Study Material
Saturday, 8 January 2022
Sunday, 29 August 2021
Social Media Marketing
Social Media Marketing
Structure
6.1 Introduction of Social media marketing
6.2 Tools techniques of social media marketing,
6.3 various platforms of Social Media Marketing.
6.4 Understanding online PR
6.5 The rules of engagement
6.1 Introduction of Social media marketing
Social media is an internet-based form of communication. Social media platforms agree to users to have conversations, contribute to information and generate web content. There are many forms of social media, like
(Forms of Social Media)
Communal technologies, on a group scale, connect nation in ways that smooth the progress of distributing information, thereby plummeting the opportunities for marketplace utilization—whether by charging added than a rival dealer for otherwise matching goods and services or charging something at all for products that just don’t work. Sunlight is a authoritative sanitizer, and the collective knowledge that powers. In these new connected marketplaces Social web is the sunlight that shines in current era. The Social Web severely levels the live ground by making information abundant, presently the same as it also levels businesses
and organizations that activate on the values of constructing in sequence in short supply.
Social media marketing helps to authenticate your variety. A company's social media attendance, when done properly, tells clients that their trade name is energetic and focused on booming announcement with consumers. Social media marketing has the authority to enlarge purchaser devotion.
⮚ For Customers’ Feelings Social Media is a Direct Feed ⮚ Social Media Marketing emphasize the Brand’s background and individuality
⮚ Social media is easily accessible and it’s also the gathering point of today’s internet know-how viewers.
⮚ Most significant portion of younger age group, young people and mid aged people, are key proportion of the total social media user inhabitants.
⮚ Social media opens potential of straight admittance to patrons devoid of any third party involvement.
⮚ Promotion through social media is attractive rate responsive as match up to expenses incurred by publish, TV or other conventional media. ⮚ Social media also helps in search engine optimization and boost in rankings of any company websites.
In short, the importance of social media can include the variety of communication way to reach at a target audience with a lesser time and
lesser efforts. In this daily burdensome life, people diverted from the old purchasing pattern to the online shopping activity. Here, they can get the information about the product through social media search engine as well as by the various forms of social media. Actually it is very much useful for the society because it reduce the time, effort and money of the customer.
Generally the social media marketing was introduced in the mid of 20th century. But after 2001 the focus on social media increased day by day and now a day it is identified as a best practice of promotion as well as selling technique. According to my point of view the terminology of social media is used by many of the firms and industry to promote and sell their products in an attractive manner.
6.2 Tools for social media marketing
What Are Social Media Marketing Tools?
Social Media Marketing Tools are nothing but software tools and technology that help companies harness the full power of social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter to conjure marketing campaigns that lure customers.
Most of these Social Media tools are focused on studying, and analyzing the patterns they find in people’s behavior on the social media platform.
Everything like the Number of Likes, The Number of Shares, The Number of Comments etc, helps these tools to design solutions to help a company’s marketing team design
Benefits Of Social Media Marketing Software
The benefits of using Social Media Marketing tools entice many profit hungry companies towards them. From time flexibility to cost-saving, here are some of the benefits of Social Media Platforms.
∙ It helps businesses save time by offering automated tools that help in generating valid, lucrative leads online.
∙ It helps to save oodles of time, no more knocking door to door, or flipping yellow pages. Everything can be found online, and these tools will find it for you.
∙ It helps to cut the firm’s operation costs by 60-70%. Companies don’t have to spend money on hiring in-house marketing talents as the tools do a much more efficient job of it.
∙ It helps companies to achieve a competitive advantage by allowing them to be one step ahead of their competitors.
∙ Social media marketing help companies to understand their customer base better, hence marketing campaigns can be designed catering to their needs.
∙ With the time saved, costs cut, and competition beat, the natural result of all the above factors leads to increased profits.
campaigns that target their desired audience.
Benefits Of Social Media Marketing Software
The benefits of using Social Media Marketing tools entice many profit hungry companies towards them. From time flexibility to cost-saving, here are some of the benefits of Social Media Platforms.
∙ It helps businesses save time by offering automated tools that help in generating valid, lucrative leads online.
∙ It helps to save oodles of time, no more knocking door to door, or flipping yellow pages. Everything can be found online, and these tools will find it for you.
∙ It helps to cut the firm’s operation costs by 60-70%.
Companies don’t have to spend money on hiring in-house marketing talents as the tools do a much more efficient job of it.
∙ It helps companies to achieve a competitive advantage by allowing them to be one step ahead of their competitors.
∙ Social media marketing help companies to understand their customer base better, hence marketing campaigns can be designed catering to their needs.
∙ With the time saved, costs cut, and competition beat, the natural result of all the above factors leads to increased profits.
Img source: https://heidicohen.com/social-media-platforms-2014-research/ 6.3Tools for Managing Social Media
Since social media marketing is an important aspect of marketing in modern businesses, there have been a number of tools created and developed for helping with social media marketing. There are both free and paid tools. The goal of this chapter is to point out the features you need from certain tools that will help you with tasks within social media marketing. These features can be found in many different tools, so the decision of choosing a perfect tool that you will use for your company will depend on your own analysis and comparison of different tools that provide the same or similar features. Since even the paid tools frequently offer a free trial period, you will be able to test each tool before you make any decision. Social media tools can be divided into
three major groups, based on the type of social media marketing task the tool can help with. Tools for planning The first type of tools includes the tools for planning your social media activity. The main feature of this kind of tool is to help you with creating a plan of your social media presence. This includes the plan of the content that is going to be published, a calendar of events and promotions that you will organize, etc. Since planning is an important part of marketing as a discipline, it is advisable that you plan every aspect of your social media marketing. The tools that provide options necessary for planning include: • Google Calendar - A tool that allows you to create interactive calendar, where you can schedule your daily activity, and monitor the weekly or monthly schedule in order to diversify posting activity on social networks. 121
• Post Planner – This app is especially designed for Facebook and it offers content suggestion based on the reach and analysis of the content you have previously published. You will save a lot of time by using the suggested content which will help post more consistently. Post Planner offers additional features for scheduling posts, analyzing reach and engagement, etc. Tools for managing After the initial phase of planning is over, it is time to conduct social media marketing strategy. This is the task that you also might need assistance with, as you might be in a situation to manage several social media accounts simultaneously. When it comes to tools for managing, you need options for scheduling posts, URL shortening, etc. In this way, you will be able to automate some
parts of your social media marketing, which will help you reduce the time you need to spend on social media. Here are some of the tools offering management features
: • HootSuite–HootSuite is an online management dashboard that helps with posting activity on several accounts, as well as with scheduling posts. With a free version of 122 this tool you can integrate up to three social media accounts, in order to manage all of them from HootSuite dashboard. Paid accounts offer additional features, such as analytics, tracking brand mentions, additional team members, etc.
• TweetDeck – This tool helps with managing account on Twitter. With data distributed in the form of columns, you can track the activity of your Twitter account, organize and schedule the posts and monitor the engagement. Tools for monitoring In order to make sure that your social media account provides good results, you need tools for monitoring that will help you analyze the performance of your account, as well as the results of your social media marketing. The main options of monitoring tools will help you track the statistics, analyze your target audience, get alerts, etc. Some of the tools that are frequently used for this purpose include the following tools:
• Google Alerts Monitor the web for the content you are interested in. Besides topics, you can get alerts when your brand is mentioned on the web as well.
123 • Google Analytics This is a very in-depth monitoring tool that should be an essential part of your marketing, but since we are interested in monitoring the social media activity, we will highlight the importance of a particular option inside Google Analytics. Choose the group “Acquisition” from the menu on the left and find the option “Social”. This is where you can access referrals from social networks, landing pages, etc. You will also get insights about the visit which resulted from someone clicking on the link of your website posted on a certain social network. In this way you can monitor the performance of each social network and compare reach and engagement of different social networks.
• Social insights Insights available on social networks can also help with monitoring the activity of a specific social media account, in terms of visits, referrals, engagement, etc. 124 Since all of these tasks, planning, management and monitoring are inseparable parts of social media marketing, you will need at least one tool from each group to help you with your daily tasks. Regardless of the tools you choose, regardless if you choose one of these suggestions, or you decide to use tools you find more suitable for your business, the goal of using those tools is to help you reduce the time necessary to invest in social media activity.
6.4 Understanding online PR
Defining online PR In 2007 the Chartered Institute of Public Relations in the UK defined online PR as: ‘Communicating over the web and using
new technology to effectively communicate with stakeholders.’ That’s a broad statement that encompasses a huge array of different disciplines. From a digital marketing perspective some of the things it would typically include are: λ raising the profile of your business or brand using online channels; λ monitoring conversations and managing your online reputation; λ developing online word of mouth and creating ‘buzz’; λ identifying online advocates and detractors (fostering the former, minimizing the impact of the latter); λ identifying online trends and issues in your industry; λ managing information flow; λ seamless integrations with the other elements of your digital marketing campaign. Essentially it distils down to two key things: raising the online profile of your business, products and services by contributing positively to the online community; and managing your reputation by monitoring, assessing, responding to and influencing online conversations about you. Promoting your business through online channels When it comes to getting your business and brand out in front of online consumers, there are a number of tools you can use. First and foremost, of course, you can and should use your own website as a vehicle to make your PR-related content available to both media professionals and consumers. It’s perhaps the only place online where you have direct control over every aspect of your content: how it looks, how it’s presented and how people interact with it. Your site is also the ideal place to host addedvalue content that supports your broader off site PR campaign, enticing people to click back to your own online real
estate, where you can track and measure their engagement. But having compelling content on your own site is only a very small part of the online PR story. The whole point of online PR is to raise awareness of your business and brand among the broader online community and Online PR and reputation management 179 to generate interest that exploits the viral potential of online social media. When word-of-mouth marketing meets online social networking, the result is massive latent potential – a groundswell that savvy online marketers can tap into. To do that effectively, of course, you need to know who your customers are, where they congregate online and what turns them on – all the strategic stuff we covered earlier in the book. Use your knowledge of your customers to find them online; then join them. Engage with them on as many different platforms as you can effectively manage. Your ultimate goal may be to guide visitors to your site but, rather than relying on them coming to you, go out to them. Seed your best creative content and put it to work for you in the places where your customers are already engaged. By adding genuine value to the conversation on sites that your customers frequent regularly, you not only raise your online profile but you also establish a willingness to enter into a productive two-way relationship with them. That in turn builds trust and makes them far more likely to engage with you. As your network of contacts grows and your relationship with the community develops, you can begin to generate a bit of buzz around your brand, build advocacy and develop that groundswell of positive influence we mentioned earlier. Getting the
word out with online press releases Just like their offline equivalent, online press releases are a way of getting prominent, newsworthy stories about your product, brand or company out in front of as many eyeballs as possible. In many ways they are similar to the standard press releases you’d submit to offline media contacts to announce significant developments and/or news in your business. When writing your online press releases bear the following points in mind: λ A story worth reading: If you’re going to pique the interest of online publishers and make them want to pick up and run with your story, you’ll need to do more than simply announce a new product, website or special once-in-a lifetime offer. Your press release needs to be compelling, interesting and relevant. Tell a story – this is no place for a sales pitch; that can come later when the reader clicks through to your website. Your press release is designed to inform publishers about your story and encourage them to write or comment about it online. Think beyond your immediate readership, and write your press release to appeal to the publisher’s readers. 180 Understanding digital marketing λ You need a strong ‘hook’: Your headline and first paragraph should capture the readers’ attention and draw them in. As with any other form of online content, you literally have seconds to catch them before they click on something else. λ Story first, detail later: Use an ‘inverted pyramid’, journalistic style of writing. Distil the main elements of your story into the first few sentences; then use the rest of your press release to elaborate on specific and relevant details. As a guide, your readers should be able to break off
at any point and still get the gist of your story. λ Keep it concise, objective and to the point: Keep your press release short and to the point. Don’t over-elaborate, and avoid excessive use of adjectives, descriptive prose and flowery language. Keep it balanced and objective, and steer clear of promotional spin. Be ruthless. If a sentence doesn’t add to the substance of your story, strip it out. λ Use active, compelling language: Your press release should zip along at a healthy pace. Use short, snappy sentences to keep it moving. Make use of the active voice in your PR writing – instead of statements like ‘The ground-breaking report was commissioned by Company X’, try active-voice equivalents like ‘Company X commissioned the groundbreaking report’ (for more examples of active/passive voice take a look at Purdue University Online Writers Lab page: http://tinyurl. com/6lowp). λ Accessible and jargon free: Remember, you don’t know where your press releases are going to be picked up. Your story should be instantly accessible to a broad and general audience. Write your press releases in plain language, steer clear of industry jargon wherever possible, and when it is necessary give a brief explanation. λ Contact details: Your press release should always provide details of how to contact a real person in the organization, who is ready to provide any additional information or direct input required. This information should include your web address, contact telephone number and an e-mail address. λ Be keyword optimized: Your press release is going to end up on the web, so you should treat it as a piece of web content. Write your copy to maximize its search visibility (see
Chapter 4). Target specific, searchrelevant keyword phrases in your writing – but not at the expense of human readability. Think people first and then search engines. Wherever it ends up, your press release will serve as an additional opportunity to rank for your chosen keyword phrases in the SERPs. λ Link back to your site: Some online press release distribution services may restrict the use of links, limit their number, or allow them only in the company boilerplate text (‘About us’ stuff) at the end of the piece. Where possible, aim to have at least one and possibly two or Online PR and reputation management 181 three active back links to your website (but no more: too many and your carefully crafted press release will start to look like link spam). Links will direct traffic to your site and can potentially help with your SEO link-building efforts. If you want to track the responses to a particular press release, make sure you ‘tag’ your links so you can identify click-throughs using your web analytics solution (see Chapter 5). λ Stick to the guidelines: Whatever distribution service you choose to use, make sure that your press release adheres to its published guidelines for formatting, links, length, content, etc. Doing so will ensure your press release passes the editorial requirements and will maximize your chances of being picked up by content publishers.
6.5 The rules of engagement
Social media, then, offers a wealth of opportunity for consumer engagement and building brand awareness, but in such an open and dynamic space it’s critical to consider what you’re doing carefully. Social media is consumer driven, and the very characteristics that makes it such an enticing proposition for marketers – the interconnected nature of online consumers, and the staggering speed at which information traverses the network – can just as easily backfire. The ‘rules’ of social media are really about applying a bit of common sense to what are essentially human relationships. The key thing to remember is that this is social media – people are going online to interact and exchange information and content with similar, like-minded people. They’re unlikely to be interested in your latest sales pitch, and they’re certainly not interested in promotional hype. They want interesting, fun, informative, quirky, addictive – whatever turns them on. When it comes to social media, you’re not just sending out a message; you’re inviting a response, and what you get might not be quite what you’re expecting. You need a plan to engage in social media marketing, but you also need to be flexible and respond to the community. λ Draw on what you already know: You already have a wealth of knowledge about your customers – who they are, what they like to do and where 170 Understanding digital marketing they hang out online. OK, so one of the main reasons you’re getting involved in social media is to get to know them a little better – but the point is that you’re not going into this blind.
Use that knowledge: apply what you already know about your customers, your business and your brand to your social media strategy. As you learn more, refine what you’re doing accordingly. λ Don’t jump in unprepared: Have a clear plan before you start – know who you’re trying to engage with and what you want to achieve. Define ways to gauge and measure your success, with frequent milestones to help keep you on track. But remember to be flexible, and modify your plan as necessary in response to community feedback. λ Look, listen and learn: Before you engage in social media marketing, spend some time ‘lurking’ (hanging around without contributing). Familiarize yourself with the different types of social media sites that you plan to target. Go and use the sites; read the blogs; immerse yourself in the media. Look, listen and learn. Just as in real life, every online community is different. Familiarize yourself with the various nuances before you dive in. λ Be open, honest and authentic: Nowhere is the term ‘full disclosure’ more appropriate than in social media. Don’t go online pretending to be an independent punter extolling the virtues of your brand. You will get found out, and when you do your company will go ‘viral’ for all the wrong reasons. There are some high-profile examples of companies getting this spectacularly wrong, with disastrous results. Never pretend to be someone or something you’re not. λ Be relevant, interesting and entertaining: Everything you do should add value to the community, as well as moving you towards your business goals. Be helpful; be constructive; be interesting and entertaining. Join the conversation, and
offer valuable, authoritative and considered advice. Make a real effort to engage with the community on their terms, and you’ll usually find them more than happy to engage with you in return. λ Don’t push out a spammy message: Don’t join social media sites just to submit a mass of links and push information about your own products or flood the community with posts on why your company is the best thing since sliced bread. It smacks of spam and adds nothing to the conversation. At best, the community will ignore you. At worst, well, we’re back to the negative viral effect again. λ Respect ‘rules’: If the site you’re frequenting has policies, guidelines and rules, read them and abide by them. λ Respect people: Always be respectful to your fellow community members. That doesn’t mean you always have to agree with them; healthy debate is good in any community. When you do disagree, though, always be Social media and online consumer engagement 171 polite and respectful of other people. They have as much right to their opinion as you do to yours. Don’t get personal. λ Respond to feedback: If users give you feedback, that’s invaluable. Let them know that you appreciate it and that you’re interested in what they have to say. Be responsive, and show them how you’ve used that feedback constructively.
Summery
Tool – In terms of social media, a tool is an application or software that helps you with performing a certain task, such as analyze the performance of your social media activity, automate posting, etc. There
are different types of tools, depending on what kind of task they can perform. The purpose of using different social media tools is to help you conduct certain social media tasks and ultimately improve the performance of your social media marketing strategy
References
Understanding Digital Marketing by DAMIAN RYAN & CALVIN JONES
E-mail marketing
E-mail marketing
5.1 Introduction to e- mail marketing
5.2 Challenges faced in bulk emails
5.3 Types of Email
5.4 Keywords
5.5 Summary
5.1 Introduction to e- mail marketing
email marketing as a modern way of communicating with consumers. Emails, as a form of communication, have been around for decades, ever since the first sent email message back in 1971. Over the years, the World Wide Web has evolved and grown, and email marketing has found its rightful place in the business world. Although email messages were once a popular way of communicating with friends, online messaging apps such as WhatsApp, Viber, etc. have taken over this role. Despite this fact, emails are still important and a large percent of people do check their email inbox daily. This gives a high potential to reach online consumers. Email marketing should be a personalized approach, where your goal is to directly communicate with the online users in order to achieve something, such as generate a sale, get visitors, encourage downloads, etc. Even though an email marketing campaign is, in essence, a promotional campaign, you should go beyond this concept and use a more subtle approach to both reach and engage online users.
The goal of email marketing is to get the message to the consumer, but it is not enough to simply send a message. You need to encourage open rates and you need to explore how the consumers are interacting with your email, whether they forward it, click on the links, etc.
What is email marketing?
Email marketing is a part of online marketing focused on communicating and establishing the connection with online users through emails. Regardless if the goal is promotional or informative, regardless if you send weekly or monthly, the core of email marketing is still communication with the recipient. The purpose of this communication is to nurture the relationship with the existing or potential customers, and to encourage an action which is the goal of an email marketing campaign.
To make sure you are communicating successfully, your email message should be: • Relevant to the recipient
• With a relevant, yet engaging subject line
• Concise and spot on
• Planned
• Sent at the right moment
• In the language the recipient understands
• Without any grammatical or spelling errors
• Without any broken links
The process of communication between a business on one side and a customer on the other goes like this. You have a message that you want to share. It can be a promotional message about a sale in your online store. It may be the news about your latest ebook. It may be an announcement for the event you will be hosting. The idea is to send a message that will encourage the recipient to complete an action, such as purchase an item, fill out a form, etc. The point is you have something to share with the subscribers. The next step is to write an email. There are lots of things to have in mind here, which will be the topic of one of the subsequent chapters. Finally, you send the message, wait and examine the results, in order to find out both positive and negative outcomes of your email marketing campaign. That is the email marketing process summarized in a nutshell. 17
One of the first obstacles every marketer faces is getting emails delivered and read. It is not an easy task, especially if you have in mind that over 200 emails are sent and received per person each day. As much as getting the attention through email marketing is lucrative (with huge ROI), it is a very difficult job. There is a true combat over users’ attention and it has become a real art to get under that spotlight. This is how email deliverability was introduced as the process of analyzing and optimizing the performance of an email marketing campaign.
Gradually, this is how the field of email marketing evolved, to become a whole new segment of online marketing, with its own best practices, strategies, and tools to use. Email marketing as a part of online marketing
To get the most out of email marketing, you need to combine this strategy with other techniques of online marketing, including content creation, search engine optimization, social media marketing, etc.
Email marketing on its own has a little chance of succeeding. The true potential of this marketing is seen when it is integrated into the overall online marketing strategy. For example, you have a new blog article (content marketing) and you want to share it with lots of online users to get more traffic to your blog (SEO). You send out a newsletter (email marketing) where you feature a summary of the article, inviting your subscribers to visit your blog to read the full article. This way you combine all your efforts to get the most out of it and to have the best chances for achieving your goals. How to start with email marketing?
Once you know the basics, it is time to start with email marketing. In essence, this is a method for achieving goals, a strategy which utilizes your own resources (a mailing list) to boost your online performance.
Set up goals
Like with any other campaign, if you want to reach success, you have to know what that success is. Goals you want to achieve will dictate the campaign settings, writing
style, target audience, etc. They will also dictate the way you measure success. This is why the first step is setting up goals. Sometimes you might have multiple goals. Either way, start by determining some of them. Here are a couple of examples to get some ideas:
• I want to drive new signups for the service
• I need new leads
• I want to invite people to an event
• I would like to encourage people to donate
• I want to sell my product
These goals are a bit too general and vague. In order to measure success, you should try to make them measurable. For example, avoid “I want to drive new signups for the service”, but add a measurement “I want to drive 100 new signups for the service”. Or, instead of “I want to sell my product” try “I want to increase sales by 20%”. Having measurable goals will help you determine if what you have achieved through the campaign is really in accordance with what you had planned. Not only will this determine whether your campaign was a success or not, it will also help you realize what you need to change to upgrade your performance.
Determine the pace of sending
Now it is time to think about sending emails. One of the first things you will need to establish is the pace. The schedule of sending is important to keep you organized, but it also makes users feel more comfortable, as they know when to expect an email from you.
You should also analyze the performance of the email campaigns in the past, to determine if there was any particular day or period of the day that showed unusual rates, regardless if that was the surprisingly high or low open rate. There are also studies that have been analyzing the performance of email marketing campaigns, in order to find out what would be the best time to send an email. Multiple
types of research have come to the conclusion that Tuesday is the best day for sending emails, while morning, 10 am, in particular, was highlighted as the best time
5.2 Challenges faced in bulk mails.
1) Low Delivery Rate
Delivery Rate of emails in email marketing is calculated as “the actual emails delivered to the inboxes of recipients and then, subtracting hard and soft bounces from the gross number of emails sent dividing that number by gross emails sent”.
Your email delivery rate ensures its success or failure. The chances of attracting customers are when your email lands in the inbox. Look for email delivery rate that scores 95% or above. If your delivery rate is going down with the time, you need to check out the reasons.
2) Low Open Rate
Open Rate in email marketing is a valued term as it lets you know about “The ratio of the total number of unique people who opened up your email and the total number of delivered emails.”
Let’s understand this by an example, “Suppose you have sent 100 emails, out of which 20 got bounced, and 80 were delivered. Out of those 80 emails, 40 were opened, and thus, the email open rate is 50%.”
The low open rate could be critical if you’re trying to get consumers directly from your emails. There could be many reasons for low open rate, like, “Unqualified Subscribers, Not Segmenting Your List, Boring Subject Line, and others”.
3) Low Click Rate
Click rate is calculated as “Number of clicks within an email as a percentage of opens”. Like open and delivery rate, your click rate is also important for the success of your emails.
Suppose, if your emails have been successfully delivered, but have not been clicked, would you consider IT a profitable effort? Like open rate, the click rate also relies on the subject line, so, ensure you have checked it again and again.
4) High Unsubscribe Rate
High Unsubscribe Rate is measured as “Number of recipients who unsubscribe as a percentage of emails delivered”.
You need to notice this metric as you will have to decide who to be targeted through your emails. It will also help you in minimizing your unsubscribing rate.
5) High SPAM Complaints
When your targeted customers mark your emails as “SPAM”, they lost their utilities. Spamming is very often in email marketing as your consumers get irritated or found your emails doubtful when sending continuously.
6) Low Active Ratio
Active Ratio is defined as “Number of email recipients who consistently open and interact with emails as a percentage of list size”
If you’re facing low active ratio for your emails, then, you should start working on its rectification right now.
7) Limited Post-Click Activity
Post-Click Activity in email marketing is calculated as “The volume of leads generated, products sold, or other brand-specific objectives completed as a result of email marketing to a targeted audience.”
If the post-click activity to your sent emails is not working as per the expectation, it could be an alarming situation.
5.3 Types of Emails
Companies send a lot of emails each day, about all sorts of different topics. Some may share the latest blog update, some might announce huge discounts, etc. Of course, each of these emails has a different purpose, which is how we can differentiate between several types of emails. There is no a strict classification of emails. For example, some marketers choose to group emails under the label transactional and non-transactional, while some choose to go beyond, and have even more narrow groups, so they have a welcome email, a notification email, etc.
The first major division we could highlight is based on the number of emails you send in the campaign, so we have one-to-many and one-to-one emails.
One-to-many email
The first group of emails is one-to-many emails, and it refers to the emails sent to the entire mailing list or a certain targeted group within that list. The main benefit of these emails is that they have a huge reach, thus the great potential to generate traffic, increase conversions, etc. Even though you reach out to a huge number of subscribers, you will still be designing a single email. This could also have a negative effect because your email might seem too general and it might lack personalization. Narrow downing the mailing list based on the different criteria could help you avoid this obstacle. Within this large group of one-to-many emails, there are several types of emails: Newsletter
A newsletter is one of the most popular types of emails. These generally contain information from your blog or website that you have recently published. They could also feature the news about your company, events, announcements, etc. By sending regular emails, you establish a connection with the readers, you bring them back to your website in the attempt to engage and convert them. On one hand, a newsletter is a very useful type of email as it allows you to combine different types of content, such as new articles from the blog, the announcement of the upcoming event, etc. Basically, you share any news related to your company. While this can be considered a benefit, it can
also be seen as a drawback, because due to this compilation of information, your call-to action button may be less in the focus. A newsletter email is usually sent according to a certain schedule you have determined.
Digest email
This type of email is similar to the newsletter, but the design is much simpler and concise. In a digest email, you share the most important pieces of content in a form of a short list with links. This way you help your subscribers find your content easily, which is especially helpful for blogs that publish a lot of content. The goal is the same as with the newsletter, you share information, increase brand awareness, and generate traffic, but the design is what differentiate these two. Digest emails are frequently automated so that the software simply picks up the scoop from your blog and send it to the subscribers. This is a perfect way to keep the subscribers informed if you have a lot of content published each day. Having a schedule for sending a digest email could be helpful to your subscribers, as they will know when to expect the new digest. Dedicated email
As the name suggest, this email is dedicated to a certain offer. Instead of piling up content, like with the previous two types, here you focus on one piece of information only. It can be an announcement of an upcoming sale, an invitation for your latest conference, asking subscribers to fill out a survey, etc. The main benefit of a dedicated email is the ability to highlight a single event that is important to you. You will have a strong call-to-action button, which will have much more impact on your campaign. Unlike newsletters, dedicated emails are usually sent without any specific schedule. Sponsorship email
Like with paid ads in search engine marketing, email marketing also allows getting promotion through paid methods. With a sponsorship email, you pay to be included in a newsletter of another website or company. This means a huge new lead potential, as you will be targeting an entirely new community. Of course, to make sure you are getting quality leads, you need to collaborate with companies that have the same target
group as you. This kind of advertising will be relevant to the recipients and this way you will be able to get visitors who are genuinely interested in products and services you provide.
One-to-one email
This group of emails includes the types of emails that are sent to a single user. The focus of such email campaign is not a huge reach because you will not be contacting the entire community. On the contrary, you will be focused on one subscriber only. The goal of this approach is to establish a connection with the subscriber, strengthen the relationship, and increase the credibility of your brand. A large portion of one-to-one emails is automated. Obviously, businesses will find it difficult to handle a huge scope of emails each day, which is why this process is automated to a great extent. The main benefit of these emails is that you can focus on one user as you introduce the user to your brand and community. Usually, you will use the existing content to do so. When it comes to sharing the new content, this might not be the perfect way to go, as in that case, one-to-many type of an email would be a better choice.
The most common types of the one-to-one emails include:
Lead nurture
This is a type of an email that is supposed to establish a firm connection with your subscriber. After someone signs up for your newsletter, sending out lead nurture emails can help them discover more about your brand, obtain even more free resources, discover more great content on your blog, etc. Since lead nurture emails are usually automated, your company will benefit from them without any extra work once you have a new lead. Unlike other emails where you reach out to the entire list of subscribers or a certain targeted group, the reach of lead nurture email is much lower, because you only target new leads. However, the reach is not even the goal here. The idea is to deepen your relationship with the subscriber and you will accomplish that by focusing on their needs.
Notification emails
Notification emails are also known as alerts and auto-responders. They notify the recipient each time something happens, and these actions are also known as triggers. The sender needs to establish some criteria for an outgoing message, something that will be a trigger for notification email to be sent. For example, a confirmation email about a successful online purchase, congratulations on a subscription, a welcome email, a birthday email, etc. and many other types of emails that are triggered by a specific action.
Social media emails
Unlike the above email campaigns, where you reach out to your subscribers, social media gives you an option to reach users' inboxes through the social media platform. For example, LinkedIn groups allow their administrators to send LinkedIn announcements, which will be sent to the members' inboxes. The same goes for Google+.
Although you do not really have access to user's email, nor could you use a software to customize the email or track conversions, this could still be a good way to leverage the power of an email campaign. This approach opens up new opportunities to grow your
business. You are able to reach the people who might not be completely familiar with your brand which is a great way to gain new leads and potential customers. The choice of the email type you are going to send depends on the goal you want to achieve. Each type has its distinctive features and it fulfills a certain purpose. Understanding the distinctions among them will help you make a better choice for the future campaigns.