Wouldn’t it be great if you could figure out today what your
marketing plan should look like in six months? Crystal balls
don’t exactly grow on trees, so we’ve asked two industry
experts—Jordan Ayan, president of SubscriberMail, and Joel Book,
director of eMarketing Education at ExactTarget—to weigh in on
what’s coming in 2008. Here’s what they said.
1) More CRM integration, especially with
software-as-a-service (SaaS) offerings. B-to-b marketers say
their single greatest problem is finding a way to leverage
e-mail campaign data, Book said. They want salespeople to know
when someone has registered for a seminar or expressed interest
in a product. And they want that information to be disseminated
almost instantly, when the prospect is hot. “E-mail can play a
vital role in lead nurturing if you can track the many data
points that can serve as triggers,” he said. Having e-mail
functionality built into CRM solutions such as Salesforce.com or
Microsoft Dynamics CRM makes this possible.
2) Increased use of automated tools. Triggered messages,
rendering tools and segmentation tools should be on your radar
once the New Year kicks in—if they aren’t already, Ayan said.
“You need the ability to preview messages across multiple
clients, [see] how that message is going to look in the in-box,”
he said. “These are not new technologies, but people are finally
starting to use them, making e-mail a true marketing tool, not
just an afterthought.”
3) Closer alignment of marketing elements. E-mail can’t stand
alone anymore, which is why we’re seeing e-mail move up the
chain of command from a “siloed” departmental view into the
hands of CMOs or directors of marketing. The reason, Ayan said:
e-mail supports every other interactive marketing tactic.
For example, people use search engines to identify suppliers
with whom they are most likely to do business. Savvy e-mailers,
Book said, are using landing pages that link from search engines
to invite those prospects to opt in to additional
communications. “Most marketers invite signup on the main home
page, but the smartest ones figure out which pages are most
heavily trafficked and invite opt in there as well,” he said.
Ayan agreed. “It’s about moving e-mail out of the tactical
world and into the strategic world,” he said. “Integrate e-mail
into a marketing plan as a strategic element.”
4) Using rich video with e-mail marketing. Although marketers
learned that embedding video in e-mail can present difficulties,
video does work—especially in the b-to-b market, Book said. The
trick is to use e-mail to bring readers to a special landing
page where they can view video on their own terms. “The viral
effect of video also drives adoption of your e-mail and builds
an audience,” he said. Another option is to provide links to
forms or instant chat clients so people can ask questions of
salespeople or customer service agents. |