Through a special arrangement, presented here for discussion is a summary of a current article from the Retail TouchPoints website.
Digital marketing service Smith-Harmon, a division of Responsys, recently compiled an Email Design Look Book, bringing together 20 compelling emails, a large portion of which are retail-driven.
"While some form of conversion is usually the primary goal, engagement is becoming an increasingly vital goal of email campaigns," said Chad White, Research Director at Responsys. "With ISPs now factoring in engagement metrics into their filtering algorithms, email campaigns that generate opens and clicks are important to maintaining healthy deliverability rates. Plus, the growth of social initiatives also means that email campaigns are often focused on getting subscribers to participate in a brand's community by voting, uploading content, commenting or taking some other non-revenue-generating action."
Among the book's shining stars:
"Consumers spend very little time looking at an email, so the design should aid them in quickly assessing the content," he said.
Discussion Questions: Which design elements should retailers prioritize in driving engagement around e-mail campaigns? What have you liked and disliked in retailer e-mail campaigns that you have seen?
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Email design look books for the tech savvy consumer will be big for the retailers as they become more creative and design conscious in getting their messages out. Once the retailers receive permission to send their promotions to a larger audience via the email appearance, they should see new trends in buying habits develop. It will take time to watch for and interpret trends. But retailers need to find new methods to reach the buyers who are the spenders.
Ed Rosenbaum, CEO, The Customer Service Rainmaker, Rainmaker Solutions
Targeting your offers properly is 90% of the battle. All the design in the world isn't going to convert a shopper who's not right for the merchandise offered.
Along those lines, it seems that retailers should actively encourage each (decision-making) member of the family to opt-in separately. How many times have you opened an email from one of your favorite retailers only to find the sale items were meant for your spouse?
And then perhaps ask during the checkout process if the purchase is for you, another family member or intended as a gift. Then maybe Amazon would stop sending me offerings for books on Jewish Mysticism just because my daughter ordered that topic for a college course four years ago.
With the cross channel shopper shown to be the most valuable, promotional emails that tap into that trend would seem to be the most effective. If a retailer lacks permissions among its email subscribers for mobile opt-in, they should develop creative aimed at getting it. If the retailer already has these permissions, they should develop creative ways of enabling the cross channel shopping experience across email and mobile.
Another interesting idea is to identify the cross channel permission-based customer as a unique segment to be developed and grown--since they spend the most, they deserve special attention apart from their single-channel peers. Retailers should also make it easy for anyone to cross promote an email offer into Facebook or Twitter.
Gib Bassett, Director of Sales and Marketing, Signal