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Member Article

New Return Path research reveals impact of subscriber engagement on email deliverability

In partnership with global research firm Demand Metric, leading email solutions provider Return Path today released a new research report, The State of Email Engagement. Following on the results of last year’s The State of Email Marketing report, this new research sought to understand the impact of subscriber engagement on email deliverability, as well as the tactics marketers are employing to improve engagement.

Email remains the go-to marketing channel for many organisations, and a key contributor to marketing effectiveness. In fact, survey respondents who reported their organisation is experiencing revenue growth were more likely to identify email as one of the most important or the most important marketing channel (68 per cent), compared to organisations whose revenue is flat or declining (58 per cent). Successful marketers also understand that subscriber engagement is the key to ensuring that email reaches subscriber inboxes. Findings from this new research highlight this critical relationship, and demonstrate that marketers who embrace the importance of subscriber engagement also enjoy better email deliverability and greater overall email effectiveness.

Demand Metric researcher John Follett said of the study’s findings, “Marketers clearly value email and understand its importance. Nearly two thirds of our study participants rated it as one of the most important channels—or the most important channel—in their marketing arsenal. However, in many cases, these same marketers are surprisingly unaware of the impact that subscriber engagement has on the success of their marketing programme.”

Other key findings from the report include:

• Marketers who understand that mailbox providers use engagement data to filter email report better deliverability. More than half of the survey participants were neutral or disagreed with the statement, “Mailbox providers use subscriber engagement to determine where to filter (e.g., inbox, spam) the email you send.” However, marketers who agreed with this statement were much more likely to report good or very good deliverability.

• List segmentation is a major driver of deliverability. Almost 80 per cent of study participants report that they are doing some degree of list segmentation. Less than half of those who don’t practice list segmentation report good or very good deliverability, compared with two-thirds of those who segment their email lists.

• Email personalisation has a positive impact on engagement. The vast majority of study participants (80 per cent) personalise marketing email content at some level. Marketers who personalise email content reported a 16 per cent higher open rate and nine per cent higher click-through rate than those who do not personalise.

• Marketers have not yet embraced engagement metrics in measuring success. While open and click-through rates provide some insight into engagement, other metrics are important to get a more complete picture. Three quarters of survey participants are currently tracking opens and clicks, while less than one third are tracking read rate (30 per cent), forward rate (15 per cent), and complaints (13 per cent).

“Over the past several years, there has been a marked increase in mailbox providers’ focus on subscriber engagement as part of the spam filtering process. This study confirms that keeping subscribers actively engaged with your email programme is a major factor in email deliverability and overall effectiveness,” said Tom Sather, Return Path’s senior director of research. “By embracing engagement metrics like read rate, forward rate, and complaint rate, marketers can gain unique insights that can improve deliverability and enhance customer relationships.”

This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Return Path .

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