Make Your B2B E-mails the Best, Not the Worst, of 2011

Auditing your own e-mail program and implementing these six tips will help your e-mail program mature and generate even more leads and revenue.

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Date published
October 20, 2010 Categories

Have B2B e-mail campaigns matured since 2006? Forrester doesn’t think so. In fact, the noted research company says many B2B e-mailers aren’t even doing the fundamentals in their campaigns.

In Shar VanBoskirk’s report, “The Best And Worst of Email Marketing, 2010″ published earlier this month, Forrester found that the average score for B2B campaigns actually dropped since its last review in 2006.

For 2010, Forrester graded 70 e-mail programs across multiple industry verticals on 15 criteria, focusing on subscription, value, presentation, and trust. Only two programs passed; most scored very low, with two the average score.

In the next couple of columns, I’ll look at the fundamentals and advanced marketing e-mail practices that Forrester reviews in its reports. I’ll also offer some advice for how you can improve your campaigns and help you mature before the next Forrester review.

1. Collect Quality Opt-In Subscriptions

List growth is the lifeblood of an e-mail program. Research has found time and time again that subscribers who have recently signed up for your e-mail program are much more engaged than those who have been on your list for six months or more. However, it is always surprising to me how difficult it is to subscribe to many brands’ e-mail programs.

These tips will help you evaluate your own e-mail subscriptions’ practices and optimize collection to increase the acquisition of quality e-mail subscribers:

2. Provide Maximum Value

B2B e-mail marketers often measure the value of their e-mail programs by how many leads the program generates. They focus on new product launches, company news, and other marketer-centric content, often forgetting about the subscribers’ needs.

However, subscribers expect you to provide valuable content in your e-mails. If you don’t, they will unsubscribe, complain, or tune out.

Consider these points when measuring the value subscribers receive from your e-mail programs:

The Next Word

Auditing your own e-mail program and implementing these tips will help your e-mail program mature and generate even more leads and revenue.

Next time, we will focus on presentation and trust criteria to help ensure that your e-mail program will pass a Forrester review with flying colors.

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