Archive for the ‘CAN-SPAM’ Category

How New Gmail Updates Affect Your Email Marketing Program

Monday, July 27th, 2009

gmail4I have been a loyal Gmail user for along time. Lately though I have been frustrated with Gmail, mainly due to the images in my HTML emails not displaying correctly. Well they have announced some changes that shed some light on the image issue.

From the Gmail Blog:

Now displaying images in messages from your contacts
Monday, July 20, 2009 5:58 PM
Posted by David de Kloet, Software Engineer

When an email references external images, Gmail usually doesn’t display them automatically. Instead we show placeholders and present you with the option to “Display images below” or “Always display images from” that sender.

display_images

We do this to help protect your privacy from spammers, who can use images and links to verify that your email address is real.

But often the messages you get with images are from friends or family and there’s no reason to worry about your privacy — you just want to see the photo of your newborn niece or the invitation design they’re sending you. So, in these cases, we’ve decided to start displaying images by default. Now, whenever someone you’ve emailed at least twice sends you a message containing images, you’ll see them right away. Note that we picked this threshold of two messages to start with, but we may tweak it if it doesn’t seem right going forward. And we only display images by default for authenticated messages (using SPF or DKIM). Gmail and other big mail providers usually authenticate their mail, but other services might not, so it’s possible you’ll get an email from one of your contacts where images aren’t displayed by default.

If you prefer to go back to the way things were, you can choose not to display images from certain senders or from anyone. To disable images from an individual sender, click “Don’t display from now on” under the “Show details” link of an email from them with images. To disable images from everybody, select “Ask before displaying external content” under “External content” on the general Settings tab.

What does this mean to Email Marketers?

Gmail will display images by defualt for emails from addresses that are in that person’s Contact’ list. It will also display images if you have sent that address at least 2 emails and that the address in question is authenticating using SPF or DKIM.

What Can I Do in My Email Marketing Program?

(more…)

Just Let Them Unsubscribe

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

If someone wants to unsubscribe, just let them unsubscribe.

Making the unsubscribe process difficult or confusing will just aggravate your (former) subscribers and cause real damage to their perception of your business or brand. Don’t make them log-in or make the text confusing. Your not only delaying the inevitable,  your making it worse. And why? If they can’t figure out how to unsubscribe, they might stay and turn into a more engaged subscriber?  Doubtful. The next time your name comes up, that bad experience will be their first memory. Just let them go, it will actually improve your program. (more…)

How to Email Your List After Campaign Inactivity

Friday, June 5th, 2009

Been awhile since you sent to  your email list?

A long while?

Follow YouTube’s lead….(click to enlarge)

youtube-tb

This is spot-on.  The only thing I would add to this would be… (more…)

Is Sony Crossing the Privacy Line?

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

Alex (the guy who posts on this blog along with me) told me to check out www.areyousuperbad.com because there was some funny videos on the site. I went on the site and naturally went to the restricted area. I mean really, who does not check out the naughty section?

site.png

So after you enter it asks you for your information:

age.png

After putting in false information it tells me the information is not correct:

wrong.png

Only after I put in my exact information does it let me in. I have an easy name “Jeff Mills” so it was able to easily identify if I was who I said I was. We tried it with a few other people in the office and if we put in a birthday even one day off of what our real birthday is, it would call us out.

I recently saw a clip on the news that said approximately 90% of people in the US can be identified if you know, gender, birthday, and zip code. If Sony is truly checking a massive database to validate your true identity, is that right? Is it legal? Should it be allowed? As a marketer, I want the most accurate info available, but even I feel this crosses the line. What do they do with the information now?

What do you think?

Transactional Email

Tuesday, June 27th, 2006

I came across this interesting article that ClickZ published last week about transactional email and leveraging it for your marketing. Now I am sure everyone has thought about customer touch points and the appropriate time to “market” to someone, but you know what, it is always the right time, it just depends on how you position it…

How many e-mail messages does your company send each month? I mean all messages, not just those sent with the express purpose of e-mail marketing. If you tally the numbers, you may get a surprise. For many companies, their commercial or marketing e-mail quantities pale in comparison to another type of e-mail: transactional messages.

Transactional messages are defined under CAN-SPAM as any e-mail “facilitating, completing or confirming a previously agreed upon transaction.” Unlike commercial messages, transactional messages aren’t required to carry any of the following:

- An advertisement notation at the top
- A U.S. Postal Service address
- An unsubscribe link

There’s another big difference between commercial and transactional messages: metrics. Though DoubleClick reports commercial messages averaging open rates of 26.9 percent and CTRs (define) of 7.2 percent in Q3 2005, Postfuture showed transactional messages pulling open rates greater than 70 percent, with CTRs surpassing 50 percent in 2004. A 2003 MarketingSherpa study found recipients viewed transactional messages more positively than other types of e-mail; they scored a 4.2 rating on a scale of 1 (not positive) to 5 (very positive).

Many companies have taken baby steps to incorporate marketing messages into transactional e-mail. A client I’m currently working with includes commercial information in a brief PS at the end of its customer service response e-mail. These e-mail messages are currently text, not HTML, and though the message is there, no one feels it’s terribly effective.

So I’ve challenged the client: Can we maintain the transactional nature of these e-mail messages while making them more effective marketing tools? Can we make better use of these moments when we have the customer’s attention and interest, but not make it so in-your-face that we alienate them?

It’s a fine line, but I’m finding it can be done.

The first key is to understand CAN-SPAM rules around mixed messages: e-mail that contains both transactional and commercial information. For these types of messages, CAN-SPAM relies on the e-mail’s primary purpose to determine whether it’s classified as transactional or commercial. Key elements here are:

- The subject line. Is it referencing the transactional or commercial information?
- The content. Which is first/most prominent, the transactional or commercial information?
- If both reference the transactional, you’ve got a shot at maintaining the transactional designation. But it’s not guaranteed.

Some articles about determining the mixed message’s primary purpose reference say as long as you keep the message two-thirds transactional and one-third commercial, the primary purpose will be viewed as transactional. But lawyers I’ve been working with on this aren’t comfortable with that blanket statement.

We’ve been focusing on the impression the e-mail will leave on recipients. Will readers feel they’re being marketed to or feel this is a relevant message about their previous transaction with a relevant, but unobtrusive, advertisement in it? If it’s the former it’s commercial; if it’s the latter, it’s transactional.

How do you put structure behind this type of vague litmus test? We created samples of mixed messages and discussed them with the attorneys. We didn’t just get a thumbs-up/thumbs-down on the transactional primary purpose on each, we talked about why the e-mail sample passed or failed the test. This allowed us to create some basic guidelines, knowing these alone don’t guarantee the transactional primary purpose (we’ll still have to pass the impression test mentioned above). But they make it more likely. Our guidelines:

The subject line must be completely transactional, with no mention of the commercial information.
For text e-mail, the transactional message must appear first, in its entirety. Only when the entire transactional message has been delivered can the commercial part of the e-mail begin.

We did get the OK to include a brief, soft-sell reference to the commercial message in the first paragraph (“My name is Jeanne and I will be handling your request today. I’ve also included a ‘Did you know’ offer at the bottom of this e-mail. Take a look, it may interest you.”).
The commercial part of the message shouldn’t be more prominent than the transactional message.

For text messages, bullet points were a no-no in the commercial portion of the information, as they make it too prominent. Bullet points were OK, though, if the message was HTML.
HTML provides more flexibility in how the commercial message could be presented and where it could appear while keeping the primary purpose transactional:
Including a narrow right column in the e-mail as a location for the commercial message was approved. In doing so, we were able to get the message into the preview pane and make it more prominent, without making it too prominent. Also OK was a box in the top right with the commercial message in it.
A light colored background behind the commercial message was approved, so long as the commercial message didn’t take up more than about half the right column.
Including a longer commercial message, one that took up all the right column, was fine, so long as it didn’t have a colored background.
Bolded text, used sparingly in the commercial portion of the message, was OK.
Remember, none of this is gospel, and none comes from CAN-SPAM regulations. These guidelines are based on one legal department’s interpretation of the CAN-SPAM rules for primary purpose. You’ll need to set your own guidelines, based on what your attorneys recommend. But these may serve as a starting point for discussion with them.

One more thought: why does CAN-SPAM matter? Why not just concede that although these messages refer to a previous transaction, their primary purpose is commercial? So you add in the “advertisement” notation at the top (required if your list is not 100 percent opt-in), the USPS address, and an unsubscribe link. What’s the big deal?

It’s really not a big deal for the e-mail itself. It becomes a big deal longer term. If you designate customer service e-mail as commercial and someone unsubscribes, you won’t be able to send her another commercial message. So the next time she submits a question via e-mail to customer service, you’d have to respond with a transactional, not commercial, e-mail.

Can it be done? Sure. But it adds a layer of complexity; you must have two different messages, one transactional and one commercial, for each customer service issue. Most companies want to avoid this, hence the importance of maintaining the transactional nature of the e-mails.

Full articlel available here