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E-mail and viral marketing

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Title: E-mail and viral marketing


1
E-mail and viral marketing
  • MARK 430

2
Todays class will cover
  • Marketing communications
  • Email marketing
  • How to get your email delivered and opened
  • Understanding SPAM legislation
  • Viral marketing
  • Putting it all together
  • Case study of Lord of the Rings (website and
    viral marketing)

3
E-mail (direct marketing)
  • Marketing-related e-mail is 22 of a typical
    Internet users in-box (conservative estimate)
  • More than half of this is spam (marketers have
    abused and misused email?)
  • Advantages
  • Cheap
  • Direct (include hyperlink to website for
    click-through)
  • Disadvantages
  • Bad reputation because of spam
  • Emails keep changing
  • No direct correspondence between person and email
    address as there is with physical mail

4
Metrics for Electronic and Postal Mail
Source Jupiter Communications as cited in
E-mail and the different...
5
Why does SPAM continue?
  • Cost to sender is minimal
  • Very low response rate (0.025) required to make
    SPAM profitable
  • Nature of the worldwide global network enables
    SPAM
  • Legal penalties difficult to enforce

6
Permission marketing (opt-in versus opt-out
direct marketing)
  • Seth Godwin coined the term permission
    marketing to describe opt-in
  • Ask people what they are interested in
  • Ask permission to send them information
  • Then do it in an entertaining, educational, or
    interesting manner
  • Opt-in techniques will grow considerably because
    it is seen as an effective way to reach people
    who have been made skeptical of traditional
    marketing techniques

7
eMail marketing challenges
  • Even with opt-in, there are considerable
    challenges in
  • Getting your email to the recipient (spam filters
    etc)
  • Getting them to open it when they get it

8
Some tactics to help get your email delivered and
opened
  • Double opt-in subscription process
  • No pre-checked boxes
  • Visible update email or preferences link
  • A recognized, expected, consistent sender name
  • Branded subject lines and subject line content
  • Based on How Nongeeks Can Increase eMail Delivery

9
Some tactics to help get your email delivered and
opened (contd)
  • Be aware of how content (spam) filtering works
  • Message proofing and pre-testing
  • Personalization and segmentation
  • Think about images instead of text (downside!)
  • Manage user expectations
  • Select appropriate send time
  • Based on How Nongeeks Can Increase eMail
    Delivery

10
Stay legal
  • Canadian legal position
  • no legislation in place yet
  • Being considered by the Spam Task Force
  • US law the Can Spam Act came into force on
    Jan 1, 2004
  • Requirements for commercial emailers

11
Viral marketing (word-of-mouth direct marketing)
  • Any strategy that encourages people to pass on
    your message to others
  • Let the users of the Internet do your marketing
    for you
  • It works, and its free
  • Hotmail used this technique to raise product
    awareness
  • Be careful of customer perception that they are
    being used people are increasingly
    sophisticated and cynical

12
Elements of a viral marketing strategy
  • Free products or services
  • Easy to pass on to someone else (Recommend it
    email to a friend etc)
  • Build in scalability (get ready for the rush)
  • Build on common motivations and behaviours
  • Understand and exploit existing communications
    networks
  • Some examples of virals from Lycos Cheeky Emails

13
Marketing communication Putting it all together
  • Case Study Marketing Lord of the Rings
  • Based on information taken from Internet
    Marketing Building Advantage in a Networked
    Economy. 2nd Ed. Rafi A Mohammed et al.
    Irwin/McGraw Hill. 2004.

14
The marketing plan for Lord of the Rings
  • Framing the marketing opportunity - the LOTR
    brand was already well known before the films, so
    the strategy had to build on that
  • Marketing opportunity analysis understanding
    customer needs
  • film has elements that appeal to several
    audiences (action, romance etc)
  • existing fan base was already very active online
    - good opportunity for viral marketing
  • website could serve various interests
  • hard core fans could get behind-the-scenes info
  • others could find out about actors
  • others may be interested in the cultural aspects
    of Middle Earth
  • Risk was that fans may not like the movie, in
    which case the Internet could be a liability -
    bad reviews travel fast

15
The marketing plan for Lord of the Rings
  • Marketing strategy
  • Segmentation the potential audience varied in
    demographics and psychographics. Hard-core fans
    were targeted separately from general movie
    goers, women targeted separately from men
  • Targeting and timing
  • the strategy was to target core LOTR fans first -
    these would eventually become evangelists for the
    product. Need to instill trust early on, and
    encourage viral marketing. Community building
    with established Tolkien websites was also done
  • Secondary groups and mass audiences were targeted
    using website, and conventional mass media

16
The marketing plan for Lord of the Rings
  • Marketing strategy
  • Positioning
  • once the audience segments were defined, the
    positioning of the movie was decided, with online
    and offline positioning working together to
    provide consistency
  • best positioning determined to be a stunning
    action/adventure with a classic good-versus-evil
    story that focuses on a ring with great powers
  • a lot of focus on the ring in communications
  • lot of focus on the setting, the landscape, the
    costumes and the creatures
  • online and offline advertising campaigns were
    separately tailored for male and female audiences

17
The marketing plan for Lord of the Rings
  • Implementation The Marketing Program
  • viral marketing formed the core of its
    communication strategy - powerful tool for
    generating awareness. Used pre-existing fan base
  • LOTR newsletter (click-through rate of gt50 and
    forwarding rate of 25)
  • Partnering and shared content - content provided
    to other websites - advertorial material -
    increased market reach
  • heavy use of downloadable viral content on
    website (eg. preview footage)

18
The marketing plan for Lord of the Rings
  • Implementation The Marketing Program
  • Official website raising awareness - first
    preview footage April 2000 - objectives
  • show early adopters that the film would be of
    high quality - generate early buzz among key fan
    group
  • give something to the fans - keep them excited
  • drive awareness of website and the movie
  • Execution - co-ordinating the power of the
    community - used other Tolkien sites, daily
    email alerts, and countdown image releases.
    Intention was to create high expectations for the
    exclusive launch
  • 1.7 million downloads within first 24 hours
  • 10 million downloads within 21 days

19
The marketing plan for Lord of the Rings
  • Use of official website
  • Many people who use the site are already
    committed to the brand
  • The customer experience at the site had to
    satisfy the committed fan, yet encourage
    exploration by novices
  • had to make newcomers feel welcome - not as
    though it was an exclusive club
  • The other marketing challenge was to integrate
    online and offline materials

20
The marketing plan for Lord of the Rings
  • The customer interface of the website - the 7 Cs

Context highly visual style, inviting look and
feel, topic-based interactive interface
Content focus on filmmaking, wealth of material
photos, audio, clips etc
Customization Low, no registration
21
Stages of Desired Customer Experience on the
official website
Experiencing Functionality Trailer and video materials for viewing readily available Navigation is simple and clear for downloads, community, cast and crew information Easy sign up for e-mail and promotions on homepage Direct links for actions including ticketing, online ship sales and merchandising
Experiencing Intimacy Website visitors articulated the value they derive from the site experience Consumers trust the information they find on the site Strong community has developed within site areas E-mail interaction allowed for open, clicking and forwarding to others
Experiencing Evangelism Strong evangelical support from the user base Trailer and new content postings are seeded throughout community areas as well as on other sites and posting boards Creates a strong sense of consumer ownership of the brand The website becomes a trusted friend
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