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home | Blog

Generate Referrals Starting with an Email Trigger

February 28, 2011

Are you using email marketing to its greatest potential?

Services like Constant Contact or iContact make it pretty easy to start up an email program.  Just enter some names in a list, drop some content into a pre-designed template and send out that e-newsletter.  Easy right?  Well yes…but no.

Yes – it’s pretty easy to do.  No – it’s not so easy to achieve results.

That’s why I love seeing and learning from great work and  On occasion I’d like to share examples with you.  Here is the full case study text from a case study I saw on MarketingSherpa.com recently:

Case Study: Roku customer referral program

Following is the full case study text from MarketingSherpa.com.

SUMMARY: Customer referrals are a powerful way to pull in more sales and leads. Some companies offer rewards, but you can push results even higher with a few simple tactics.

See how this consumer electronics company sent an automated email to encourage new customers to refer their friends and contacts. This email generated 75 percent of all registrations in the referral program

Roku referral page

CHALLENGE

Marketers at Roku, a video-streaming device for television, knew that word-of-mouth helped push sales. About 25 percent of their customers said they had first heard of the company from a friend or family member.

“Our goal was to try to increase that because word-of-mouth and referrals are one of the most cost-effective ways of acquiring customers,” says Lomit Patel, Senior Director, Direct Marketing, Roku. “Even if they don’t translate directly into sales, it helps create a positive image and a positive awareness of Roku.”

In response, Patel’s team launched a great referral program. It offered rewards to customers who sent referrals via email, Facebook or Twitter. But the team needed to get more customers to participate.

CAMPAIGN

Patel planned to send triggered emails to Roku’s newest customers to ask if they’d like to tell their friends about the product. Email would be central to the program’s promotion.

Here are the steps his team followed:

Step #1. Establish a program and relevant rewards

Customers could visit Roku’s referral landing page to suggest the product to friends via email, Facebook, Twitter or another channel. The page generated a customizable default message and referral link. Each link included a tracking code which tallied sales made through each customer’s referral.

Roku tested several different rewards to offer. Once Patel’s team realized that more than 80 percent of Roku’s customers were also Netflix customers, they settled on free one-month Netflix memberships.

- No limit on rewards

Customers received coupons for a free month of Netflix for every sale made through their referral links. There was no limit on the number and rewards were not based on the number of referrals sent.

“The program really started to go forward after we changed the reward structure,” Patel says.

Step #2. Design referral landing page

The referral landing page had two goals:
1. Get customers to register in the referral program
2. Get customers to send referrals

After arriving, visitors were shown an overlay that requested their first name, last name and email address. Once information was submitted, the overlay disappeared to reveal the referral page (see creative samples below).

The referral page emphasized the Netflix offer as well as:

- Email form

Visitors could type contacts’ email addresses or import them from a Hotmail, Yahoo!, Gmail or another email account. Recommended text for the email was included and could be removed or altered. The text:

“Try Roku – Brilliant device for streaming HD Movies from Netflix! My link gets you 10% OFF the Roku XDS.”

After visitors clicked “send,” the system generated emails for all listed contacts and included the referral link.

- Other sharing buttons

Visitors could use the page to share similar messages on Facebook, Twitter and Blogger. A unique referral URL was also offered, which visitors could copy and paste anywhere they preferred.

Step #3. Design email for new customers

Roku needed a systematic way to encourage new customers to send referrals. The team designed a triggered email to automatically reach out after a purchase (see creative samples below). The email included:
o Image of a TV with Netflix on it
o Large text: “Get a free month of Netflix for each friend who tries Roku”
o Description of three steps to getting rewards
o Button to visit referral landing page

- Test the timing

Roku has a 30-day money-back guarantee and Patel’s team wanted to avoid asking for referrals during that period. Likewise, he did not want to wait too long to send the email, since customers would likely discover the program through Roku’s other channels.

The team tested sending the email after three different periods: 35 days, 40 days and 45 days after purchase (results are below).

Step #4. Promote in additional channels

In addition to the automated email to new customers, Roku promoted the referral program in the following areas:

- Launch emails

The automated emails described above would not reach Roku’s older customers. But older customers still needed to be kept in the loop.

The team twice promoted the referral program in dedicated emails to its house list. It sent the first email at the program’s launch, and the second about three months later. These emails were similar to the program’s automated messages.

- Email newsletters

Roku’s monthly email newsletter typically reserved its upper right-hand portion to advertise for the referral program.

- Links on website

Links to the referral program were also included in Roku’s website footer and in a button on the website’s “reviews” section.

RESULTS

“Email has been the biggest way to promote this,” Patel says. “The newsletters definitely help, but these individual emails after purchase have had the most effect.”

After launching the referral program:

o 75% of registrations for Roku’s referral program are driven by the triggered emails to new customers

o 30% more customers report that their decision to purchase Roku was influenced by a friend or family member

o 5% of all Roku customers participate in the referral program

By testing, Patel’s team discovered that sending the triggered emails 45 days after purchase worked best. The results of those tests:

Forty-five days after purchase:
o Open rate: 33.4%
o CTR: 14.7%
o Conversion rate: 22.4%

Forty days after purchase
o Open rate: 23.7%
o CTR: 12.1%
o Conversion rate: 17.7%

Thirty-five days after purchase
o Open rate: 19.8%
o CTR: 6.4%
o Conversion rate: 13.5%

- Page tweak surged conversions

After these tests, the team tested a change to the referral landing page. Instead of using an overlay to request visitors’ names and email addresses, visitors arriving from these emails had their information pre-loaded into the form.

This increased conversion rates for these emails to 55 percent, Patel says.

- Emailed referrals beat social referrals

Of all the channels through which customers could send referrals to contacts, referrals sent via email drove 70 percent of all sales in the program, Patel says.

“Our customer demographics tend to be in the 30s to 50s range, and that could indicate why they are more comfortable using email versus using social media.”


Want to Know More about Albany Marketing firm Burst Marketing?
Visit us at www.burstmarketing.net

 

It’s What You Say

July 12, 2009

This marks the 1 year anniversary of the Burst Marketing Blog. If you’re still here, it’s due to one thing – content.

Content is king, now more than ever. In the May 29th, 2009 edition of the Albany Business Review, I mentioned that distribution of content is separating ever more quickly from the production of content.

Traditional electronic and print content mediums are joined by mobile broadcast and by websites, blogs, social media outlets, email, video and audio streaming and other online content distribution channels to blur the focus of where people get their content.

As the where becomes more fragmented, the what becomes the central hub of your communication plan.

To put a spin on a piece of advice mom may have once given you…

‘it’s not how you say it, it’s what you say.’

Targeting is still important – very important. But the reasons for that and the execution of it are different than they used to be not so long ago. Targeting now comes first in the form of content and next in the area of placement. Cost per 1000 or GRPs are too misleading today to be reliable measures of spending effectiveness.

Your target may be listening or watching something one moment and then seconds later be somewhere else. Trying to hit them in a single spot is like tracking a mirage in the desert. Don’t try.

Content is the one constant you can control.

Posted by: Steve Banis


Want to Know More about Albany Marketing firm Burst Marketing?
Visit us at www.burstmarketing.net