New York, NY, September 27, 2007 — The Email Experience Council (EEC), the Direct Marketing Association’s
(DMA) vertical working group that’s focused on the email marketing
industry, today announced the release of its second annual Retail
Welcome Email Subscription Benchmark Study. The study, which examines the welcome emails of 118 of the top online retailers tracked via RetailEmail.Blogspot,
identifies a number of best practices and provides benchmarks in the
areas of merchandising, relationship-building, deliverability, and
CAN-SPAM compliance.
“This
30-page study dissects the welcome email and examines its various
elements, giving email marketers an in-depth look at all of the issues
to consider,” said Jeanniey Mullen, EEC founder and a senior partner
and executive director for Email and Dialogue Services at OgilvyOne
worldwide. “Its findings should be extremely
valuable to retailers, service companies, and other B-to-C companies
who are looking for new ideas and benchmarks against which to measure
their own welcome emails.”
“Welcome
emails should set the tone of the program and the expectations of the
recipient from an aesthetics and content standpoint,” said Kara
Trivunovic, director of strategic services at Premiere Global Services
Inc., the sponsor of the EEC study. “It is said
that you never get a second chance to make a first impression — and
that adage holds true to the email channel as well. Properly executed welcome messages actually create anticipation in the recipient for the next message.”
“Studies have shown that welcome emails have significantly higher open rates than regular emails,” said Ramesh Lakshmi-Ratan
“As
the second welcome study that we’ve done, this time around we were able
make year-over-year comparisons and identify evolving practices," said
Chad White, the EEC's director of retail insights, editor-at-large and
founder of RetailEmail.Blogspot, and the study’s author. "What
we found was that there’s a clear trend toward welcome emails that are
more promotional and more engaging, and that more attention is being
paid to deliverability.”
The study, which is available in the EEC’s Whitepaper Room, found that 72 percent of major online retailers send out welcome emails, up from 66 percent last year. That’s a strong sign that more retailers are recognizing the value of these critical emails.
This
year, for the first time, the EEC also tracked the passage of time
between subscriptions and the delivery of welcome emails. While
the majority of retailers deliver their welcome emails within 10
minutes of sign-up, 19 percent take more than 24 hours to deliver —
with nearly a third of those taking more than a week. In the world of digital communications, that’s an eternity to wait for a welcome email.
Here are some other findings from the EEC’s Retail Welcome Email Benchmark Study:
· 58
percent of welcome emails were CAN-SPAM compliant in terms of including
both a mailing address and unsubscribe method, versus 52 percent last year. Not
all welcome emails need to be compliant, but considering that these are
welcome emails for promotional emails, the EEC believes that they
should be.
· 62
percent of welcome emails asked the subscriber to whitelist them by
adding an email address to their address book, up from 49 percent last
year.
· 79 percent of retailers sent out HTML welcome emails, up from 69 percent last. The remainder sent text-only welcome emails. That said, most of the HTML welcome emails were HTML “lite,” making extensive use of HTML text.
· 75 percent of the welcome emails include the retailer’s brand name in their subject lines, on par with last year. Including branding here helps the subscriber recognize the email as one that they requested.
· 32 percent of welcome emails include a discount, reward or incentive, down from 34 percent last year. That’s in line with the results of the EEC’s Retail Email Subscription Benchmark Study, which saw a move away from incentives during sign-up.
Since your post mentions that most sites do no offer whitelisting instructions, here you go:
I built a new free email instruction generator that will create user whitelist instructions for all the ISPs, mobile devices and most of the popular client side spam filters. This also includes things like Blackberries, SpamCop (used heavily by Microsoft) and more ISPs than previously included.
http://www.emaildeliveryjedi.com/email-whitelist.php
Posted by: Chris Lang | June 14, 2008 at 01:29 PM