Email Insider Summit, Day 3: Moving the Needle, Awards, Are You Smarter Than a Thought Leader?
The final day of the Winter 2008 Email Insider Summit was dominated by a 2009 pledge, an awards ceremony, and a challenge to all.
For a raw, unedited play-by-play of the Summit, check out the Twitter conversation.
The Pledge
The pledge was a list of 7 (+1) email marketing commitments proposed by moderator Stephanie Miller (Return Path), Jack Hogan (Lifescript), and Brad Bacon (The Weather Channel). As Stephanie, Jack, and Brad stepped through their 45-minute presentation, they challenged marketers in the room (and those reading this now) to make several commitments related to their 2009 email marketing strategy. We were all asked to sign individually pledges promising the following:
- I will employ long term thinking and trend my campaign-level data.
- I will only collect data that I will use and I will use the data that I have. I will ensure that my sign up process is simple, clear and easy.
- I will send every subscriber a truly optimized welcome message that excites them about about my program and sets the stage for a satisfying email experience.
- I will make at least 30% of my total messages each month tailored to the subscriber’s lifecycle, interests, or status. Really tailored. No cheating.
- I will ensure that subscribers who opt out of my email messages will not receive another email that they don’t want. Period.
- I will give my subscribers choices about what they want, and how frequently.
- I will never place a hyphen in the word “email.”
- I will….(this one was left blank for *you* to complete).
Other interesting tidbits from this panel…
- Jack Hogan said that unsubscribe rates were high on their welcome messages. However, he was okay with this because, “if they don’t want it, we don’t want to send it.”
- Stephanie Miller quoted a recent Silverpop study: 67% know but don’t care that the “report spam” button hurts marketers.
- Brad Bacon admitted that due to their strong brand awareness, the Weather Channel had the luxury of high double opt-in rates and low unsubscribes/complaints. He said, “people want our content!” This makes it hard to justify improving their programs (although he admitted several areas that needed tweaking).
- Jack Hogan showed off the Lifescript branded “Hassle Free” one-click unsubscribe button that is located in the upper right of every message. (Aside: I wonder if this button is “bulletproof”). According to Jack, there has been nearly a 1-to-1 correlation between unsubscribes (up) and complaints (down). This keeps the ISPs happy and helps overall deliverability.
The Awards Ceremony
Next up were the Email Insider Academy Awards. The trio Lisa Harmon and Aaron Smith (Smith-Harmon) and Jessica Morris (Pottery Barn) rewarded several marketers in the Lifecycle Creative Awards.
The Challenge
The morning concluded with several email industry thought leaders discussing the “new tools for new age marketing.” Ryan Deutsch (StrongMail Systems), Ed Henrich (Responsys), and Chip House (ExactTarget) led a Q&A aptly named “Are You Smarter Than a Thought Leader?”
They proposed a series of challenges for marketers as we head into 2009. Audience members were rewarded with a $5 Starbucks card for offering a compelling case for why they were wrong. A sampling of the statements are below:
- Ryan thinks: You should stop sending promotional campaigns.
- Ed thinks: You should use the tools you have and the tools will get better.
- Chip thinks: You should enable cross-channel purchasing opportunities via personalized email coupons.
- Ryan thinks: You should invest in a centralized database of record.
- Ed thinks: You should be talking more about PROCESS.
- Chip thinks: You should find ways to engage and capture customers via inbound SMS promotions. (I won a gift card for challenging this one).
Overall, the Email Insider Summit delivered on their promise. It was 3 days of marketers and email thought leaders converging to discuss the current state of email marketing and offering predictions for what’s to come in the near future. This Summit is one you want to add to your calendars for Spring 2009.
Be on the lookout for subsequent blog posts over the next few weeks that will dig deeper into many of the topics covered at the Winter 2008 Email Insider Summit.
DJ Waldow
Director of Best Practices & Deliverability at Bronto


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