Hi, I was told if I send email to people engaged in the past 90 days 30 min before the rest, it will increase my email inboxing 19%. I like to give it a try in Markeo. Anyone has ever set this up in Marketo or any recommendation on this? If I use regular email program, it's likely that I need to clone the 2nd email to send to the rest? Any better way to do so?
Thanks in advance,
Huihsing
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hey Huihsing, you can accomplish this more easily than cloning by creating a smart list of people who have interacted with your email in the past 90 days, and then using choices, wait steps, and remove from flow steps in a single send campaign. What this won't provide you with, though, is as clear of a picture of how successful this test has been. If you want a little bit more visibility, you can always separate the two send campaigns, or use a clone of the email for the second send.
Smart list: people who have interacted with emails in the past 90 days
Flow:
1. Send Email, add choice: if Member of smart list: Interacted with emails (created above)
2. Remove from flow, add choice: If was sent email: your email
3. Wait 30 minutes
4. Send Email (will go to remaining people)
Hope this helps!
Hey Huihsing, you can accomplish this more easily than cloning by creating a smart list of people who have interacted with your email in the past 90 days, and then using choices, wait steps, and remove from flow steps in a single send campaign. What this won't provide you with, though, is as clear of a picture of how successful this test has been. If you want a little bit more visibility, you can always separate the two send campaigns, or use a clone of the email for the second send.
Smart list: people who have interacted with emails in the past 90 days
Flow:
1. Send Email, add choice: if Member of smart list: Interacted with emails (created above)
2. Remove from flow, add choice: If was sent email: your email
3. Wait 30 minutes
4. Send Email (will go to remaining people)
Hope this helps!
Hi, you can do this with two regular email sends or you can do this with one nurture send with conditional wait steps in it.
For the nurture
Smart list = your target audience
Flow
step 1
if lead score is greater than 100 (or whatever you use to determine engagment)
Send email
Step 2
Wait 30 minutes
Step 3
if lead score is less than 100
Send email
Interesting. Who told you this?
Dory Viscogliosi- have you tried this as well? Maybe I'll test this vs. 250ok.
I've read it... but haven't tried it yet We have a Return Path account that shows us inbox placement and we have a dedicated IP so we're already doing pretty well on inbox placement.
I'd be curious to see the actual results -- I think a 19% increase is high.
I'd be curious to see the actual results -- I think a 19% increase is high.
Sounds nearly nonsensical, based on the way mail is sent, scanned, and classified. It kind of reminds me of a question the other day about spacing sends 5 minutes apart. These small intervals don't even register given the store-and-forward nature of SMTP.
I could see a "perfect storm" situation in which this would help for a particular type of recipient, but I'd be thinking .16% as opposed to 16%.
I'd like to see an article explaining the thought process here.
This was the Marketo blog post that I read where it was suggested: http://blog.marketo.com/2016/01/3-strategies-for-maximizing-email-deliverability.html
I'm thinking that if the OP was referencing this, some of the numbers might have been slightly misunderstood.
Don't think I've seen so drastic a misunderstanding/misrepresentation of the difference between sender-wide and recipient-level engagement.
ETA: That is, it's BS.
Well.. sometimes I don't ask why someone would actually want to do something, I just give them the tools to do what they want to get done. Probably a place where I could improve myself, but I wouldn't want to pop someone else's balloon.
I know you're just relaying the information and I'm definitely not blaming you for it being wrong!
Problem is that when someone takes the time to learn how to do something, they assume it has the promised results. I think in this case it would be better to not learn because then your workflow becomes needlessly convoluted... forever.