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Title:
Holiday
Action Saves a Sour Shopping Season
Author:
Beka
Ruse
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Usually,
U.S. retailers earn 20-80% of their entire yearly gross during the holiday
season. But this year, things are different. The sluggish US economy
has prompted Deloitte Research's Carl Steidtmann to fear "the worst
Christmas ever" in the retail sector.Short of going door to door
in a Santa suit, how can businesses increase profits and prevent a blue
Christmas? Despite economic gloom, industry leaders have found that
an e-mail follow up strategy can increase sales by a cheery 35%! To
weather the ailing economy, use a follow up autoresponder during your
holiday campaigns.
What
Does It Do?
Follow
up autoresponders follow up with your leads for you. You create a
series of messages, and decide when they should be sent, (daily, weekly,
etc.). Your autoresponder will send the messages to each new lead
automatically. With no further intervention from you, your leads will
remember you throughout the winter chill. And this regular reminding
will mean more sales during the all-important holiday shopping season.
Give
yourself the gift of a higher conversion rate! Follow up automatically
using these simple steps:
Offer
Useful Information
Personalize Your Messages
Track Your Leads
Broadcast Tailor-Made Offers
Write
your follow up messages for your leads - not for yourself. You want
to talk about your great service, but your leads just want to know
what they'll get out of it!
At some
point, you must have purchased something like your product. What were
you looking for then? Was it information about pricing, styles, or
holiday gift wrapping? Maybe just a clearer explanation of the product?
Figure that out, and put the answer in your follow up messages. That's
what your leads want to know.
Personalize
Your Messages
You don't
open postal mail addressed to "Current Resident", and your
leads aren't going to read e-mail addressed to "Dear Internet
Friend." People are simply more likely to read messages that
address them by name.Autoresponders
let you use variables to personalize your messages. This way, you
write just one message, but Lenny Lead reads "Happy Holidays,
Lenny!" while Kate Customer reads "Happy Holidays, Kate!"
Names
are only the beginning of the personalization features available,
though. In addition to full, first, and last names, some autoresponders
let you add e-mail addresses, dates, or an ad category. The best even
correct the capitalization in your leads' names, giving your messages
a much more professional look.
Get even
better results from your snowballing list of leads by experimenting
with follow up content and timing. Your experimentation will be much
more successful if you have access to proper statistics.
Only
use a follow up autoresponder that offers detailed lead statistics.
Look for live, graphical stats that show your incoming leads broken
down by day / week / month, all of your active leads, and leads who
have requested removal from your list.
Broadcast
Tailor-Made Offers
To get
more bang for your holiday buck, look for an autoresponder that also
lets you broadcast extra e-mails to all of your leads. Some even allow
you to send tailor-made offers only to leads who meet certain criteriaFor
instance, send everyone who's been on your list for a month a special
discount. Or, notify all leads interested in a certain product when
a new shipment comes in. Follow
up messages keep leads warm. Use periodic broadcasts to convert them
to sales!
Prevent
a Crummy Christmas
Businesses
of all sizes have seen their sales grow by leaps and bounds because
of automated follow up. Implement your follow up strategy now to make
the best use of holiday leads! Then, enjoy the season - your autoresponder
is following up for you!
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Beka Ruse is the Business Development Manager at AWeber Communications.
Find a free article archive, and more about automated e-mail follow
up at: http://www.aweber.com/lhs.htm
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------References:
Sydell, L. (2001, October 23). Holiday Online Retail, National Public
Radio's Marketplace
Covert, J. (2001, October 23). NY Fashion Designers Launch Bid to
Revive Holiday Sales, Wall Street Journal
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