Tag Archive for 'direct marketing'

Calise & Sedei and Taco Cabana Celebrate Mobile

3Ci, Taco Cabana and Calise & Sedei, the agency for the retail food chain, recently launched a mobile marketing campaign aimed at building a mobile database and testing the effectiveness of mobile marketing - and the early results show the immediate, positive impact of mobile! To build their mobile database, Taco Cabana took a two pronged approach over six days of promotion. First, a call to action was promoted at SanAntonio Spurs games asking fans to text in their vote for the best “kissingcam” couple and they would receive a mobile coupon for a free taco. Second, in store point of purchase promos called for fans to text in for a chance to win Spurs tickets. Taco Cabana then sent out a text message to the mobile consumers in their database, asking them to opt-in to the Taco Cabana mobile club and get a coupon for a free order of nachos.

An astounding 22% of the consumers were converted into mobile club members who will receive coupons on their mobile phones. In addition, they saw a 10% redemption rate on the coupons delivered during the promotions. Due to the overwhelming success of this test, 3Ci’s team is currently working with Taco Cabana to build additional mobile marketing campaigns that will
further build their mobile database and drive foot traffic to retail stores.

- Ainsworth

Start Building Your Mobile Database

I sat through a great meeting yesterday with a direct marketing firm from Boca Raton. As I demoed our platform, we reviewed a couple of the firm’s ideas. A lot of direct marketing firms are dealing with e-mail or direct mail, which is a slightly different beast than SMS. There are particular ways to maintain conversions with mobile marketing, that wouldn’t apply for e-mail marketing. In addition, mobile marketing is about spending the time to build a database rather than simply catching and blasting opt-in messages.

This firm got the concept that many do not: Mobile marketing isn’t restricted to a stand alone campaign that can be monetized immediately. In fact, a well designed mobile marketing strategy will have always-on campaigns that support other direct marketing efforts. Your brand’s short code is equivalent to it’s URL. When I work with a client, this is one of the first concepts that I establish. Once your short code is live, you need at least one campaign that will run constantly and collect interested consumers who read your marketing material. Mobile activates traditional marketing in a way that websites cannot. Missing this concept causes a lot of brands to avoid mobile marketing because they aren’t quite sure how to monetize it.
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7 Ways to Maintain Conversions in Mobile Marketing

The mobile marketing medium is defining its future as a viable channel for consumer impressions and conversions. Unlike blast e-mail marketing, which failed because of a lack of regulation, mobile marketing has shown tremendous conversion rates. E-mail marketing is now at such a low-conversion, because of the decreased sensitivity of the end-user, it’s borderline useless. Mobile marketing and text messaging is a viable impression and conversion medium because users have such a high sensitivity to the notifications they receive. Don’t be fooled, there’s more to it than sitting in their pocket - that’s just one, albeit, critical factor - it is also because the abuse rate has been low. Cell phone users are very aware of the ability to turn off notifications for text messaging, and if markets abuse this service, they will; much like many have switched off notifications for e-mails because the iPhone has no spam filter.

The carrier’s strict regulations have benefit mobile marketers in this fashion, as they have managed to prevent end-users from feeling spammed. As mobile marketing begins to take off in 2008, and shortcodes reach the spotlight, more of this responsibility will rest on the Application Service Providers and mobile marketers. In fact, the future of 50% conversion rates rests in the hands of the mobile marketers; following a few simple steps can preserve the most affordable and most profitable medium to hit marketing.

1. Double Opt-In
While only T-Mobile and Verizon wireless require double-opt-in for marketing messages, requiring all participants to double opt-in will significantly reduce the potential that you will have an unwilling subscriber on your marketing channel. When users opt-in, make sure to send a follow-up message asking them to reply with Yes, Y, or something similar, to confirm they want to receive the messages you’re interested in sending them. Confirmed users are interested in receiving messages and you won’t run into complaints.

2. Send Like Offers
Not only is it a violation of the mobile acceptable use policies to avoid this rule, it is also common sense. If you have a valid double opt-in registration for television coupon offers, don’t send alerts for the local car wash. Unrelated, but demographically targeted offers are more appropriate for appended messages, where the user has solicited information and you are providing relevant advertising in the remaining character messages of the information they requested. To emphasize my point, I was excited to sign up for mobile alerts through http://www.wiialerts.com, knowing that I would only receive mobile alerts when Nintendo Wii’s hit Amazon.com at their normal $249 price. So far, that has been all I have received, and I will keep my subscription despite already having bought a Wii from the first set of alerts sent to me - just a few days before Christmas. If this were to change, I would remove the service and never think twice about rejoining. Send users what they signed up for, and they’ll stay subscribed for as long as they’re interested in converting on your messages. Send users something they’re not interested in and they’ll never rejoin your services.

3. Don’t Bait Your Call-To-Action
If you are offering a Call-To-Action that requires a conversion off of the handset, such as visiting a full html website, be very clear with the offer to the end users. Nothing screams UNSUBSCRIBE like a user that took time to sit down at his/her computer only to find out they’re not getting what they were told. While a baited Call-To-Action may receive more conversions from handset to website, the conversion from website to product will not be any better. An honest Call-To-Action will have great conversion rates and leave consumers satisfied with your mobile offering.
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