By Only Influencers Administrator on Wednesday, 04 June 2014
Category: Email Strategy

Automated Marketing: Drip vs. Nurture

"Drip marketing describes a series of predesigned emails sent on a predetermined schedule geared toward education, branding, positioning, or selling of your product. Drip marketing emails are distributed to a broad audience; lead-nurturing emails are distributed to a specific segment."

According to a recent report by Gleanster, 84% of top-performing companies are using — or plan to start using — marketing automation by 2015. What’s interesting to me about this statistic is how few of these companies can tell me specifically whether they have deployed, or plan to deploy, a drip or nurture campaign — or both. When polling our clients and potential clients, most companies do not differentiate between these two campaign styles and I find this incongruent with the overall benefit they wish to attain using automation.

Let’s start with some understanding:

Drip marketing describes a series of predesigned emails sent on a predetermined schedule geared toward education, branding, positioning, or selling of your product. Drip marketing emails are distributed to a broad audience; lead-nurturing emails are distributed to a specific segment. Think of the drip irrigation system: drip, drip, drip. There is no consideration for state of the plant; the water continues to drip at a regular interval, whether or not the plant is parched or overwatered.

Though the campaign is not interaction based, broadly defined, there are three drip-marketing triggers for the launch of your automated program:

 

Newsletters are a prime example of a drip campaign — an email or direct mail scheduled to release on the first Tuesday of the month, for example. Social-media postings can be drip-marketing messages as well.

Nurture marketing contains messages sent to specific prospects or leads based upon their previous actions or interactions and their place in the buying cycle. Also known as transactional emails (e.g., order-confirmation email), these emails have higher open rates (51.3% compared to 36.6% for email newsletters) and thus, provide prime real estate for you to introduce new topics or cross- or up-sell products or services. Again, broadly defined, there are three basic types of nurture campaigns:

Most sales funnels share some/many characteristics — understanding the lead’s position in the sales funnel is important to building an effective automated campaign. There’s discussion about whether a person starts as a prospect or lead (at Spider Trainers, we call it a prospect until the point of engagement, at which point it is a lead, and further engagement defines a qualified lead), but beyond that and across industries, the sales funnel looks something like this:

The type of content you use within your campaign — whether drip or nurture — will elicit different responses from your audience and help you to evaluate their stage and create additional messaging. One approach is to determine the type of content needed by first grouping your prospects into awareness segments, for example:

If you’re using awareness, think next about the type of messaging most appropriate for the segment, for example:

Defining these parameters and constructing an automated campaign to stay top of mind (drip) or nudge the prospect along the sales funnel (nurture) is no small undertaking. Your campaign may well have dozens or even hundreds of timed or interaction-based events, but over the span of the entire campaign, your automated marketing will require less effort than a string of blast emails. With that said, there is still an up-front overhead in both time and resources to consider. Due to the time across which your campaign deploys, the cost of the campaign is amortized throughout the lifecycle.

What’s more, many automated campaigns can be repurposed many times, further reducing the cost per event.

For most companies, it’s not a matter of drip or nurture; it’s drip and nurture. You need the benefits of the more passive campaign style of drip marketing in order to remain in the leads’ thoughts until the point when they enter the buying cycle and the active interaction of a nurture campaign to improve your brand’s stickiness and guide each person through the steps of becoming your customer.


For most companies, automated email marketing is a mix of three campaign styles: blast, drip, and nurture. Blasts are used for on-the-spot promotions or to test an acquired list, drip to stay top of mind, and nurture to nudge recipients along the buying cycle.

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