The fewer questions you ask, the more data you get
InfoWorld
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Lead with Knowledge[an error occurred while processing this directive]
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Home  //  Community //  Opinions //  Article
Print Article    Email Article
E-Business Secrets
Brian Livingston
The fewer questions you ask, the more data you get

I reported last week that MarketingSherpa and Intermarket Group have published "The E-Mail Marketer's Guide: Hard Data for 2002." This information-packed study has more than 100 pages of results from surveys of some 1,700 directors of online marketing.

Here's the second part of my summary of the findings:

1. DON'T BE NOSY. The report cites NetLine, a marketing program that sent out an offer of a free white paper. One registration form requested contact info plus one optional question. A nearly identical form asked for the same things, but with THREE optional questions. The longer form garnered a 50 percent response from the pre-qualified group, but the short form received a 74.6 percent response. The less you ask, the more you get.

2. OFFER SOMETHING. When consumers were asked by Jupiter Media Metrix what a Web site could promise in exchange for typing in their personal information, 48 percent wanted a chance to win a prize in a sweepstakes. About 31 percent wanted frequent-flier miles or a similar affinity program. But most important, 73 percent wanted a guarantee that the information would not be misused.

3. KEEP IT FRESH. One site, iEntry, which sends 50 million e-mails per month to its opt-in subscribers, noted the percentage of readers who opened each issue. "If they subscribed within the past three months, they open at 85-90 percent," says founder Rich Ord. "If they're two years old, on average they could be down to a 15 percent open rate unless you really revamp content and find new reasons to make them open."

4. MAIL EARLY. More than 3 out of 4 Internet users (76 percent) spend their first few minutes online reading and sending e-mail, according to figures from the U.S. Yankee Group. Gartner estimates that business users spend an average of 49 minutes per day managing their e-mail. This may explain why Travelocity found that it obtains the best results when it sends its messages between 8 a.m. and noon of each recipient's local time.

The report is chock full of other good stuff: e-mail opt-in rates, click-through rates, and much more. You'll find an overview and table of contents of the study at: http://www.sherpastore.com@n6.be/4e6d

I mentioned last week that MarketingSherpa is also sponsoring the E-Mail Newsletter Publishers Profit Workshop in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 14. Registration is $495. Due to an editing error, the Web link you can visit for more information was left out. Here it is: http://www.sherpastore.com@n6.be/61f5

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

LIVINGSTON'S TOP 10 NEWS PICKS O' THE WEEK

1. Webshots.com registers 150,000 new users per week in comeback success story: http://www.cnn.com@a2.tc/435

2. Visa implements new rules for online credit card transactions: http://www.cardforum.com@n6.be/81d

3. "Micro-size" e-commerce sites profit by staying small and simple: http://www.bizreport.com@836.as/c05

4. Elvis Costello music auto-upgrades you to Windows Media Player 9: http://www.theregister.co.uk@1c.to/fed

5. MIT is posting its materials online for no charge as "OpenCourseWare": http://news.bbc.co.uk@a6r.ms/13d5

6. Many online "personals" lead to bogus pay-per-minute telephone lines: http://www.msnbc.com@5a0.tc/17bd

7. Eight ways to dramatically increase your sales from online auctions: http://www.auctionbytes.com@3n.be/1ba5

8. Kevin Yank, "god" of SitePoint, discusses Java, PHP, .Net, and J2EE: http://www.webmasterbase.com@th.gs/1f8d

9. FTP tips: The basics on File Transfer Protocol and tricks it can do: http://hotwired.lycos.com@54.vg/2375

10. Woman caught embezzling $2.1 million to buy into African e-mail fraud: http://www.freep.com@e.la/275d

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

WACKY WEB WEEK: INTERNET CLOCK LETS YOU SLEEP IN

They've finally done it! Researchers at Brunel University in England have invented a clock that checks your local traffic via the Net and wakes you later than usual if there are no tie-ups along your route.

Inventor David Hunt says of using the clock, "I was so punctual it was scary." That may be a wee bit of an exaggeration, but the story makes a thought-provoking and fun read: http://news.bbc.co.uk@836.as/c39d

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

E-BUSINESS SECRETS: Our mission is to bring you such useful and thought-provoking information about the Web that you actually look forward to reading your e-mail.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: E-Business Secrets is written by InfoWorld contributing editor Brian Livingston: http://SecretsPro.com

Research director is Vickie Stevens. Brian has published 10 books, including:

Windows Me Secrets: http://www.amazon.com@isbn.at/0764534939

Windows 2000 Secrets: http://www.amazon.com@isbn.at/0764534130

Win a gift certificate good for a book, CD, or DVD of your choice if you're the first to send a tip Brian prints. mailto:Brian@SecretsPro.com



Click here for all of Brian Livingston's past columns.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Home  //  Community //  Opinions //  Article Print Article    Email Article
Back to Top
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
SUBSCRIBE
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
About InfoWorld : Advertise : Subscribe : Contact Us : Awards : Events : Store
InfoWorld HomeNewsTest CenterOpinionsProduct GuideTechIndex
 COLUMN ARCHIVE  FORUMS
 

COLUMN

 
E-Business Secrets
Brian Livingston

The fewer questions you ask, the more data you get

I reported last week that MarketingSherpa and Intermarket Group have published "The E-Mail Marketer's Guide: Hard Data for 2002." This information-packed study has more than 100 pages of results from surveys of some 1,700 directors of online marketing.

   ADVERTISEMENT
  

Free IT resource

Virtualization Insights from Top Experts - Learn how virtualization gets real!

Sponsored by Dell

Free IT resource

TechNet: More ways to know it, share it, and keep it running.

Sponsored by Microsoft

RELATED LINKS
»  AT&T buys high-speed wireless spectrum for $2.5 billion
»  Update: Sprint chief Forsee resigns
»  IT trainer offers master's degree for hackers
»  Wireless RSS feed 

IDG ENTERPRISE NETWORK
More Network LAN/WAN News...  (ComputerWorld)
Wireless EV-DO on board  (ComputerWorld)

TOP NEWS 


IT SOLUTION SEARCH

Here's the second part of my summary of the findings:

1. DON'T BE NOSY. The report cites NetLine, a marketing program that sent out an offer of a free white paper. One registration form requested contact info plus one optional question. A nearly identical form asked for the same things, but with THREE optional questions. The longer form garnered a 50 percent response from the pre-qualified group, but the short form received a 74.6 percent response. The less you ask, the more you get.

2. OFFER SOMETHING. When consumers were asked by Jupiter Media Metrix what a Web site could promise in exchange for typing in their personal information, 48 percent wanted a chance to win a prize in a sweepstakes. About 31 percent wanted frequent-flier miles or a similar affinity program. But most important, 73 percent wanted a guarantee that the information would not be misused.

3. KEEP IT FRESH. One site, iEntry, which sends 50 million e-mails per month to its opt-in subscribers, noted the percentage of readers who opened each issue. "If they subscribed within the past three months, they open at 85-90 percent," says founder Rich Ord. "If they're two years old, on average they could be down to a 15 percent open rate unless you really revamp content and find new reasons to make them open."

4. MAIL EARLY. More than 3 out of 4 Internet users (76 percent) spend their first few minutes online reading and sending e-mail, according to figures from the U.S. Yankee Group. Gartner estimates that business users spend an average of 49 minutes per day managing their e-mail. This may explain why Travelocity found that it obtains the best results when it sends its messages between 8 a.m. and noon of each recipient's local time.

The report is chock full of other good stuff: e-mail opt-in rates, click-through rates, and much more. You'll find an overview and table of contents of the study at: http://www.sherpastore.com@n6.be/4e6d

I mentioned last week that MarketingSherpa is also sponsoring the E-Mail Newsletter Publishers Profit Workshop in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 14. Registration is $495. Due to an editing error, the Web link you can visit for more information was left out. Here it is: http://www.sherpastore.com@n6.be/61f5

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

LIVINGSTON'S TOP 10 NEWS PICKS O' THE WEEK

1. Webshots.com registers 150,000 new users per week in comeback success story: http://www.cnn.com@a2.tc/435

2. Visa implements new rules for online credit card transactions: http://www.cardforum.com@n6.be/81d

3. "Micro-size" e-commerce sites profit by staying small and simple: http://www.bizreport.com@836.as/c05

4. Elvis Costello music auto-upgrades you to Windows Media Player 9: http://www.theregister.co.uk@1c.to/fed

5. MIT is posting its materials online for no charge as "OpenCourseWare": http://news.bbc.co.uk@a6r.ms/13d5

6. Many online "personals" lead to bogus pay-per-minute telephone lines: http://www.msnbc.com@5a0.tc/17bd

7. Eight ways to dramatically increase your sales from online auctions: http://www.auctionbytes.com@3n.be/1ba5

8. Kevin Yank, "god" of SitePoint, discusses Java, PHP, .Net, and J2EE: http://www.webmasterbase.com@th.gs/1f8d

9. FTP tips: The basics on File Transfer Protocol and tricks it can do: http://hotwired.lycos.com@54.vg/2375

10. Woman caught embezzling $2.1 million to buy into African e-mail fraud: http://www.freep.com@e.la/275d

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

WACKY WEB WEEK: INTERNET CLOCK LETS YOU SLEEP IN

They've finally done it! Researchers at Brunel University in England have invented a clock that checks your local traffic via the Net and wakes you later than usual if there are no tie-ups along your route.

Inventor David Hunt says of using the clock, "I was so punctual it was scary." That may be a wee bit of an exaggeration, but the story makes a thought-provoking and fun read: http://news.bbc.co.uk@836.as/c39d

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

E-BUSINESS SECRETS: Our mission is to bring you such useful and thought-provoking information about the Web that you actually look forward to reading your e-mail.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: E-Business Secrets is written by InfoWorld contributing editor Brian Livingston: http://SecretsPro.com

Research director is Vickie Stevens. Brian has published 10 books, including:

Windows Me Secrets: http://www.amazon.com@isbn.at/0764534939

Windows 2000 Secrets: http://www.amazon.com@isbn.at/0764534130

Win a gift certificate good for a book, CD, or DVD of your choice if you're the first to send a tip Brian prints. mailto:Brian@SecretsPro.com




Click here for all of Brian Livingston's past columns.


SPONSORED WHITE PAPERS
EMC - Lower costs and improve reliability-Get the EMC CLARiiON white paper!
Ciphertrust - Are you ready for Sobig.G? Learn how to protect your email systems.
CDW - Personal attention. CDW. The Right Technology. Right Away.
EMC - Explore key performance features and capabilities of EMC ControlCenter 5.1.1.
Intel - Free Intel white paper shows you how to deploy a secure wireless LAN
Cisco - FREE WHITE PAPER: BLUEPRINT to design and implement secure VPNs
Verity, Inc. - "Mass Consolidation Hits the Web-Search Market"
McDATA - Download a FREE storage consolidation white paper from McDATA(R).
Lucent Technologies - Overcoming Common Firewall Limitations
Lucent Technologies - Leverage Your Mobile High Speed Data Access. Download Free White Paper!
Nokia - Get the scoop! Mobilizing business white papers & case studies.
BMC Software - Maximize the Potential of Enterprise Data: Free white paper!
Network Associates - Free white paper - Strategies for Optimizing Network Costs and Benefits
Entrust - Manage identities across applications. Improve productivity.
Stalker Software - CommuniGate Pro - Transform your Email and Calendaring
Remedy - A NEW Gartner Research Note:Producing Quality IT Services

Search the IDG White Paper Library:


SPONSORED LINKS

INFOWORLD MARKETPLACE


» Hot Stock Alert (TMDI)
Telemedicus - Medical Communication Top Telemedicine Technology
» Apply BPM and ITIL at your IT Help Desk
ServiceWise brings BPM to complete IT service while eliminating integration cost. Learn more here.
» EMC delivers high-speed image capture, storage
Learn how you can quickly capture, organize, and deliver information with EMC ApplicationXtender.
» Register for your free VMWare Virtualization kit!
VMware virtualization takes the cost and complexity out of IT  Download this free kit to learn how.
» FREE Sophos Threat Detection Test
Is your AV catching everything it should? Free virus, spyware and adware scan.




 HOME  NEWS  TEST CENTER  OPINIONS  PRODUCT GUIDE  TECHINDEX   About : Advertise : Subscribe : Contact Us : Awards : Events 

Copyright © 2008, Reprints, Permissions, Licensing, IDG Network, Privacy Policy

All Rights reserved. InfoWorld is a leading publisher of technology information and product reviews on topics including viruses, phishing, worms, firewalls, security, servers, storage, networking, wireless, databases, and web services.

Computerworld :: Network World :: CIO :: PC World :: Darwin :: CMO :: CSO
IT Careers :: JavaWorld :: Macworld :: Mac Central :: Playlist :: GamePro :: GameStar :: Gamerhelp
ITWorld Canada :: Computerwoche :: Techworld UK :: tecChannel :: IDG.se :: IDG.no