3) Spread holiday cheer through operational emails. Spread a little
holiday cheer through welcome, thank you, and confirmation messages. While these
messages are not meant (or allowed by CAN-SPAM laws) to be predominantly
marketing focused, adding a little company branding is 100 percent acceptable
and even suggested by most email experts.
Operational emails can be easily leveraged by including:
- An email header that links to the retailer’s website.
- A link to a coupon offer.
- A link to a web page with complementary products.
- A link where recipients can manage their subscription preferences.
4) Select occasions not days. Stop stressing about email send dates.
There is no universal best time or day to send an email campaign. While
historically, marketers have tried to define this, the result was merely a
greater volume of email sent at the same time, leading consumers to tune out
more and making the marketer’s theory completely obsolete.
Instead, base the email schedule around audience behavior and environmental
factors. Retailers should ask themselves: When are my consumers at their
computer? Moreover, when are they interested in my product?
Additionally, tie messaging to occasions such as each holiday, the weather,
new product releases, etc. For the holiday season, try creating seasonal
campaigns that deploy before each big holiday.
Wendy Lowe is director of Product Marketing for Campaigner (www.campaigner.com),
an email marketing solution. Wendy can be reached at
wlowe@protus.com.