Posts Tagged ‘Email’

2008 Online Spending Forecasts Look Great for B2B

3
January
2008

Most business-to-business (B2B) marketers plan to increase their 2008 marketing budgets – but 79% of them plan to increase their online marketing budgets, according to BtoB magazine’s “2008 Marketing Priorities and Plans”? study.

George Assimakopoulos
Principal Manager

BtoB’s previous survey (2006) had found that nearly 76% of marketers planned to increase their online budgets in 2007. Here are some other key findings from BtoB’s survey this year:

  • Some 62% of B2B marketers said their primary goal in 2008 would be customer acquisition, 19% cited brand awareness and nearly 12% pointed to customer retention.
  • Online will constitute more than one-third (nearly 34%) of marketing budgets in 2008, B2B marketers said; that’s up from the nearly 27% cited for 2007.
  • Online areas that marketers plan to increase next year are website development (74% of marketers said so); email (70%); search engine marketing (64%); video (40%); webcasting (39%); banners (36%); sponsorships (30%); and social media (26%).
  • Rating ad agency partners’ willingness and ability to adapt programs according to marketing goals, 54% of B2B marketers said “OK” and 41% said “excellent.”
  • Rating trade-media partners’ willingness and ability to tailor programs to fit marketing goals, nearly 66% said “OK” and 28% said “excellent.”
  • Nearly 20% of B2B marketers say they are using social media as part of the marketing mix: Among them, 40% use them for customer feedback, 31% for market research, 29% for advertising, 27% as a sales channel.

To read BtoB’s Outlook 2008 report for online marketing – CLICK HERE.

Which Day of The Week?

12
July
2007

How many emails you send in a particular week – and what your competitors are doing with their campaigns – can have an impact on your e-mail open rates.

George Assimakopoulos

Principal Manager

According to eROI’s "Email Marketing Statistics by Day and Time" study for the second quarter of 2007, the best days for opens are Wednesday, followed by Monday and Thursday, Tuesday and Friday, Sunday, and then Saturday. While 27% of email is opened on Wednesday, only 12% is opened on Saturday. Click-through rates follow a similar pattern, with 5% clickthroughs on Wednesdays and Thursdays, but only 2% clickthroughs on Saturday and Sunday.

Recently, Email Insider shared research that they conducted in an article that best stated the effect of frequency based on the day selection…

"When retailers sent one email in a given week, their overwhelming favorite day was Tuesday, with Monday in a distant second place. However, when retailers sent two emails in a given week, Thursday was their favorite, followed by Tuesday. Wednesday was the least popular workweek day. When retailers sent three emails in a given week, Thursday was the most popular, followed by Monday. Those two days were by far the most popular. Wednesday’s fortunes were much brighter when retailers sent four emails in a given week. While Monday was the most popular, Wednesday was a fairly close second."

While these can make for helpful benchmarks, we urge everyone to test their day selections, as well as their frequency to determine what your particular subscribers respond to best.