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Email Marketing for Business-to-Business Customers

by | Nov 5, 2007 | Email Marketing, Underwire Newsletter

imageEmail marketing—what do you think of it?

I have a negative attitude towards real spam (enlargements, pills, mortgages) and perceived spam (marketing messages I have not asked to receive). At the same time, I love the newsletters that I subscribe to.

Although I subscribe to these sites’ RSS feeds, I also like the email reminders and prompts to visit their sites, where I can download content or look at related articles.

My email is open all the time, which is why, in some cases, I prefer email to RSS.

Here’s a short list of email newsletters I received today:

I like these newsletters because they are directly related to my business. Now, if I was in the business of re-selling these companies’ services or if I was a retailer selling a product, I’d appreciate timely sales information from the companies whose services and products I was selling—information that would help my business.

Do you have a regular newsletter that you offer to your service providers, vendors, retailers? Do you receive a regular newsletter from a company whose products or services you sell? Please add to the comments any tips or anecdotes about the things that work well in these b2b newsletters. Tell us what you like or dislike.

Why am I asking?

Because selling cycles are interesting beasts. For many companies, you sell-in your products to re-sellers, who in turns sell your products through to the end consumer. You want to optimize both sell-in and sell-through. In some cases, a b2b (business-to-business) email newsletter can help you do that. But aside from a gut feeling about the benefits of b2b newsletters, what do we know?

Paul Dunay at MarketingProfs recently posted some stats regarding b2b newsletters. These were presented at the MarketingProfs Conference in October 2007 and reported in the MarketingProfs Daily Fix newsletter:

  • The percentage of professionals who sign up for email offers was higher than I would have thought – 85%. (source: Return Path)
  • The increase in purchase value of email subscribers vs. non subscribers was 17%. That means, on average, the email subscriber bought 17% more! (source: Forrester)
  • How much more likely is a B2B subscriber to consider email “spam” if it comes “too frequently”? The answer was twice as likely. That’s daunting, and it means you need to think about the cadence of your emails! (source: MarketingSherpa)

Find out how many subscribers read email newsletters on their mobile phone and other b2b email stats …

What do you think about these numbers? Are they reflective of your own experiences?

Post a comment. Tell us what you think of b2b email newsletters.

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