2016年8月18日 星期四

How To Do SWOT Analysis For E-сommerce


Think of it as a framework for methodically analyzing a business and charting out a long-termstrategy.

While originally developed for large businesses, you’ll be surprised to learn that SWOT is equally useful for small businesses in fast-movingindustries like e-commerce.

SWOT, which stands for “Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities & Threats”, will help you identify your strengths, spot opportunities and counter competition.

In this post, we’ll help you understand SWOT analysis — even if you no business education — and show you how to use it in your E-commercebusiness.

Why SWOT?

There are dozens of methodologies for analyzing businesses. You might even be familiar with some of these acronyms such as:

  • SOAR (Strengths, Opportunities, Aspirations & Results)
  • SCORE (Strengths, Challenges, Options, Responses, Effectiveness)
  • NOISE (Needs, Opportunities, Improvements, Strengths, Exceptions)

Most, if not all of these are essentially built-upon the SWOT analysis fundamentals. This is one reason why even 50+ years after it was first developed, SWOT analysis is still one of the most popular ways to analyze businesses.

There is another reason for SWOT’s popularity: its simplicity and flexibility.

“Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities & Threats” are intuitive categories that anyone can understand, regardless of their business background. These categories are also very flexible — they apply as much to businesses as they apply to non-profit organizations and government bodies.

Beyond the simplicity, SWOT also gives you actionable insight into your business, both in the short-term and long-term. With SWOT you can:

  • Understand current and future plans.
  • Understand the current and future state of your products/services.
  • Know your competitors, customers and market trends better.
  • Chart out exact strategies and tactics to counter threats in the market.

So what exactly is SWOT and how can you apply it to your E-commerce business?

Let’s find out below.

What is SWOT?

We don’t really know who came up with the SWOT methodology (though most sources claim it was management consultant Albert Humphrey). What we do know that it was initially based on data collected from Fortune 500 companies.

At its heart, the SWOT method believes that all the factors that affect a business can be divided into four categories:

  • Strengths: Anything the business is currently good at, or that which could be described as its “strength”.
  • Weaknesses: Anything the business currently struggles with.
  • Opportunities: Current opportunities in the market that the business could exploit with its existing resources or skills.
  • Threats: Market forces, such as a competitor or external factors (such as a change in local laws) that could threaten the business.

Of these, “strengths” and “weaknesses” are internal to a business. “Opportunities” and “threats” on the other hand, are external factors.

In traditional SWOT analysis, you’d also classify your strengths and opportunities as “helpful” for your business growth. Weaknesses and threats would be “harmful”.

Based on this, you get a chart four quadrant matrix like this:

a chart four quadrant matrix for SWOT

Any business, regardless of its size of industry, can segregate its success factors into these four categories.

For example, suppose you’re running a watch store, both offline and online. You have an extensive range of budget watches but your luxury brand stock is weak. You also have a deep-pocketed competitor outspending you in local advertising, though you have a strong brand presence online.

Your SWOT analysis might look something like this:

  • Strengths:Extensive range of budget products; strong in-house digital marketing talent.
  • Weaknesses: Poor collection of luxury watches; poor store location.
  • Threats: Online and local watch retailers; younger demographics not buying watches; growth of digital smart watches; general-purpose retailers like Amazon.
  • Opportunities: Existing E-commerce store to tap into online demand; growing sales in budget watch category.

Listing all these factors will help you figure out a strategy to play up your strengths, counter your weaknesses and beat your competition.

How can you perform a similar analysis for your store?

Let’s find out.

SWOT for E-commerce

Before you jump in and start analyzing your business, you’ll need a few things to run a successful SWOT analysis:

  • Time: Depending on the size of your business, it might take anywhere from a few days to several months to do a complete SWOT analysis. Keep this in mind before you start the analysis.
  • Data (subjective and objective): A competent SWOT analysis requires lots of data. You’ll need objective data like traffic figures, inventory totals, financial details, etc. as well as subjective data like customer interviews, internal audits, etc.
  • Benchmarks:Though not necessary, it’s good to have some industry benchmarks to audit your performance. After all, you can’t claim that traffic generation is your “strength” if you can’t meet industry standards.

Below, we’ll show you all the data you should have and how to use it during analysis.

How to do SWOT Analysis for E-commerce

Follow the steps shown below to analyze your E-commerce business:

Step #1: Gather objective data

Your objective data — stats, traffic figures, sales data, etc. — give you hard numbers on your business’ performance. This will form the foundation of any analysis.

Here’s the data you should have before starting SWOT:

Current website traffic
Dig through your analytics to find:

  • Unique visitors per month
  • Pageviews per month
  • Traffic trends (up/down)
  • % change in traffic MoM and YoY
  • Bounce rate

Conversion rates

Your conversion rate is the percentage of your traffic that turns into paying customers (or leads, subscribers or any other conversion event). That is, if you get 100 visitors daily and of these, 5 end up buying from you, your conversion rate is 5%.

You should have conversion rate data for:

  • Individual products
  • Product categories (such as shoes/bags/accessories)
  • The entire store

Customer loyalty

How likely are your customers to return to your store and shop from you? For this, you can use the following data:

  • Net Promoter Score (NPS)
  • New vs. returning visitors
  • Number (%age) of repeat customers

Social media statistics

If social media is a large source of your traffic and customers, you should know the following numbers::

  • Social media followers/likes across social networks
  • Average likes/comments/shares per post (as percentage of total followers/likes)
  • Growth in social media followers/likes MoM and YoY

Shipping statistics

Shipping is critical for the survival of an E-commerce business. Make sure to gather data like:

  • Average shipping time
  • Shipping delay (if any)
  • Shipping cost

Customer LTV and AOV
LTV (Lifetime Value) and AOV (Average Order Value) often determine an E-commerce business’ long-term profitability. AOV is easy enough to calculate — it’s simply your total sales divided by the total number of orders.

To calculate LTV, use this formula:

(Average Order Value) x (Number of Repeat Sales) x (Average Retention Time)

Customer acquisition data

How and where you acquire your customers is an important part of your business’ success. You should have numbers like:

  • Top 5 traffic sources (in absolute numbers)
  • Top 5 traffic sources (in terms of conversion rates)
  • Cost of customer acquisition per channel
  • Discounts/promotions on different channels (such as a Facebook-only coupon code).

SEO data

Social brands might get away with poor SEO, but for most other E-commerce businesses, organic reach is a massive driver of conversions.

Run a quick SEO audit to find data like:

  • Current rankings for target keywords
  • Domain-specific metrics (total number of backlinks, number of linking domains, domain authority, etc.)
  • Number of pages
  • Number of ranking keywords
  • Growth in total backlinks MoM and YoY

Customer service data

Dig through your customer service data to find numbers like:

  • Average number of support tickets per day, week, and month
  • Growth in number of support tickets vs. growth in traffic/customers (drastic increase in support tickets without accompanying growth in customers is a sign of underlying service issues)
  • Number of customer service agents and their performance
  • Average number of support emails vs. on-sitemessages (via chat)  vs. phone calls

Efficiency metrics

How efficiently can you ship products and resolve customer problems? Pick through your data to find these numbers:

  • Average turnaround time per customer query
  • Average time for packing and shipping individual product(s)

To gather this treasure trove of data, you’ll need to open multiple different tools. But once you have it, you’ll have a lot of insight into the things holding your business back.

Step #2: Gather subjective data

While objective data and numbers are great, they can’t tell you what customers actually feel about your store and your products.

They also don’t tell you anything about your employee morale, their work satisfaction, and any issues holding them back.

In this step, you need to collect data like:
Customer interviews and surveys
Interviews and surveys — on-site, through email or over the phone — are some of your best tools for understanding your customers and what they want.

Ask:

  • What do your customers like about your product(s) and your site?
  • What do your customers NOT like about your product(s) and your site?
  • What improvements do they want to see, if any?

Employee interviews
Your customers are only one half of your business’ success. The other half is a happy, productive team of people behind the scenes.

Interview your employees and managers to figure out:

  • What do they feel about your business and their role(s) in it?
  • What would they like to change?
  • What would they want to remain the same?

Besides the above, you should also audit your internal resources to answer questions like:

  • What skills do you (or your team) specialize in?
  • What skills do you need to hire/outsource for?
  • What skills are not “in your DNA”, i.e. skills you’ll have to bring in outside partners for?

Your goal in any subjective audit is to figure out the “one thing” you do really well (such as product design, customer service, or marketing). At the same time, you also need to find skills and areas you need to drastically improve upon.

Step #3: Competitor analysis

Competitor analysis is the heart of the “Opportunities & Threats” in SWOT. You’ll want to devote a significant amount of time to this.

Start off by listing your major competitors. Then find the following data:

Product range
Dig through your competitor’s website and find answers to questions like:

  • How many products do your biggest competitors sell?
  • What is the overlap between their product range and yours?
  • What new products are they planning to launch?
  • What products have they discontinued recently?

Product pricing
Document the pricing for all their products you are competing against, as well as their shipping costs. Make an Excel sheet with their top selling products (that you compete against) and list their prices.

Current promotions

Are your competitors running any current promotions (such as discount coupons, offers, etc.)?

If yes, how prominently are they advertising these promos (on their site, on their social media channels, in print/digital/TV ads)?

Document all the promotions you can find in a separate document. Also note which products they are promoting heavily — these are either their best converting products or new launches.

SEO

For each competitor, find out their:

  • Domain authority
  • Total backlinks
  • Total ranking keywords
  • Top ranking keywords

Social media presence
Find out the following for each competitor:

  • Top social channels (by total followers/fans)
  • Top social channels (by activity)
  • Average number of updates on each channel
  • Average engagement rate for each post on each channel

Advertising spend

How and where are your competitors advertising their products?

Figure this out by asking questions like:

  • Are your competitors advertising on Google AdWords? If yes, what are their target keywords?
  • Are your competitors promoting themselves through paid social ads? If yes, what are their top social channels — Twitter, Facebook or Instagram?
  • Do your competitors have any video ads?
  • Do your competitors sponsor any contests, podcasts, or email newsletters? If yes, how long have they been doing it (a long-termsponsorship is likely to be profitable)?
  • Do your competitors spend money on media buys?

If possible, also find your competitors’ offline ad spend, including print, radio, billboard and TV advertising.

It’s also a good idea to collect your competitors’ creatives (ad images, copy, videos, etc.). This can be the springboard for new marketing ideas.

Customer service

The quality of customer service often makes or breaks competition. It can be difficult to get this data, but you can get an estimate by sending a support email/call and calculating response quality and time.

In addition, also figure out the number of customer support channels they offer (email, on-site chat, phone, etc.). Which channel do they promote on their site? For example, some businesses display their phone numbers prominently on their site while others focus on email.

Payment methods

What payment methods do your competitors accept? Is there an obvious payment method they are missing (such as Paypal)?

Website Design/Usability issues

This is mostly subjective, but a design and usability audit of your competitors can help you spot opportunities.

Figure out things like:

  • Total number of checkout steps
  • Marketing copy and design, especially above the fold
  • Quality and quantity of product images
  • Quality and depth of product descriptions
  • Average number of reviews for each product

In addition, also note the E-commerce software they use.

Company metrics

Finally, find out some more details about your competitors, including their:

  • Company size (in terms of employees)
  • Annual revenues
  • Growth in revenues YoY
  • Number of monthly visitors and pageviews
  • Years in business

Step #4: Understand market trends

What is the current demand for your product(s)? How is demand expected to grow in the near and far future? Is there any pending legislation that can impact product demand?

Figuring out these trends can be hard since there is often little concrete data available. However, if you’ve been in business for a while, you likely already have a good idea of general trends.

Try to find out things like:

  • Current and projected demand for your product(s)
  • Market trends that can increase demand for your products (example: a famous rapper recently started wearing shoes similar to yours)
  • Market trends that can decrease demand for your products (example: new fashion trends favor monochromatic themes while you sell mostly colorful clothing)
  • Legislation that might impact product demand (example: your local government adding a tax to imported products — such as yours)
  • Market developments that can impact competition (example: new software drastically reduces cost to build conversion-focusedE-commerce sites — which is your strength — and thus floods the market with new players)

This will be an open-ended enquiry. You don’t have to have exact numbers for each of the issues above; a general idea of the way the industry is moving and the impact it will have on your business is good enough to start with.

Step #5: Map Our Your SWOT

If you’ve followed the four steps above, you’ll likely have a ton of data about your own business, your competition and your market.

With this data, you can now start answering questions to zero in on your SWOT — Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats.

Strengths

To find your strengths, dig through your data and answer questions like:

  • What do you do better than anyone else in your business?
  • What competitive advantage do you have over your rivals?
  • What is your USP?

Weaknesses

To spot weaknesses, find answers to questions such as:

  • What are my shipping costs? Are my total costs lower than brick and mortar stores?
  • How much do I have to spend on marketing? Does lower marketing spend mean that the barrier to entry is low (and thus, more competition)?
  • What skills does my current team lack? Are these crucial to my business success?

Opportunities

You can narrow down on your opportunities by asking questions like:

  • What market trends can I take advantage of to expand my revenues?
  • What competitor weaknesses can I exploit?
  • What technologies can I use to increase efficiency?

Threats
To narrow down on threats, find answers to questions like these:

  • How big is the barrier to entry? How likely is it for a new startup to tap into my existing market?
  • What are the chances that a bigger rival will move into my segment?
  • Are there any regulatory or legal hurdles that might impede my growth?

These are just a few questions to kickstart your SWOT analysis. As you gather and analyze data, you’ll spot obvious strengths and weaknesses you can exploit to fuel growth.

For example, if your analysis shows that you have strong design talent while your competitors have barely any presence on social media, you can use your design strength to outmarket your competitors on social channels.

Similarly, if you have a strong manufacturing base that can quickly turn prototypes into finished products, you can use it to spot trends and bring new products to market faster than your competitors.

If you do all the five steps above, you’ll be in a much better place to understand your business, your competition and the market forces that affects your success.

Over to You

SWOT analysis isn’t essential to E-commercesuccess, but it definitely helps. Instead of playing it by the ear, a thorough SWOT analysis will help you chart out a long-term strategy for success. Armed with this document, you’ll be able to spot trends faster than your competitors, mitigate your weaknesses and focus your strengths.

Here’s what you should takeaway from this post:

  • Gather both subjective and objective data about your site and your business before starting any SWOT analysis.
  • Analyze your competitors as rigorously as you analyze your own business and its strengths/weaknesses.
  • Understanding external forces — market trends, legislative issues, etc. — is the crucial for finding opportunities quickly

2015年2月18日 星期三

Retweet: 5 Tips to Creating a Sense of Urgency in Your Writing andEmails Published by Alan Harris

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When it comes to making a decision, do you ever hesitate? Of course you do, everyone does! Even when it comes to making decisions about things we enjoy, such as where to eat, what to buy, or what event to attend, we debate and delay the decision making process.

So how do you get people to take action quickly with your own business? You need to eliminate any potential procrastinating ways. How? By creating a sense of urgency in your writing.

Whether you’re writing an irresistible email subject line, drafting up a promo, creating an email invitation, or writing a social post, here are five ways to grab the attention of your audience, and ignite them into action.

1. Set a Deadline
Nothing conveys a sense of urgency quite like a deadline. Reinforce the deadline in your email subject line or headline, the body copy and in the call-to-action. Use words such as “ends tomorrow,” “good until 3/3/15,” or “offer expires Thursday.”

2. Use Time-Sensitive Language
Use time-sensitive phrasing and wording such as, “time is running out,” “last chance,”or “only one day left,” especially in tandem with a deadline. Here’s an example: “Last chance! This offer expires tomorrow at noon PST. Don’t miss out.”

If you don’t want to use a hard deadline or expiration date, you can still use time-sensitive language in a general way, e.g. “limited-time offer.” You can also employ a countdown clock in your emails and across social media channels to reinforce the sense of urgency. Sending a last reminder in the final hours of an offer can also be effective.

3. Create Demand with Scarcity
An alternative way to communicate urgency to your readers without relying on deadlines is to emphasize or create a sense of scarcity, e.g. “Get it before it’s gone,” “only 5 spots left,” or “While supplies last.”

Whether you’re selling tickets to a fundraiser, or new merchandise, reminding your audience that you only have a finite and rapidly dwindling supply of something can help push those fence-sitters over the edge. Also be honest about the limited supply of your product or service as well. If people rush to buy a “flying off the shelves” ticket only to see there are plenty more a week later, you’ll have angry customers on your hands.

4. Keep Your Writing Brief
Once you entice readers, don’t overwhelm them with a mountain of text, because the average reader doesn’t have the attention for it. Instead, keep the body of your message brief so readers focus on your headline, key points and call-to-action. Need some help in the brevity department? Check out the very cool and free Hemingway App.

5. Use a Clear, Direct Call-to-Action
It doesn’t matter how well written your email, blog or social post is if your readers don’t know what you want them to do. Make it obvious with a direct and easy to understand CTA, or call-to-action. Whether you want them to make a phone call or click-through to your website, make your CTA a highly visible link or button with action-oriented wording. You can use the VerticalResponse Button Builder to create your own call-to-action button for free.

Did we miss any tips? Share yours in the comments section below.

Send emails with a sense of urgency using VerticalResponse – It’s free up to 1,000 email contacts.

© 2015, VerticalResponse Blog. All rights reserved. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited.

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About the Author

Alan Harris
Alan Harris is a Marketing Automation Specialist at VerticalResponse.



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Retweet: 3 Emails You Should Be Sending But Aren't by Lisa Furgison

When it comes to email marketing, many small business owners rely on only a few emails to try to accomplish goals. While newsletters, event emails and offers are your email bread and butter, it’s important to have a variety of email types in the mix.

To keep you from getting in a routine of sending the same thing over and over, we’ve put together a list of less common email types that you can add to your email marketing plan. Give one of these emails a try to spice up your content.

1. New content email

When you write a new blog post, create a must-see infographic, or post a new video on your website, you should share it in an email.

It would be amazing if your target audience checked your website or blog on a daily basis, but that’s probably unrealistic. Your new post might go unnoticed, unless you tell people it exists. That’s where email comes in. Send an email that offers a brief summary of what’s new and share a link.

If your business is creating and sending a lot of content each week, each email could promote a few pieces of content. You want to encourage more website traffic, but you don’t want to overwhelm inboxes in the process.

Here’s an example of an email that entices readers to check out a new article: 

3 Emails You Should Send But Aren`t 

What we like about this email:

It’s short. You don’t have to write a long description of the content. It’s okay to keep it short. A few sentences is fine.
A creative image. This article, which talks about learning from failure, isn’t an easy piece of content to find an image for. However, the author thought outside of the box and found a picture that fits.
Clear call to action. The reader should click on the red text link. The obvious call to action is an important component in this email. They could have also used a call to action button to make it even more obvious. You can create on using our free Button Builder. 
2. Customer appreciation email

It’s common to send a newsletter that updates your clients about recent news, or emails that encourage sales, but sometimes it’s a good idea to just say thanks. Everyone appreciates a thank you, which is why you should take the time to express it.

Whether your non-profit just reached a campaign goal, or your business just hit a milestone anniversary, send an email thanking your donors or customers for being part of that success.

Here’s an example of a customer appreciation email from a non-profit: 

3 Emails You Should Send But Aren`t 

What we like about this email:

Conversational tone. The text is inviting and talks to real people.
A way to engage. In this email, the reader can make another donation and continue to engage with the non-profit. (Businesses can include a link back to their website.)
You might also consider hosting a customer appreciation event. Retailers could host a customer appreciation sale with a discount offered to loyal customers. Service-based businesses can offer a discount via email for a popular service. Non-profits could host a thank you breakfast for key donors. Of course, you can invite guests via email.

3. Current event email

Consider creating an email that has a connection to a current event or trend. For example, you could send an email that has a holiday theme or is tied to another current event. 

Here’s a quick list of reoccurring events that you can focus an email on:

Regular holidays
Sporting events (just abide by any usage rights)
Weather changes
Changing seasons
Election time
Back to School
Local events, community celebrations
Obscure holidays (Margarita Day, Bring Your Dog to Work Day, etc.)
Of course, timing is key. In most cases, you can plan ahead. Mark your calendar with email reminders to ensure you send an email out before St. Patrick’s Day or the Back to School season.

Consider offering some kind of promotion or deal that’s connected to the event. For example, a pizza shop can offer 20 percent off for orders placed during the Pennant Race. A heating repair company can offer a discounted maintenance check on the first official day of winter.

When the Polar Vortex swept through the country last winter, a car rental business in St. Croix sent out an email encouraging winter bound residents to take a vacation.

“The rough weather in the Northeast gave this client a big boost,” says Perry Sheraw, managing director of Sugarmill Media, who helped the company compose the email. Here’s a look at what recipients got in their inbox: 

3 Emails You Should Send But Aren`t 

What we like about this email:

Humor. The connection between the snowstorm and mixed drinks is comical.
Great image. The image of a beach is a great lure for people who are tired of shoveling snow.
Creativity. The company took a current event and got creative with it, using it as a clever marketing tool.

Retweet: 3 Free Content Curation Tools That'll Enhance Your Social Posts by Contributing Author

Social media is an important part of your small business marketing plan. Coming up with relevant and interesting content to post on a regular basis (that isn’t just about your biz) requires a little extra time.

At this point, you might be thinking that you don’t have time to sit around, browse the web, find great content and then post it to your social media accounts. Thankfully, there are free and low cost tools out there designed for busy small businesses like you. 

You can use curation tools. These social media tools find or suggest content that your audience will like and make it easy for you to share it. Here’s a list of three to check out:

1. Swayy

Swayy is focused entirely on social media curation. You tell it what topics you’re interested in and it’ll generate a list of related content. It also looks at your posts, your audience’s interests and their engagement with your business to add to the list.

The content is presented in a visual way, making it easy to scroll through and find interesting items to share. Here’s what a curated list of content looks like:

3 Free Content Curation Tools That'll Enhance Your Social Posts

If you what to share something, you can do so immediately or schedule it to appear at a later date. Swayy will analyze how well it did with your audience and refine the content search for the next time around. You can also view your analytics reports in real-time.

The free version gives you one dashboard. If you want to add to it, plans start at $9 a month.

2. Zite

Similar to Swayy, Zite gives you a list of content that matches your interests. As you look through the content, you can “like it” and the site will suggest similar content. As your list of liked content grows, the site hones in on your taste and gives you specifically tailored content to check out.

It has a clean layout, mimicking that of a newspaper or magazine. Here’s an example of what you’ll see:

3 Free Content Curation Tools That'll Enhance Your Social Posts

When you find a must-share article, you can post it directly to your site or social networks.

Added bonus: It’s free.

3. Hootsuite

Hootsuite is a popular social media tool. Many small business owners use it to manage multiple social sites, but it suggests content too. There’s a “suggested content” section where you can select topics of interest and get a list of popular posts that fit in that category.

If you see something you like, you can post it to your account with a few easy clicks. Here’s what it looks like: 

3 Free Content Curation Tools That'll Enhance Your Social Posts

As you can see, the content is set up in a list format, which is a different look than other tools.

As mentioned, Hootsuite is not just a curation tool. It’s a social media management tool as well, so you can access several social sites all from one dashboard, which is helpful for Aly Silverio, founder of independent clothing line Jawbreaking.

“It’s awesome being able to line up our tweets and not have to worry about constantly being on our phones to post tweets,” she says.

You get a double feature with this tool: curation and management.

There is a free version, with limited features. Paid plans start at $9.99 a month.

How to get started

Before you dive into any of these platforms, figure out what specific goals you want to achieve. Are you hoping to drive more visitors to your website? Would you like to find relevant content to share with your audience? Are you curious about whether or not your audience enjoys the content you’re sharing?

Once you know what you’d like to achieve, try out the free versions of the platforms and select one that fits your needs. 

Retweet: 50 Unique Ideas for Your Next Email Guide by Lisa Furgison

As a business owner, you’re juggling a lot of day-to-day to tasks and may not have time come up with ideas for your next email or promotion.

We’ve put our creative noggins together to create a full year’s worth of quirky and engaging email ideas. Each month centers on a specific theme. Within that month, you’ll find four out-of-the-box email ideas for your small business. Each month also contains a marketing tip to get your creative mojo flowing.

January

This month celebrates all things quirky by sending out emails around nontraditional holidays.

Peculiar People Day

Use this unique day to be creative. For example, McDonald’s created this gem for its email and social media campaigns. You can also highlight an unusual or eccentric product that your company makes. It falls on January 10 each year.

Dress Up Your Pet Day

People love their pets. They love dressing them up even more. Encourage your customers to dress up their pet and enter your photo contest. It works especially well for places like the Pet Supermarket. The holiday is January 14.

Compliment Day

On January 24, compliment your customers on Compliment Day like Kara’s Cupcakes does.

complimentday

Or, take a minute to compliment your staff by sending an email invitation to a team-building event like this marketing agency did.

Celebrate Opposite Day

Convince your customers to try something new on Opposite Day. In an email, Sephora used the holiday, which lands on January 25, to encourage customers to try a beauty product that they wouldn’t normally use.

oppositeday

A small business can stand out by sending emails for nontraditional holidays. You don’t have to be literal with all holidays—no need to install a bar to celebrate Margarita Day but you can get creative: for instance, a plumbing business could send an email about Peanut Butter Day and drains moving as slow as peanut butter. It will stand out in your reader’s mind. Check out this site for a full list of bizarre holidays.

February

With Valentine’s Day smack-dab in the middle of the month, focus your efforts on lovey-dovey notions in February. Any business can send emails for Valentine’s Day, not just restaurants and florists. Think outside the box for Valentine’s Day content; here we’ve assembled some great examples and ideas.

Generate more email interest

Borrow an idea from Zulilly, the mom-centered discount shop. The company sent an email asking customers to “Tell us which brands make your heart flutter, and we’ll tell you when they’re on Zulilly.” It capitalizes on the holiday and asks customers to sign up for more emails.

‘Fall in Love’ partnership

Team up with other vendors in your area and create a shopping event around Valentine’s Day. Ten shops in Brooklyn joined forces and launched the “Fall in Love with Brooklyn” event. Customers were invited via email and given a map to hit all of the participating shops.

fall-in-love

Create a shopping guide

Send your customers a list of romantic gifts they can pick up at your business. Haberdash, an online retailer specializing in men’s style, sent this email to offer unique gifts for guys.

Introduce a QR code

Valentine’s Day marketing doesn’t have to focus on flowers and champagne, the holiday comes with anxiety too. Capitalizing on the uneasy feelings of the holiday, Isobar, a UK cell phone company, sent an email to customers asking, “Does he love you?” The campaign contained a QR code that took customers to a promotional website. Try something similar that combines Valentine’s Day with a QR code. They work for some businesses and not for others so only use if appropriate.

March

Emails around sporting events always draw a crowd. This month’s ideas prove that you don’t need a sports-themed product to capitalize on the craziness that is March Madness. Before using March Madness in any marketing or advertising, make sure you check the legal guidelines to avoid any trouble. Many sporting and other events have very specific usage guidelines.

Run a March Madness promotion

Offer a special March Madness deal. When you think basketball you probably don’t think office supply store, but online office supply store Shoplet sent customers a list of ten customizable office supplies that connect with the tourney.

“This month, leverage the excitement behind March Madness,” Nicholas Womack, a business developer at Shoplet, says. He encourages other businesses to make a creative connection between their business and the big event.

Start a bracket

Bracketology is all the rage during March, so create a bracket for your brand. For example, Gardens and Guns, a southern lifestyle magazine, ran a bracket to name the best southern food. Like this company, you can send out emails and host online voting as a way to engage customers and readers.

Run a photo contest

Send an email to your customers asking them to participate in a March Madness photo contest. Or, try a “Young Basketball Star” competition and ask parents to send in pictures of their kids playing ball.

Video contest inspired by a world record

Did you know there’s a Guinness World Record for the longest time to spin a basketball with one hand? There is. The record is 10 minutes and 33 seconds. Use this awesome record to inspire a video contest. Email your customers and ask them to shoot a video of this rare talent.

April

This month get in touch with your inner videographer and add videos to your email marketing. Need a reason to make a video? Here are a few to get you inspired.

Celebrate YouTube

In April of 2005, the owner of YouTube recorded himself at the zoo and uploaded the site’s first video. Tell your customers that you’re honoring this digital anniversary by creating your first video. Pick a topic like thanking your customers, sharing your first product, first employee or first office location.

A company newsreel

Create a company newsreel. Do an on camera interview with your new CEO or shoot a “What’s New” video. Visit California did this. The tourism hub created a fall-themed video to let visitors know about new seasonal events.

A video about your services

Bring your list of products or services to life with a video and email the link to your customers. The motion department at OverIt, an Albany-based creative agency, made this humorous video to showcase the company’s animation services and its ability to work within any genre.


“Keep your video short. Make it relevant and worthwhile,” Lawrence Basso, the motion design director at OverIt suggests. “Don’t be afraid to add a little humor, either. If the video is funny enough, it will travel regardless of what it’s about.”

Go out on a ‘Vine’

Worried that you don’t have the recording chops to make a video? Have your customers do it. Ask your customers to shoot a video on Twitter’s Vine while using your product. Send an invite for the competition and send another email when it’s time for consumers to pick a winner.

May

Celebrate your unique company this month by creating emails about all of the great things your business does.

Start a company newsletter

If your company doesn’t send out a newsletter, start one this month. It’s a fantastic way to keep your customers in-the-know. You can include a variety of topics in your newsletter. Brag a little when your company wins an award, offer a behind-the-scenes tour, or introduce new managers.

Sending a company newsletter is a fantastic way to keep readers up to date on everything happening in your company. Be sure to send it on a regular basis so your readers come to expect it. And we like to keep them fairly short so that our audience can get what they need without having to commit too much time.

Celebrate milestones

If your company hits an anniversary or lands a big client, tell your customers about it. You could include the info in a company newsletter or send your customers a coupon in celebration. Either way, your customers will appreciate the update.

Offer a history lesson

Email your customers a piece of your company’s timeline. Include a call-to-action button that takes them to your site to learn more. Of course, you’ll have to have a complete timeline created on your site before sending the email. Here’s a good example.

A recap of the year

May might seem like an unexpected time to send a “Year in Review” email, but this kind of promotion can get lost in the holiday hubbub. Instead, send one out in May and invite customers to a friends-and-family sale in honor of all your company has accomplished this year. Retailers like Sears use this kind of promotion a lot, but it can be effective for a small business too.

Celebrate mom

Everyone has a mom and no matter what kind of business you have, you can pay tribute to, or celebrate moms everywhere. You can do a “Bring Your Mom In” special or a Moms get a special % off deal.

June

Ah, warm weather is arriving (unless you’re in the Southern Hemisphere of course). Use this seasonal change to propel your email marketing this month.

Celebrate National Trails Day

Include a list of local trails in the June edition of your company’s newsletter to celebrate National Trails Day, which is June 7. Remember, customers appreciate helpful, usable content and a newsletter is a good place for it.

Send a summer discount code

Summer is a terrific time to give your customers a little incentive to buy. An eyeglass shop used a summer-themed email to offer a discount. Don’t forget to create a clear call to action in your email.

Welcome summer and new guests

Send an email that not only welcomes the warm weather but also welcomes new customers, too. If a customer has bought a new product or signed up for a new service in the past six months, applaud their actions with a well-crafted welcome email.

Summer giving

Team up with your local food bank this summer and get your customers involved. Send an email asking them to bring in canned goods like KinderCare Learning Centers did.

kinder-care

Summertime can be a slow season for some companies. Your customers are often out of the office or on vacation and aren’t as responsive as the rest of the year, but that doesn’t mean your email marketing should go on hiatus. You can use this month to try different email tactics and ideas, like the ones we’ve assembled here.

Remember Dads and Grads

Dads and grads rule in June. Offer special deals for dads and grads and get more customers in your doors in this traditionally slower summer month. Give grads something to spend all their graduation money on or their new found job earnings toward!

July

If you’re in the U.S., get a little patriotic. Use the Fourth as a catalyst for a series of emails.

The perfect Fourth of July party

This holiday is all about getting the crew together for a backyard barbecue. To help your customers host a rockin’ independence party, offer some tips to create the best gathering possible. You can also offer a Fourth of July discount like Shoplet does.

eflyer_4th

“During the holidays, customers are expecting sales,” Womack says. “The Fourth of July is a holiday known for cookouts and backyard parties, which is why Shoplet displays products like paper plates, cups and utensils.” Try connecting your products to the holiday too.

Recognize a vet

You don’t have to wait for Veteran’s Day to honor a vet. Devote a section of your newsletter to your employees who are also vets. Offer a “Vets in the Spotlight” section that talks about their service and their role in your company.

Remember the first walk on the moon

Neil Armstrong walked on the moon in July of 1969. In honor of this patriotic event, host a “Biggest Accomplishment Competition.” Invite your customers to add their biggest accomplishment to a growing list on Facebook. Give the biggest accomplisher a company-specific prize.

Made in America email

Take pride in your American-made products by offering a discount. Menards, a home remodeling store, sends a sales flyer to its customers that highlights its American products.

August

It’s all about creating useful content this month. Here are a few ideas you can use to create “tips and tricks” emails.

A watermelon-centered email

August 2 is Watermelon Day. Yes, Watermelon Day. Think up a way to connect your product to this fruit-loving celebration. Lego did. The company emailed invitations to LEGOLAND’s Watermelon Day event complete with tips to grow watermelon and a Lego building contest. Yum!

Ring in ‘Work Like a Dog Day’

Celebrate this funny holiday, which falls on August 5, with an email about how productive your product or service can be. Try something like, “Today is Work Like a Dog Day, but you shouldn’t have to work that hard. Here are three tips to be more productive using our products.”

Tips to use your product better

Create a useful email that will help your customers get more out of your product or service. TurboTax does this well. Marketers for the tax-filing software sent an email out about money-saving tips.

August-use-product

You want your customers to succeed with your products or services; try sending a how-to email once a month with a useful tip that helps your customers and your business. Serving your customers instead of always selling to them creates loyalty that lasts.

Celebrate Relaxation Day with a reorder email

August 15 is Relaxation Day. It’s a great day to send a reorder email out. Encourage your customers to relax by stocking up on your products. Send something similar to this reorder email from 1-800-CONTACTS.

augustreorder

September

It’s back-to-school time. Use this month to market to both parents and students.

Offer a back-to-school discount

Recognize this is an expensive time for parent shoppers by offering a discount. Shoplet, an online office supply store, offered a 15 percent discount to customers on its email list. If you offer a service such as a salon, spa or car mechanic tailor your message for stressed parents or college bound students

shoplet-back-to-school

 

“Back-to-school marketing is extremely valuable for Shoplet, as it is one of our most lucrative seasons throughout the year,” Womack says. His advice to other business owners is to “make sure your customers are aware of your competitive pricing and convenient selection and services during the back-to-school season.”

A favorite teacher contest

Everyone has a favorite teacher, so invite your customers to participate in a favorite teacher contest via email. Dollar Days, a discount online retailer, did this exact competition and asked customers to weigh in on Facebook. More than 107,000 people voted and 18 teachers were given prizes through this social media promotion.

Last chance sale

If a deal has a deadline, customers are more likely to act fast. While you can use the last chance sale throughout the year, it made sense for Shoplet to try and cash in on this busy time of year with a last chance sale.

Dorm decorating tips

Don’t forget, college students are returning to dorms, too. Offer helpful tips for the college-bound group. For example, offer tips to create dorm decor that suggests a few products from your shop.  Or offer ideas on how to cook ramen in a dorm room, pizza or restaurant deals, or a back-to-school oil change before they set off.

October

From smartphones to social media updates, use this month to spin a few digital inventions into marketing emails.

An email celebrating email

In October of 1971 the first email was sent. Honor this big event by sending an email recognizing this milestone and ask customers to refer-a-friend via email. Groupon, the discount site, offers an incentive with its refer a friend program. And so does VerticalResponse!

Send out a survey

Email an online survey like this alumni association did. Tell the recipient how long it will take to complete the survey, too. You can also offer an incentive to participate.

Retro social media posts

When did your company first start using social media? Create an email that showcases your first posts and ask customers to join a conversation about how social media has grown through the years.

It’s important to balance creativity with communicating your core message. Use creativity in certain places such as in subject lines, images or a fun theme, but keep the important information in the email easy to see and read.

November

Let your email marketing reflect the season by creating emails that focus on being thankful.

Create a testimonial email

Tell your customers how thankful you are to be able to offer high quality products. Use several testimonials to drive the point home. For example, clothing retailer, Kimberton, offers a testimonial to market its flannel shirt.

Generate an email stuffed with facts

Thanksgiving is all about the food, particularly turkey. Create an infographic that offers some interesting turkey facts. For example, Mint.com, a finance site, created this graphic for the holiday. Think of a way to create an infographic that connects to your business and the holiday.

Focus on cause marketing

Team up with a charity and create emails that center around your do-good spirit. Paper Culture, an eco-friendly stationary and invitations shop, has involved their customers in their efforts to support the environment. They plant trees, either for every ‘like’ the company receives on Facebook or every order. And they even let their customers dedicate the trees if they want.

Ask for feedback

After a customer makes a purchase, send a thank you email and ask for feedback. Online comments can bolster the reputation of products. Asking for a product review through email is a good way to nab positive reviews. Here’s an example from outdoor clothing company, Ibex.

December

Embrace the gift-giving season with holiday-themed marketing.

Take advantage of National Cookie Day

Celebrate this holiday by offering some holiday cookie recipes in your company newsletter like this bakery did, or give away a free cookie when customers come into your business.

An email full of gift ideas

Coming up with gift ideas is hard. Take some of the pressure off your customers by offering a series of holiday gift ideas. Rather than send one long email with a dozen options, break your emails into smaller, more specific topics like Piperlime did with its “Girls Guide to Guy Buys.”

DecemberPiperlime

Email a holiday greeting card

You can go as simple or as elaborate as you’d like with a holiday card. You can use free card-creating sites like Punchbowl or you can create something fancier like OverIt did with this animated card for SUNY Albany.

“I think a digital holiday card is a good year-end reminder for clients. It says, ‘Hey, we’re still here if you need anything,’” Basso says. “It can also give you a creative outlet to do some things you don’t get to do often.”

Be a holiday time-saver

During the holiday season everyone wants the gift-giving process to be easy. Remind your customers that your company has plenty of time-saving ways to purchase a gift. For example, Staples reminds customers that they can reserve an item online and pick it up in the store.

With this guide, you won’t be scratching your head for email topics this year. While we’ve listed over 50 email topics for you, there’s no limit on creativity. Have some fun and see what kind of quirky ideas you can come up with too.  Always double check holiday dates to ensure you mail your email for the right holiday at the right time. Otherwise you might be creating your own funny holiday!

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