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    « FTC Nails Kodak and ICE.com for Violation of CAN-SPAM | Main | Job Market Survey »

    May 15, 2006

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    Comments

    Darla Dixon

    Testing the list...that is brilliant! Michelle Cubas is right, every one of your blog entries has a golden nugget of info in it :) Thank you!

    Michelle Cubas

    Dear Janine,

    One reason I open your email blog is that I "trust" there is a golden nugget in there somewhere. You've established your credibility with me by consistently delivering information I can use and share with my clients.

    Thank you. It is refreshing.

    Regards,
    Michelle Cubas, Positive Potentials LLC
    Enterprise Brand Strategist & Business Coach
    Business Influences http://coachcubas.blogspot.com

    Dr.M.Grant

    I had use some different techniques, before I manage to work out Best working one. It’s start with invitation. Invitation is your first contact with the respondents and may be the only opportunity to persuade them to participate in your study. A catchy subject line may get people to open your email but what really gets them to read it is their name in the preview pane. It must contain all the important information in the first few lines. State who you are, why you’ve contacted them, the purpose of the study, what you will do with the results, and if an honorarium is on offer. Give people some sort of time frame to work within. Set an appropriate deadline. Whether conducting business-to-business or business-to-consumer research, assuring confidentiality is essential to increasing response rates. An honorarium is a way to thank respondents and show them that their time is appreciated. Send at least one reminder three days prior to the deadline, to those who haven’t yet participated in the study. I have pointed that in my Marketing Strategy dissertation, which you may obtain in here( http://www.coursework4you.co.uk/sprtmrk14.htm). Yet, your article give some performance ,if I may say. Would recommend to some of my partners to read .

    Janine

    Hi lrm - Not knowing your open rate or conversion rates I'll take a stab at this. For your open rate you'll probably want to get more than the usual statistically valid sample of 100 becuase I'm guessing you'll want them to then click through. So in this case let's define a "response" as an open since you want to test your subject line. If you know your open rate will be 20%, I'd suggest you mail roughly 5,000 to get 1000 opens. (1000/.20=5000). Now if you know you have a 3% click through rate you can compare this at the same time. Email 5000 at that rate and you'll get a statistically valid sample too (5000 x .03 = 150) since I'm assuming that what you really want them to do it click. So here, either way, you're covered.

    lrm

    Say I have a list of 50,000 names and want to test three subject lines. What percentage of the list should I send the test to for it to be statistically valid?

    I'm positing that I will test the three subject lines on a small sample of the list (well three small samples) and then send the best performing one to the remainder of the list. So I want to keep the sample as small as possible to so as to be able to send the best performing subject line to the greatest number of addresses in my list.

    Thanks.

    Janine

    Hi Andi - Great question. If you have two separate campaigns and someone appears on your list twice, then yes they would recieve it twice. One way to prevent this is to download each list to an excel file and sort by email address in Excel. Find the like email addresses on the list then suppress them from your mailing so they don't recieve the campaign for this test at all. Not the most optimal way but it works. Another way to prevent this is if the two lists are "alike" meaning both are customer or both are prospect you can re-upload one of them, then append the second list to the first. This way all duplicates are removed. Then download the list, split it in two in Excel then re-upload two lists for your test. Again, a little bit of work, but it might be an answer for you.

    Andi

    I have two lists set up on my account: one with about 5000 users and one with about 10000 users. If I send a campaign to each of these lists separately, to track each list separately, will users who happen to be included in both lists receive the email twice?

    Janine

    Hi Rich - Not yet, however, our engineers have been hard at work reworking our systems to be able to handle this. Believe me, it's something I'd like in our system and it's something the team here is striving for. Stay tuned...

    Rich Majorek

    I would love to be able to test creative, offer, subject lines, etc., but I don't think vertical response really offers me the necessary tools to do this without setting up multiple campaigns and a lot of manual segmentation of lists. Are there tools available that I'm missing?

    Janine

    Hi Alon

    You can download your list into MS Excel and divide your list into a few parts. Then you can name them and upload them as separate lists.

    Hope this helps!

    Alon Raskin

    How does vertical response facilitate in dividing my mailing list into various groups? For example, if I have 10,000 names in a mailing list, I may want to be able to compare different subjects lines. How does vertical response allow me to do this?

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