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mobileStorm Knowledge Base
.: General Troubleshooting
.: E-mail Marketing for Blackberrys
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E-mail Marketing for Blackberrys
SUMMARY Ready to hear the horrible truth? 64% of key decision makers are
viewing your carefully crafted email on their BlackBerrys and other
mobile devices, according to new MarketingSherpa data. And, chances
are, your email looks downright awful.
What do you do? First, find a BlackBerry and see for yourself.
Then, call for an immediate meeting with your email design team. To
help, we've put together a list of tactics and creative samples so you
can see just how truly bad it is. Plus, hotlinks to two cool
simulators.
BlackBerrys are
the device of choice for the business users over Treos and Palm Pilots.
And while reviews on Apple's iPhone are that it's an incredibly
wonderful Web tool, it's not yet as mission-critical as the BlackBerry
for email -- especially when it comes to enterprise email applications.
Most
marketers we talked to echoed Overamerica Media Group CEO Jon Levy, who
says, We believe that a significant percentage of our subscribers read
their email in mobiles as the first point of contact. We are starting
to commit ourselves to optimizing our email to work better in mobile
because of it.
You don't have to send in just text-only email
to reach BlackBerry users. If you're truly dedicated to gaining an edge
in this the-time-is-now niche through testing techniques and
researching your database, there are ways of delivering richer media
experiences to the BlackBerry crowd. Although more B-to-B people use
BlackBerrys at the moment, that's changing. The good thing is that our
roundup of tips work for consumer marketers, too.
Demographics & Usage
Young
adults are the primary users of mobile devices. According to new
research from ExactTarget, which surveyed 4,202 mobile phone users, 7%
of whom identified themselves as mobile email users:
o 38% are ages 18-44 vs 12% for ages 45-64 o 80% access their mobile email at home o 39% admit to checking email while driving their cars
Users
are also a wealthier demographic -- 19% of mobile phone users with an
annual household income of more than $100,000 regularly use their
mobile devices to access email. For households earning $200,000+, that
number doubles to 38%.
Another key point -- people use mobile
email differently. Primarily, it's to stay on top of matters that users
deem as urgent. 87% access the same email accounts from both their
mobile device and through a computer at home or work, says Morgan
Stewart, Director Research & Strategy, ExactTarget. Rendering,
screen resolution and hard-to-use keyboards make mobile less desirable
than desktops or laptops for accessing email.
Mobile email
users scan their email for important one-to-one messages, leaving the
rest for perusal on their PC later. Sales reps and road warriors are
the main mobile email users, but this is going to change in the next
six months, ExactTarget predicts, because of lowering prices on mobile
devices. This means more consumers will be accessing email this way.
And let's not forget the iPhone.
If mobile marketing is
important to serving your demographic, Stewart urges you to join an
advocacy trade organization, such as the W3C, post-haste. Trying to
work with the device manufacturers and service carriers on achieving
standards is the only way the marketing community will decrease their
frustrations.
This market is a moving target because everyone
is trying to beat everyone else in terms of putting out the next cool
device, he says. "There's very little consideration out there for
mobile standards. We need to start figuring out how to standardize this
stuff from a coding perspective.
-> Strategy #1. Text-only vs HTML vs multipart MIME
Because
no standards exist regarding how an email is displayed on a mobile
device, Overamerica's Levy and others say to send email as text-only so
it renders better for BlackBerry users. Why text-only emails? If they
look good on a BlackBerry, they'll also be readable on a PC. For all
of our campaigns, text-only clickthroughs are usually 30% higher than
HTML, Levy says. "We keep the message short, sweet and to the point."
When
sending time-sensitive alerts, consider designing the entire campaign
for mobiles, using short messages and allowing recipients to react to
the message quickly.
But many marketers simply cannot abandon
HTML that easily, which is why multipart MIME comes into play, says
Stewart. Multipart MIME is an email format that includes both an HTML
and a text-only version in the same message and displays the version
that the user's system is set to show. Systems that can't show HTML
should show the text version instead, assuming your email client
understands MIME format.
Here's an example from Stewart why
B-to-B marketers should use multipart MIME: If you have a white paper
offer that is only available for a few days, of course, your
subscribers aren't going to download it onto their mobiles. So,
encourage them to flag the email so that when they get back to the
office, they'll remember to download it. This way you get the text to
them and also all the benefits of HTML.
Still, multipart MIME
isn't the end-all answer. According to Stewart, the text version will
be displayed on mobile devices only 60% of the time. Some systems will
attempt to display HTML -- it depends on the email client.
-> Strategy #2. Type size, call to action and hotlinks
Getting
the right type size for BlackBerry emails can be tricky because people
set up their defaults differently. The current situation is similar to
a few years ago with the Internet, where you couldn't assume that
everyone had high-speed access or a wide-screen monitor.
"Based
on what we've seen, using 8-point fonts seems to work", says
mobileStorm CEO Jared Reitzin. "In the end, you want to make the body
text a small but viewable size."
Seven more tips:
- Character
space is limited, so make sure that your company name is immediately
recognizable and that the subject line includes a compelling call to
action in the first 15-25 characters.
- No matter how you
approach the issue, you need to realize that busy people don't read
their BlackBerry email -- they scan it. Subscribers aren't likely to
scroll through your full message. This is why the subject line and
first screen (100 total characters, or 20-25 words) need to really grab
your subscriber's attention so they'll mark it and follow it up later
when they're back on a PC.
- Keep permission in mind.
Subscribers are more likely to delete your message without reading it
if you sent it to them unsolicited, too frequently or it's irrelevant.
-
Don't hotlink names of people or places if you want your BlackBerry
readers to be able to see the words that are laying over the code. If
you want to include a link, use the full address, such as http://www.marketingsherpa.com
-
If a user opens an email on their wireless, the same message will
typically appear opened (and no longer bolded) on their email system
back at the office, so it's very important to get them to flag it so
they remember it later.
- Use a text-only header and a
sentence or two that places the *hook* of the offer at the very top. "Attention spans for mobile users are even shorter than they are for
people on computers, so the hook should be the first thing they read,"
Levy says.
- Levy and Reitzin both suggest placing logos and
images below the text, perhaps on the second or third BlackBerry
screen. This way, your PC audience gets a more dynamic message but your
BlackBerry users still get the message right away. Reitzin calls it a "blog-style" design. -> Strategy #3. Writing subject lines
Because
of the scanning habits of BlackBerry users, subject lines will make up
a significant portion of the text that they read. Email copywriter
Karen Gedney suggests spending equal time writing and rewriting subject
lines as you do on the rest of the copy. You may end up writing 10-15
different versions before settling on one.
Other tips:
o
Keep subject lines short, using only key words, such as "Action Item"
and "Reminder", and for time-sensitive events such as webinars, "Filling Fast" o Put the *subject* first in the subject line. For
instance, if your email is for an SEO white paper, "SEO" should be the
first thing they read in the subject line
It's like the saying, "Be brief, be brilliant and be gone,"Â Gedney says. I've had about 15
clients adopt this philosophy with their subject lines, and they ve all
seen response rates increase.
-> Strategy #4. Survey your house file
Since
far too many email directors wear hats for creative, list, reputation
management, etc. -- they haven't had time to determine how many members
in their database are mobile readers. Of course, the best way is to
ask.
If you are a new company with an empty database, querying
people about if they plan on reading the email in a BlackBerry/mobile
during the signup process may do the trick. Then, segment them with a
dedicated file or send your email using multipart MIME.
Longstanding
companies will also want to research the names they already have. To
get started in that direction, some marketers are testing text-only
*identifier* campaigns, using subject lines that are specifically
designed to get the attention of BlackBerrys users.
For the
copy, the idea is to create a one- to three-sentence message explaining
that you would like to know if they normally read your email on a
mobile device or on a PC. Create a link for them to react to either
possibility.
If you find that your BlackBerry audience is too
big to ignore, you can begin targeting that segment to participate in a
short study on how they want to see email in their BlackBerrys.
"Even
if it's only a few people, they'll probably be able to inform you about
surprisingly egregious errors that you would have overlooked," says Jon
Cline, CIO, Enthusiast Inc. "The relationships can be powerful because
you will no longer be a slick salesperson trying to make a buck. You
are including them behind the scenes."
After you have recruited
your mini-focus group, get people with BlackBerrys in your office to
participate. Their face-to-face feedback will make your overall
findings more dynamic. If no one has a BlackBerry, get one added to
your budget immediately so you have a clear idea of what your readers
see. While you're at it, you'd better ask for a Motorola Q and iPhone,
too. (See below for hotlinks to two BlackBerry simulators.)
-> Strategy #5. Special BlackBerry landing page
Another
option several marketers are testing is a separate landing page for
BlackBerrys, where they provide a link at the top of the email that
immediately alerts the reader of the opportunity to click on it
("BlackBerry readers, click here"). Before you commit to this, make
sure the demand for such a feature truly exists.
"Creating
parallel HTML universes for mobile and Web browsers may be a very
difficult proposition," Cline says. "It could take a lot of extra
preparation and work. But for the right company, it may also really,
really prove to be beneficial."
The links would make tracking easy in order to:
o Gauge the concept's vitality o Perform necessary design tweaks
Basically,
you need your email design and IT people to build a truncated HTML page
before testing it like crazy. The two common screen sizes for
BlackBerry models are:
o 320x240 pixels for the newer versions (8700/8800 series and 8300/"the Curve") o 240x260 pixels for 8100 (also called the Pearl) and 7100 series
If
you decide to create a mobile landing page, Stewart suggests putting
the link for the mobile landing page link below the text message, so
users read the message first and foremost. It's worth a test. Having
the link above the text might influence users to click on the link more
or it might distract them so that it would be better after the message.
Four Technical Tips
Figuring
out the technical aspects to regular email can be a tasking experience,
much less dealing with BlackBerrys, too. Reitzin offers four tips to
take straight to your IT department once you're ready to test
BlackBerry initiatives:
Tip #1. Keep the header to 50 pixels
high and 320 pixels wide so you can put as much text on the opening of
your screen and grab the reader's attention.
Tip #2. On your
mobile-specific email, use H1 and H2 tags (H1 to H6 tags define
headers, with the former being the largest header and the latter being
the smallest). This will allow your headline to stand out (see creative
samples).
Tip #3. Don't use any sort of scripts within the HTML page since Javascript is not supported by mobile environments.
Tip
#4. Always limit the size of your HTML page to 200K or under.
BlackBerrys have tight restrictions in terms of the cache, and your
message might not get completely displayed.
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Article
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192
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Created
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July 26, 2007
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Modified
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May 14, 2008
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Author
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derek
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Rating
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