Is your B2B company one of the 93% utilizing email marketing?
In an effort to generate leads, boost engagement, and improve customer retentions and acquisition, most are.
However, over the past two years, many companies have reported challenges in optimizing their email marketing strategy. The cause is often an disproportionately large focus on social media, which has taken center stage as the focus of digital marketing strategies.
To optimize emails and drive results, B2B companies need to look at the big picture of digital marketing. It is not just one channel that will lead to success. Instead, an inclusive and cohesive strategy is needed, which utilizes each channel for the specific purposes it serves best. With that in mind, it is time to bring a focus back to email marketing and embrace the innovations that will drive results.
In this article, we will cover two strategies for making the most out of your email marketing campaign. However, first let’s take a closer look at why an inclusive digital marketing strategy is so important.
Digital marketing can be looked at as a puzzle, and without all of the pieces, you can’t get the final result. The ‘pieces’ include social media, email marketing, SEO, paid ads, conversion rate optimization, and blogging. Each of these serves a purpose in the process of engaging leads and eventually converting them to customers. As social media took off in popularity, particularly over the past two years, many claimed email to be ‘dead’. With the ability to reach a wide audience and engage with them on social media platforms, many B2B companies questioned if email still had a place within their marketing strategy. Fortunately, you don’t have to look far to find the answer. There are 2.5 billion email users in the world, and email offers unique advantages. Here are just a few:
Email marketing has its place. It is useful for engaging prospects, staying in communication with them, nurturing leads, driving specific actions, and increasing customer loyalty. Social media also has its place in building brand awareness, establishing authority, and generating leads. They can work together, along with other channels, to drive results.
If your company has slacked off in the area of email marketing, it’s time to revamp your focus. Here are two strategies (and perhaps a bonus!) that can help you make the most out of your email marketing campaigns.
Most B2B companies are utilizing email marketing to send their newsletters. While these can serve a purpose, another type of email drives 152% more clicks. I’m referring to automated emails, which respond when prospects take specific actions. Examples include emails sent in response to subscribing to a newsletter, showing engagement with specific services, or when a free trial is started. Imagine a customer who downloads an e-book about one of your services. They are obviously interested, so an autoresponder email can follow up afterward, offering another supplementary piece of information that can help in their buying decision. By using behavior-based automation in your emails, companies can give their leads the most relevant information. This helps to increase engagement and move them through the buying funnel. When asking B2B marketers if data-driven personalized marketing is effective, 95% said results were increasing ‘marginally’ or ‘significantly’. To implement this strategy, you will need to identify important actions that signal interest and plan emails in response to them. Learn more about creating a behavioral email marketing strategy in this helpful guide from Hubspot, and if you’d like to see this strategy in action, check out these successful examples.
List segmentation is the tactic of dividing up your email list according to certain criteria. Marketers using this strategy report higher open rates, lower unsubscribe rates, better deliverability, and increased sales leads.
This strategy involves being in tune with the advancement of your leads through your buying cycle. Each prospect will be looking for specific information as they progress closer to making a purchase. As a result, your emails should be planned to help in the process. When leads are new and cold, you want to provide them with educational content so they can clearly identify the problem they need to solve. Once they know their problem, they move into the stage of looking for solutions. Here, you will provide information specific to your product or service. Then, once they decide on the product they want, it is time to move into the copy to close the sale.
If your company’s email marketing campaign is suffering from poor results, don’t give up—you now have the three strategies you need to overcome the challenge. Throughout it all, remember to keep digital marketing investments balanced between the different channels, and be sure to stay up on the latest trends. Let’s quickly recap the three strategies we’ve covered in this article:
If you have any questions at this stage, we’d be more than happy to help—just get in touch via the comments section below!