Email Marketing Facts
- 95% of U.S. online consumers use email
- 93% of U.S. online consumers are SUBSCRIBERS and receive at least one permission-based email per day
- 83% of U.S. online consumers say they check email at least once per day
- 64% say they check email several times per day
- 70% say they always open emails from their favorite companies
- 77% of U.S. online consumers say they are more cautious about giving companies their email address over the past year.
- 91% of email users have subscribed to a company’s email and then later decided they no
longer want to receive the emails - 18% say they never open email from companies
- 23% of subscribers will continually delete or ignore email from companies with whom they no longer wish to interact, rather than making the effort to unsubscribe or hit the spam button.
- 54% of e-mails came too frequently
- 49% say the content became repetitive or boring over time
- 47% receive too many emails and needed to get off some companies' lists
- 25% feel the content wasn't relevant from the start
- 24% prefer to seek out information instead of having companies push it
- 22% signed up for a one-time offer
- 13% say that their circumstances changed (i.e., moved, married, changed job, etc.)
- 8% switched to another company that provided better information
- 6% found they could get the information another way (e.g., via blogs, Facebook, etc.)
- 67% Click the link to "unsubscribe"
- 17% Delete emails when they arrive
- 8% Click the "spam" or "junk" button
- 6% Just ignore the emails
- 2% Setup a filter in email program
Facebook Facts
- 73% of U.S. online consumers have created a profile on Facebook
- 65% of U.S. online consumers are currently active on Facebook
- 42% of U.S. online consumers are FANS (have “liked” at least one company)
- 64% of Facebook users are “FANS” (have “liked” a company on Facebook)
- 84% of Facebook users check Facebook at least once per week
- 68% of Facebook users check Facebook at least once per day
- 55% of Facebook users have “liked” a company and then no longer wanted to see that company’s posts
- 51% of FANS say they rarely or never visit a company’s page after “liking” them
- 71% of FANS say they have become more selective about “liking” companies on Facebook
- 11% of people who created a Facebook account have stopped using Facebook
- 44% say that the company posted too frequently
- 43% feel that their wall was becoming too crowded with marketing posts
- 38% say the content became repetitive or boring over time
- 26% say they only "liked" the company to take advantage of a one-time offer
- 24% decided that the company didn't offer enough deals
- 24% feel that the posts were too promotional
- 19% say that the content wasn't relevant from the start
- 17% describe the company's posts as too chit-chatty; not focused on real value
- 14% prefer to seek out information instead of having companies push it
- 12% say personal circumstances changed
- 17% of U.S. online consumers have created a Twitter account
- 9% of U.S. online consumers are currently active on Twitter
- 5% of U.S. online consumers are FOLLOWERS (have “followed” at least one company)
- 56% of active Twitter users are FOLLOWERS
- 64% of active Twitter users check Twitter at least once per day
- 48% check Twitter several times per day
- 71% of FOLLOWERS expect to receive marketing messages from companies
- 41% of Twitter users have “followed” a company on Twitter and then stopped following
- 47% of those who created a Twitter account are no longer active on Twitter
- 52% found Twitter to be pointless
- 38% said it got boring
- 23% think Twitter is too chaotic
Most relationships come to an end and online consumer-brand relationships are no exception. Whether forged through email, FaceBook or Twitter, if communications demonstrate the company does not respect or care for the subscriber, the relationship is over.
- Consumers want brands to e-mail them relevant content. They expect marketers to honor permissions, and show restraint when it comes to email frequency. They measure your emails against the best senders in their inbox.
- Consumers use Facebook to engage with brands they know and trust. They expect marketers to keep their Facebook pages fresh and interesting, and to limit their posts.
- Consumers who actively use Twitter expect frequent, focused Tweets from brands. They expect to receive prompt answers when they ask questions via Twitter.
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7 comments:
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As a social media user, I found that these facts are interesting.
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Great stats on the email marketing and social media! I will definitely consider them while building out my next campaigns. Become a mystery shopper?
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