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Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

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Page 1: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

in conjunction with

Produced by

Email Marketing Insight

2011A research project into Irish marketers’ use of email

Page 2: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

Introduction 1Foreword by Tom Trainor 1

Introduction by Andrew O’Shaughnessy 2

Executive summary 3

About the research 4

Section 1 – Use of email by Irish marketers 7Importance of email in the marketing strategy 7

What marketers use email for 8

Email systems marketers are using 9

Section 2 – Email targeting and volumes 10Frequency of email campaigns 1 0

Email database sizes 1 1

Use of personalisation in email marketing 1 2

Section 3 – Email benchmarks 14Email metrics being tracked 1 4

Average open rates 1 6

Average click through rates 1 7

Section 4 – Email budgets 18Budgets allocated to email 1 8

Expected change in expenditure 1 9

Where email budgets will come from 20

Section 5 - Challenges facing email marketing 21Future challenges facing email marketing 21

Section 6 - Social media and email marketing 22Social media and email marketing 22

Contents

Page 3: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

1

Introduction

Foreword by Tom Trainor

Welcome to the latest edition of Email Marketing Insight, a research project into how Irish marketers use email.

The last survey gave us many insights in the use of email by Irish marketers. The continuing commitment of Irish Marketers to email marketing is clear from this year’s survey results. It is heartening to see that Irish companies are becoming more sophisticated in their email marketing campaigns and are more focused on measuring the results of each campaign. The survey this year was conducted along the same lines as the last survey with over 400 marketing professionals from various industry sectors taking part in the research and answering questions on their use of email, their audiences, email benchmarks and their view of the challenges for email marketing.

In the analysis of this year’s survey, comparisons are made with the last survey results to identify trends and changes in practices in the use of email marketing. From this year, we will also track the use of social media in email marketing campaigns.

This report will give Irish Marketers valuable information about the techniques, trends and attitudes towards email marketing in Ireland. Hopefully, it will give readers the inspiration to invigorate their own email marketing strategy.

Wishing you success in your future email marketing campaigns.

Tom TrainorChief ExecutiveThe Marketing Institute

Page 4: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

2

Introduction

Introduction by Andrew O’Shaughnessy

We are delighted to once again collaborate with the Marketing Institute on this, the third Email Marketing Insight report.

The report will be of interest to marketers seeking insight into emerging trends and attitudes towards email marketing.

Recent research shows that retaining one existing customer is five to seven times more profitable than attracting one new customer. Email excels at nurturing relationships - and this fact is reinforced in this survey as the majority of those surveyed say one of the main uses of email is for customer retention.

Email remains a ‘very important’ or ‘important’ part of the marketing strategy, and this third report shows continued growth in the use of outsourced solutions to create, deploy and measure results of email campaigns. This reflects a growing sophistication in the market for email solutions that will allow marketers to track campaign metrics and build ROI from their ongoing email communications.

Since the last survey social media has emerged as a must do for marketers. We think social media is an exciting development and offers a huge opportunity for marketers. However, many are not sure how to market their products and services in these new channels and are looking at campaigns as either email or social network. The real power is in social and email working together. Marketers can use the push power and ‘share-ability’ of email to drive social networking efforts; and then take advantage of their expanding fan base online to capture new email subscribers, giving a company the ability to continue communicating on a one-on-one basis directly in the inbox.

This integrated marketing approach in the digital space is the way forward, and those who look at how channels can work together will be the ones that succeed.

Andrew O’ShaughnessyCEONewsweaver

Page 5: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

3

Introduction

Executive Summary

In this year’s survey, email marketing remains an essential part of marketers’ marketing mix with over 84% of

Email marketing is increasingly used by marketers to maintain customer relationships, build brand awareness and increase website traffic. It is also utilised by a large percentage of respondents for internal communications; and as a tool to drive lead generation and online sales.

In this year’s study, we have included a new section dedicated to the use of social media in email marketing. Interestingly there is a 50/50 split between respondents who use social media in their email campaigns and those who do not which could suggest that marketers are still trying to figure out how to integrate social media into their marketing strategies.

When we look at the trend in which email metrics are being tracked and recorded since 2008, we see a lift across the board. As more marketers look to outsourced solutions for their email marketing needs, they get easy access to these metrics. This allows them review opens, clicks and depth of engagement through emails, which in turn enables them build true ROI from their email campaigns.

Some of the other major findings of the 2011 research:

A 12% increase over the 2009 results in the number of respondents sending campaigns “daily” to “at least once a month”.

A 10% increase in the number of respondents using email to drive online sales.

A 16% increase in the level of importance B2C placed on email marketing as part of their overall marketing strategy

There is a 9% increase in the 5,000 – 25,000 database size since the 2009 results.

Links to Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter are the number one use of social media in email marketing.

As with previous years “inbox overload” and “spam” remain the biggest challenge perceived by respondents for email marketing, closely followed by “deliverability” and “unwillingness of people to opt in to new email lists”.

In both B2B and B2C there is a significant increase in the number of organisations using outsourced solutions.

48% of marketers do not expect their organisation’s expenditure on email to change in the next 12 months.

The majority of B2C respondents had open rates in the 10-30% rate, while B2B respondents showed open rates of 31-51+ %.

Page 6: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

4

Results

About the research

Q. What is your job title?

This research is now in its third year running and aims to uncover current practices and trends in the use of email marketing in Ireland.The research was conducted through an online survey sent to over 1800 members of the Marketing Institute.

400 business professionals completed the survey, ranging from sales and marketing executives to company CEOs and owners ofsmall, medium and large organisations. Respondents represented a cross section of industry types and sizes and included those working in both B2B and B2C sectors.

Owner / CEO / Director / MD

Marketing / Brand Management

Marketing / Brand Executive

Account / Sales Management

Other

28.3%

27.9%19%

5%

19.7%

Page 7: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

5

Results

Q. Which industry sector is your organisation in?

Q. Which of the following best describes your organisation’s marketing audience?

Marketing / Media / Publishing

Banking / Finance / Insurance

IT / Telecommunications

Education / Training

Non profit / Trade association

Consulting

Wholesale / Distribution

Hotel / Restaurant

Retail

Transportation / Travel

Manufacturing

Entertainment

Medical / Healthcare

Government

Construction

Agriculture / Forestry / Fishing

Utilities

18.4%

14.5%

9.6%

8.5%

7.1%

5.7%

5.0%

4.6%

4.3%

4.3%

3.9%

3.5%

3.5%

2.8%

2.1%

1.4%

0.7%

Only businesses

Primarily businesses

Roughly split betweenconsumers and businesses

Primarily consumers

Only consumers

Don’t know

26.1%

23.5%

21.9%

19%

7.7%

1.6%

Page 8: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

6

Results

Q. How many marketing personnel are there in your organisation?

1 full-time person

2-4 full-time people

1 part-time person

10+ full-time people

5-7 full-time people

6-10 full-time people

Don’t know

29.1%

28.4%

18.8%

10.4%

5.8%

4.9%

2.6%

To help gauge the size of the organisations participating in the research we asked respondents to specify how many marketing staff they employed. 48% of respondents were from smaller companies with less than two full-time marketing staff. 28% of respondents were from medium sized companies with 2- 4 full- time marketing staff and 21% were from larger companies with more than five-full time marketing staff.

The breakdown of companies represented in this 2011 survey shows a significant decrease in the number of full-time staff employed in medium and larger organisations (5 plus full-time people) and remains the same (Less than 4 full time people) in smaller organisations.

Page 9: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

7

Results

Importance of email in the marketing strategy

Q. How important is email as part of your overall marketing strategy?

Similar to previous years the vast majority of respondents (84%) state that email as part of their marketing strategy is either “very important” (49%) or “important” (35%).

This is a significant result in that it highlights the critical importance that marketing professionals give to communicating effectively with their core audiences via email.

Compared with past surveys, there is a major increase (16%) from 71% to 87% of respondents stating that email is “very important” or “important” in their marketing strategy.

Very important

Important

Neither important orunimportant

Not important at all

52%

43%

44%

32%

13%

7%

6%

3%

B2C B2B

Page 10: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

8

Results

What marketers use email for

Q. Which of the following do you use email marketing for within your organisation?

Respondents were asked what they use email marketing for most often in their organisation and answers were summarised below.

As with previous years, a large majority of respondents in the survey always use email for “Maintaining customer relationships” (66%), “Building brand awareness” (46%), “Internal communications” (53%) and “Increasing website traffic” (23%).

Compared with 2009, we saw a 10% increase in respondents always using email to drive online sales.

Maintaining customer relationships

Generating new sales leads

Driving direct online sales

Building brand awareness

Driving offline sales

Increasing website traffic

Internal communications

65.7%

33%

27.9% 34.9% 37.1%

46.2% 39.9% 13.9%

23.3% 52.4% 24.3%

42.8% 42.2% 15%

53% 27.4% 19.6%

50.9% 16.1%

29.7% 4.6%

Always Sometimes Never

Page 11: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

9

Results

Email systems marketers are using

Q. What email marketing solution are you currently using?

A large proportion of those surveyed (30%) do not use a dedicated email marketing software product and continue to rely on basic email facilities such as outlook. The figure has dropped 16% from 2009 when the number of respondents using basic email facilities was at 46%.

A closer analysis of the results shows that those working in B2B environments are far more reliant on basic email systems such as outlook than their counterparts in B2C. In both sectors however there is a significant increase in the number of organisations using outsourced solutions.

Normal email such as outlook(no special software or database)

Advanced web-based solution

Basic web-based solution

Full service (outsourced to an emailservice provider)

In-house system (software on yourown servers)

Don’t know

29.9%

18.4%

17%

15.3%

14.3%

5.1%

Normal email such as outlook(no special software or database)

Basic web-based solution

Advanced web-based solution

In-house system (software on yourown servers)

Full service (outsourced to an emailservice provider)

Don’t know

5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40%

B2C B2B

Page 12: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

10

Results

Frequency of email campaigns

Q. On average, how often do you conduct email marketing campaigns?

Respondents were asked how often they conduct email marketing campaigns. The results show that 58% of marketers send email campaigns at least once a month while 16% of them send campaigns less than once a quarter.

The 2011 results compared to 2009 show a 14% increase in the number of respondents sending email campaigns at least oncea month.

At least once a month

At least once a week

Less than once a quarter

Less than once a month

At least once a forthnight

We do not use email

Don’t know

Daily

26%

17.8%

16.1%

14.8%

11.5%

5.5%

4.4%

4.1%

Page 13: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

11

Results

Email database size

Q. What is the approximate size of your email database?

The majority of respondents (56%) have email databases of less than 5000 addresses

As would be expected B2B databases are smaller than B2C databases. There is also a large jump in the database size of 5,000 – 25,000 from 16% in 2009 to 25% in 2011..

<5000 email addresses

5000-25000 email adresses

25000-100000

Don’t know

250000+ email addresses

100000-250000

56.4%

24.9%

8.9%

6.3%

2.3%

1.1%

0-4999

5000-24999

25000-99999

Unknown

250000

100000-24999

20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

B2C B2B

Page 14: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

12

Results

Use of personalisation in email marketing

Q. On average, what level of personalisation do you use in your email marketing?

Personalisation and segmentation are key to getting the most out of email marketing. Anticipated, relevant and timely email campaigns are likely to yield the best return on investment.

A significant proportion of respondents (72%) do not personalise their email campaigns or only do so by name, an increase from 2009 (64%).

Interestingly, there has been an 8% decrease in the number of respondents who personalise their email campaigns by dynamic content or by more than name.

Closer analysis of the results also shows that marketers working in the B2B sector tend to use more personalisation in their email marketing campaigns than those in B2C marketing (67% compared to 58%). This could reflect the fact that B2B marketers do more retention marketing and have better data profiles on each address.

Personalise by name only

We do not personalise content

Personalise by more than name

Use dynamic content (use data todrive targeted content to specific users)

Don’t know

39.9%

31.6%

14.9%

8%

5.5%

Personalise by name only

We do not personalise content

Personalise by more than name

Use dynamic content (use data todrive targeted content to specific users)

Don’t know

10% 20% 30% 40% 50%

B2C B2B

Page 15: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

13

Results

Large and small companies have maintained the same level of personalisation since 2008. However, we see a notable decrease in the level of personalisation for medium sized companies. As with the 2009 results, we see that a “lack of customer data” is still a challenge for marketers with 46% of them agreeing or strongly agreeing to that statement. This could be blamed for the decrease in personalisation for mediumsized companies.

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

2008 2009 2011

Personalisation in large companies

Some None Unknown

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

2008 2009 2011

Personalisation in medium companies

Some None Unknown

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

2008 2009 2011

Personalisation in small companies

Some None Unknown

Page 16: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

14

Results

Email metrics being tracked

Q. What email metrics do you regularly track?

Compared to 2009 there is a significant increase in the percentage of metrics being tracked by respondents; most notably a 16% increase in Click-through rates and a 14% increase in bounce rates.

Further analysis found that those working in B2C marketing tracked more metrics than those in B2B.

Click-through rates

Open rate

Bounce rates

Unsubscribe rates

Delivery rates

Conversion rates

Don’t know

Response variations by list segment

59.2%

54.1%

44.3%

42.4%

38%

26.9%

23.7%

12.3%

Click-through rates

Open rate

Bounce rates

Unsubscribe rates

Delivery rates

Conversion rates

Don’t know

Response variations by list segment

B2B B2C

Page 17: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

15

Results

As previously stated we have seen a 16% increase since 2009 in the number of respondents using an outsourced email marketing solution. This would explain the consistent increase in the number of metrics being tracked since 2008 for B2B and B2C.

B2B trend 201120092008

B2C trend 201120092008

Open rate

Click through rates

Conversion rates Click to open ratio

Response variations bylist segments

Delivery rate Unsubscribe rates

Bounce rates

70%

80%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%

Open rate

Click through rates

Conversion rates Click to open ratio

Response variations bylist segments

Delivery rate Unsubscribe rates

Bounce rates

70%

80%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%

Page 18: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

10% 20% 30% 40%

16

Results

Average open rates

Q. On average, what overall open rates do you get from your mailings?

The 2009 survey showed that 38% of respondents did not know what their open rate was. There has only been a slight improvement this year with 32% of respondents saying they did not know the open rate of their email campaigns.

Analysis also shows that there is an 8% increase in the 21 -30% open rate since 2009 with B2C marketers enjoying much larger open-rates in this category than their B2B counterparts.However in the 31 - 51% + category, the B2B sector shows greater open rates compared with the B2C sector.

Average Open rates

Don’t know

21-30%

11-20%

31-40%

51+%

41-50%

0-10%

32.8%

20.2%

13.9%

12%

8.8%

6.3%

6%

0-10%

11-20%

21-30%

31-40%

41-50%

51+%

B2B B2C

Page 19: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

10% 20% 30% 40%

17

Results

Average click through rates

On average, what overall click through rates do you get from your mailings?

Measurement of click-through rates shows a steady improvement in this year’s survey compared to last year. In 2011, we saw a drop in the percentage of respondents who did not know what their click-through rates were. (36% in 2011, 49% in 2009 and 58% in 2008)

Measurement of click-through rates shows a steady improvement in this year’s survey compared to 2009. In the 2011 survey, we saw a drop in the percentage of respondents who did not know what their click-through rates were, (36% in 2011, 49% in 2009 and 58% in 2008).

Average click through rates by industry

Don’t know

6-10%

3-4%

21%+

16-20%

11-15%

0-2%

35.6%

15.4%

12.8%

12.2%

9.6%

9.3%

5.1%

0-2%

3-5%

6-10%

11-15%

16-20%

21+%

B2B B2C

Page 20: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

18

Results

Budgets allocated to email

What percentage of your marketing budget do you allocate to email marketing?

Respondents were asked to describe their email marketing spend. The majority of respondents (48%) spend less than 5% of their marketing budget on email marketing.

Compared to 2009, there is a slight increase in marketing spend on email marketing, especially in the 6 -15% range. This increase, although slight suggests that marketers value the importance and effectiveness of email marketing securing a good return on investment despite a backdrop of tough economic circumstances.

Further analysis of the survey results also shows us that both small and large organisations are increasing their marketing spend on email marketing compared with medium sized organisations who have decreased their spend.

0-2%

Don’t know

3-5%

6-10%

11-15%

21%+

16-20%

32.5%

23.7%

15.8%

12%

7.6%

5%

3.5%

% Marketing spend on email, by year

201120092008

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%0-2% 3-5% 6-10% 11-15% 16-20% 21%+

2011 % Marketing spend by company size

LargeMediumSmall

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%0-2% 3-5% 6-10% 11-15% 16-20% 21%+

Page 21: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%

19

Results

Expected change in expenditure

How do you expect your organisation’s expenditure on email to change in thenext 12 months?

When asked how their email marketing expenditure would change over the next 12 months, the vast majority (88%) said their expenditure would either increase (40%) or stay the stay the same (48%). There was also a drop in the number of marketers who said their budget would decrease which would suggest that despite such touch economic circumstances, marketers trust the ROI potential of email marketing.

Stay the same

Increase

Don’t know

Decrease

48%

39.8%

11%

1.3%

LargeMediumSmall

Stay the same

Increase

Don’t know

Decrease

Increase Stay the same Decrease Don’t know

11%

40%

47%

2%

Page 22: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

20

Results

Where email budgets will come from

Where do you expect this increase in budget to come from?

A large percentage of marketers expect their email marketing budget increase to come from “New budget” (17%), followed by “Print/press advertising budget” (16%) and “Direct mail” (9%).

We do not expect ourexpenditure to increase

Don’t know

From new budget

From print/pressadvertising budget

From direct mail budget

From TV, radio, cinema budget

From mobile/SMS budget

From Door-to-door budget

From field marketing budget

From inserts budget

From outdoor budget

From interactive TV budget

29.1%

21.5%

17.3%

15.6%

8.9%

3%

0.8%

0.8%

0.8%

0.4%

0.4%

0%

Page 23: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

21

Results

Future challenges facing email marketing

Q. Thinking about the challenges currently facing email marketing, please indicatewhether you agree or disagree with the following statements

Similar to previous years respondents hold the same opinions regarding the challenges facing email marketing. “Inbox overload” and “spam” remain the top challenges, closely followed by “deliverability” and “unwillingness of people to opt in to new email lists”.

Recipients' inboxes are swamped andall email suffers

Email doesn’t get the attention/budget it deserves

Unwillingness of people to opt into new email lists

Spam is eroding trust in email

A lack of customer data is holdingback email effectiveness

Deliverability is becoming more difficult

There is a lack of accountability/measurement

It is difficult to do effective emailcreative due to image blocking

Strongly agre Agree Neither agree or disagree Disagree Strongly disagree

31.9% 52.4% 10.1% 5.5% 0%

30.9% 43% 14.7% 10.7% 0.7%

11.8% 45.7% 31.9% 10.5% 0%

13.6% 48.1% 26.6% 11.4% 0.3%

15.2% 45.9% 23.8% 15.2% 0%

8.4%

11.3% 48.7% 22.7% 16%

34.1% 26.6% 24.4% 6.5%

1.3%

11.5% 34.4% 32.8% 19.7% 1.6%

Page 24: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

22

Results

Social media and email marketing

Q. Do you use social media in your emails?

This is the first year this question has been asked and it relates to the increase in social activity seen in both the B2B and B2C sector today. It is interesting to note that there is almost a 50/50 split between respondents who use social media in their email campaigns and those whodo not.

How social media is used in email marketingHere respondents were asked which areas of social networking they use in their email marketing campaigns.

Analysis shows that the number 1 use of social media in email marketing is to include links to their company Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn pages.

Yes

No

Q. If you use social networking in your emails, how do you use it?

We include a link to our Facebook page

We include a link to our Twitter page

We include a link to our Linkedin paage

We include a link to other socialnetwork platforms

Readers can share with theirFacebook page

We have a subscribe box onour facebook page

We feature a ‘like’ button

Readers can share with theirTwitter page

Readers can share with theirLinkedin page

Readers can share with other socialnetwork plarforms

81.5%

67.9%

44.4%

17.9%

17.3%

17.3%

16%

15.4%

9.9%

8.6%

49% 51%

Page 25: Newsweaver Email Marketing Insight Report 2011

23

Thank you

Newsweaver in conjunction with the Marketing Institute of Ireland would like to thank every one who participated in this years Email Marketing Insight Report.

If you have any questions about the report, please contact

Newsweaver on email [email protected]

The Marketing Institute of Ireland on email [email protected]