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Bradley Johnson Productions Posts

Drop a site below if you’ve ascertained anything cool for writers!

https://conversionsciences.com/a-behavioral-design-framework-for-you-and-your-website/

Having trouble viewing the text? You can always read the original article here: A Behavioral Design Framework for You and Your Website

Maybe the best behavioral design framework for your website is the same one that you can use to change your personal habits. The man walked onto the stage in a colorful robe. He was holding a small oar. He claimed he was wearing a magician’s robe and that the oar was his magic wand and […]

The post A Behavioral Design Framework for You and Your Website appeared first on Conversion Sciences.

What’s the most interesting marketing tip you’ve discovered from this post?

https://conversionsciences.com/a-behavioral-design-framework-for-you-and-your-website/

Having trouble viewing the text? You can always read the original article here: A Behavioral Design Framework for You and Your Website

Maybe the best behavioral design framework for your website is the same one that you can use to change your personal habits. The man walked onto the stage in a colorful robe. He was holding a small oar. He claimed he was wearing a magician’s robe and that the oar was his magic wand and […]

The post A Behavioral Design Framework for You and Your Website appeared first on Conversion Sciences.

What’s the most useful writer tip you’ve uncovered from this post?

https://wordtothewise.com/2020/01/troubleshooting-the-questions/

In my post earlier this week, katie asks:

what do you do next when the problem statement is as non-specific as “open rates are falling”? how would you go about getting from there to that next level of marketing email from our ESP goes to bulk?

Icon of an eye looking around

That’s a great question, and will help me explain pieces I didn’t in the initial post.

The observation here is: “open rates are falling.”

We know that open rates are what happens when someone loads a 1×1 pixel in their mail client. There are delivery reasons why this will fail and there are non-delivery reasons why this will fail. We want to figure out why pixels aren’t loading.

What are common reasons pixel loads fail?

  1. This message is too long and gmail is cutting off the 1×1 pixel.
  2. There is something wrong with our tracking server
  3. The mail isn’t making it to the inbox
  4. The mail isn’t interesting enough for folks to open

(I really need a flow chart to make this pretty, but I’ll write it out here for now. Basically, I ask a question and then take next steps based on the answer. The questions are sorta ordered, but they don’t have to be asked and answered in this order).

Where are open rates falling? Is this happening everywhere or just at a few places? The answer here gives me another pathway to follow.

  • If, for instance, it’s only gmail then maybe this is just a longer message than normal and it’s being truncated. Not a delivery problem, but we should do a test and see if gmail is truncating the message.
  • If, for instance, it’s across all my recipients and it’s not isolated to a specific domain, then maybe my tracking server fell over. Not a delivery problem, but we should go talk to the web folks.
  • If, for instance, it’s at Yahoo, some cable companies, and AOL, then that may be a problem at the Yahoo domains. Let’s look deeper into those domains.

Are the open rates at the affected domains zero or just smaller than normal?

  • An open rate of zero suggests mail may be fully blocked or going to spam.
    • We can look at our SMTP logs to see if there are active blocks visible
    • We can do some tests to our own freemail accounts to see where mail is going for those addresses
  • A lower open rate suggests some mail is going to bulk.
    • Do we have an inbox monitoring tool available? Let’s add that to the next mailing so we can see where mail is delivered.
    • Can we run some tests to our own mailboxes to see where mail is delivered?

The idea here is we’re trying to determine what pathway to go down. Was this is something technical that caused the reporting to be prevented the pixel from loading and caused a false lower reading? Or was there something about the message that caused fewer recipients to actually open it? Or

The next set of questions aren’t so much about troubleshooting, but about other things I’d think about.

  • Is there any deviation from normal related to the mail client?
  • Could there be something about this template that corrupted the subject line and caused folks not to open it?
  • Are my tests going to the inbox?
  • Did I put any new domains or content in the email?
  • Was there a DNS problem that caused a temporary failure in authentication?

There are a multitude of reasons that open rates may fall. Fixing delivery problems, be they blocks or spamfoldering, can take extensive work and time to resolve. Before jumping too the conclusion that delivery is poor, figure out if there are other, easier to solve reasons, that explain a low open rate.

Drop a site below if you’ve ascertained anything cool for authors!

https://wordtothewise.com/2020/01/troubleshooting-the-questions/

In my post earlier this week, katie asks:

what do you do next when the problem statement is as non-specific as “open rates are falling”? how would you go about getting from there to that next level of marketing email from our ESP goes to bulk?

Icon of an eye looking around

That’s a great question, and will help me explain pieces I didn’t in the initial post.

The observation here is: “open rates are falling.”

We know that open rates are what happens when someone loads a 1×1 pixel in their mail client. There are delivery reasons why this will fail and there are non-delivery reasons why this will fail. We want to figure out why pixels aren’t loading.

What are common reasons pixel loads fail?

  1. This message is too long and gmail is cutting off the 1×1 pixel.
  2. There is something wrong with our tracking server
  3. The mail isn’t making it to the inbox
  4. The mail isn’t interesting enough for folks to open

(I really need a flow chart to make this pretty, but I’ll write it out here for now. Basically, I ask a question and then take next steps based on the answer. The questions are sorta ordered, but they don’t have to be asked and answered in this order).

Where are open rates falling? Is this happening everywhere or just at a few places? The answer here gives me another pathway to follow.

  • If, for instance, it’s only gmail then maybe this is just a longer message than normal and it’s being truncated. Not a delivery problem, but we should do a test and see if gmail is truncating the message.
  • If, for instance, it’s across all my recipients and it’s not isolated to a specific domain, then maybe my tracking server fell over. Not a delivery problem, but we should go talk to the web folks.
  • If, for instance, it’s at Yahoo, some cable companies, and AOL, then that may be a problem at the Yahoo domains. Let’s look deeper into those domains.

Are the open rates at the affected domains zero or just smaller than normal?

  • An open rate of zero suggests mail may be fully blocked or going to spam.
    • We can look at our SMTP logs to see if there are active blocks visible
    • We can do some tests to our own freemail accounts to see where mail is going for those addresses
  • A lower open rate suggests some mail is going to bulk.
    • Do we have an inbox monitoring tool available? Let’s add that to the next mailing so we can see where mail is delivered.
    • Can we run some tests to our own mailboxes to see where mail is delivered?

The idea here is we’re trying to determine what pathway to go down. Was this is something technical that caused the reporting to be prevented the pixel from loading and caused a false lower reading? Or was there something about the message that caused fewer recipients to actually open it? Or

The next set of questions aren’t so much about troubleshooting, but about other things I’d think about.

  • Is there any deviation from normal related to the mail client?
  • Could there be something about this template that corrupted the subject line and caused folks not to open it?
  • Are my tests going to the inbox?
  • Did I put any new domains or content in the email?
  • Was there a DNS problem that caused a temporary failure in authentication?

There are a multitude of reasons that open rates may fall. Fixing delivery problems, be they blocks or spamfoldering, can take extensive work and time to resolve. Before jumping too the conclusion that delivery is poor, figure out if there are other, easier to solve reasons, that explain a low open rate.

A Short Analysis of E. E. Cummings’ ‘loneliness (a leaf falls)’

What do we call this short E. E. Cummings masterpiece? ‘l(a’, after its first line? ‘loneliness (a leaf falls)’? But that violates the careful syntax of Cummings’ own poem. ‘a leaf falls on loneliness’? But that separates the two things that need to be kept together. ‘l(a leaf falls)oneliness’ then? […]

The post A Short Analysis of E. E. Cummings’ ‘loneliness (a leaf falls)’ appeared first on Interesting Literature.

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http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/markgrow/~3/rWlt_efk8Ik/

harold burson

I just wanted to acknowledge the passing of a friend and one of the true greats in the PR/marketing/advertising industry.

Harold Burson died this week at the age of 98.

Mr. Burson, who was described by PRWeek as the 20th century’s “most influential PR figure,” founded the powerhouse public relations firm Burson-Marsteller with Bill Marsteller in 1953. The firm created the concept of total communication strategies that became the industry standard for decades.

Mr. Burson became a friend when he helped guide me on my first book Return On Influence in 2011 (he also wrote one of the testimonies in the book).

He was nearly 90 when we chatted in his Manhattan office and even then he was still coming to work every day. Mr. Burson was a journalist by trade and as an officer in the U.S. Army, he covered the Nuremberg Trial in 1945. He showed me priceless mementos from that assignment, which he had on display in his office.

I was amazed at his boundless energy. When I met with him he told me that he was writing a book, which became The Business of Persuasion, published in 2017. In 2018, I documented one of my conversations with him as he described his strategy for crisis management.

He told me that he really had no great regrets in his very long life and attributed his success to knowing when to say “yes” when a door of opportunity opened up to him.

Mr. Burson pioneered many of the PR best practices we take for granted today, but beyond that, he helped define the role of the corporation in society today, mentored many of today’s brightest leaders, and was a relentless advocate for strong ethical standards.

I will miss him.

Keynote speaker Mark SchaeferMark Schaefer is the chief blogger for this site, executive director of Schaefer Marketing Solutions, and the author of several best-selling digital marketing books. He is an acclaimed keynote speaker, college educator, and business consultant.  The Marketing Companion podcast is among the top business podcasts in the world.  Contact Mark to have him speak to your company event or conference soon.

I took this photo of Mr. Burson in his office in 2011.

The post The passing of a legend appeared first on Schaefer Marketing Solutions: We Help Businesses {grow}.

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