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Caution: Falling Open Rates!
Do recent findings indicate that recipients are tuning out
email marketers, or is something else going on?
Something strange appears to be happening to email open
rates.
Data collected by MarketingSherpa for its "Email Marketing
Benchmark Guide 2006," reveals more marketers this year than last
are reporting open rates of less than 20 percent, and fewer are
seeing open rates of more than 50 percent.
Yet despite this drop affecting 38 percent of emailers
surveyed, click-through rates have remained stable. As a percentage
of total emails sent, most marketers continue to achieve
click-through rates in the range of 3 - 20 percent.
Moreover, conversion rates across the board also are up slightly
this year over last, according to information shared by
MarketingSherpa during a Dec. 13 teleseminar co-hosted by
Silverpop.
So what is going on?
If email response has remained strong, then how can open
rates be falling for so many email marketers?
"The general response level to email has remained fairly consistent
over several years," said Silverpop CEO, Bill Nussey. "The fact is,
people are opening their messages; we're just not measuring them
very well."
Open rates are collected when a tiny piece of HTML code called a
Web beacon or Web bug activates when an email is opened. But if the
email program blocks or disables a message's graphics, then the
beacon can't activate, and the open goes unrecorded.
This effect is widespread. Silverpop's "2005 Broken Link Study" found that 40 percent
of commercial email arrives in the inbox with the graphics and
links partially or completely disabled.
What you can do
If your open rates are falling, and you suspect the
culprit may be image suppression, ask recipients to add you to
their email address books. This will ensure your messages are
delivered directly to the email inbox, with the images
intact.
This "white listing" won't help with recipients whose email
programs can't read HTML messages, or who have elected to receive
plain-text messages, or who download their email to read offline
later. But these recipients probably represent a fairly small
portion of your email list.
Despite these difficulties in measurement, open rates are still a
good barometer of success. Studies show that email users no longer
start by reading the subject line, but instead look first at who
sent the message. If your open rates are strong, it's a sign that
recipients trust your brand. If your open rates have begun to
steadily decline over time, it could indicate your messages have
gone stale and are no longer resonating with recipients. But if
your click-through and conversion rates are holding steady or
better yet, improving, then falling open rates may simply be a
matter of measurement, not success.
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