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Beware the Danger of High Frequency Email
Despite strong response, it can kill the goose that lays the golden egg

June 2009

I had breakfast a little more than a year ago with the vice president of marketing for a major online retailer and cataloger.  She told me she was worried she'd fallen into the trap of emailing too frequently.  Her company was sending three or four e-mails per week. She noted that every email generated sales — and that obviously pleased senior management.
But she was concerned that the quantity she was sending was hurting her list.  Today, after careful analysis, the company usually sends one email a week.

Every email you send will generate sales, but how do you find the right cadence for your list?
 

Frequency Pros and Cons

No doubt, it's categorically true that a strong email contact strategy with compelling offers will generate sales.  At the same time, industry consumer surveys have shown that one major reason for opt-outs is frequency of contact.

There's a way to measure the impact on your business.  If you step up frequency of mailing during the holiday gift-giving season, for example, you can compare those results with the times you send fewer e-mails.  Or, you could create a holdout group that receives fewer e-mails and track both groups over several months.  Or, even if you don't create separate groups, you can monitor activity to help determine whether your current frequency schedule is working.

Below are some metrics you should be watching.  Aggregate this activity on a monthly basis, do simple trend analysis and project what this might mean to your company over a full year based on your current list size.  Keep in mind that new additions to your list can mask performance issues and list fatigue.

  • Revenue Increase.  It is likely this will be stronger with a stepped up mailing schedule.  Are you trading short-term revenue gains for long-term losses? 
  • Revenue per delivered email.  This is the statistic that tells all.  
  • Opt-outs.  Does frequency have a direct impact on your list size?  
  • Spam complaints.  High complaint rates put your emails in danger of being blocked by ISPs or sent to bulk folders.  
  • Bounces.  If you are sending more emails, naturally you’ll have more bounces.  As a result, more of your list will be moved to a do-not-email status over time.  
  • Open and click-through behavior.  If you don’t get opens, you’re not engaging your list.  
  • Mailing to a list that is increasing inactive can be a problem.  Plus, low open rates impact your reputation with some ISPs.  

This analysis takes time and discipline, but yields an assessment of your email program's health.  I've seen examples of 40 percent revenue increases with more frequent emails.  But the revenue per delivered e-mail is about half, and opt-outs are more than double.

Also, take into account deployment costs and internal overhead.  It may be hard to assign internal costs, but each email requires support from copywriters, designers, and the quality control and Web teams.

At the end of the analysis, you may find that a less frequent strategy is more productive for your company and healthier for your list.

Let Customers Control Frequency

If you send e-mails once a week or less, you probably don't need to consider this option.  But companies that mail more than once a week should allow recipients to adjust the frequency of their messages.

Take a look at the JoS. A. Bank Clothier footer and the accompanying "Change Frequency" screen. 

JoS A. Banks Clothier email footer

A subscriber who clicks on the Change Frequency link is presented with a simple choice:

JoS A. Bank Clothier Email Preference Center

Some marketers make frequency the focus of email promotions. They send emails that highlight the recipients' ability to receive fewer e-mails and provide links that allow recipients to adjust their preferences.

When Frequency is fine

If you have a plan in place to send triggered messages based on the activity of the recipient, don't stop.  This may step up the frequency of contact with certain individuals on your list, but these messages are highly relevant based on purchase activity, browsing behavior or other targeted information.  This is pertinent marketing and should be extremely productive.

Cash In on Peak Seasons

During peak selling seasons, such as the gift-giving holidays, many marketers make a conscious decision to increase frequency.  Smith-Harmon, an e-mail marketing agency, released a study that examined the number of promotional emails sent by online retailers in 2008. It found that email volume peaked last December, when retailers sent consumers an average of 14.6 emails. That equates to an email every other day.

This frequency spike is still a calculated risk, due to the factors discussed earlier, but the season also represents a time when many catalogers have the largest amount of sales.  It may be prudent to capitalize on a peak buying season.

There are no absolutes in the frequency debate.  But you can strategically assess the risks and rewards and put a plan in place that makes sense for your business.  Email certainly works; just don't kill the goose that lays the golden egg. 
 

Reggie Brady is president of Reggie Brady Marketing Solutions, a direct and e-mail marketing consultancy in Norwalk, CT. You can reach her at (203) 838-8138 or reggie@reggiebrady.com

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