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> Get Articles > Email Marketing > E-mail: A Story of Evolution By Design

E-mail: A Story of Evolution By Design


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Cheryl Rickman
infowebcritique.co.uk

WebCritique: Fine tune your website
http://www.webcritique.co.uk


E-mail has come of age with rich media. C. Rickman

looks at e-mail's history, benefits and rich media

applications to conclude how to get the most from

this killer app



The Killer App

Known as 'the killer app of the '90s, e-mail has

come a long way, from the dawn of e-mail packet-switching

theory in the 1960s and the first e-mail programme in 1971,

to the present day, 2001, where rich media and java

technology have created e-mail that can battle with

television advertising and improve return on investment.



Throughout the 90s the key benefits of e-mail were in

its cost-efficiency, its quickness and click through rates.

The fact that e-mail allows for good customer retention

and prospect list building are further benefits, along

with its viral marketing capabilities and its capacity

to be responsive and customary, based on user action.

Thanks to the ability to tailor content, style and

frequency of e-mails, depending on customer buying

patters, actions and demographic statistics, e-mail

is one of the best customer-focused marketing tool

at a business's disposal today.



E-mails nurture those important customer relationships

and allow marketers to gather market intelligence.



Says Jonathan Jackson of emarketer (http://www.emarketer.com)

"There's also a sense of urgency about using e-mail.

What's the first thing you do when you go online in the

morning? Head for your e-mail?"



Additional benefits have been added to the resume of

e-mail, with the rise of rich media and improved CRM

and measurement tools. And the sheer amount of usage

and growth creates an even wider audience for marketers

and businesses.



According to Jackson there is "plenty of evidence to

suggest that e-mail is indeed the killer app." Says

Jonathan, "In the US there are 97 million active

e-mail users aged 14+ who send or receive five or

more e-mail messages every week. They account for

44% of the total 14+ population. And while there

are 97 million e-mail users today, there are only

88 million active web users."



Naturally, with an increased usage comes a proliferation

of e-mails jostling for position in inboxes across

the globe, so the target audience is growing but the

task of ensuring that messages are read is made increasingly

difficult. Thankfully more and more options are springing

up ranging from simple HTML programmes to streaming media,

video and audio e-mail options. But more on that later.



A History

The beginnings of remote message transmission came with

smoke signals and jungle drums. This evolved towards

telegraph wire messaging and morse code via airwaves.

The telex system was also widely used from the 1920s-1980s

and the telephone network has evolved substantially towards

mobile networks and WAP technology. Just as

communications have seen massive growth in recent years,

so has e-mail.



Back in 1957 the USSR launched Sputnik, the first

artificial earth satellite. This is when experiements

in 'packet-switching' began. By the early 1970s, the

first host-to-host protocol was being used and the

first cross-country link was installed by AT&T

between UCLA and BBN at 56kbps.



In 1971 Ray Tomlinson of BBN invented an email program

to send messages across a distributed network.

Soon after that, Larry Roberts wrote the first email

management program (RD) to list, selectively read,

file, forward, and respond to messages. E-mail was

born.



Two years later, in 1973, the first computer-to-computer

chat took place at UCLA and the University of London

communicated by e-mail with people in Norway.

In 1975 John Vittal developed MSG, the first all-inclusive

email program providing replying, forwarding, and

filing capabilities and Satellite links crossed two

oceans (to Hawaii and UK) as the first TCP tests were

run.



The 1970s was the decade when e-mail really started

to take hold. The Queen of the UK, Elizabeth II sent

her first email in 1976 and shortly afterwards

emoticons became widely used.



The 1980s saw the introduction of DNS, the Domain Name

System and Internet Relay Chat (IRC). With shopping

malls arriving on the Internet in 1994. E-mail and

the net have come a long way. Today, thirty years

on, email has become the killer app.



Growth of the killer app

E-mail marketing response rates outdo banner advertising

response rates and other forms of advertising with a CTR

of 5.4%. Evidently, E-mail is not called the "killer app."

for nothing.



The amount spent on e-mail marketing has risen from $97

million in 1999 to almost $1.1 billion in 2000, according

to emarketer, with future spending set to increase.

This will rise to over $4.5 billion by 2003, emarketer

predicts.



With the proliferation of e-mail messages in today's society

and the cluttered condition of inboxes, it's a greater

challenge to get e-mails opened and actioned. To meet

this challenge make e-mails:

· Precise, clear and simple

· Customer-focused

· Timely

· Personal

· Contain information of value

· Well targeted

· Urgent

· Innovative



Other solutions that enhance an e-mail's chance of getting

read have recently sprung up, including rich media applications.

For example, video e-mail is perfect for those who aren't

great copywriters but communicate well when they talk or

present something.



Rich Media E-mail Solutions

Text can cause misunderstanding and can be ambiguous, and at

the same time 'everybody sends text e-mails, they're boring'.

Using audio or video e-mails is a surefire way to rid e-mails

of ambiguity. There are several programs available, here are

just a few:



elive2u™ is easy to use live real time video email

http://www.elive2u.co.uk .



This programme allows you to communicate in real time

with anyone, anywhere who is connected on the Internet.

You just need the elive2u™ software, a PC camera

microphone and speakers and, providing the user owns a

web camera, you can send your video email with the

simplicity of a text based HTML document. Access to the

live streaming audio/video email is just as simple.

Recipients do not need to book or utilize a central

server, need no expensive plug-ins and require no

software other than their regular email client, as

long as it supports HTML and JavaScript.



The elive2u™ software enables the user to transmit

live streaming audio/video to private email accounts,

whichs provides the user with totally confidential

and private Internet transmission and it's inexpensive

too.



Another company, Emblaze, have licensed Microsoft's

Windows Media Audio and Video Format using their Emblaze™

based solution for video over wireless 2.5G and 3G

networks, mobile phones and other low-resource handheld

devices. http://www.imagemind.com/ . Video Express

sends both personal streaming video and audio, therefore

not requiring attachments. Your recipient does not have

to wait to play your multimedia e-mail because there

is no file attachment and they will only need the

Windows Media Player. All you need is your sound card

for voice messages and any Windows compliant video

capture board to record video.



Mailround is an innovative email branding service which

sends out all outgoing email with the company brand

www.mailround.com . While

http://www.cyberavsolutions.com/products.htm have

another video e-mail solution:



VideoLink Mail 2.0 can send both audio and video.

It works with any email software that lets you attach

a file and also works well with most cameras and video

capture cards. The recipient needs no special software

to play the video, because the player is embedded in the

video.



Videoshare at www.videoshare.com offer a free downloadable

software application that enables users to send

streaming video via email, greeting cards and embed

video on web pages.



There's plenty to choose from, so why opt for Rich Media?



1. It Gets Attention! If executed properly, the return

on a rich media email campaign can be much higher than a

regular plain text or html campaign.



2. Not only is this a novel way to receive e-mail. It

provides its readers with a lot more stimuli and information

about the product or service, enhancing their chances of

buying.



3. Less effort is required to view a video e-mail than to

open a text e-mail, click on a link and browse a site.



Whatever you decide, before embarking on a rich media

email campaign do your homework. Think about the

capabilities of your list, your message, your target

audience, the costs involved and plan your campaign very

thoroughly. And always keep abreast of new technologies.

So where will e-mail be in another 30 years? I wonder...





Cheryl Rickman is author of, 111 winning ways to promote

your website successfully. and the founder of

http://www.webcritique.co.uk where she offers website

appraisals, personalised web promotion plans and press

releases, plus web page writing, editing and proofreading

services.





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