![]() |
The role of email marketing in the multi-channel evolution: Part 3In the second part of the this four-article series I discussed some opportunities around the convergence of email with social and mobile, with insights and basic practical tips on how to integrate and manage your cross-channel voice. In this part I drill deeper into best practices for mobile-email optimisation, since this is a critical aspect of message consistency from the desktop to the handheld environment and something that can't ignored in a solid multi-channel strategy. Mobile is the technology with the highest audience penetration rate globally, and with smartphone ownership on the rise mobile email marketing is becoming increasingly important. The mobile email campaignWith that said, the term "mobile email campaign" is a misnomer. The first and foremost concept email marketers need to embrace is that there is really no such thing as a mobile email campaign in the strictest sense. Emails are sent to an email address and it is the recipient alone who decides whether to read that email on their mobile phone or on their desktop computer. Consumers' preferences can and will change based on what they are doing and what technologies they have at their disposal at any given moment. So people are reading emails on mobile devices, right now, even if the marketer doesn't know about it or plan for it. In fact, it's very likely that a high percentage of email marketers have no idea whether their emails are being read on mobile devices and, as a result, are missing the unique opportunity to communicate with their customers through emails that are both content- and design-appropriate for today's on-the-go consumers. Marketers can safely assume that a significant portion of their emails are being read on mobile phones. So therefore optimizing emails for cross-platform performance is a large but necessary labor. Design sensitivities for mobile email readersDesigning for the mobile web is nothing particularly new. Although it seems that mobile style-sheets haven't proven to be quite as popular in email, despite the advantages they provide to device-based viewing. Keep in mind that some devices are better at handling HTML email. Apple and Android devices generally display HTML emails intact, making the optimisation requirements minimal. Overall though, viewing HTML email on a mobile device can be fiddly and even on the iPhone it's possible to have text automatically rescaled to a size that's nearly unreadable or in a way that can break your design. The point is that regardless of device-use, optimising your emails for the mobile environment is essential. A mobile screen is small - at first glance no one's going to see much of your content, especially if it's designed to fit a PC screen instead. Also, each and every mobile device has its own unique standard settings to take into account. BlackBerry devices, for example, don't display images by default, whereas iPhones and Android devices normally do. But how can you optimise for all these technical requirements and cater for device-use across the board in one sweep? Start by following a few straightforward, universal rules. Here are key optimisation practices that will help you produce mobile-friendly emails for most devices
In a world where data is king, it has never been more important to use it cleverly to support cross-channel marketing activities that drive sales. In the final part of this series I discuss some methods of gathering email subscribers' social profile data while highlighting the main privacy and legal concerns to keep in mind. I will also take a quick look at what the future holds for the multi-channel marketing evolution. About Wikus EngelbrechtWikus Engelbrecht is a marketing writer, journalist and media liaison at GraphicMail (www.graphicmail.co.za; @GraphicMail), an international email and mobile marketing service provider. Since 2003, his professional career in language and media has spanned the film, print advertising, magazine publishing, web development and online content industries. Contact Wikus at wikus@graphicmail.com and follow @WKS_Engelbrecht on Twitter. View my profile and articles... |