Lịch sử Internet Marketing
Xu hướng Internet trải rộng khắp năm châu. Vậy bạn có biết Internet Marketing được hình thành từ khi nào, bắt đầu có ảnh hướng đối với các nhà maketers và media planner khi nào? Hãy cùng nhau tìm hiểu và cho ý kiến về tầm quan trọng của Internet Marketing nhé!
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Sunday, August 21, 2011
MediaPost Publications Say What?! Bad Advice From Email Experts 05/24/2011
MediaPost Publications Top Customer Data Tips 05/17/2011
MediaPost Publications Why Unstructured Data Will Mean Something Tomorrow 05/09/2011
MediaPost Publications The Next Wave Affecting Email Design 04/26/2011
MediaPost Publications Measurement By Averages 04/25/2011
MediaPost Publications Email Decision-Making: Beyond Revenue Or Best Practices 04/21/2011
MediaPost Publications Four Things You Can Do Now About Privacy 04/18/2011
MediaPost Publications Q: Email vs. Social? A: I'll Take Both 04/07/2011
Saturday, August 20, 2011
If Your Email Were A Novel
Writers embarking on a new work do not just sit down at a keyboard and start pecking out the great American novel. Storytelling is a craft, and the act of actually writing a novel is usually preceded by months of researching, planning, sketching and vetting. And after the writing the editing begins, a task as onerous and essential as the initial pen to paper -- er, pixel to screen. There is a lot of process and training required to elevate writing to art. Yes writers have a gift, but it's a gift akin to a runner's ability to tap out a marathon in just over 2 hours -- years of training go into recognizing that gift's true potential.
William Faulkner famously claimed that short stories were much more difficult to write than novels, because of how much restraint the author must exercise over what to include in such a restrictive form. Where does that leave email writers? Kids have to read sonnets to pass high school English. We have about the same real estate to work with ,but have to earn every word of attention. If any writing craft needs process, training and discipline, surely it's ours.
In fact, there is a lot we can learn from the novelist's craft when approaching our own, not the least of which is to think of email as a craft, and not some form of e-manual labor. If we think like writers instead of marketers, we may enjoy a wider audience for our work. Who knows? We may even find ourselves with a bestseller on our hands. So dust off your Hermes 3000, crack your knuckles, and let's create a real page-turner:
Genre: Novels are romances, mysteries, psychological thrillers or comedies. Emails also have a genre, ranging from newsletter to promotional message to announcement. The important thing about a genre is choosing one. You don't hear a novelist say, "Gotta get a book out" (OK, Stephen King probably says that, but he's an exception who proves the rule), but we say it about emails all the time. The emails we send also need to have a clear purpose, which their genre defines.
Plot: This is the story your email tells, whether it's about a 20%-off sale, or recommended products based on what you've bought in the past, or a webinar next week. But plot is also a narrative that can span through multiple installments, like the Harry Potter series or "The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest." Your story doesn't begin and end with each email. How does each installment in your ongoing series draw your audience in deeper, and further develop your relationship with subscribers?
Theme: "The author is not trying to say anything, Mr. May," my 10th grade English teacher said to me once. "He is saying something. You evidently just can't hear it." A layer deeper than the story about your spring sale or registration deadline, theme is the underlying message and carries the impact each email has on your brand development. Anyone can send an email. But if your company makes a point of sending only messages that it is uniquely qualified to send, then the theme starts to emerge and every message helps strengthen the brand. For example, "60% off - today only" is a message that defines Gilt Groupe and Haute Look and The Clymb, but would positively ruin Neiman Marcus or the TED Conference. When the theme of emails is ignored, the messages start to compromise the rest of the work done to build a brand. There may be short-term gains, but the expenses hit the balance sheet later on.
Tone: Like genre, an email's tone should be a deliberate choice. An email that relies on humor or levity can be very successful for a brand similarly aligned, like Old Navy or The Onion. But a brand that trades on authority should have a very different tone in its emails: messages from The Economist or BMW should probably never include an exclamation point. A brand whose positioning is approachable and conversational might use a first-person voice to forge a personal connection.
Very often, I see messages where each of these elements is determined more by the individual message's objective than by brand positioning and continuity. Individual emails can enjoy some success by going maverick on the brand and focusing on the immediate business need and environment. But I believe that an email program is more successful when approached as a craft with a long view. Email artisans do not need a writer's gift, but could enjoy better results through some of a writer's process and discipline.
Friday, August 19, 2011
E-mail Marketing Definations
e-mail marketing |
Email marketing is a process of soliciting business prospects via email. It is essentially the same as direct mail except that instead of sending mail through the postal service, messages are sent electronically via email.
Email Marketing Definition - Email Marketing
Email marketing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- sending email messages with the purpose of enhancing the relationship of a merchant with its current or previous customers, to encourage customer loyalty and repeat business,
- sending email messages with the purpose of acquiring new customers or convincing current customers to purchase something immediately,
- adding advertisements to email messages sent by other companies to their customers, and
- sending email messages over the Internet, as email did and does exist outside the Internet (e.g., network email and FIDO).
Contents
[hide]Comparison to traditional mail
Advantages
- An exact return on investment can be tracked ("track to basket") and has proven to be high when done properly. Email marketing is often reported as second only to search marketing as the most effective online marketing tactic.[2]
- Advertisers can reach substantial numbers of email subscribers who have opted in (i.e., consented) to receive email communications on subjects of interest to them.
- Over half of Internet users check or send email on a typical day.[3]
- Email is popular with digital marketers, rising an estimated 15% in 2009 to £292m in the UK.
Disadvantages
Legal requirements
References
- ^ DMA: "The Power of Direct Marketing: ROI, Sales, Expenditures and Employment in the U.S., 2006-2007 Edition", Direct Marketing Association, October 2006
- ^ "New Survey Data: Email's ROI Makes Tactic Key for Marketers in 2009 ", MarketingSherpa, January 21, 2009
- ^ Pew Internet & American Life Project, "Tracking surveys", March 2000 – March 2007
- ^ MediaWeek: UK e-mail marketing predicted to rise 15% MediaWeek.co.uk
- ^ Return Path's Reputation Benchmark Report: "5 ways to increase deliverability", BtoB Magazine, July 2008
- ^ The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 online at ftc.gov or PDF Version
- ^ a b Fairhead, N. (2003) “All hail the brave new world of permission marketing via email” (Media 16, August 2003)
- ^ Dilworth, Dianna. (2007) Ruth's Chris Steak House sends sizzling e-mails for special occasions, DMNews retrieved on February 19, 2008
- ^ O'Brian J. & Montazemia, A. (2004) Management Information Systems (Canada: McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd.)
- ^ Full text of Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations
- ^ FTC Approves New Rule Provision Under The CAN-SPAM Act
Try to search "e-mail marketing" on Google Search |