Thursday, May 10, 2007

Email Marketing by the Numbers

I just want to take a moment and tell you about a book that has come out recently that I highly recommend - "Email Marketing by the Numbers". It is a great book by Chris Baggott and Ali Sales - both of whom I collaborated very closely with during my days in marketing department at ExactTarget. They are both extremely talented marketers to which I can personally attest.

I bought the book as soon as it came available and was delighted to find it not just a book by Chris, but a compilation of work from many talented internet marketers from around the world. Many of those talented professionals are people I worked with while at ExactTarget like Morgan Stewart, Chip House, Joel Book, and Ali Sales. Other contributors, specifically Amol Dalvi, I continue to work with in my current position at tech start up Right On Interactive.

I also want to mention Kelly Rusk with Card Communications who is an email marketing expert who contributed to the book as well - she both posts and links here and is an extremely talented internet marketer. I met her by chance when I started blogging and have been faithfully reading her posts ever since!

Besides the fact that many reputable professionals contributed to the book (my friends!) - it is also an easy read. A book on email marketing could easily put anyone to sleep (even die-hards like me) but instead it flows nicely and the examples and insight are truly inspiring.

So if you are truly interested in adding email to your marketing arsenal or just want to hone in your existing skills - you cant go wrong buying this book. Good job guys!

Google Analytics gets a facelift

Here it is...

If you logged into your Google account recently you saw a notice about Google Analytics undergoing a face lift. So I was pleasantly suprised when I logged into my account today and saw that my account had been migrated already and I was able to take it out for an initial test drive!

I have to say that I really love the new interface. Its much more intuitive and even simpler to use and understand than before...which was hard to do since it was already a pretty sleek and easy to use interface.

Here are the main improvements:

  • Email and export reports: Schedule or send ad-hoc personalized report emails and export reports in PDF format.
  • Custom Dashboard: No more digging through reports. Put all the information you need on a custom dashboard that you can email to others.
  • Trend and Over-time Graph: Compare time periods and select date ranges without losing sight of long term trends.
  • Contextual help tips: Context sensitive Help and Conversion University tips are available from every report.
I have to say that I really think the interface is a huge improvement in helping you find the information that is most important to you. Where you usually had to dig through to find the data - you are now able to get to it more quickly, save it, and share it.

So far I am very impressed. What do you think?

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Outlook 2007 - more like 1999...

If you are a marketer you have to be pulling your hair out at the new Outlook 2007.

Check out the article at Marketing Sherpa.

What we have here is a major shift in how marketers will have to approach email marketing, since Microsoft has decided to move away completely from usability and technology in favor of security. (It should be noted that I don't accept the premise of the argument that it is ultimately a choice of one or the other...)

If you are a web designer - you may want to relearn how to design using tables because the new Outlook does not support CSS floating or positioning. The irony for us old web designers is that we actually remember what it was like to hack together a design using tables - most new designers are unfamiliar with the old way of designing on the web...welcome to 1999!

If you put forms in your email - don't expect those to render either. You know those sophisticated emails that contain surveys or registrations...kiss them goodbye because they are now the odd man out. Sit back and think about what this means as marketers...yep, it sucks that bad.

And if you were ever holding out for rich media - videos, flash, applets ect...fuhgettaboutit! Microsoft doesn't seem to think that those spam filter issues are going away any time soon - so now it will be even longer before they become available in email. Thanks alot.

The biggest point I am making besides the fact that all of these changes really impact email marketing negatively - is that its a fundamental shift in Microsoft's way of thinking. Instead of pioneering the way to help make email more user friendly and extending its functionality, they have decided to force us into much more primitive email. It almost feels like Microsoft is trying to revert back to 1999.

But then those were much better times for Microsoft.

Spread the word!

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