Blogiversary, Part IV
Blogiversary, Part IV
Four years on, as the British would say, OnlyOnce is going strong. Cumulative stats show a steady 457 posts, about one every three days on average (same as it’s been all along), and a scant 409 non-spam comments. Maybe some day I’ll start being more edgy and provocative. Or prolific. Or Twitterific. Or something.
Looking back over my initial “how’s it going” post and the last three anniversary posts, I’d say my reasons for blogging, out of my four original ones, have consolidated now around “Thinking” (writing short posts helps me crystallize my thinking) and “Employees” (one of our senior people once called reading OnlyOnce “getting a peek inside Matt’s head). But I’d also add two new raisons d’etre to the list:
Book Reviews: it’s not that I enjoy reading my own book reviews so much as I am glad I’m compiling a list of the business books I’m reading and what I think of them. While it’s not comprehensive (I limit the blogging to business books, probably about 50% of what I read), it’s come in handy a few times to have a little online library for my own reference.
I like it: I really, really enjoy writing. I used to write all the time when I was younger. High school newspaper editor, creative writing magazine founder, and all that. I miss it. Blogging is probably the only form of prose I regularly write now. And it’s great. The reawakening and sharpening of my writing skills has even inspired me to dive into a couple creative writing exercises, short stories mostly, in the past year. So I just like doing it.
And isn’t that reason enough to do something?
Context is King
Context is King
A small post with a good point. I noticed in The Economist this week something that struck me. They posted a correction to a prior article. Publications do that all the time, but this particular correction was placed on a page in the same section of the magazine in which the error appeared a couple weeks before. Most print publications tend to bury their corrections in the front or the back where they never get seen. But this one was right in the middle of the magazine, saying “we made a mistake – right here.” Noteworthy to me for its show of transparency, always appreciated but not seen frequently enough in “official” things.
Parenting and Corporate Leadership
Parenting and Corporate Leadership
Let me be clear up front: I do not think of my colleagues at Return Path as children, and I do not think of Casey, Wilson, and Elyse as employees. That said, after a couple weeks of good quality family time in January, I was struck by the realization that being a CEO for a long time before having kids has made me a better parent…and I think being a new parent the last three years has made me a better CEO.
Here's why. The two roles have a heavy overlap in required core interpersonal competencies. And doing both of them well means you're practicing those competencies twice as many hours in a week than just doing one – and in different settings. It's like cross training. In no order, the cross-over competencies I can think of are…
Decisiveness. Be wishy washy at work, and the team can get stuck in a holding pattern. Be wishy washy with kids, they run their agenda, not yours.
Listening. As my friend Anita says, you have two ears and one mouth for a reason. Listening to your team at work, and also listening for what's not being said, is the best way to understand what's going on in your organization. Kids need to be heard as well. The best way to teach good verbal communication skills is to ask questions and then listen actively and attentively to the responses.
Focus. Basically, no one benefits from multitasking, even if it feels like a more efficient way of working. Anyone you're spending time with, whether professionally or at home, deserves your full attention. The reality is that the human brain is full of entropy anyway, so even a focused conversation, meeting, or play time, is somehow compromised. Actually doing other activities at the same time destroys the human connection.
Patience. For the most part, steering people to draw their own conclusions about things at work is key. Even if it takes longer than just telling them what to do, it produces better results. With kids, patience takes on a whole new meaning, but giving them space to work through issues and scenarios on their own, while hard, clearly fosters independence.
Alignment. If you and your senior staff disagree about something, cross-communication confuses the team. If you and your spouse aren't on the same page about something, watch those kids play the two of you off each other. A united front at the top is key!
I'm sure there are others…but these are the main things that jump to mind. And of course one can be great in one area without being in the other area at all, or without being great in it. Are you a parent and a business leader? What do you think?
Return Path Blog is Up
Return Path Blog is Up
Today we launched our new corporate web site at Return Path. We’re trying an experiment. We’ve reinvented large portions of the site as a corporate blog (for those of you who follow Fred’s blog, the two of us just realized last week that we had both done this to our companies’ web sites at the same time without knowing it).
As I said in my introductory post on the new site, we’re casting the blog as an Online Resource Center for Email Marketers. There are no hard and fast rules for how corporate blogs are supposed to work, so we’re experimenting with it. I hope all of our friends, employees, customers, and investors, as well as journalists who cover online marketing, and other marketers who care about email, subscribe to it and give it a shot — and also give us feedback.
Since there aren’t a lot of precedents for good corporate blogs, we’ve created the following guidelines for ourselves in publishing this blog:
* We will treat you the way a publisher would treat you — as a valued, paying subscriber
* We will give you a new and deeper level of access to our and industry data and experts
* We will respond to your feedback and comments promptly and not defensively
* We will not clutter up the Resource Center with third-party advertising
* We reserve the right to occasionally post about Return Path, but not in an annoying way
I hope these are reasonable, and if they work, I hope others will adopt them as well.
My personal blog, OnlyOnce, will continue to exist in its current form, and I will follow Fred’s lead and cross-post between the two blogs whenever it’s relevant. So I’d encourage you to have a look at the new Return Path site, and feel free to subscribe to our blog via RSS, or by entering your email address in the top of the "Feed Me!" form on our home page. We promise you a regular, but not overbearing, stream of interesting facts and insights into email marketing from me, George Bilbrey, Stephanie Miller, and many others on the Return Path team like that you won’t be able to get anywhere else!
Email Articles This Week
Email Articles This Week
I know, not a real inspired headline. There are two interesting articles floating around about email marketing this week. I have a few thoughts on both.
First, David Daniels from Jupiter writes in ClickZ about Assigning a Value to Email Addresses. David’s numbers show that 71% of marketers don’t put a value on their email addresses. I think that may be an understatement, but it’s a telling figure nonetheless. David’s article is right on and gives marketers some good direction on how to think about valuing email addresses. The one thing he doesn’t address explicitly, though, is how to think about the value of an email address in the context of a multi-channel customer relationship. Customer Lifetime Value is all good and well, but the more sophisticated marketers take the next step and try to understand by customer (or segment) how valuable email is relative to other channels.
Second, David Baker writes in Mediapost’s Email Insider about Finding New Customers Via Email. The column is a nice discussion of how important email is to retaining customers. We at Return Path completely agree. However, the question Baker posed at the beginning is not well addressed — “Should I use email to find new customers?”
My company works with hundreds of smart marketers every week who say, “Yes! Because it’s effective, cost efficient and is the only way to combine the relevancy of search with the power of online advertising.”
I applaud Baker’s note of caution to marketers planning to acquire customers via email. It’s always a good idea to plan the campaign with the same diligence you plan any marketing outreach — making sure the targeting, message, design and offer are all optimized for the prospect interest and the medium.
However, I take great issue with his conclusion that email acquisition marketing “does more harm than good.” Our clients disprove this claim every day. Email prospecting done well includes a synergy of organic, viral and paid techniques. Consumers and business professionals still want to receive relevant and informative offers via email. More than 50,000 of them sign up every DAY for email offers from Return Path alone.
Poeple who have failed list rental tests (and there are lots of them) need to ask some hard questions of their campaign strategy, their creative, their list rental partner, and their agency. Did you try to send the same message and design to a list of prospects as you do to your house file? No wonder no one got the message, they don’t even know you. Was your list double opt-in?  Did you segment the list by interest category or demographics? Perhaps your message was mis-targeted. Did your landing page make it easy to take advantage of the offer? Did you test on a small portion of the list before blasting the entire file? Did you optimize your subject line to ensure higher open rates? Did you try to do too much? The golden rule of email list rental is “one email, one message.”
The success of many marketers using list rental today can not be ignored. Done well, email acquisition is extremely powerful. And, the addition of new lead generation, co-registration and offer aggregation opportunities create even more custom and targeted opportunities to connect with prospects.
It’s too easy to dismiss something that didn’t work two years ago by blaming the medium. Instead, recognize that old experience for what it was. A well-intentioned effort to test out a new medium, that didn’t work because many tried to apply practices from other media to it. Times have changed, and email acquisition has proven its value.
Stick with Daniels’ article, figure out how valuable an email address can be for you, then go out and collect as many of them as you can from customers and prospects who will be all-too-willing to give them to you in exchange for content, offers, and other points of value.
Everyone's a Direct Marketer, Part II
Everyone’s a Direct Marketer, Part II
(If you missed the first post in this series, it’s here.)
So, all companies are now direct marketers — their web sites and email lists make it so, they can’t effectively reach their fragmented audience without it, and consumer permission demands it. Why is this new to some companies and not others, and what lessons can companies who are new at it learn from traditional direct marketers?
First, the quick answer — it’s new because it’s being driven by the new technologies the Internet has brought us in the past 10 years. Those technologies have opened up the possibility for 1:1 communication between any company and its customers that was previously unaffordable to many industries with low price point products. You never received a telemarketing call for a movie, because making the call costs $3, and all you’ll spend on the movie is $10. P&G never sent you a glossy direct mail piece for toothpaste, because they’d spend $1 at a small chance you’ll buy their $2.25 product. But the cost of a banner ad or a given keyword or an incremental email is so low (virtually zero in some cases), that everyone can afford a direct presence today.
What lessons can companies who are new at it learn from traditional direct marketers? There are many, but four things stand out to me that good DMers do well that are different from the skills inherent in traditional marketing/advertising:
1. Take the creative process seriously. Just because you can dash off an important email to your staff in 30 seconds doesn’t mean your marketing people should do the same to your customers. Put your email campaigns or templates through a rigorous development and approval process, just as you would a newspaper ad or radio spot. There’s just no excuse for typos, bad grammar, or sloppy graphics in email or on a web site.
2. Use live testing and feedback loops. It’s hard to test two versions of a TV commecial without incurrent significant extra cost. It’s impossible to test 20. But with today’s software, you can test 10 versions of your home page, or 100 versions of your email campaign, almost instantly, and refine your message on the fly to maximize response.
3. Make transparency part of your corporate culture. Just as you can have a 1:1 relationship with your customers, your customers expect a 1:1 relationship back. If they want to know what data you store on them, tell them. If they want you to stop emailing/calling/mailing them, stop. If they want to know more about your products or policies, let them in. Think about marketing more as a dialog with your customers, and less as you messaging them.
4. Merge content with advertising. Old-school advertisers didn’t have to worry about this one, because their ads were always surrounded by other people’s content (TV, newspaper, radio, magazines). But in direct marketing, your message is sometimes the only message around. Make it interesting. Make it entertaining. I always think the prototypical example of this as the old J. Peterman catalog, which was trying to sell clothing and accessories by creating stories and mystique around each product. But there are tons of other examples as well, especially around email newsletters.
Next up in the series: What does this mean for the way companies will be structured or operate in the future?
OnlyOnce Now MultiLingual
OnlyOnce Now MultiLingual
If you look in the left sidebar of OnlyOnce, you will now see a box that says “Translate This Page” with a dropdown that lets you pick the language. Google Translate takes over from there and does the heavy lifting.Â
Global world…awesome service. Thanks, Google!
Thanks Brad and Ross for the tip.
Why French Fries are Like Marketing
My friend Seth has a theory about life called the French Fry Theory. The theory is simple — “you always have room for one more fry.” It’s pretty spot-on, if you think about it. Fries are so tasty, and so relatively small (most of the time), that it’s easy to just keep eating, and eating, and eating them.
I’ve always thought that the French Fry Theory can be applied to many things, usually other food items. However, I came up with a new application today: Marketing.
So why are French Fries like Marketing? You can always do one more thing. One more press release. One more piece of collateral. One more page on the corporate web site. One more newsletter. Trade show. Webinar. Research study. Ad. Search engine placement. Vendor. System. Speech. Take your pick.
The world we operate in is so dynamic that marketing (when done well) is nearly impossible to ever feel like you’re completely on top of. There’s always more to be done, and the trick to doing it well is knowing when to say “no” as much as when to charge into something.
My hat’s off to 21st century online-industry marketers. To bring this analogy back to its starting point…their plates are full!
Signs Your CMO Isn’t Scaling
(This is the third post in the series… The first one When to Hire your first CMO is here, and What does Great Look Like in a CMO is here).
In Startup CXO I wrote that I always think that the French Fry Theory can be applied to many things, usually other food items. The French Fry Theory is the idea that you always have room to eat one more fry and in my case I always do. But the same idea applies to marketing because you can always do “one more thing.” One more press release. One more piece of collateral. One more page on the corporate web site. One more newsletter. Trade show. Webinar. Research study. Ad. Search engine placement. Vendor. System. Speech. Take your pick.
The world we operate in is so dynamic that marketing (when done well) is nearly impossible to ever feel like you’re completely on top of and it’s near impossible to get closure. There’s always more to be done, and the trick to doing it well is knowing when to say “no” as much as when to charge into something. In my experience, CMOs who aren’t scaling well past the startup stage are the ones who typically do one or all of the following.
First, they’re stuck in “french fry mode” and treat all tasks like french fries. They focus on task execution (eating the next fry) and can’t pull up to think about whether they’re doing the right thing (should they be ordering another plate of fries?) and they are simply not scaling. If your CMO is constantly putting out fires that’s a sign that they may be too task-oriented and not strategic enough.
Another sign that your CMO isn’t scaling is if they report on activity as opposed to outcomes. This is related to my prior point. When all the world is a task list, then report-outs are just volumes of tasks but tasks are not the same as productivity or results. I’m not sure why marketing ended up like this, but it’s frequently the only function in the company that spends time producing beautiful reports on all the stuff they do. It probably comes from years of working with agencies who report like that to justify client spend. Regardless, can you imagine seeing reports on activity instead of outcomes from other departments? Do you really need the report from the CFO that talks about how many collections calls the team made as opposed to reporting on bad debt? Or a report from the CRO talking about how many meetings a rep had with no mention of pipeline or closes – seriously? No thank you. CMOs who can’t link activity to outcome with a focus on outcome are not scaling with the job and for all you know they may be rearranging the chairs on the Titanic.
A final sign that your CMO isn’t scaling is if they spend disproportionate amounts of time on creative or agency work. That’s the glamorous and fun part of marketing, for sure. Having made TV commercials as a head of marketing when I was at MovieFone, I can attest to that. But even if you’re a big B2C marketer with a lot of agency and creative spend, while you should be supervising that work, spending all your time on it is a sign that you’re not interested in all the other, well, french fries.
Marketing is becoming increasingly complex and differentiated, and it can easily be a service center as opposed to a strategic function. I don’t think that’s ideal, but that may be how a company decides to run it. But even if it is a service function your CMO needs to able to create space in their day for thinking and analysis, they need to be strategic, and they need to be able to stop doing “one more thing.”
( You can find this post on the Bolster Blog here)
More Good Inc.
More Good Inc.
Last year I was pleased and proud to write about our debut on the Inc. 500 list of America’s fastest growing companies. At that time I wrote that “Now our challenge, of course, is STAYING on the list, and hopefully upping our ranking next year!” Well, I am again please and proud to announce that we, in fact, stayed on the list. (You can read all the Inc. coverage here and see our press release about the ranking here.)
Unfortunately, we didn’t make the second part of our goal to up our rank. But, we did up our growth – our three-year revenue growth rate was 18% higher than last year. This is a testament to the hard work of our team (now 150 strong!) and wouldn’t be possible without the support of our many great clients (now 1,500 strong!). Most importantly, we see no end in sight. In fact, 2008 promises to be an even bigger year for us as we poise for continued growth. By the way, would you like to be part of a team that has now ranked as one of America’s fastest growing companies two years in a row? Check out our Careers page and join the team that is advancing email marketing, one company at a time.
When to Hire a Chief Privacy Officer
(Post 1 of 4 in the series of Scaling CPO’s)
Most startups don’t have a Chief Privacy Officer and just rely on outside advice from external counsel or a privacy consultant. In Startup CXO our Chief Privacy Officer from Return Path, Dennis Dayman, strongly advocates for privacy to be baked into a startup at the very beginning. Some startups probably don’t have any help in this area at all but given the importance of privacy and security issues today that’s a mistake.
If your startup doesn’t start life with a Chief Privacy Officer you’ll have to heed some warning signs and here are some I’ve picked up over the years. First, you’ll know it’s time to hire a Chief Privacy Officer when you wake up in the middle of the night terrified that you’re going to find your company on the front page of the newspaper or served a subpoena to testify before Congress about a data breach. Even if you’re not waking up in the middle of the night you might be concerned about privacy if you are spending too much of your own time trying to understand what PCI Compliance, or HIPAA, or GDPR means to your business. Or if you really don’t see the connections between your business and privacy issues in general, then a Chief Privacy Officer can be very helpful.
You might get tough questions from your board on what your data breach client communication plan is, and if you don’t have a great answer and aren’t sure how to get to one, then it’s time to think about a Privacy Officer.
A fractional Chief Privacy Officer may be the best option for most startups…forever. Sometimes you can find one fractional executive for both the Privacy and Chief Information Security Officer roles. You probably can’t get by without a full-time leader in this area if you are large (>$50mm in revenue) and are sitting on a massive amount of consumer data, especially if that information involves PII, financial, or health information. But if that’s not you, a fractional Chief Privacy Officer may be the way to go. While a fractional executive is similar to an outside lawyer or consultant, an executive has a company title for external credibility and the personal commitment to the organization to ensure compliance. A fractional exeuctive is way more than a consultant since they’ll be able to provide guidance to employees and represent the company as if they were a full-time Chief Privacy Officer.
Not every startup needs a Chief Privacy Officer since you can cover your bases with lawyers or consultants, but if you’re collecting lots of data from jurisdictions across the world you’d be wise to get a Privacy officer, or a fractional executive, sooner rather than later.
(You can find this post on the Bolster Blog here)