Home > Email Marketing > Top 12 Tips To Re-Engage Your “Inactive” Customer via email

Top 12 Tips To Re-Engage Your “Inactive” Customer via email

March 13th, 2009 by XDXY eMarketing

Based on some preliminary analysis, we estimate that 25 to 33 percent of the typical email list may be comprised of “inactive” recipients. In this context, we are defining inactive recipients as those who have not opened AND clicked on a single email over a given period of time/number of emails.

Here are some tips on what you can do to re-engage your inactives:

1. Special Offers - If you are a retailer, for example, consider a special offer such as discounts or free shipping. If you are a B2B marketer you might offer a special white paper that will motivate the recipient to re-engage with your communications.

2. Survey Subscribers - While you are not likely to get a significant response, consider surveying these recipients to help provide insight into their inactivity.

3. Update Profile - Using incentives, drive subscribers to your profile update page where they can change email addresses, update format preferences, demographics and interests. This updated information may now enable you to send them targeted and relevant emails.

4. Understand Their Demographics/Profile - Perhaps a large percentage of your inactives share a common trait. Perhaps they opted in as part of registering for a white paper or seminar or promotional offer. Or perhaps a majority are women, while your content is oriented toward men.

5. Try Different Send Days/Times - If you always mail on the same day or time of day, try some different distribution times (what do you have to lose?).

6. Modify Frequency - Now that you’ve segmented your list by actives and inactives, consider adjusting the frequency of your sends. If you normally send twice per month, you may want to test sending three times to active subscribers, but only once to inactives.

7. Create Different Content - If your analysis has been able to uncover some common threads among inactives, consider packaging the content differently for this group. For example, a newsletter from a job search-oriented business might logically find many subscribers becoming inactive after completing their job search. For these recipients, the company might want to focus its newsletter content on managing people, careers and the hiring process. Uncovering this type of trend should lead to providing different newsletters or dynamic versions based on a person’s profile or stated preferences.

8. Try Different Formats - Test using a text version, for example, that is very simple but with specific links and messaging intended to drive action.

9. Test Different Styles of Subject Lines - If you’ve used a particular style of subject line, try a different approach with the inactives. Creative subject lines could be one of your most effective strategies in getting recipients to re-engage.

10. Monitor Seed/Proof Lists - Send your messages to proof and seed lists for key domains. Monitor if content or images are causing your messages to be filtered or treated differently with specific ISPs and companies. If problems are detected, consider developing different versions of the messages that may not trip
filters.

11. Send a Postcard - If you have your subscribers’ mailing addresses, consider sending them a postcard that offers an incentive if they’ll update their email preferences and profile.

12. Move Re-engaged to Active Status - After each email message sent to the inactives, change the demographic status of those recipients clicked a link to “active.” This helps keep your focus on converting the inactives and tracking your success in those efforts.

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Email Marketing , ,

  1. March 14th, 2009 at 03:58 | #1

    Cookie driven re-engagement email is driving super open rates for hand raisers at our clients sites. Either a useful default message that is relevant for the customers to use, or a departure page specific offer. This is geared for anyone who is in the client’s opt in email list, who visits the site and leaves with out transacting. They only will receive one of these in a 24 hour period provided they do not transact. Basically a selectable full site abandon tool.

  2. March 14th, 2009 at 06:02 | #2

    Great article - just what I needed - thanks!

  3. March 15th, 2009 at 00:14 | #3

    Excellent list. Picked a few good pointers. I might add:

    Have a Contest

    Ask then a specific question

    Ask for their help.

    Cheers!

    Gadgetguy Gadgetgreg

  4. March 17th, 2009 at 18:23 | #4

    I’d add that selling is often what has put off consumers in the first place. Sending them something really useful, like Jacob Tangs “is your email marketing doing better then this industry benchmark?”.

    Whilst this is marketing it’s valuable information. So my number one tip to increase open rates would be give away valuable information.

  5. Jacob
    March 17th, 2009 at 21:24 | #5

    @greg gazin

    Thanks for adding

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