Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Adobe Reveals the Secrets of Email

Adobe shared the results of its 3rd annual consumer email survey today, and while some of the findings are extremely predictable—nobody likes spam—others are downright shocking: for example, business email is 36 times more popular than social message services like Slack. Yeah, let that one sink in…

In fact email, that clunky relic of the early days of the web is actually the most popular form of communication online and its popularity is increasing year on year. And not just amongst the more mature, one of email’s biggest user groups, according to Adobe, is millennials.

Should Businesses Use Email?

Businesses should be using any marketing channel that reaches their target demographic, and with email usage increased across the board according to Adobe’s study, every target demographic uses email.

0% check their email on a smartwatch

Drilling down into the results, smartphones are the most popular way of checking email, with 81% of us doing it regularly. However, when it comes to work email, 62% stick to a laptop or desktop. Tablets continue to slide, with only 6% of personal email and 4% of work email checked on them. Of the people Adobe surveyed, 0% check their email on a smartwatch.

So the choice is clear: if you’re marketing to customers in their personal time focus on mobile-friendly design, for business customers laptops and desktops give you more design freedom.

Designing Good Email

Some of the most interesting findings in the Adobe survey relate to the type of email that marketers send to customers.

Of no surprise to anybody in Adobe’s survey is the fact that 40% of emails are deleted without being read. What will reassure you is that among B2C consumers the preference for being contacted by email (as opposed to SMS, or post, for example) is increasing year on year.

61% of consumers say that email is their first choice when being contacted by brands, but almost everyone says that too many brands focus on promotions, when what they really want to receive is quality, information-driven content.

26% of respondents stated that they did not believe that “Inbox Zero” was possible

On average 82% of work emails are opened, compared to 60% of personal emails.

By far the most complained about element of email communication is frequency. Daily emails are seen as too pushy. Emails that don’t match the recipient’s interests, were also singled out for criticism.

Regardless of age group or gender, personalised email was considered desirable and a major factor in not clicking the ‘Unsubscribe’ link.

The UX of Email

According to Bridgette Darling, Adobe’s Product Marketing Manager and expert on email, one of the key trends highlighted by Adobe’s survey is that we are all developing a healthier relationship with email.

Users tend to check email every few hours, but we’re getting better at ring-fencing the times when email is appropriate. That’s partly due to improved email applications, with improved spam filtering, but it’s also a shift in attitude. If you’re reaching out to customers then email is increasingly a positive and productive way to do it.

Users report checking email on average 5.4 hours per working day, reduced from 7 hours per working day last year.

Millennials treat “Inbox Zero” as a goal to be achieved, making their inboxes neat, organised, and checked regularly. Despite this, only half of respondents reported ever reaching “Inbox Zero”. 26% of respondents stated that they did not believe that “Inbox Zero” was possible.

Users over 34 are also developing better habits, restricting the times that they check email. Fewer people are checking work email outside of standard office hours.

Fewer respondents than last year said they were checking their email in bed, although the younger you are, the more likely you are to be scanning your inbox while in your pyjamas.

For respondents under 25, personal email caused more anxiety than work email

Interestingly women check their email marginally more often, but feel that they don’t check enough. Men feel that they check too often.

Terrifyingly 28% of under-25s admit to checking email while driving!

When receiving email, most users over 35 said they felt indifference. For respondents under 25, personal email caused more anxiety than work email.

Email Beats Slack

The big story in online messaging in the last few years is the growth of tools like Slack. These tools do seem to be liked by close working teams, such as developers. However the popularity of such tools is greatly over-estimated.

In 2016, Slack and similar tools had a 2% share of business communications, this year that dropped to 1%. 80% of respondents said they use email in a  professional capacity, compared with just 18% who use video conferencing.

The Future of Email Design

Adobe announced Experience Cloud back in March. It’s a suite of marketing tools designed to use the power of Adobe’s Sensei AI technology to deliver improved customer experiences.

Adobe Marketing Cloud, and Adobe Analytics Cloud, which both form part of Adobe Experience Cloud, integrate with Adobe Creative Cloud—it’s amazing they ever see the Sun over in San Jose—meaning web designers can utilise existing skills to design enterprise level email campaigns.

Adobe is working on predictive images for email with Ignite, a system for scoring images based on how frequently emails are opened, read, acted upon, and more. Just as subject lines can be scored, soon image scores will allow us to send email finely tuned to appeal to different demographics.

In future, we’ll also see multi-lingual campaigns via Experience Cloud, so that companies that sell in multiple languages can co-ordinate their campaigns more easily.

It is far cheaper for businesses to hold on to existing customers than it is to attract new ones. The personalised nature of email means that once we’ve established a relationship, it’s relatively simple to maintain that customer relationship with intelligent email design.

Many people have predicted that email will fall away as messaging services take over, but it seems that at least for now, that simply is not the case. Email continues to be the way most customers prefer to be contacted, and is the best way to build a loyal customer base.

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Setting Your Customer Engagement Emails on Automation Using Kissmetrics

Human attention spans are embarrassingly bad.

I’d have to be lucky to get just 5% of people to read this entire post. Most probably won’t get past the intro, so I’ll get to the point:

In this age of infinite distraction, brands that can keep their customers engaged with the product are bound to be the winners.

Fads come and go (by definition) and companies have short lifespans. Here one day, closed (or acquired) the next.

Brands that will succeed are the ones that keep customers engaged and re-purchasing.

Brands like Netflix, Facebook, and Amazon are the masters at keeping users engaged. Netflix keeps producing great content, which keeps people coming back. Facebook has a great, addictive product that billions of people use everyday, and Amazon has made billions off keeping customers to come back and make more (and more) purchases.

To keep customers engaged, they’ll need to be informed on what they’re missing without you. To do that, you can send behaviorally-targeted emails towards the relevant group of users.

Here’s how to spot your unengaged users, and get them re-engaged. And this is all done with Kissmetrics.

Just What the Heck is an Unengaged User?

Before we dive into the hows, we’ll first need to know what an unengaged user looks like.

There are active users and there are engaged users.

Active means they have logged in. Even if they login, stare the screen for a few minutes, and leave they can be considered active.

An engaged user is one who uses the product in a meaningful way. They use features, comment on statuses, send messages, and share photos.

Each product will have different conditions of what makes an engaged user, but one thing is for sure – they need to be using the product and interacting with it, not just logging in.

We’ll use a SaaS company as an example in this post. And we’ll set our definitions of unengaged and engaged customers:

  • Engaged – Has used at least 3 features 4 different times in the last 7 days.
  • Unengaged – Has not used any feature the past 14 days.

Now that we have our definitions, we’ll monitor our unengaged users using Kissmetrics Populations and then target them using Kissmetrics Campaigns.

Monitoring With Populations

Populations was created for growth/marketing and product teams to help them keep track of their growth cycle. With just a few clicks you’ll be able to monitor the KPIs that matter to your company.

For this post, we have to goal of shrinking our unengaged user base. So we’ll create Population that tracks the users that have not used any feature in the last 14 days.

Let’s see how many users are in this Population:

So we have our Population in place. Since these are our unengaged users, we’ll want to reduce the number of people in this Population. Let’s take our first step by creating a Campaign.

Send Behavior-Based Email Messages Using Campaigns

Campaigns is one of my favorite features in Kissmetrics. Once you find a segment of users that need to be nudged – whether it’s toward conversion, using features, logging in, etc. – you pull up Campaigns and create the perfect email to nudge them.

There are a number of things you can use Campaigns for. In this case, we’re using it to get our unengaged users in the product and using the features.

In Campaigns, we’ll create a new email message:

And we’ll target the people in the Population we previously created:

We’ll then set our conversion goal. This means that we determine if the Campaign is successful if the users do a specified event. For us, that event will be Used Feature.

We’ll then track the results in Campaigns, where it’ll say how effective the Campaign has been. Here are the results from a different Campaign:

And we can’t forget about Populations. Once we have our Campaign running, we’ll check the Population to see if it’s growing (bad) or shrinking (good).

Minor Interruption

Prefer to just watch our promo videos for Campaigns and Populations? Just hit play below – let’s start with Populations:

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And Campaigns:

http://ift.tt/2iGmqcchttp://ift.tt/1oYF5fw

 

Conclusion

No matter how sticky your product, there will always be a group of unengaged users.

Even the ultra-addicting Facebook gets unengaged users.

And how do they bring them back?

Through emails.

Don’t believe me? Just get off Facebook for a few days (if you can) and you’ll eventually receive the barrage of emails that come like clockwork.

New friend suggestions, did you see person’s comment person’s status, person added a new photo, and you have 99 notifications, 5 pokes, and 3 new friend requests.

All designed to get you sucked into back and using Facebook once again.

Facebook (and countless other companies) send these emails because they work. Everyone has email, no one ignores their inbox, and well-written emails convert.

About the Author: Zach Bulygo (Twitter) is the Blog Manager for Kissmetrics.

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5 Ways the Floating Action Button Boosts UX

A Floating Action Button (FAB) is a circled icon floating above the user interface. Its shape, position, and color ensure it stands out from the rest of a UI. FAB was popularized by the release of Google’s Material Design principles in 2014. Since this release, the FAB user interface element has been widely adopted in web and mobile design.

Although the FAB may be seen as a small, seemly insignificant UI component, its effects can be important. Given that the pattern is used correctly, it’s meant to be instantly identifiable and accessible.

Floating Action Button in Android app

1. Represent a Hallmark Action

Ideally, FAB should highlight the most relevant or frequently used actions, it should be used for the actions that are the primary characteristics of your app. If you’re going to use FAB in your app, the design of the app must be carefully considered and the user’s possible actions must be boiled down to a single prominent feature. For example, a music app may have FAB that represents ‘Play/Stop’. An Instagram-like app might have a FAB that represents ‘Take a Photo’.

A floating action button represents the primary action in an application. Pausing or resuming playback on this screen tells users that it’s a music app.

According to research by Steve Jones, FAB demonstrates a slight negative usability impact when users first use the button. However, once users successfully complete a task using the FAB, they are able to use it more efficiently than a traditional action button.

2. Be a Way-Finding Tool

FAB is a natural cue for telling users what to do next. Research by Google shows that, when faced with unfamiliar screens many users rely on FAB to navigate. Thus, FAB is very useful as a signpost of what to do next.

The use of a Floating Action Button in Twitter encourages you to post content

3. Provide a Set of Actions

In some cases, it is appropriate for the button to spin out and expose a few other options as can be seen in the Evernote example below. The FAB can replace itself with a sequence of more specific actions and you can design them to be contextual to your users. As a rule of thumb, provide at least three options upon press but not more than six (including the original floating action button target).

Also keep in mind that these actions must be related to the primary action the FAB itself expresses, and be related to each other: do not treat these revealed actions as independent as they could be if positioned on a toolbar.

Don’t: ‘Where I am’ action isn’t relevant to create content actions.

4. Be Context Aware

Context plays an important role in user interaction. Sometimes users want to consume content, sometimes they want to perform actions. It all depends on context. Using some contextual behavior could bring the best of FAB to the UX of any app. Let’s consider Google+ as an example. Google+ shows the button when the user is engaging with the stream, and hiding it when that engagement is reversed. These two states rely on context : when users are engaging with a social stream, a primary action is to scroll, hence there’s no need for FAB, and when users stop scrolling, they might want to post something.

5. Connect Two States Together

FAB is not just a round button, it has some transformative properties that you can use to help ease your users from screen to screen. When morphing the floating action button, make transition between two states in a logical way. The animation in the examples below maintain the user’s sense of orientation and help the user comprehend the change that has just happened in the view’s layout, what has triggered the change, and how to initiate the change again later on if needed.

Image credit: Ehsan Rahimi

Image credit: Dribbble

Conclusion

Some might say that FAB is bad UX. It’s tempting to say that because users and designers aren’t used to it. We are used to familiar toolbars and the concept of FAB is still fairly new to us. We all know how that new things are hard, but at the same time they encourage a more carefully designed user experience. Used correctly, FAB can be an astoundingly helpful pattern for the end-user.  

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Monday, August 28, 2017

Homepages Rarely Convert Because These 6 Elements Are Often Ignored

No, this headline isn’t clickbait.

This article does contains critical homepage elements that are often overlooked. And you might be ignoring them. In fact, the examples I share here are a sure sign that many marketers still ignore critical homepage elements. And conversions are lost for these simple reasons.

I’m not going to rehash what you already know about homepages.

You are a smart marketer. You already know a homepage is your website’s front door. It’s where most of your customers expect to find the #1 thing you do that can solve a specific problem for them.

Okay, enough talk. Here are six homepage elements you’re probably overlooking that are costing you conversions:

1. Homework (a.k.a. doing customer research)

Homework ‘on people’, that is. And yes, it’s a homepage element—because it shows when you do it well.

Imagine this for a second: Your high school teacher assigns you homework and asks you to submit it in three days. For the next two days, you stay up late and wake up early to deliver your best. You faithfully turn in your homework on the third day.

Question: How long would it take your teacher to score your work? A few seconds to five minutes. That’s how long it will take to score something you worked on for days.

It’s the same with your homepage. Your homepage (or even any landing page for that matter) is like homework given to you by your target audience. It takes them a few seconds or minutes to score you, before deciding to bounce or stay.

Homework shows on your homepage—because, if you do it, your copy will be saying what your prospects want to hear. If they land on your page and find that you’re not speaking their language, it shows you haven’t done your homework, and things can get ugly. You may even leave such a bad impression that they make a point of not going back.

Example, Ashdown People—a firm specializing in HR for IT businesses:

If you’re a tech firm who visits this page for the first time, here’s a couple of questions you’d naturally have in mind:

  • What does Shaping The Digital And Technology Workforce mean?
  • How are you shaping it?
  • What’s the exact HR problem that this brand solves for IT organizations?

The page looks nice, but imagine the confusion its visitors may be experiencing.

In contrast, take Solertia — another HR firm:

Their homepage copy speaks directly to a specific challenge folks running HRs face—developing compensation strategies to avoid losing key talent. This will catch the attention of an HR pro because it deals with problems that hurt and offers a solution.

This is a good example of someone doing their homework. Whoever wrote this copy studied their audience well enough to find that ‘developing strategies to keep key players in an organization’ is a goal HRs always try to reach.

Doing your homework on your target audience reflects in your messaging.

How do you do your homework? Talk to the very people that visit your homepage: customers. In other words, get feedback. There are great tools that will help you here, some of which include:

  • SurveyMonkey: Create surveys and generate quality feedbacks.
  • Kampyle: Get feedbacks from users.
  • Get Satisfaction: Build a forum where customers talk to one another about your product, while you just watch, listen and act accordingly.
  • AnyMeeting: Schedule live meetings with customers and get actual feedbacks from them.
  • IdeaScale: Allows users to make and vote suggestions about your product. And feedbacks with the most interactions gains higher recognition than others.

These tools will help you know your customers’ pain points, goals and how they will need your product to solve their problem. Then, you’ll be able to create a homepage (and even any other landing page) that speaks directly to those problems.

Next, brevity and clarity.

2. Brevity and Clarity

Brevity doesn’t necessarily mean copy is short. It does imply there are no redundancies, and yet enough clever repetition to convince visitors to take a specific action.

Chris Garrett, Chief Digital Officer at Rainmaker Digital, wrote that a landing page should be, “as long as necessary. And no longer.”

That’s brevity. As long as necessary. No longer. And clarity, on the other hand, is self explanatory enough. Is the problem you solve for your audience crystal clear?

When your homepage doesn’t briefly and clearly explain your offerings, people lose interest. It’s that simple.

Another case in point is where you have brevity on your homepage, but not clarity—a case where your homepage copy is brief, but it isn’t clear how visitors will benefit from your business.

A typical example of that is ZOHO’s homepage:

It’s a well designed page and it sure is brief; not much to read here. But to me, it lacks clarity.

If, like me, you knew nothing about ZOHO before visiting their homepage, you have no idea what The operating system for your business OR A revolutionary all-in-one suite to run your entire business means. If you’re curious, though, you might want to click the “learn more” link to find out.

But according to some sites, Zoho gets about 18 million monthly visits. What if 400k, 1mm, 5mm … of those monthly visitors aren’t curious enough to click learn more? They were probably looking for a specific solution before landing on this page, and that’s what they expect you to communicate to them.

Your best bet is to communicate whatever you’re offering in the clearest and shortest way possible. A perfect example of “brief and clear” is Google My Business’ homepage:

In just over 20 words, with an image on the side, Google My Business clearly and briefly explains how they help your business get found when your brand name is searched.

So brevity and clarity could mean five, ten, 200 words. What matters is that your page provides enough information for your visitors to become convinced and take action. And this why not hiring a good copywriter for your business is a terrible idea. A good copywriter will do enough dirty work to produce copy that has both brevity and clarity.

3. Active voice on CTA Buttons

(Active voice describes a sentence where the subject performs the action stated by the verb.)

In other words, a CTA button with active voice is one that says “This is what will happen when you (the visitor) click this.”

And active voice goes beyond just using verbs on your CTA.

It’s easy to think that all visitors understand what a colored CTA button means, but you’d be surprised. Sign-Up.to recently mentioned in their study that “Images are good, but it’s not always clear that the image is also a call to action.”

Just because you have a colored button on copy doesn’t mean visitors know where the button will lead when clicked. Example:

Where will Click Here lead when clicked? Is that button for a call, an email, or a link to another page? You need to let people be certain what your button is for, or you risk confusing people.

A good CTA button has active voice on it—one that says “This is what will happen when you click this.” Here’s a perfect example of that from Toyota:

“Explore Prius” is active voice. It says exactly where the CTA will lead after it’s clicked—a page where you get to explore the Toyota Prius.

That’s active voice in action. Don’t put your visitors in a position where they’re not sure what your button is meant for. Make it as descriptive as it needs to be — Explore [my product], See a demo, Check out this case study, etc.

4. Specificity Over Hyperbole

Why not hyperbole? Because overstating can lead to visitors questioning your sincerity.

Instead, use copy that specifically communicates how you actually add value to people’s life and businesses. Twilio’s homepage is a good example:

Twilio is a tool that software developers use to add communication capabilities to the applications they build. And that’s exactly what they explain in the homepage: “Build software that communicates with everyone in the world.”

No overstatements. No hyperbole. Just the specific problem Twilio solves for people.

Hootsuite’s homepage is another good example:

According to SEMrush, Hootsuite gets about 7.2 million monthly visits. That’s impressive, yet, there’s no mention of how big they are on the homepage, but a brief and clear explanation of how their product solves problems for people.

Adding hyperbole to your copy doesn’t communicate any value. ConversionXL Founder Peep Laja says it this way (54:21): “You don’t add life to copy with hyperbole. [For example,] ‘We have the best pizza in town VS. We deliver pizza in 10 minutes’. [Pick] specific [over] hyperbole”.

5. Testimonials With Smiling or Happy Faces

Testimonials are powerful already, but one with a smiling face pictured? Terrific!

One Swedish study reveals that your smile has a huge effect on people around you— try smiling at someone and you’d see they almost can’t help but smile back, unless they consciously don’t want to. Amazing, eh?

Pipedrive lay emphasis on the fact that their customers are actually happy people. Then they put those happy, smiling faces about 40% down their homepage.

Kissmetrics understands this concept as well:

So, if you’re going to use testimonials with customer headshots, use those that are smiling already since they have a positive effect on viewers.

6. One Page, One Goal

You’d think every marketer by now gets the concept of one page, one goal, until you see a homepage like this in 2017:

Several CTAs on one page. What’s the one goal that a page like this is trying to achieve? Virtually everyone would have no idea. And several studies have proved it’s far better to use one page for one result. The more specific you are, the better you’ll be at converting specific visitors.

A good example of a homepage with one goal is this one on QX Recruitment Services:

In contrast to HR Consultants homepage (above), this one has only one goal. Which means if the homepage gets 2000, 5000, 20000, etc. monthly visitors, this report will be the number one thing catching their attention. And it’s the only action they’re first asked to take. Brilliant.

This way, QX Recruitment Services know how to measure the homepage’s success — it’s as successful as the number of downloads the report gets.

Start Converting With Your Homepage

If you’re going to have a homepage (or even any landing page) at all, you want to ensure it drives optimal conversions. And the tips above have hopefully inspired you to make specific corrections on your homepage, or even create a compelling one from scratch.

About the Author: Victor Ijidola is a conversion-driven freelance writer and content marketer. Need help with landing pages, ebooks, blog posts, guest blogging, email newsletters, etc? Contact him at Premium Content Shop.

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