As selected by TIME Magazine. These five websites suffer from marketing infestation, are in need of an overhaul, notoriously slow to load, discriminatory, and just plain annoying.
- eHarmony
- Evite
- Meez
- MySpace
- SecondLife
As selected by TIME Magazine. These five websites suffer from marketing infestation, are in need of an overhaul, notoriously slow to load, discriminatory, and just plain annoying.
In reviewing the success of your email marketing campaigns, there are several data points that provide valuable insight. These are the things that you should be tracking. They include:
While most email marketing suites provide some of these numbers as part of their reporting, it is important to note that our definition and value of what we track is slightly different. For example, typical click through rates are measured as the percentage of clicks to the number of messages sent. But if a recipient does not open the message, how can they produce a click? This typical measurement of the “click through rate” doesn’t tell us much. By measuring the percent of clicks to opens (click to open rate), we are able to determine how effective the message is at producing action (clicks).
The goal is to evaluate the success of the campaign along each step of the following process:
Send -> Deliver -> Open -> Click -> Convert
Setting benchmarks and measuring the success of each step allows us to determine where the areas for improvement are in the email marketing process.
Here are some things to look at for poor performance at each step of the email marketing process:
Constant fine tuning at each step of the process can help to improve the overall results of your email marketing campaign.
Technorati Tags: delivery rate, email marketingOften times the focus of ecommerce and online marketing is on conversions - making sales to your sources of traffic. But what about selling MORE to the people who already want to buy from you?
In the July 2007 edition of Business 2.0, the article “Rethinking The Recommendation Engine” discusses some of the latest in ecommerce cross selling and up selling technologies (aka recommendation engines).
According to Forrester Research, consumers spent $220 billion online last year and it is estimated that 10-30 percent of that is accounted for by recommendation systems. That is anywhere between 22 and 66 billion dollars!
So what is a recommendation system? The most recognized recommendation system is Amazon’s. Based on the items you have purchased and what you search for, they do some complicated calculations to find items that you might also like.
A ‘recommendation system’ is a friendlier name to the traditional sales terms of cross selling and up selling.
“Would you like to to super size that? Would you like fries with that?”
“If you love that shirt, take a look at this one. Do you want some new pants to go along with that as well?”
The article goes on to talk about some new recommendation platforms out there used by some heavy hitters.
These technologies are not well suited for the average online store. But that doesn’t mean you can’t, and shouldn’t, have some means of cross selling or up selling. Creating a simple recommendation system not only creates value by selling more, but it also enhances the customers’ experience, introducing new products and helping customers find what they may have forgot or need.
Here are some concrete recommendations for creating a simple system to capture that 10-30%, making the most out of your sales:
Yahoo announced today some much needed feature updates to their PPC platform. Yahoo now lets you copy and move keywords from one ad group to another. As to why it took so long for such a simple but required function to be implemented will still remain a mystery to everyone.
In addition to the move and copy, they have also steamlined the keyword selection process and updated the help section with some best practices guide.
Yahoo is getting there, slowly but surely. Keep taking pages out of Google’s book…
Technorati Tags: pay per click, ppc, SEM, yahooPeople often have a general idea of what is involved in SEO, but they tend to focus on one or two particular variables. The truth of the matter is there are a lot more. Some are more important than others, but singling out specific ones ignores the long tail effect. The little things add up and can make a huge difference.
Here are all the things that can POSITIVELY impact your positioning, in no particular order:
Conversely, here are things, exclusive of blackhat practices, that NEGATIVELY impact your positioning that can be easily avoided:
In general, we’d recommend sticking to GREAT content, clean code and healthy flow of relevant inbound links.
Technorati Tags: Search Engine Optimization, seo
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