential tool for small business owners, offering ROI that other forms of marketing just can’t match.

Autoresponder email campaigns greatly enhance the effectiveness of email marketing — without raising marketing costs. An autoresponder series allows small business owners to share new content, build email lists, promote products and services, and share company news quickly, efficiently, and cost-effectively.

The Pros of Autoresponders

First, let’s clarify what we mean by autoresponders. An autoresponder email tool sends a pre-determined automatic response to any email your business receives. But the tool does more than that. You can also create automated commands that will send marketing emails to contacts whenever they take a specified action, such as ordering from your website, signing up for your email newsletter, or even simply visiting your website.

Autoresponders can benefit your small business by:

  • Saving time — Rather than requiring you to invest the time writing and sending individual emails to potential, new, and current customers, autoresponders can automatically send a welcome email to a new subscriber, or thank a customer for an order. It creates the feeling of a personal interaction without the time investment you would have to make if you did all that on your own.
  • Creating a positive first impression — Automated emails make it easier to show off your impressive customer service to new customers. A new contact who receives a welcome email or a discount offer could become a paying customer.
  • Maximizing selling opportunities — Signing up for your email list shows the prospect is already interested in your business, product, or service. Connecting with a new customer right away through an autoresponder means your marketing message reaches them when their interest is high and they are most receptive to hearing what you have to offer.
  • Improving value to customers — Everyone hates spam and junk email, so adding additional content or services to your autoresponder emails is a great way to demonstrate to customers that your emails are valuable. Not only are you giving them useful content that can fulfill a need or make their lives easier, you’re also demonstrating that your name in the “from” line means the email is worth reading.
  • Engaging customers — Consistent communication of valuable content is a great way to keep your brand front-of-mind for customers. Autoresponders allow you to maintain a measured, continuous stream of relevant content with a minimal time investment to develop it.

Top types of autoresponder emails

You can use autoresponders in many ways. Here are some of the most popular and effective types of automated emails:

Welcome emails

Whenever someone signs up to be on any kind of company list, a welcome email is an excellent — and expected — way to thank them for their interest and to encourage deeper engagement. The autoresponder tool automatically sends an email with content you’ve predetermined. It could be a simple “welcome to the family” message, an invitation to connect on social media, a promotional offer or discount, links to additional information about your company, products and services, a call to action, or printable coupon. 

Content offer emails

This type of email can actually be combined with others, such as a welcome email. The email conveys your key message — “welcome” or “thank you for your order” — and also offers the recipient additional worthwhile content. You can include brief content directly in the email or incorporate links to lengthier content that the recipient can review at his or her leisure.

Surveys and feedback requests

Asking customers for their opinion is a great way to engage them with your brand. By tying your request for feedback to an action, such as placing an order or chatting online with customer service, you capture the recipients’ attention when they’re already thinking of your brand. You can also choose to initiate the contact by sending a survey to customers who haven’t interacted with your brand for a while. In addition to enriching engagement, surveys and feedback emails provide an excellent way to gather important information from your customers. You can sweeten the deal and increase response rates by incorporating an incentive offer into the email, such as a chance to win a gift card.

Follow-up emails

When you send an email and recipients don’t open it, following up with a second email a few days later can result in an average 30% lift in your open rate. This can be as simple as resending the same email to people who didn’t open the first one. Autoresponders allow you to automatically schedule a follow-up email when you create and send an initial email campaign. This reduces the amount of time you spend on follow-up emails by eliminating the extra work of manually segmenting your list of non-responders and creating a new campaign.

Confirmation emails

When customers make a purchase through your website or mobile app, they want acknowledgement that you’ve received their order and are working to fulfill it. An automated confirmation email gives customers a sense of security, and affords you the opportunity to provide additional information about their purchase. You can also use a confirmation email to up-sell, informing customers of products or services related to what they’ve ordered.

Convincing data

Marketing data firm Epsilon says open rates for triggered emails can be nearly 77 percent higher than for business-as-usual email messages. Click rates for triggered emails can be nearly 152 percent higher. The key to this success, Epsilon notes, is likely because triggered emails go out in response to a consumer action.

Trying to track consumer emails and actions in order to create individual campaigns in response can be a frustrating and time-consuming exercise for anyone. As a small business owner, you need a more effective and efficient way to set up triggered emails, and autoresponders can help.

By establishing autoresponder campaigns, your small business can capitalize on the power of triggered emails, and create more engaged, profitable interactions with prospects and customers.

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