Our commerce clients are deep in the throes of holiday season, and with their planning and activity has come an influx of questions about best practices for emailing during the holiday season. I decided to let the data speak for itself!
Our commerce clients are deep in the throes of holiday season, and with their planning and activity has come an influx of questions about best practices for emailing during the holiday season. I decided to let the data speak for itself!
- Open Rate – the thought process here went something like, “people complain about getting emails on Christmas day – but do they open those emails?”
- Revenue per Open – how valuable was any given email open?
- Revenue per 1,000 Emails Sent (RPM) – How much money is made for every thousand emails deployed? This metric is a balancing act for the first two figures (e.g. if open rate is very low but revenue per open is high, is quality enough to offset the deficit in quantity)?
- Generally speaking, open rates are materially lower on holidays than non-holidays, but the value of any given open will often be stronger on holidays vs. non.
- Not surprisingly, Cyber Monday proved the most valuable in terms of RPM; interestingly, Valentine’s Day was a close second.
- In terms of lift overall versus an average day, Thanksgiving weekend (the Saturday and Sunday after the holiday), proved most compelling for email marketing with a 129% improvement over the typical weekend. New Year’s Eve showcased the most marked decline vs. a typical day.
- There are several holidays/holiday weekends where retailers will see a major decline vs. average non-holiday days; in these instances, even sales cannot adequately buffer the engagement and conversion gaps.
- December (well, pre-Christmas December) is a powerful month across the board, but 12/1-12/14 – which included much of Hanukkah last year – proved more valuable than 12/15-12/21 ($23.59 RPM vs. $20.88), so for commerce brands the indicator is to start those campaigns early!
- The final days leading up to Christmas present the worst possible times to reap immediate benefits from email marketing (probably because it’s often too late to guarantee holiday arrivals!).
These results will obviously vary from business to business, but my hope is that these aggregate findings will be helpful from a directional perspective. As always, we recommend data-driven marketers conduct their own congruent analysis and urge them to focus on real value and conversion versus top-of-funnel metrics such as opens or clicks.