Posts Tagged ‘e-mail’

Should DRTV Marketers Use Multiple Affiliate Networks?

Monday, December 8th, 2008

molander.jpg Should you be involved with multiple affiliate networks? Why or why not?

If so, how does it work technically—from a tracking, reporting and optimization perspective?

When it comes to affiliate programs, DRTV marketers are looking for more sales with less friction. I’ve complained for years that affiliate programs need a better means to achieve scale (providing marketers with an easier means to drive actions). Scale is Google’s “secret sauce” and responsible for cost-per-click’s (CPC) trouncing cost-per-acquisition (CPA). The CPC model has won that battle…for now.

In seeking out CPA scale (and the increased actions it may bring), DRTV marketers always find their way to the “multiple affiliate network” question—should they or shouldn’t they and what’s involved? Carolyn Tang has been around this block a few times and worked both sides of the fence at affiliates like MyPoints.com and marketers like Orbitz and CollectiblesToday.com (The Bradford Exchange). Today, she works as the client services lead at Chicago-based affiliate network Shareasale.

Simply stated, there are two primary concerns for retailers when swimming in multiple affiliate network ponds. These are:

1. Proper attribution of the sale:
Avoiding duplication of counts or scores among web marketing channels (affiliate, search, e-mail, etc.)
2. Proper payment:
Avoiding duplicate payments to affiliate networks (in scenarios where customers touch multiple affiliate sites or cookies)

Following is an excerpt from my conversation with Tang that gets to the nitty-gritty of what to be concerned with and how to make the decision.

Carolyn Tang: I think in the past, the emphasis has definitely been on duplicate reporting—on having to pay multiple times on a single transaction. Obviously, this is not very cost-effective. Funny thing is the technology has evolved to the point where we have a lot more reporting tools in place, such as Omniture or any third-party dashboard reporting tool. Many times, those tools don’t necessarily track correctly. They will attribute a transaction to a single marketing channel, but because of the way the technology is set up it may or may not attribute it to the correct channel. So I think, whereas before the driving concern was on overpaying on a single transaction, it is now on actually attributing the transaction to the proper channel.

Jeff Molander: So you’re saying that the technology now has improved that? (more…)

12 Tips To Ensure Customers’ Gifts Will Arrive On Time

Friday, November 14th, 2008

lindab.jpg In every online holiday gifting purchase decision, the customer wonders “will this gift get here/there on time?” It’s important to communicate clearly shipping cutoff dates to ease the fear, uncertainty and doubt—or risk losing your sale to a competitor.

1. Use clear wording like “Shipping Deadlines,” “Shipping Cutoff” or “Order By December ___” rather than just “Shipping Details” or “Shipping Info.”

2. Make sure the information is easy to find on every page of your online store (You never know how a customer “lands” on your site. Examples: a deep link to a product page through a search engine, a forwarded-from-friend e-mail that links to a special offer or a direct type in visit.)

3. Include all shipping options: standard, expedited and express.
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4. Include where you ship to on your shipping information detail page. Be clear if different states or countries have different cutoff dates.

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5. Explain any restrictions clearly.

6. If different products/categories have different estimated shipping times, you must be clear about them on product pages and your information page.

7. Remember that Christmas is not the only holiday of the season. Consider Kwanzaa, Diwali and Hanukkah.
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8. Consider offering a guarantee for on-time delivery. Best Buy offers an e-coupon and pays for shipping should the order arrive late.

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9. Remind last-minute shoppers about electronic gift card options, e-gift cards are “always on time.”

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10. Don’t forget to remind your e-mail subscribers about cut-off dates in subject lines and e-mail creative.

11. Provide the option to gift-wrap and include a gift message for direct delivery to the recipient. This is especially handy when the recipient lives in a different city.

12. If for any reason the item is not available or otherwise does not leave the warehouse on time, call the customer to notify them or at least send an e-mail notification. Offer to overnight an alternative item if need be.

Linda Bustos is an e-commerce analyst with Elastic Path and the author of the Get Elastic eCommerce Blog.

10 Tips for Recession-Proofing Your e-Commerce Site

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

bob-cell.jpg The economic decline is top-of-mind for everyone – especially retailers – as consumers place an even stronger hold on their wallets. In such a volatile marketplace, retailers must employ creative tactics to gain a competitive edge and remain profitable. With escalating gas prices, now more than ever, shoppers are going online which puts multichannel retailers at an advantage. That considered, simply having an online channel is not enough – it’s how you market your site and engage customers that makes the difference.

Here are 10 tips and tricks you can apply to your e-commerce site to survive the recession and boost website sales.

1. Smart Merchandising - Promote Groups of Low-Cost Offers: Find inexpensive, appealing items and bundle them in a creative way as a special promotion that gives shoppers an incentive to fill their carts with many low-cost items.

2. Instant Couponing for Multiple-Category Purchasing: Drive shoppers to buy more by offering them a reasonable discount on items from other categories if they buy immediately.

3. Minimum Purchase Free Shipping: Look at your margins and offer free shipping at a purchase threshold where it makes financial sense. Shoppers will fill the cart for the reward.

4. Personalized Recommendations on the Shopping Cart Page: Personalized product recommendations (PPRs) are a recession hit: they’re important on the category page, on the product detail page and everywhere else on the site you can afford the real estate. Putting them at the point of purchase—on the shopping cart page—is a highly strategic placement that moves shoppers to buy. PPRs are recession-proof because leading vendors like MyBuys offer them on a pay-for-performance basis.

5. Value Exchange (Gift with Purchase): Offer a small gift with a minimum price purchase to help move more product, increase customer loyalty and motivate customers to sample other products to increase cart size.

6. Use E-mail Creatively: Use e-mail alerts to recommend products that shoppers want and while you’re at it, remind them of abandoned shopping cart items, which have high conversion rates.

7. Ratings and Reviews: Create a sense of community and loyalty by adding ratings and reviews to your site. Shoppers trust one another and this functionality is not expensive to implement. Also, highly rated products tend to convert at better rates.

8. Creative Use of Widgets: Make widgets highly accessible from your webpage and your Facebook page. Offer different size choices and make them easy to download. Turn your fans into advertising affiliates by having them add these widgets to their social networking pages or blogs and give them points toward purchase for click-throughs or conversions.

9. Create Special Membership Clubs: Companies like SKECHERS, Clinique and many others have successful clubs for building loyalty and growing their lists. Get shoppers to sign up, become part of your community and give you permission to market to them. Reward them with free shipping, special coupons and discounts.

10. New Customer Programs: Coupons or other incentives to turn people into first-time buyers aren’t expensive to create or manage and once you bring shoppers to your site, you can employ the rest of the tactics mentioned above to bring them back for more.

Robert E. Cell is CEO of MyBuys.