Forget Friendship. Show Me The Goods!

White Paper

A detrimental side effect of the rise of social media is that marketers have crept further and further into the realm of the personal. Email has become a hotbed for personalised, chatty and sometimes fluffy content designed to forge a friendly link between brands and consumers.

But has this quest for friendship backfired? Over-personalisation can cause significant brand damage if it feels insincere, therefore it’s vital that marketers understand what kind of interaction customers respond most positively to.

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An all but ignored side effect of the rise of social media is that marketers have crept further and further into the realm of the personal. Email has become a hotbed for personalised, chatty and sometimes fluffy content designed to forge a friendly link between brands and consumers.

But has this quest for friendship backfired? Over-personalisation can cause significant brand damage if it feels insincere, therefore it’s vital that marketers understand what kind of interaction customers respond most positively to.

From meeting place to marketplace

We decided to investigate by interviewing 1,000 UK consumers and testing their reactions to popular email campaigns to discover what makes them click, and why.

Our study found that the inbox is becoming a marketplace not a meeting place.

Consumers receive more emails from brands than friends and family, yet they are logging on more than ever, with 99% checking their inbox at least once a day and avidly sifting the gems from the junk.

The challenge for marketers is how to grab attention and produce messages that recipients look forward to receiving without straying into ‘false friendship’ territory. This means enticing customers with highly relevant information and offers they can’t resist.

In the first of this new series of research reports we reveal the critical qualities needed for an email that hits the mark: temptation, relevancy and clarity.

Obsessive checking, rapid deleting

Over three quarters (78%) of UK consumers now receive more emails from companies and brands than they do from family and friends.

People are almost obsessive about monitoring their personal emails, but this doesn’t mean they read everything – far from it! Almost two thirds (63%) delete most marketing emails without reading them, but they make some exceptions.

How often people check their personal email:

Checking constantly, deleting the majority, reading occasionally and checking again. It’s as if people don’t want to miss something.

The question is: what are they searching for?

The essential qualities of Britain’s most popular marketing emails

Temptation

Our research analysed the emotional impact of successful email campaigns and found people would rather be tempted than amused or informed. This is mirrored by the fact that two thirds of UK consumers are most likely to open email with offers in the subject line.

It seems people are happy to use email as a marketplace, as long as they like what’s on offer.

This is where relevance is crucial.

How the most popular emails make recipients feel

Relevancy

With the exception of special offers, the subject lines that resonate best with consumers include topics that fit their interests as well as brands they like. However they prefer no personalisation at all to that based on demographic assumptions, while including people’s names had no discernible impact.

Clarity

People like emails that get to the point. Our research uncovered a strong preference for a direct, open approach to selling rather than a softer sell hidden behind a ruse of friendship.

More than a third (37%) went as far as to call overlyfamiliar emails ‘deal breakers’.

Email qualities that resonate best with UK consumers

The essential qualities of successful emails

Don’t get too personal

Although personalisation has its merits, there is a strong sense that consumers want email marketers to keep their distance and focus on the goods they are offering. Almost two fifths (38%) hate feeling like companies are stalking them via email.

This applies to content and style too. Less than a fifth (18%) said personalised content would tempt them to open an email, and only 17% said it would prompt them to return to a brand that they’d previously abandoned.

Not too often, but often enough

While consumers dislike over-frequency and two thirds (65%) say this turns them off a brand, the majority (57%) are happy to receive emails up to once a week.

While consumers dislike over-frequency and two thirds (65%) say this turns them off a brand, the majority (57%) are happy to receive emails up to once a week.

Nine in ten (91%) UK consumers sometimes get annoyed by marketing emails. The consequences of one bad email can be dire. One third (37%) send an email to junk after reading a message they don’t particularly like and even more (39%) unsubscribe from future emails.

Yet the good news is mistakes can be rectified.

WHAT BRANDS CAN DO TO WIN CONSUMERS BACK

The age factor

Our research found an indirect correlation between how often different age groups use email for personal communication and how much they engage with marketing communications.

Young people are most comfortable with being sold to via email, with 18 to 24 year olds being the least likely to delete marketing messages without reading them and the most likely to engage. This age group receives fewer personal emails, perhaps due to a tendency to use social media for personal communications.

Conversely older consumers are the least likely to engage with marketing emails. Those over 55 are the most likely to check their emails 10 times a day or more.

It seems groups of people who frequently use email for personal communication find marketing emails more intrusive and are less likely to engage. This has interesting echoes of our 2014 Buying Behaviour Study, which found consumers are most consciously influenced by email than any other digital channel.

All or nothing with the sexes

Our research found only subtle variations in the way men and women respond to email marketing.

Marketers seem to have more to gain by using long-term customer nurturing strategies with women. They are less forgiving of unappealing campaigns than men and quicker to unsubscribe if they dislike just one email, but more likely to take positive action such as sharing an email they like.

This illustrates the wider trend of consumers taking an all or nothing approach – dismissing emails entirely that don’t meet their criteria but actively looking forward to those that do.

How to seal the deal

  1. It’s not enough to create one brilliant campaign. Brands need to win a reputation for delivering must-read messages to win the right to bypass people’s internal filters. The aim should be becoming one of the few brands that customers skip straight to when they open their inbox.
  2. While demographics can give clues on how people want to be communicated with, there is no substitute for watching and listening. Monitor how consumers respond to campaigns and adjust your content and frequency accordingly.
  3. People appreciate straightforward information from brands they occasionally buy from, however prefer tempting offers from brands they buy from more frequently.
  4. While marketers should not abandon personalisation or engagement, this research illustrates that they need to be used with care. Be aware that customers know what brands want from them, as well as what they want from brands.
  5. Don’t get too friendly too soon and don’t pretend that friendship is the ultimate goal. You want to sell, and customers want to buy the right things in the right way.

So cut to the chase and show them the goods!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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