Archive for the ‘Case of Study’ Category

Email Marketing for Hotels and Resorts

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

Inspiring myself in this great post of Johana Cavalcanti about email marketing for hotels and resorts, I decided to write a series of post of the best practices of email marketing for different markets and sectors. All the business around tourism could generate great brand equity, more sales, more loyalty from existing customers and also get news customers, with a good email marketing program.

These are the few things you should know to start a successful email marketing program:

Create and build your own list:

It is very important that you build your list organically with the permission of all your prospects to send them de campaigns in order to get the best results out of your email marketing. The first step to start getting email addresses is having a clear subscriber form in every page of your website. To improve the subscription rate:

•    The subscription form should not be long. Not more than 5 fields. If it takes too much time to fill out no one will submit it.
•    You must clearly specify the benefits of been part of your list: better offers, special discounts, special information, etc.
•    You could encourage people to sign up by offering an extra gift like a travel guide or by entering a draw to win a price like a digital camera.

The hotels deal directly with the customer, what makes easy to get email addresses offline:

•    You can ask for email address during the check-in or check out
•    You can leave a welcome form in the room
•    You can leave a form on the table the first breakfast
•    You can have forms in the Gym, Spa, Golf, etc.

The trade shows are also a great place to collect email addresses offline.

Segmentation and Schedule

Setting the right frequency for your campaigns is key for the success of your email marketing program. Too many emails will get your subscribers tired of you, unsubscribing or even worse, flagging you as Spam. Sending a newsletter once a month is the best. You should schedule as well all the events, bank holydays, concerts, etc. in your area for special campaigns. You can also send a welcome message for the customers that are coming to the hotel in the following days and a thank you message a few days after they leave the hotel.

The segmentation of your list is also one of the most important things. Every campaign is not relevant or interesting for all your subscribers, that is why you have to segment your list by age, sex, interests, geographical area, etc.


The campaign creation

The sender and the subject of the campaign will be the first thing our subscribers will read, therefore the sender must be familiar to the subscriber and the subject must refer to the content in the campaign.

The layout of the campaign should be very similar to your web page, with the same logos and colors, and should at least have the next components:

•    Always send a text version of the email
•    Use the “alt” tag on every image
•    Always include a link to the campaign to be seen on the web
•    The main content should be in the top left corner
•    Always include a visible unsubscribe link
•    Include a “Forward to a friend” link

The Stats

Once the campaign is sent you have to check the next stats to know what’s happened:

•    Open Rate
•    CTR (Click Through Rate)
•    Conversion Rate
•    Unsubscribe Rate
•    Viral Rate
•    Bounced emails

All this data allow you to know what is more interesting for each of your subscribers, who is unsubscribing, who is forwarding your message, what is the best day and time to send the campaigns and much more in order to improve the campaigns, the content and also improve the segmentation of your list.

How Apple could improve their email marketing

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

I am a big Apple fan for a lot of reasons: the way they revolutionized the personal computer market, the way they revolutionized the Music industry, how they started a new revolution in the cell phone market, the design excellence of their products, the capacity to build a culture and a brand, and the list goes to the infinite.

Apparently Apple is a perfect marketing machine. However the last emails that I’ve received from them, shows me that they don’t get how email marketing has changed. They can improve a lot in this specific field. The last campaigns sent by Apple show an absolute lack of personalization and segmentation.  Let’s analyze the email I received from them during Christmas (it is in Spanish, I will translate):

The Subject: Equip yourself with Apple in 2009

I bought a MacBook from Apple store more than 2 years ago. Just taking this fact in account, the subject line would’ve been much more personal If they’ve written: Equip your MacBook for 2009 or Find the best accessories for your MacBook in 2009. Just this little of personalization of the subject line would’ve given a much better open rate, CTR and even conversion rate.

The Layout:

The first problem that everyone can see is that if you look at the email in your preview panel, with no images, the email looks empty. The main message is in a big image that doesn’t have an alternative text, so I cannot even intuit what is it about. The second big missing part is a link that allows me to see the message on the web in case my email reader cannot display the design properly. These two things can make your open rate drop.

Once we download the images of the email we can see a beautiful html design  (I don’t expect less from Apple), with a lot of  “call to action” elements that will lead me to the store.  However the design of the main message is more than 700 pixels wide, what will make me horizontal scroll to see the full message in most of the preview panels in email readers. That could be improved.

The Message

The thing that surprises me the most is the complete lack of personalization of the message. More than 70% of the email tells me about accessories for an iPod, iPhone and iPod Touch that I’ve never bought. Knowing that what I bought from them was a MacBook, they could’ve offered me the coolest, best sold, cheapest or whatever accessories for my already bought MacBook.   They could’ve even offered me to change my old MacBook for the new one.

That is not all. To the no personalization, I can add that the message had no value at all for me. They didn’t tell me about a special offer, a good discount or any valuable information for a MacBook user. They just blasted a publicity email with links to their online store, maybe to remind me that they have an online store. That doesn’t have any value. I know the online store is there. I’ve already bought stuff there.

Conclusion
I think Apple is taking advantage of their strong brand and is not taking care of the details like the one I just explained. Email marketing is an extremely powerful way to create and reinforce strong brands, establish relationships with the clients and in the end, increase sales. But you have to care about the details, care about your consumer base and care about your community, and this kind of impersonal email campaigns with no value are not the way.