By Mike Austin on Wednesday, 04 June 2014
Category: Email Strategy

What is Triggered Messaging

"Triggered messaging is a rapidly growing part of marketing with extremely good ROI. It's about delivering business messages that are personalized and near-real time: often sent by email but increasingly by other channels such as within web pages. "

Triggered messaging is a rapidly growing part of marketing with extremely good ROI. It's about delivering business messages that are personalized and near-real time: often sent by email but increasingly by other channels such as within web pages.

Industry experience from years of email marketing are now being incorporated into triggered messaging as technology allows rich customer data to be collected at the point of customer interaction and leveraged at the point of initiation. It is evolutionary: supplementing, not replacing current email and web marketing.

Triggered messages are usually initiated by an individual’s activity, not sent as part of a scheduled send. A large part of their content is likely to be very topical and transient – for example suggestions for in-stock products that the shopper should like, the start/end date of the next sale, or details of the holiday they were just choosing on-site.

Where a triggered messaging system is used, it should cooperate with your ESP and web marketing system, so each does what it does best. Your ESP handles email design, marketing, and list management. Your eCommerce system runs the business. The triggered messaging system integrates data between these two and sends highly-personalized communications at times when each shopper is highly engaged and responsive. For example real-time messages for cart and browse abandonment and new personalization options such as suggested products.

This post continues with some examples business cases and then briefly summarises two methods of implementing triggered messaging – (1) by using a standard ESP and (2) by using a purpose-built triggered messaging system.

Example Business Cases Examples

Business Cases Example Results


Implementing recovery emails is shown to increase turnover by about 10%.

http://www.triggeredmessaging.com/blog/real-time-marketing-report-for-may-2014

Triggered emails, and transactional emails in particular, get much better open and click rates than traditional bulk emails.

http://www.experian.com/assets/marketing-services/reports/transactional-email-report.pdf

Method 1: Sending triggered emails using just an ESP

You create a custom integration process to transfer eCommerce data into your ESP in near-real-time, or at least as rapidly as you want to make decisions.

This can be complicated, not least because if the data is too slow, the triggers may misbehave. Nothing is more annoying to a shopper who has made a purchase than to get a cart abandonment email, because the email marketing system didn’t quickly realise that they’d purchased.

Also, note that most eCommerce abandonment data only includes site visitors that log in to a website in a session. For this reason, identification rates and hence marketing ROI are usually low.

Once in the email marketing system, you’ll need to setup rules or triggers to send the emails and personalized content to the right people, depending on their history and behaviour. Where you allow multi-stage programmes, there must to be conditions to ensure they get cancelled if behaviour changes, e.g. if the shopper makes a purchase part. way through a recovery campaign.

Here's the implementation steps for sending triggered emails:

  1. Read data from your eCommerce API into your ESP API, including the following: Customer list;       Transactional events such product browsed, view cart contents, and cart purchase; and Product data (text, image urls, prices) for in-stock products.
  2. In your ESP, set rules or triggers to send the emails to the right people, depending on their history and behaviour.

    For example, every 30 minutes you could send a cart abandonment recovery email to every account that has been loaded into the “active shoppers” between 60 minutes and 30 minutes ago and no later.

    Or you could write your own custom triggered messaging system that runs separately and calls your ESP API to load data or trigger transactional emails as appropriate.
  3. Set marketing pressure rules so that abandonment recovery emails are not sent too often.
  4. Define appropriate rules for multi-step campaigns. For example:
  1. Create the emails in your ESP

You get the idea, I'm sure. You can do triggered messaging with just an ESP, but it requires significant custom integration work and possibly some coding.

Some things are easier than others, largely because of limitations in your eCommerce system – purchase complete emails will likely be simple, cart abandonment not too bad if you ignore the whole business of emailing people who haven’t signed into the cart. However, browse and form abandonment, or any type of highly personalized emails, are likely to be very difficult.

Method 2: Sending triggered emails with a purpose-built triggered messaging system

There are several dedicated triggered messaging systems which help tie some or all of these moving parts together. The simpler ones handle just cart abandonment, more sophisticated systems handle a wider range of applications.

Here are some things you may want look for:

Here's the corresponding implementation steps for sending triggered emails with a purpose-built triggered messaging system:

  1. Enter the account details of your eCommerce system and ESP so data can be pulled from the eCommerce site and stored in the system.
  2. If you want particular data loaded into the subscriber lists on your ESP, configure the corresponding profile fields. For example the current cart contents and the first/last name from the registration form on the site.
  3. Build the emails in your ESP. And configure which one sent for which event, in your triggered messaging system
  4. If you also want real-time content for your emails and Web pages (such as product suggestions and count-down timers) configure this content in your triggered messaging system, using standard scripting. Then copy the corresponding HTML “slot”, where the content will load, into your emails or web pages.

So that's triggered messaging. I suggest that you start with cart abandonment, then add form and browse abandonment, then move on to multi-stage programs. There’s lots you can do if you’ve built the right foundations. Leverage the data that you've collected to segment and personalize all your emails. And finally add dynamic content and offers to all your marketing emails and website.

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