You are currently browsing the Education Marketing weblog archives for September, 2008.
17/09/2008 by Tony Attwood.
Three years ago hardly anyone emailed schools. Now email is the fastest growing type of educational marketing. But not everyone is getting acceptable response rates.
My aim here is to outline the different types of email services available, give an idea of the sort of response rates you can get, and set out how much email marketing will cost.
There are two main services available: emailing schools and emailing teachers. Each has its own unique benefits.
If you email schools, you should be able to get a list of virtually every school. The addresses will be of the school administrator for the most part, and so it is important to write Attn: The Head of Maths (or whoever you want to reach) in the subject line.
A typical mailing (including guidance on how the email should be written, supply of the list and the transmission of the mailing) will cost around 5p per school.
The best response rate I’ve had in selling a product costing £20 via email to teachers is 1.2%. But I would add here that we had to experiment several times in order to get this – the way the advert is written really does affect the response rate.
I have seen other people talk of higher response rates and lower costs, but generally these seem to me to be for different scenarios – for example on emails aimed direct at teachers or previous buyers (as opposed to all schools), or for free items.
The two central problems with emails sent in this way are that school email addresses do change a lot and it is often the case that email addresses given on school web sites are (rather curiously) not always accurate. (Call me if you’d like to know why). However we are currently working on accuracy rates approaching 95% for our email lists, and this figure is edging upwards all the time.
Emailing teachers is a different matter. When you email schools you get to almost every school, but you are dependent on the administrator passing the email on. When you email teachers you only get to those teachers who have opted into the email service, which means you only reach a fraction of all possible teachers. But because you reach them directly, and because they have opted in, the response rate can be much higher. Selling the same £20 product as mentioned above we have had response rates of 3.5%, as opposed to the record 1.2% on the “email schools” promotion.
If you’ve not promoted your product before via email it is often a good idea to start by using the email teachers service, on the grounds that if you don’t get a good response rate there, you are very unlikely to get much of a result anywhere else.
After that, many companies find that they can make a good profit using both services.
There’s more on emailing teachers direct at www.yesmail.org.uk/emailteachersdirect.html
There’s a summary of prices for emailing schools at www.yesmail.org.uk/Schools.html
For more information, to talk about the ways of writing your email such that it will get the highest possible response rate, and to discuss the best way to write your email, please do call 01536 399 000.
If you have been, thanks for reading.
Tony Attwood
PS: The issue that I haven’t dealt with is the relative merits of email vis a vis direct mail. That’s for another day – but if you would like to know more now please do call on 01536 399 000.
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11/09/2008 by Tony Attwood.
What do blogs, web sites and newsgroups have to do with bringing in new customers and building relationships?
I started work on this a couple of years back, and earlier this year produced a report on finding thus far suggesting that blogs and the like can make a big difference. There’s a link to that report below.
Since then HHM has continued its experiment, and has now managed to get one of its blogs read by over 65,000 different people a month, and now has the odd situation of companies contacting us to ask if they can advertise on the site!
We’ve also now started running a newsgroup for another company, and the number of calls we are getting on this seems to be rising.
So, is it possible to build customer relationships and enhance orders through the whole “web 2.0″ field? The answer is yes, most certainly. If you want to get more people to your web site, if you want to interact with customers and potential customers more, and overall if you want to find an interestingly low cost way of building sales, the new technology can do it.
The down side is that there’s a load of people out there who want to sell you solutions that don’t necessarily work - especially with that old favourite of “get you to the top of the google search list.”
This can be done - for example we’ve done it for the word “schools” which depending on where you are in the world and what time of day it is, will have our site www.schools.co.uk as first, second or third out of 32 million on a UK search and in the top three on page one out of 467 million worldwide.
And just to show we are not just education - we did it for shawls as well, where our customer is now on page 1 of google for “baby shawls” out of 111,000.
Thus it can all be done - but it is time consuming, and not something you can fix up in a spare half hour. The earlier article on the topic is below, or you can call me, tell me what you sell, and I’ll tell you what I know: 01536 399 013
http://www.hamilton-house.com/free%20reports/Blogs.pdf
Tony Attwood
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02/09/2008 by Tony Attwood.
In order to show you just how effective our shared mailings can be, Hamilton House Mailings plc can offer you a special low price on shared mailings. The only qualifying clause is that you have not undertaken a shared mailing with us during the past 12 months.
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