ROI – Dotdigital https://dotdigital.com Mon, 19 Jan 2026 14:28:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://cdn.dotdigital.com/dtg/2021/11/favicon-61950c71180a3.png ROI – Dotdigital https://dotdigital.com 32 32 What is revenue attribution? Models, examples, and how it works https://dotdigital.com/blog/what-is-revenue-attribution/ Fri, 16 Jan 2026 10:15:24 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=74375 As a marketer, you probably feel the growing pressure to show exactly how your efforts impact your business’s bottom line. That’s where revenue attribution comes in. In this guide, we’ll explore what revenue attribution is, how to measure it, the models available, and why it often provides more actionable insights than traditional ROI.

Whether you’re a Marketing Director, a Content Manager, an Email Marketer or somewhere in between, understanding revenue attribution helps you make smarter decisions, allocate budget effectively, and improve campaign performance.

What is revenue attribution?

Revenue attribution is all about connecting the dots between your marketing efforts and the revenue they generate. It looks at different touchpoints across the customer journey and shows which channels are driving sales. Think of it as a way to see what’s really working and what’s not, so you can optimize your marketing strategies with confidence.

Different products, markets, and roles require different approaches. A Marketing Director might want a high-level overview of top-performing channels, while a Content Manager might be more interested in which campaigns are influencing engagement along the journey. That’s why having a flexible attribution model and conversion window is key to success at an individual and business level.

Why revenue attribution matters now

Customers interact with multiple channels like email, SMS, web, social, ads before making a purchase. Budgets are tight, and stakeholders want clear proof of ROI.

Revenue overview bar graph compared to the previous year.

Revenue attribution lets marketers see which channels and campaigns are actually driving revenue, not just clicks or impressions. It’s no longer enough to measure success by the number of leads or total conversions; understanding the contribution of each touchpoint is essential to making smarter, data-driven decisions.

How do you measure revenue attribution?

Revenue attribution is measured through different models, each suited to particular marketing goals or roles. Let’s break down the most commonly used ones:

First touch

This model gives 100% of credit to the first touchpoint a customer interacts with. It’s great for identifying which channels are bringing in new customers. The downside however is that it doesn’t show how later interactions influenced the final conversion.

Last touch

Opposite to first touch, this model credits the final interaction before conversion. It’s simple to track and easy to understand, but it ignores all the other touchpoints that played a role. In Dotdigital, this is known as “direct campaign revenue.”

Table highlighting what revenue attribution does and it's benefits

Linear

Linear attribution spreads credit evenly across all touchpoints. So if you have five touchpoints, each gets 20%. This gives you a balanced view, but it doesn’t highlight which touchpoints were more influential than others.

Time-decay

Time-decay gives more credit to interactions closer to the final conversion. It’s useful for understanding which channels drive conversions regularly, though it may undervalue top-of-funnel efforts. Dotdigital refers to this as “assisted campaign revenue.”

Positional

Positional attribution assigns 40% of credit to both the first and last touchpoints, with the remaining 20% spread across middle interactions. While it’s more nuanced, it can still undervalue the middle touchpoints.

At Dotdigital, you can choose between last touch or time-decay models, and customize a fully flexible conversion window to suit your business and customers.

Revenue attribution for email

In the Dotdigital platform, our revenue attribution for email uses direct campaign revenue (last touch) or assisted campaign revenue (time-decay and linear). Here’s how it works:

  1. Interactions between a contact and your campaign (like clicks) are tracked.
  2. A unique tracking code is assigned to the customer and stored as a cookie.
  3. All subsequent actions, including purchases, are attributed to the right campaign within your chosen conversion window.

This approach captures multi-touch, cross-device journeys, giving you a complete view of which campaigns are driving revenue. Dotdigital’s reporting tools then help you identify high-performing campaigns and make data-driven optimizations.

Revenue attribution for SMS

SMS is the ideal channel to support email, due to high open rates and engagement from customers. So offering revenue attribution for SMS gives you that extra overview of overall campaign success. As with email, it tracks both direct and assisted campaign revenue to easily identify how different touchpoints perform throughout the customer journey.

It works the same way as revenue attribution for email. Each SMS is assigned a unique tracking code which is embedded in all links in the SMS message, allowing you to track all interactions, like clicks and conversions.

Any click is recorded and associated with the specific campaign and message. If your customer then goes on to complete a purchase, the revenue generated will be attributed from the specific action within the corresponding SMS campaign.

ROI vs. revenue attribution

For many years, ROI was the gold standard for checking how your marketing is performing vs converted sales. But since revenue attribution came on the scene, it has begun to take over as the leading method of tracking marketing effort vs sales.

Financial and technical data analysis graph showing search findings

There’s several benefits to using revenue attribution over traditional ROI methods of tracking. Here’s some of the most important ones:

  • Revenue attribution provides more granular insights to pinpoint specific marketing activities that drive sales, enable better decision-making and help optimize each channel
  • By understanding which channels and campaigns contribute the most, you can distribute and allocate budgets more efficiently and prioritize high performing channels
  • Attribution models can consider multiple touchpoints, so companies can measure the impact of their entire marketing funnel across various channels. ROI only looks at the whole picture without breaking down the details
  • Revenue attribution helps identify the most effective marketing channels and campaigns, enabling companies to refine and focus their strategies and efforts on what works best
  • While ROI provides a general measure of the profit generated from marketing investments, revenue attribution applies a value to specific touchpoints, offering a more detailed analysis of marketing performance
  • Revenue attribution equips you with better information for creating long-term marketing strategies and adapting as needed. You can also use this for annual campaigns by using your results from previous years (such as Black Friday/Cyber Monday campaigns)
  • By mapping out the customer journey across touchpoints and stages, you can create more personalized and engaging marketing experiences for you and your customers

Some common pitfalls and trade-offs

Revenue attribution gives you powerful insights, but there’s a few things to watch out for:

  • Attribution window too short or too long. If your window is too short, you might miss important touchpoints. Too long, and you could over-credit interactions that had little impact
  • Over-crediting last touch. Focusing only on the final interaction can hide the influence of earlier channels in the journey
  • Ignoring offline conversions. Purchases or interactions that happen offline or outside tracked channels may not be counted
  • Data quality and integration issues. Attribution is only as good as the data you feed into it. Missing or inconsistent data can skew results

Being aware of these trade‑offs helps you interpret results accurately and make smarter marketing decisions.

How to get started with revenue attribution

If you’re an existing ecommerce customer using the Dotdigital platform, you can start using revenue attribution straight away. Your customer and retail dashboards already hold all the data you need to begin.

Set your attribution window

Your attribution window controls how long a touchpoint can influence a purchase.
The default is five days, but you can change this to match your sales cycle.
There’s a few things to think about:

  • Longer buying journeys need a longer window
  • Fast-moving products usually work better with a shorter window
  • You can tweak your settings later if something doesn’t feel right
  • It helps to check what your other models are doing (Google Analytics uses 30 days by default)

Use data to guide your choice

Take a quick look at how your customers usually behave. If most shoppers return a week later to buy, a five-day window won’t tell the full story. If customers buy within a couple of hours, a long window might over-credit activity that didn’t make an impact.

Accurate revenue, no matter the currency

One thing that makes Dotdigital’s attribution stand out is how well it handles global sales.

If a customer pays in dollars, yen, pounds, or any other currency, our built-in Forex rates convert revenue back to the exact exchange rate on the day of purchase. You get reliable numbers you can trust, without any manual work.

Not a customer yet?

If you’re not a Dotdigital customer yet, we’d love to show you how revenue attribution works in the platform. Get in touch and we’ll walk you through how it can support your marketing strategy and give you clear insight into what drives revenue.

Final thoughts

Revenue attribution gives you the clarity you need to understand what’s really driving revenue across your customer journey. When you can see which channels, messages, and moments make the biggest impact, you’re in a stronger position to budget smarter, improve performance, and build more meaningful customer experiences.

Whether you’re refining your attribution window, exploring different models, or looking for a clearer view of your multi-channel activity, the goal is the same. You want data you can trust and insights you can act on.

If you’re ready to take the next step, we’re always here to help you make the most of your data and turn it into growth.

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What is the value of an email address? https://dotdigital.com/blog/what-is-the-value-of-an-email-address/ Mon, 17 Nov 2025 20:00:00 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=96198 Marketers are under a lot of pressure at the moment. Budgets are tight, channels are multiplying, and everyone’s chasing the same goals: drive sales, increase revenue, and improve customer lifetime value (CLV). But while 60% of marketing leaders are prioritizing increasing CLV, many still struggle to measure the ROI of one of their most profitable channels: email.

That’s surprising, because email is a long-standing part of the marketing mix. And, it’s a channel that, despite being told every year it’s no longer relevant, continues to thrive. According to Litmus, for every dollar spent on email marketing, marketers can get $36–$50 in return, so it’s no wonder global email marketing revenue is projected to hit $14.5 billion by 2026.

It’s safe to say email is still the MVP of marketing channels. The inbox is where customers want to engage. It’s personal, permission-based, and gives customers control over how they interact with brands.

Marketers clearly know the value of this channel, too. Brands scored the highest in the email marketing category in our latest Hitting the mark report, and it remains the preferred channel for consumers, according to our consumer research report, the loyalty divide. But while email continues to outperform other channels, many brands still aren’t tapping its full potential, especially when it comes to email list growth and long-term engagement.

An email address is the starting point of a relationship. It’s your invitation to deliver value, build trust, and set the tone for a long-term connection. Once you’ve earned that inbox spot, you unlock the ability to retarget, nurture, and delight your customers over time.

Need to know email marketing stats

Why email list growth matters

But performance that delivers results doesn’t happen by accident. To get the most from your email marketing, you need to start the relationship strong and think about how to grow your list strategically. A strong list growth strategy doesn’t just fill your database; it lays the foundation for smarter automation, richer personalization, and lasting loyalty.

Yet, in our latest Hitting the mark report, only 45% of brands had a clear list growth strategy, using tools like popovers or attention-grabbing sign-up tactics. The remaining 55% buried their sign-ups in footers or hid them behind account creation. In other words, more than half of the brands are making it harder than it should be to kickstart a relationship with prospective customers, missing out on list growth opportunities.

And that’s a problem because if subscribing isn’t easy, most visitors won’t bother, and once they leave, that connection is lost.

The benefits of a strong email list growth strategy

Making it easy and enticing to subscribe creates a reliable way to boost CLV and build long-term loyalty. Plus, a well-planned email list growth strategy arms you with everything you need to deliver smarter automation, sharper personalization, and drive sustainable revenue growth.

A strong strategy can:

  • Increase CLV: Engaged subscribers buy more often, spend more per purchase, and stay loyal longer, directly improving customer lifetime value
  • Capture zero- and first-party data: Easily gather the insights you need to personalize campaigns, segment audiences, and even inform your broader marketing strategy
  • Build trust and transparency: Set expectations from the first interaction by being clear about data use, consent, and the value exchange
  • Enable smarter automation: Trigger personalized journeys that welcome, nurture, and convert new subscribers automatically
  • Improve engagement rates: Deliver tailored content that feels relevant and timely, boosting open, click, and conversion rates
  • Strengthen retention and loyalty: Turn new sign-ups into long-term brand advocates through consistent, value-driven communication

How to calculate the value of an email address

If you’re wondering whether it’s worth investing in your email list growth efforts, here’s a simple exercise to help you find out: calculate how much a single email address is worth to your business. Because when you can put a number to it (even a rough one), it becomes incredibly clear how powerful your acquisition efforts can be.

The value of one address

A single email address represents a relationship, a potential sale, and a share of your brand’s long-term revenue. To estimate what that relationship is worth, start with two numbers:

  • Your total email-attributed revenue from the past 12 months
  • The number of active subscribers (people who actually open, click, and convert — not your total list size)

Then use this simple calculation:

Email value per address = total email revenue ÷ active subscribers

Example: $20,000 ÷ 10,000 active addresses = $2 per subscriber(per year)

It’s a simple calculation, but it’s eye-opening. Even if that number seems small, it adds up fast when you think about the lifetime of that relationship.

The lifetime value of one email address

Now, let’s think about how long a subscriber typically stays active. If you lose around 5% of your list each month, your average subscriber lifespan is roughly 20 months (1 ÷ 0.05). Multiply your per-subscriber value by that number to get their lifetime value (LTV).

Lifetime value = Email value per address × average subscriber lifespan

Example: $2 × 20 months = $40 lifetime value per subscriber

Even if a single subscriber only contributes $2 a month, over time, they could be worth $40 to your brand. This number will increase the more they engage and when they make repeat purchases.

The value of your entire list

To get an even bigger picture, multiply that lifetime value by the number of active subscribers you have.

List value = lifetime value × active subscribers

Example: $40 × 50,000 active subscribers = $2,000,000 total list value

That’s the potential of your email list, which makes it worth thinking carefully about how to fill it with highly engaged subscribers.

How to grow your email list with engaged subscribers

Your email list growth strategy is about attracting the right people and giving them a reason to stick around. When you focus on quality, intent, and value exchange, you’ll build richer lists of engaged customers who love your brand.

Here’s how to build a list full of genuinely engaged prospects:

1. Get your placement right

Your sign-up form’s location can make or break your list growth efforts. If your only option to subscribe lives in the footer of your website, then you’re relying on visitors to scroll all the way down, which most won’t.

Think about where people are most engaged; every touchpoint is a chance to encourage email list growth. With 54% of consumers discovering new brands on mobile, the experience has to be quick and easy to act on. Popovers can work well, but they’re not the only way to get noticed. Try adding multiple touchpoints on your website, like banners, sticky headers, or embedded sign-up forms, to make subscribing feel seamless.

Example of email list growth by Rebel Active

Activewear brand Rebel Active keeps a permanent sign-up CTA in its website header, making it easy to subscribe anytime. The homepage also promotes its loyalty program, giving visitors an extra reason to join.

2. Include clear consent and privacy messaging

Trust starts the moment someone shares their email with you, and it’s key to sustainable list growth. Yet in Hitting the mark, 32% of brands didn’t communicate their privacy policy or collect proper consent.

That’s not just risky, it’s a missed opportunity to build trust and confidence in your brand. Being upfront about how you’ll use a customer’s data and linking to your privacy policy shows transparency and respect.

Beyond being a legal must-have (in compliance with GDPR, CAN-SPAM, and various US state laws), this shows customers you value their data and won’t abuse their trust. With consumer confidence in data security at an all-time low because of recent and ongoing data breaches, this reassurance goes a long way in building relationships based on trust.

Email list growth strategy consent and privacy policy example by Mammut

Mammut keeps its privacy and consent messaging short, clear, and customer-friendly. A simple tick box at the end of the form lets subscribers know exactly what they’re opting into, while a link to more details keeps things transparent without overwhelming the experience.

3. Use smart attention-grabbing tactics

Sign-up opportunities should adapt to where the visitor is in their journey. If you’re using popovers, make them contextual.

A few popover tactics you can try are:

  • Delayed scroll popovers: Let visitors explore your homepage or landing page first, then invite them to subscribe halfway down the page
  • Timed triggers: Show popovers after a set time period, like 45 seconds, to reach visitors who’ve clearly engaged or haven’t bounced
  • Exit-intent prompts: Offer a light-touch “stay in touch” message before someone leaves your site
  • Save your basket messages: Convert browsers who aren’t ready to buy yet but want to keep in touch

Just make sure you’re not overdoing it. Use conditions to avoid showing popovers to existing contacts, to avoid turning your helpful prompt into an annoyance.

Email list growth example by BEIS using popover strategy

BÉIS uses a delayed popover to invite visitors to subscribe and sweetens the deal with a 25% discount. It’s a smart example of value exchange done well.

And remember, attention-grabbing doesn’t have to mean adding a popover to your site. If your website visits happen predominantly over mobile, popovers might not be ideal. Try using interactive tools like quizzes or style finders that collect valuable data in a fun, opt-in way. It’s engagement that doubles as insight.

Email list growth example using quiz for data collection

Health and nutrition brand Free Soul knows that choosing supplements can be confusing. To help, it offers an interactive quiz that delivers personalized product recommendations and collects valuable subscriber data in a natural, engaging way.

4. Be clear, open, and value-driven

The best-performing sign-ups are built on honesty. Tell customers what you’re collecting and why you’re collecting it.

Instead of saying “Tell us your birthday,” flip it to “Get a birthday treat from us.” Make the value exchange obvious to the subscriber. For every piece of data they share, they should feel like they’re getting something better in return. This small shift builds trust, reinforces transparency, and positions your brand as one that gives more than it takes.

Grill'd example of using incentives to entice email list growth

Grill’d makes data sharing irresistible by clearly explaining why they collect information like birthdays and favorite Aussie Rules teams, and what subscribers get in return. It’s transparent, relevant, and builds trust from the start of the relationship.

5. Weave loyalty into your sign-up experience

Loyalty isn’t the final stage of the customer journey; it should be your brand’s mindset that shows up right from the first interaction. Shoppers today expect to get something back for their engagement, and loyalty programs are a big part of that.

But according to Hitting the mark, only 22% of brands integrated loyalty or advocacy into welcome and onboarding messages, and just 9% had a fully integrated loyalty program across the entire customer journey.

If you have one, make it a feature of your sign-up experience. Position your loyalty or rewards program as a reason why visitors should subscribe. This shifts the mindset from “giving your email away” to “joining something valuable.”

Gant example using loyalty program as tactic for email list growth

GANT takes a loyalty-first approach to list growth, shifting the message from “Sign up to our emails” to “Join the club.” This subtle change makes subscribing feel like joining an exclusive community, which sparks instant engagement and long-term loyalty.

Strong lists build stronger brands

Your email list is one of your most valuable marketing assets, but only if it’s full of people who genuinely want to hear from you. Keep focusing on meaningful list growth, quality data, and transparent value exchanges, and the ROI will follow naturally. When you treat list growth as an ongoing strategy, not a one-time task, your inbox becomes one of the most powerful drivers of loyalty and revenue your brand has.

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4 benefits of targeted email marketing https://dotdigital.com/blog/four-benefits-targeted-email-marketing/ Tue, 20 Jun 2023 08:36:24 +0000 https://dot.tiltedchair.co/four-benefits-targeted-email-marketing/ Email marketing tactics have changed significantly in recent years thanks to technological advances. But one thing that hasn’t changed is the importance of targeted email marketing. Sending one message to your entire marketing database isn’t enough. 

Consistently sending the same message will eventually damage your brand reputation, increase unsubscribes, and ultimately hold up conversions. Sales will dip and profits will suffer. All because you failed to engage customers enough.

Targeted emails don’t have to be complicated or hyper-personalized works of art. Successful email marketing strategies are all about understanding and catering to your audience’s individual needs and preferences. Read on to learn four key benefits of targeted email marketing. These benefits will revolutionize your campaigns and boost your business growth.

What is targeted email marketing?

We all know that email marketing is the most successful channel available to marketers today. Email marketing offers $42 ROI for every $1 spent. But that’s just the beginning of what’s possible.

You can significantly improve your ROI, sales, and profits by adopting targeted email marketing.

Targeted email marketing is a way of ensuring your emails make an impact in the inbox. Using the information you already hold about your customers, you can send tailored messages to specific sets of subscribers. You target them.

To improve your email marketing strategy, it’s important to segment and personalize based on customer information like their interests, age, and gender. This level of personalization impresses readers and improves their experience with your brand. This increases the likelihood that they’ll act on your calls to action and remain loyal customers.

4 benefits of targeted email marketing

Let’s look at these four benefits of targeted email marketing…

Improve relevancy

Segmentation ensures you’re sending a more relevant message to your audience. You can divide your customer base into distinct groups based on shared characteristics, such as demographics, preferences, past purchase behavior, or engagement history. 

By categorizing customers into these segments, you can tailor your email campaigns to address the unique needs, desires, and expectations of each specific group. Customers who receive relevant content are more likely to engage with your email marketing efforts. Customers will click and convert because targeted emails appeal to their goals and offer value to them.

It’s most effective to gather information and segment new subscribers through their welcome program. You should regularly prompt customers during their customer journey to update their marketing preferences.

Segmentation is an essential and under-utilized email marketing tactic and helps build stronger connections with your audience. But, the more you segment and target your audience, the better your results will be.

Increase ROI

Sending targeted and personalized emails leads to higher engagement rates and increased sales conversions. With more customers converting, your revenue will naturally rise. By understanding your customers’ preferences and needs, you can provide them with targeted discounts and promotions that cater to their interests. This approach allows you to deliver the appropriate message at the right moment, resulting in higher customer engagement. When you deliver relevant messages, engaged readers convert faster. And more conversions mean more revenue.

If you know customers are interested in a specific product range, target them with offers that appeal to them. Even basic segmentation such as age and gender significantly affects your ROI. Marketers can enjoy ROI increases of up to 760% when sending targeted, segmented campaigns.

Better customer relationships

We’ve already mentioned that improved relevancy in your emails will demonstrate your brand’s value to the customer. In the long run, it will also help you build and nurture long-term relationships with your customers. 

When you know your customers and segment and personalize your emails accordingly, customers will hold your marketing in high regard. By regularly sending relevant content, customers will develop high expectations from your emails. The more you meet – and exceed – these expectations, the more their trust and respect for your brand will increase.

Longer customer retention

Targeted email marketing not only makes building relationships with subscribers easier; it also makes retaining them easier. 

Creating personalized and targeted email marketing campaigns can greatly enhance customer retention. It’s important to build strong relationships with both potential and existing customers by continuously learning about their preferences and optimizing your email campaigns. 

By doing so, you increase engagement and ensure your customers receive value from your emails. This fosters loyalty and customer satisfaction, ultimately leading to repeat purchases and positive word-of-mouth recommendations.

Shoppers who value your experiences will seek you out, in and out of the inbox. If you replicate these experiences in your cross-channel marketing they’ll think about you first, every time.

Optimize for ultimate success

It’s important to optimize your marketing strategy as customers’ needs and goals change with every conversion. Encourage customers to update their marketing preferences and keep track of email marketing metrics such as opens, click-through rates, and ROI to determine which tactics are most effective. Adjust your campaigns accordingly to align with your customer’s interests and behaviors.

Summary

By using targeted email marketing strategies you can connect with your audience, increase ROI, build stronger customer relationships, and improve retention rates. It’s a powerful tool that can significantly impact your digital marketing efforts. To stay ahead of the competition, it’s highly recommended to invest in targeted email marketing strategies to take your marketing campaigns to the next level.

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How to drive revenue from abandoned carts https://dotdigital.com/blog/how-to-drive-revenue-from-abandoned-carts/ Tue, 27 Sep 2022 12:00:00 +0000 https://dot.tiltedchair.co/how-to-drive-revenue-from-abandoned-carts/

How to drive revenue from abandoned carts

Young woman shops on her laptop

Abandoned carts are a problem for many businesses. December is the month with the highest level of online basket abandonment, followed by November and January. With cart abandonment rates averaging around 70%, that’s a lot of missed revenue. In fact, it’s estimated that abandoned carts cost ecommerce businesses $18 billion a year.

Customer acquisition isn’t cheap, and nurturing a customer to checkout takes time and effort, so we don’t want to lose them at the final hurdle.

An abandoned cart is especially damaging if a customer goes on to purchase from, and form a lifelong loyalty to, another brand. Of those who abandoned their online cart, 26% went on to buy the item from another retailer. This issue is more prominent with younger customers, retailers identify millennial shoppers (aged 25-34) as the most indecisive online, followed by 18-24-year-olds.

What can you do about abandoned carts?

Marketing automation allows you to target customers based on their actions, or inactions. This is especially relevant to abandoned cart situations. You have a pool of customers who’ve expressed an interest in your product, so utilize email marketing and SMS to keep the conversation going – even after a customer has abandoned their cart.

Can abandoned cart campaigns work outside of ecommerce?

It’s important not to think of abandoned cart programs as only applicable to B2C or ecommerce brands. Abandoned browse emails can be used in a very similar way. For a B2B brand or service consider what your high intent actions are. Whether it’s filling in a form or viewing a pricing page, you can create abandoned browse emails to capture any customers who drop off without completing an action.

Apply similar tactics as ecommerce brands, identify what the hang-up could be, and address it in your follow up automation.

Why do customers abandon carts?

The reason people are abandoning their carts are plentiful, a study found that:

  • 48% of customers abandoned their cart as extra costs were too high (taxes, shipping, etc.)
  • 24% didn’t want to create an account
  • 22% said delivery options were too slow
  • 18% didn’t trust the site with their payment card information

Other reasons cited were that the site took too long, the returns policy wasn’t up to scratch, and not enough payment options were available.

How to drive revenue from abandoned carts

Once you know the pain points for your customers, you can address them. The key reasons given by consumers all center around trust, value, and ease.

Build trust

Social proof is the psychological human behavior of copying others, as if other people are doing something, it indicates it’s a safe, and good, thing to do. Social proof in marketing isn’t a new phenomenon, and it’s extremely powerful – especially to first-time customers who don’t know your brand first-hand yet.

Social proof

This example from Radley uses subtle social proof by stating that the product is ‘selling fast’. This lets customers know that what they like is approved by others. It also highlights it’s Platinum Feefo review rating, and lets customers know they can read more if they want to.

Share your reviews

Including your overall brand review rating, or specific product ratings relevant to the abandoned cart in question, is a great way to deliver trust. 92% of consumers hesitate to make a purchase if there are no customer reviews, and a huge 92% of B2B buyers are more likely to purchase after reading a trusted review. Dotdigital integrates with review platforms such as Trustpilot, Reviews.io, and Yotpo so that reviews are easily incorporated into your automation campaigns.

Include user-generated content

UGC is content created by your existing customers, such as social media posts, and is great for showing potential customers that others love your brand. Similar to reviews, UGC is centered around social proof. UGC is often less polished, and will feel more genuine to the consumer as it doesn’t come directly from the brand.

Offer value

Value is key, especially as we are entering a cost of living crisis. In our recent research, 44% of respondents stated ‘the brand has affordable prices’ as a top consideration when choosing a brand to purchase from.

Discounts and data capture

This example from florist brand Bouqs offers a unique looking discount code to the customer to get them to shop their abandoned cart. The email also features an SMS marketing capture block, offering an even higher discount to the customer in exchange for their details. Offering perks as an incentive for signing up to other marketing channels or your loyalty scheme improves the customer’s experience and increases their lifetime value. It’s win-win.

Discounts and RFM

In terms of discounting, you don’t want to just throw out discounts to everyone. Not only will this impact your bottom line, but customers will get wise to this and start to expect and rely on this before purchasing. Use Dotdigital’s RFM (recency, and frequency modelling) to decipher if a customer needs a discount to get them over the line, or if patience and a nudge will be enough to get them to order at full price.

Discounts and AOV

Another thing to consider is how much is the customer spending, is a discount worthwhile? If you offer a discount that’s conditional on spending over a set amount, you can not only save the abandoned cart, but also increase the order value. This is where you should include AI-powered product recommendations too, making it super easy for the customer to add to their cart.

Make it easy for the customer

Ease is so important in a world where everyone is short on time. It seems obvious, but make sure your abandoned cart campaigns include the products the customer has abandoned. You can do this easily by integrating your store or website with Dotdigital.

A simple customer journey

You want the customer journey to have as few steps as possible, so ensuring that the user can click-through and the item is already in their cart is ideal, or at least on the right page and ready to go. If you’re offering free shipping or other discount incentive, set it up so that this is auto-applied too, and the user doesn’t need to copy and paste codes.

SMS marketing

Remember email isn’t the only channel at your disposal. SMS marketing can cut through the noise of a busy inbox to grab customers’ attention. This example from denim brand Good American names the product to jog the shopper’s memory, offers 10% off, and links through to checkout. Keeping it super succinct and to the point.

Highlight perks

The downside of online shopping? You can’t fully examine the product or try it on. So returns policies are super important. If you have a strong returns policy, make sure this is communicated in your abandoned cart campaigns.

Beauty brand Paula’s Choice have a block at the end of their email highlighting their benefits such as a money back guarantee, free shipping, free consultations, and free recycling. Highlighting this enforces value through increased ease for the customer, aligned ethical values, plus the money back guarantee negates any feelings of uncertainty for a new customer.

Other perks to highlight include your variety of payment options, and for those impatient shoppers (guilty), shouting about your fast delivery options can also help close the sale.

Setting up an abandoned cart program

So, once you’ve identified the content, how do you set up an automated abandoned cart program?

Setting up an automation program can feel daunting, but it can be as simple or as complex as you have time for. Even a simple ‘You forgot this’ email with the product included will recover more revenue than not sending anything at all. Plus, the beauty of automation is you set it up and then it works away in the background. You need to be reporting on your automation campaigns, that’s how you keep optimizing, but it’s one initial lift with continued revenue in return.

Create a winning abandoned cart campaign

Setting up an abandoned cart program with Dotdigital is easier than you might think. Learn from the experts in this webinar with our partner, Nosto, covering everything you need to know.


Watch now

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Ecommerce marketing: 5 email campaigns to drive conversions and increase sales https://dotdigital.com/blog/ecommerce-marketing-5-email-campaigns-to-drive-conversions-and-increase-sales/ Thu, 06 May 2021 00:00:00 +0000 https://dot.tiltedchair.co/ecommerce-marketing-5-email-campaigns-to-drive-conversions-and-increase-sales/ Ecommerce marketing success is not a mystery. It’s about understanding customer intent. What do they need at a specific stage of their journey to drive them closer to conversion? Timing is everything.

Ecommerce merchants have the tools they need at their fingertips. Customers are willing to give you the data you need to deliver relevant messages that meet their needs. Marketing automation and ecommerce store platforms collect data about browsing behaviors that ensure you can send targeted and relevant communications when the time is right.

Like dotdigital’s new eRFM customer modeling tool, new tech makes it even easier for merchants to recognize customer intent and utilize these moments to generate more sales.

Customer intent for ecommerce marketing

Why is customer intent important?

Being able to identify moments in the customers’ journey where they’re preparing to act is vital. It enables ecommerce merchants to pinpoint key stages where customers will be most susceptible to your marketing.

eRFM customer modeling looks at a customer’s RFM (recency, frequency, and monetary value) score and adds engagements such as email opens and online browsing. Using this you can keep track of customers as they begin to show signs of intent to buy.

You can build dynamic segments based on eRFM scores to target customers on the verge of conversion or on the edge of unengagement. Pulling in new data every day, this customer modeling tool ensures you never miss an opportunity to act on customer intent.

5 ecommerce campaigns to drive conversions and sales

Using the tools at your fingertips you can create campaigns designed to target the right customer at the right time. eRFM segments help you understand which stage of the journey your customer is at. This makes it easier than ever to design automated email marketing campaigns that are relevant and timely.

1. The welcome program

Welcome emails are a central pillar in ecommerce email marketing.

They experience higher open rates and engagement rates than any other email campaign. Signing up to receive your email marketing is a clear indication that your new customer is ready to take action. Triggering this series as early as possible ensures you are acting on this intent.

Discount codes, clear CTAs, and options to update preferences are essential for this campaign. But most of you will probably have had these running for a while. So how can we shake things up?

At the early stage, you probably won’t have a lot of data on your customers. This makes sending highly relevant communication tough, but not impossible.

Even if they’ve not bought anything with your brand before, your eRFM model will let you know which of your new recruits are most engaged with your marketing and which are not. You can create new branches in your welcome program to deliver different messages to those of have or haven’t opened your email.

Welcome programs for ecommerce marketing

2. Abandoned cart email series

Like welcome programs, abandoned cart emails are a guaranteed money-maker for ecommerce marketers.

Triggered by customers’ actions, these emails are timely and relevant when built correctly. Emails that land within 30 minutes of cart abandonment generated more opens, better clicks, and higher sales. By arriving quickly, you’re recognizing that the customer intends to make a purchase. A well-timed prompt is all they need to return to your website and close the sale.

Using eRFM segments you can target your abandoned cart emails depending on their level of engagement with your brand. First purchase intent should be taken seriously by every ecommerce merchant.

This is the first step towards creating a loyal customer. Use your abandoned cart program to offer coupon codes and drive first-time buyers to make a purchase by providing information about shipping and returns policies.

Abandoned cart emails for ecommerce marketing

3. Aftersales campaign

Aftersales care is often a stage forgotten or neglected by ecommerce marketers.

Beyond transactional emails such as order confirmations and shipping notices, you are missing out big time if you’re not delivering engaging and relevant content post-purchase. While these emails can take many forms, you should focus your attention on creating quality content that improves the shopper’s experience.

Provide customers with tips about how to care for their new items or hints about how to get the most out of your products. This will boost their overall experience but will offer you the chance to cross- and upsell your products. AI-powered product recommendations can surface catalog items based on past purchases to drive customers to make another purchase.

Using eRFM you can build segments of customers to showing signs of intent to make a second purchase. Promoting, cross- and upselling items using AI-powered product recommendations prompt the reader back to your website to make that all-important second purchase.

4. Loyalty campaign

All marketers, ecommerce or not, know that it’s cheaper to keep exiting customers than to acquire new ones.

Loyalty campaigns are essential for maintaining high levels of customer engagement. The more engaged customers are, the more they’ll continue to turn to your brand when they need to shop. Rewarding shoppers for their loyalty through points and coupon codes typically keep engagement levels high, but it’s not a guarantee.

While typically low-maintenance, loyal customers still need your attention. eRFM allows you to identify loyal customers who are showing signs of low engagement. When your loyal customers stop opening your emails, it’s time to act. This is a key segment you do not want to lose.

Creating a separate branch in your loyalty program designed to reconnect with this segment will help you maintain customer loyalty.

Loyalty programs for ecommerce marketing

5. Re-engagement campaign

While list churn is an accepted aspect of marketing, it’s not one we enjoy.

Re-engagement campaigns are all about reminding customers why they chose to sign-up for your marketing in the first place. Showcasing your bestsellers and demonstrating your brand value is essential in a re-engagement campaign.

To achieve success with this campaign, it’s essential to be timely, to target customers early before they’ve disengaged completely. By using eRFM, you can create specific re-engagement campaigns based on how much they have lapsed. A customer who was once a high spender can be targeted with a discount coupon, as they have a higher likelihood to convert. Customers who are not likely to spend as much can be targeted with product recommendations or CTA to update marketing preferences.

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B2B marketing: 5 email campaigns that generate stronger leads https://dotdigital.com/blog/b2b-marketing-5-email-campaigns-that-generate-stronger-leads/ Fri, 26 Mar 2021 00:00:00 +0000 https://dot.tiltedchair.co/b2b-marketing-5-email-campaigns-that-generate-stronger-leads/ B2B marketers are well aware of the benefits of email marketing. The real problem lies with the barrage of emails landing in inboxes every day. How do you ensure your email campaigns generate the strongest leads possible?

Lead generation for B2B marketers

Lead generation is fundamental to the success of B2B brands. It helps you identify the ideal customers for your products or services, then attract them and drive them to buy. It’s an essential activity that unites B2B sales and marketing teams as they work towards their single goal.

The first stage of lead generation involves collecting data on your potential customers. This information could include name, email, company name, job title, sector, and more. This will help you get to know your prospects and enable you to send increasingly personalized marketing as your relationship develops.

After you’ve collected this data, you need to nurture these leads to get them into a place where they’re ready to convert. This generally involved using marketing automation to warm leads until they’re ready to be passed to your sales team.

The ultimate goal of lead generation is to create a consistent pipeline of high-quality prospects ready to convert into customers.

Lead generation for b2b marketers

5 email marketing campaigns that generate strong leads

To ensure you’re only qualifying the highest quality leads, you need to be running campaigns that engage prospects.

Email marketing for B2B brands is the strongest channel in your toolkit. Omnichannel marketing automation platforms empower B2B marketers with greater insights into customer data. With this, you’ll be able to deliver personalized, targeted content in your email marketing campaigns.

Your strategy and tactics will vary significantly depending on your industry and product or service offering. Think of the campaigns below as your list of ingredients, it’s up to you to decide how to put the recipe together but we’ve selected those guaranteed to engage audiences to produce stronger leads.

1. Welcome series

Your welcome series is one of the most important automation campaigns you can send.

It’s your first chance to really introduce yourself to a new prospect. In a welcome series, you should be introducing your brand, outlining your value proposition, and setting clear expectations for your readers.

By doing this, you’re demonstrating your brand’s integrity. You’re being open and honest from your very first interaction and this will establish a strong relationship right from the very beginning.

You’re also contacting leads at the time when they are most engaged with your brand. Welcome emails enjoy a significantly higher open rate because they arrive in subscribers’ inboxes at the point of sign-up. Therefore, they’re actively engaged and looking forward to your emails.

Prospects who receive a welcome email will experience significantly higher levels of engagement with your brand, simply by starting it off right.

2. Activation emails

Once you’ve engaged your new prospects with your welcome series, the natural next step is your activation series. This helps new customers learn about your products or services while allowing you to get to know them.

You should use your activation series as a way to get to know new leads. As well as introducing your brand offering, you should use this series to learn about their interests and needs. Gathering preferences is essential.

Marketing preferences will be critical to creating stronger leads. Collecting them will enable you to send personalized marketing. The more you’re able to deliver targeted and relevant content related to the prospect’s journey, the more they’ll view your brand as one that will consistently meet their needs.

3. Lead nurturing

As B2B marketers, you know the importance of lead nurturing. On average, nurtured leads create 20% more sales opportunities than non-nurtured leads. But nurturing leads is often a labor-intensive tactic. It requires knowledge and understanding of your potential customers.

And that’s exactly where your omnichannel marketing automation platform comes into play. By combining marketing preferences with lead scoring, you can create a clear, well-rounded picture of your customers, their interests, and their needs. This is all you need to build a powerful lead nurture automation program.

Prospects expect and interact with different types of content at different stages of their journey. Lead scoring can help you understand where your leads are and trigger specific campaigns as they progress through your customer lifecycle. Armed with an understanding of what they’re looking for from your brand, you can ensure you’re delivering rich, nurturing content guaranteed to drive them towards conversion.

4. ABM

The key to successful account-based marketing (ABM) lies in your curated content. You need to deliver content that appeals directly to the accounts you’re targeting.

When putting together your ABM strategy, you should group prospects based on their shared traits. For example, you may decide to target 50 brands that deliver catering services. This will make it easier for you to deliver curated content designed to address their specific pain points and demonstrate the value your brand can offer.

ABM campaigns are strong converters as they engage prospects on an unprecedented one-to-one scale. Not only are you demonstrating your understanding of their needs, but you’re also providing clear solutions to their problems.

5. Loyalty program

Modern customers want their relationships with brands to be two-way streets. If they’re going to do business with you, they want to know what they’re getting out of it.

Of course, you’re already demonstrating this through your personalized and targeted lead nurturing campaigns. Potential customers know you will be providing them with an excellent service solving their specific pain points. But they will be strong, more loyal customers if they see your brand going over and above to satisfy them.

Thankfully, achieving this is easier than it sounds. A loyalty program is a surefire way to win over prospects. Rewarding content downloads, social posts, and referrals are great ways to turn a prospect into a customer, and a customer into a brand advocate.

Taking your next steps in B2B marketing

Now you’ve been inspired by some powerful marketing automation campaigns to generate stronger leads. Next, you need to think about how you’re going to drive these prospects to convert and how to keep them as long-term clients.

By diving into the modern customer’s lifecycle, you can automate every stage of the journey to save yourself time and make money. Check out our latest B2B marketing cheatsheet to discover how.

B2B marketing lifecycle marketing

 

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3 B2B marketing strategies proven to drive revenue https://dotdigital.com/blog/3-b2b-marketing-strategies-proven-to-drive-revenue/ Tue, 19 Jan 2021 00:00:00 +0000 https://dot.tiltedchair.co/3-b2b-marketing-strategies-proven-to-drive-revenue/ Over the last 10 years or so we seem to have forgotten that whether you’re selling B2B or B2C, we’re all still selling to people. So, why is it that in the B2B marketing world, we seem to forget that? I believe B2B marketers could take a page out of the B2C marketer’s playbook and try adopting some of the strategies that are proven to drive revenue.

83% of business buyers say that being treated like a person, and not a number, is very important to winning their business.

The notion that price is the most important influence on B2B buying decisions couldn’t be further from the truth; in fact it only contributes towards 20% of the decision, whereas customer experience now influences 80% of buying decisions. And that’s why in this blog, I’m going to cover three strategies to improve your customer experience, helping you grow sustainably and beat the competition.

1. Capture valuable data

87% of marketers consider data to be their most underutilized asset. It comes as no surprise that one of the biggest pain points I come across when speaking to those in the industry, is the inability to access and action their data. It almost goes without saying that your data capture needs to be a smooth and easy process for the buyer. Whether that’s through a popover on your website, a ‘contact us’ form, or a newsletter sign-up, try to gradually acquire data from the buyer rather than bombarding them with one big form. At the end of the day, data capture is what enables you to successfully implement all the following strategies, so you must make sure you nail it!

2. Personalize your content

Personalization seems to be all anyone talks about these days, but there is a reason for all the preaching – it really does help to drive ROI. Remember when I said that 83% of B2B buyers want to be treated as a person? Well, personalizing your content is a big step in the right direction. A personalized experience is a proven way to increase the overall customer experience, which we know now makes up 80% of B2B buying decisions. To do this we need to utilize that valuable data we have captured, think about combining explicit and implicit data to ensure the most personalized experience. The obvious first points you’ll be utilizing will be: name, title, company, then to take it to the next level you’ll want to be tracking web sessions to get a deeper understanding of what your buyer is looking at within your website.

The use of dynamic content is a must for personalization, simply because it allows you to scale with ease, leverage data like average order value or contract end date, and tailor the message you are trying to get across to that particular person. An example I frequently see is discounting. You may, for example, be willing to discount a little more freely for a business with a higher average order value than another.

Personalization can also come in the form of lead scoring. I know that when I’m working on leads within our CRM, Microsoft Dynamics 365, the content I’m going to send to a particular person always differs depending on the lead score they have achieved. For example, someone with a low lead score may need a little more nurturing through helpful content, compared to that of a prospect with a higher lead score. Someone who is more engaged with your brand may benefit from a triggered SMS as they are more likely to respond.

3. Leverage omnichannel marketing

It’s no secret that omnichannel is leading the way in the customer engagement space, however a lot of companies I talk to are often limited by their own tech stack. I often ask, “What’s your omnichannel strategy currently look like?” The answer I hear a lot is – “it’s not as good as it could be” This leaves a golden opportunity to fully leverage omnichannel and get ahead of your competitors.

We know that brands who adopt an omnichannel strategy are 89% more likely to retain their customers compared to the 33% who don’t. There are countless use cases of ways to utilize more channels to move leads down the funnel faster, eliminate no shows, and improve ROI. My personal favorite is the use of SMS. SMS can penetrate the noise better than any other channel; it’s direct, and the near-perfect engagement score – a read rate of 98% – isn’t easily beaten.

While I do love SMS let’s not forget about live chat. Did you know 78% of B2B customers buy from the first brand to respond to their questions?

Brands need to look closely at how decision makers are engaging with them and respond accordingly. Depending on the industry, that first touch point might just be a question they need answered on the fly via live chat, saving them having to pick up the phone and talk to someone.

44% of B2B marketers report that the main reason they abandon websites is that there’s no contact info immediately available. I know that from my experience with live chat at Dotdigital, we have a number of new business leads that get transferred over to the sales team from prospects asking questions on the go. These are opportunities that we would undoubtedly miss out on if we didn’t use that particular channel.


To summarize, the three strategies to help you enhance customer experience and enable sustainable business growth are:

  • Capturing valuable data: The data you capture facilitates everything you do! Make sure you reduce barriers for your buyers to provide that data by ensuring it’s a smooth and easy process for them.
  • Personalizing content: Customer experience is key. Deliver a highly personalized experience that blows your buyers away.
  • Leveraging omnichannel marketing: Nowadays one touch point isn’t enough. Engage with your customer across several channels to convert leads faster, eliminate no shows, and improve ROI.
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How Miss Amara used its abandoned cart program to drive revenue https://dotdigital.com/blog/how-miss-amara-used-its-abandoned-cart-program-to-drive-revenue/ Wed, 13 Jan 2021 00:00:00 +0000 https://dot.tiltedchair.co/how-miss-amara-used-its-abandoned-cart-program-to-drive-revenue/ Dedicated to delivering a speedy, efficient, and convenient experience to its customers, Miss Amara has come leaps and bounds with its customer-centric ecommerce business model. As the business continued to grow, one of the challenges that Miss Amara faced was increased cart abandonment rates. The absence of automated retargeted programs meant the brand was missing out on revenue with an impact on customer acquisition. Therefore, the team wanted to get these cart abandoners back on track towards conversion. Considering this, Miss Amara partnered with dotdigital in January 2019 as its omnichannel marketing automation provider.

Setting up marketing automations

The company started its marketing automation journey by implementing automated campaigns such as welcome series, abandoned cart, and abandoned checkout as primary revenue-driving programs. We sat down with Jacob Dryer, Digital Marketing Manager at Miss Amara to discuss the company’s journey with dotdigital. According to Jacob, “With dotdigital automated programs, we’ve been able to understand, acknowledge, and effectively address our customer’s pain points. The partnership has allowed us to segment our customers and approach them with tailored campaigns, showcasing our relevant product ranges, catering to their interests. These include pet-friendly and eco-friendly rugs, as well as various collections like Scandi.”
Miss Amara email example
In addition to retargeting and capitalizing on lapsed customers, the team also integrated creative thinking into the messaging and styling of the triggered emails. The highly personalized emails praise the taste of the customer in the subject line as an encouragement to open and warms them up with a pun.
Miss Amara email example Get the look

Adapting to a changing situation

As the COVID-19 pandemic was unfolding, Miss Amara was quick to assess the situation and revisit its business strategy. The team ramped up its digital and social efforts and extended customer service online hours to ensure they were in constant contact with customers. The user-generated content (UGC) allowed the team to improve the process and deliver consistent support, as well as provide a seamless purchase experience to customers through these unprecedented times. “The COVID-19 crisis led to a surge of online shopping, introducing ‘first-time’ online shoppers to already existing lists. As a result, we doubled the efforts towards marketing campaigns to deliver exceptional customer experience by focusing on our campaigns and messaging. Thanks to dotdigital for the constant support through this troubled phase. The regular strategy discussions and mock-up journeys enabled us to surface key customer data, capitalize on lapsed customers, easily onboard new customers as well as analyze and segment customers on basis of their interests, and their most preferred channel to shop,” added Jacob.

A results-driven approach pays off

Miss Amara saw a whopping 190% increase in email revenue from April to June 2020, when compared to the previous quarter. Its newly introduced automation programs have performed exceptionally with outstanding results. The brand saw a massive 51.6% conversion with their abandoned carts and abandon checkout campaigns.
Example of Miss Amara's abandoned cart email
Additionally, the welcome series program remains by far the best customer journey, contributing a 183% increase in revenue in the fourth quarter, compared to the previous quarter. Overall, the brand witnessed a staggering 445% increase in overall revenue for 2020 as compared to 2019. Check out some of our other fantastic client results by visiting our customer success story page.]]>
Post-sale email marketing – how to dramatically increase your ROI https://dotdigital.com/blog/post-sale-email-marketing-how-to-dramatically-increase-your-roi/ Wed, 15 Jul 2020 23:00:00 +0000 https://dot.tiltedchair.co/post-sale-email-marketing-how-to-dramatically-increase-your-roi/ Post-sale email marketing is about amplifying customer value – both for your brand and your customers. Once the first purchase is made, it’s time to start using email marketing to reassure customers, build loyalty, and drive repeat purchases; through cross-sells, up-sells, and referrals. With post-purchase marketing, it’s all about that feel-good factor – reassuring customers that you’re the right brand for them.

Because brands that don’t take their customer engagement further, and follow up after a purchase, will lose more customers quicker in the long run.

What should brands include in their post-purchase email marketing?

Ask yourself these questions:

  • Do you send triggered emails following a purchase to reassure customers and build customer loyalty?
  • Are your customers kept informed on the progress of their online order, through the use of timely emails?
  • Does your marketing team send customers targeted, follow-up email marketing messages within four weeks of their online purchase. Is the content based on the item they purchased?

Do it like Amazon

Amazon sets the post-sale experience bar really high. That’s why customers keep coming back for more.

So why does Amazon get it so right?

For one, customers are super-receptive to post-sale email marketing. But unlike Amazon, many retails don’t take full advantage of this period to create customer loyalty and drive more additional revenue. Those that do use the opportunity to serve customers some engaging and relevant content, which adds value to the purchase they made. Things like:

  • simple, relevant order updates
  • useful delivery information
  • bringing products to life through storytelling
  • offering help if something goes wrong
  • asking for feedback on product and service
  • cross-upselling to complement the experience

All these points have one thing in common: they meet those all-important future expectations. Whether it’s updating customers on what they need to know when, connecting through different channels, or renewing delightful customer experiences, Amazon hits the nail on the head. You can too.

Post-sale email marketing best practice

  • Invite website users to sign up to your email marketing/e-newsletters while they are in the checkout process. Users are engaged with your site and products at this point, so are likely to subscribe to future offers.
  • Use the checkout process to incentivize customers to sign up to your email marketing. Offer them loyalty points, discounts off future purchases, or exclusive special offers or previews when they subscribe.
  • Send a triggered order confirmation email immediately after an online purchase. This is expected behavior and failure to do so may result in order cancellations.
  • Send a triggered ‘item dispatched’ email. Keeping customers informed on the status of their order helps to build trust, loyalty, referrals, and repeat purchases.
  • Send targeted post-sale email marketing campaigns, based on the items a recipient ordered. Once you know what a customer has ordered, you have the chance to begin targeting offers that will help drive upsell, cross-sell, and repeat purchases. Don’t waste this chance – use effective product recommendations like ‘best next’, ‘also bought’, and more.
  • Use customer surveys as part of your post-sale messages to collect valuable data on the customer experience and help build loyalty and trust.

What to look for in an omnichannel marketing provider

Your cross-channel marketing automation provider should enable you to import transactional data so you can segment post-sale email marketing campaigns based on purchase activity. Plus, you should be able to send different content to different groups of purchasers, e.g. male vs. female, clothing vs. household goods, etc.

Look for a solution that can also enable you to set up dynamic content based on your customers’ transactional data and automatically target aftersales content and offers.


Want more post-sale email marketing advice? Check out our guide on post-purchase marketing here.

Post-sale email marketing
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Measuring Email Marketing ROI: What’s your campaign worth? https://dotdigital.com/blog/whats-email-worth-roi/ Mon, 10 Mar 2014 00:00:00 +0000 https://dot.tiltedchair.co/whats-email-worth-roi/ Dotdigital’s Client Services Director, Skip Fidura, takes time out to help you understand just what email is costing – or generating – for your business. This is the first in a series of blogs looking at helping calculate the lifetime value of your email marketing program.

In 2010, we wrote a blog on ‘5 Steps to Ensure Spot-On ROI Tracking’, which looked at how even though overall UK marketing spend fell in the final 3 months of 2009, it was expected to increase in 2010, including email marketing, for the first time since early 2007.

Well, four years later, the latest research from the DMA’s annual National client email report found that “more than half of UK client-side email marketers anticipate increasing their 2014 email expenditure, after ROI for the channel reached 2,500% in 2013. (Source)

And according to MarketingCharts, “8 in 10 US marketers who responded to an Adobe survey agree that there is more pressure to show return on investment on marketing spend”.

So, with that in mind, here are some thoughts on how you should be tracking and measuring the ROI from your email marketing and how you can improve it.

Set goals

Like any other marketing activity, you need to set goals for your email marketing that are specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and timed.  These goals should go deeper than the process metrics like opens and clicks that are easy to track. They should be based on the performance metrics that are true indicators of success for your business.  You can then work backwards to see how the process metrics correlate and identify which are the best indicators of true success.

Track your customer journeys – from email through to purchase

Site tracking enriches your data and your understanding of your contact’s engagement with your site.

By tracking certain pages of your website, you can track which pages your contacts go to after clicking a link in your email.  Your email service provider (ESP) should be able to provide you with a piece of JavaScript code that you can add to your web pages and this site tracking information is then provided within the reporting area against the relevant campaign

What to do with this ROI information?

Split testing on ROI as a metric is extremely powerful as it enables you to increase the effectiveness of your campaign.

Most ESPs will give you the power to test subject lines, content, friendly from names and from addresses for open or click performance. While these will give you some insight, most of us make no money from these process metrics and we need to be looking at these tests in the context of sales and ROI, whether that is units sold, revenue, AOV or order frequency.

How to improve your ROI from email marketing

Once you have a better understanding of your email marketing’s performance, you can benchmark your metrics against previous periods and start looking at ways to improve it going forward. To start, have a look at these key factors:

  • Segment your data to send relevant emails
  • Use marketing automation to be proactively reactive. In other words, use automation to immediately react to strong buying indicators with programs such as abandoned browse, abandoned basket and thank you messages with cross-selling up-sell offers. Split test your emails to see what works best for you, including subject lines, friendly from name, creative and from address
  •  Test different landing pages and see what resonates with your audience best

Tools in Dotdigital that make it happen

For a while now in Dotdigital, you can set up site and ROI tracking. If you haven’t already, find out how to here

ROI Split Testing

A new feature to Dotdigital’s split testing functionality enables you to measure winning split test campaigns on ROI data, not just the amount of clicks and opens. If you’re using our site and ROI tracking, you can start using this immediately. Read more in our blog post and forum.

Is there another way?

By now you might be thinking this assumes all of my email marketing is done in a vacuum – that none of my other marketing influences this behavior.  Attribution could be the topic of a whole book, not to mention another post. In short you are correct, as this uses last touch attribution. In our experience, it is not a perfect system but it is directionally accurate. In some cases, email gets the credit at the expense of other channels but this balances out with those situations where the other channels get credit at the expense of email.

If you are not comfortable with this, there is another way to look at it. Instead of focusing on the value-driven by a campaign, turn the question around to look at the value of your email list as an asset to the business.  This can be measured simply by taking the revenue generated by those customers for whom you have an email address, which gives you the value of the list. You then divide this value by the number of addresses, which gives the value of each address.

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