Your product or service is the best on the market.
You’ve got a large email database.
You use a killer design and you launch your email campaign.
The next morning you eagerly log into your email marketing tool only to discover that no one has clicked, or worse yet opened the email! Sigh.
When it comes to email: One size does NOT fit all. Just blasting emails to your entire database won’t work. Instead, you must segment your email marketing lists and tailor messaging to connect with specific prospects and customers.
According to HubSpot, “Targeted and segmented lead nurturing emails generate an 8% click-through rate compared to general email sends, which generate just a 3% click-through-rate.” That’s a substantial increase, especially if you have a large database. And JupiterResearch has shown that “Relevant emails drive 18 times more revenue than broadcast emails.”
List Segmentation: A Proven Best Practice
Now a widely recognized best practice, list segmentation can dramatically improve your email marketing efforts and results. Even the smallest segmentation can increase success rates, which MailChimp recently demonstrated by measuring statistics from 2,000 users who sent 11,000 segmented campaigns to nearly 9 million recipients. They found that “Segmented campaigns distinctly improved email performance almost across the board.” And The Lyris’ Annual Email Optimizer report showed that “39% of marketers who segmented their email lists experienced higher open rates, 28% experienced lower unsubscribe rates, and 24% experienced better deliverability and greater revenue.”
All Buyers Are Not the Same
One Size Does NOT Fit All - Vital Importance of List Segmentation
When it comes to segmenting your lists, recognizing the differences in your buyers is a must. Look for specific attributes that you know about an individual to segment your lists, then tailor the content and offers specifically to those individuals, groups, etc. Categorical examples that can be used to segment your email lists and customize content include:
- Established Customers vs. Current Prospects: An established customer should receive different messaging and offers than a new prospect that may be unfamiliar with your products and services.
- Location: Establishing a location is an easy way to segment your audience and tailor the timing and elements of your emails. An invitation to an event in Arizona is probably going to be of more interest to recipients in the southwest rather than those in Maine or Mumbai.
- Industry: Professionals working in Finance typically have different interests than those in Transportation & Logistics or Healthcare. Segmenting your lists by industry ensuring that your content is industry-specific will improve the likelihood that your message will hit the mark.
- Professional Role or Title: Professional profiling extends to individual roles and titles. Use them to refine messages and connect with your target, be it the C-level Executive, Director of Marketing or Entry-Level Sales Representative.
- Size of Organization: The needs of Enterprise businesses are much different than those of SMBs and your emails should reflect that fact.
- Previous Behavioral Patterns: Leveraging behavioral data such as opens vs. clicks, visits to a web page, attending an event, completing a form, contacting a sales rep to express interest, etc. can help you determine where buyers are in the sales process to help you target emails.
Don’t forget analytics! Use them to capture data then segment email lists and tailor messaging to specific audiences to demonstrate you know and care about the interests of your recipients. The simple fact is: The more targeted and relevant your campaign, the better your chances are at garnering a response, making a sale and enhancing customer loyalty.
Originally posted on Channel Chatter, by David Buffaloe, Zift Solutions VP of Marketing. As VP of Marketing, David is responsible for all aspects of marketing including strategy, tactics and programs needed to create interest, demand and recognition for Zift Solutions. |