Want to Conquer 'Email Fatigue'? Figure out Your Customers' Viewing Behavior.You already know that personalization attracts engagement. But you need to dive in deeper to satisfy customers' content cravings.

ByDeren Baker

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

How quickly does email fatigue set in? Faster than you can say "unsubscribe." MarketingSherpa recently revealed that just15 percentof email users surveyed thought that the messages they receive from marketers were always useful.

Is this disconnect between would-be loyal consumers and businesses, then, dooming email marketing? Not necessarily. Companies willing to change their messaging from self-promotional to customer-centric can avoid the crash and burn -- and that change starts with a deep dive into consumers' viewing behaviors.

Want engaged readers? Get to know them, beginning with an exploration of the types of content they prefer. As an Experian report indicated, emails offering a personal flair based on users' needs drove up click rates by27 percentand open rates by 11 percent.

Related:3 Ways to Strengthen Your Email Marketing Impact

Know your customer, know your strategy.

If you don't know your customers, you can't enhance your branding efforts. But if you do know them, you can reference cultural touchstones you know will resonate, and get a sense of the emotions they respond to that might motivate them in the sales process.

For example, consumers who watchedSanta Clarita Diet(a horror-comedy on Netflix about a California family) were20 times more likelyto purchase CeraVe skincare products on Amazon, according to a Jumpshot report. Were CeraVe aware of that connection, it could promote its products directly to those consumers already likely to purchase its products.

Of course, getting closer to readers presents a major challenge: Another Experian rerport showed thatmore than four out of fivemarketers reportedly struggle to define customer personas. In other words, they're clueless about the content consumers crave.

A colleague of mine tells me she's experiencing this problem first-hand. Turns out, she signed up for a company's email list, assuming she'd receive more information about the business that way. Instead, she's being bombarded with daily GIFs and visual puns that aren't making her laugh. The sender isclearly risking losing her-- and other customers -- through this ill-thought-out joke-a-day format.

Related:12 Reasons Why Your Emails Aren't Driving Business

Of course my colleague's experience isn't unique. Plenty of companies lean toward including imagery in their email campaigns. And in theory that's smart. But, if that imagery isn't compelling viewers to take action, that content is a mismatch for the target audience, and a potentially costly one.

For instance,58 percentof millennials who participated in a Market Cube survey for Campaign Monitor said that they donated to nonprofit organizations at least most of the time when they received a compelling email with a strong request.

That figure shows how ripe the for-profit commercial market is, too, forauthentic, personalizedemail campaigns.

Give consumers what they really want.

To increase your emails' influence, consider taking a new approach to understanding your consumers. Try these strategies to gather viewing data and turn it into actionable insights:

1. Construct realistic profiles of your audience.Chances are, you already have demographic information about your prospects and current customers, but knowing age and location isn't always enough. You need to know your audience's habits, interests and lifestyle choices. By partnering with entities that can help you sift through consumer behaviors online and off, you can gather that critical information and build out the profiles you've started.

Use Google Analytics, geographically tied U.S. Census data and surveys of your existing customers to learn more about your audience. That will increase the accuracy with which you're able to target prospects.Foursquare's Pilgrim technologycan be an asset to geolocate email recipients in real time and trigger profile information.

2. Seek third-party customer data sources.Adding depth and dimension to your audience profiles, right down to the shows they watch and movies they stream, might be too much to consider as an in-house job. Instead, talk to third-party providers who assist companies in building out omnichannel consumer perspectives.

Instead of creating blanket market segments based on one or two properties,macro-segmentyour audience and blow away the competition. As you proceed, you can gain a strategic edge by learning more about your audiences through the data you -- and a third party -- collect. You might discover that most of your users turn their devices toward kids' shows and family entertainment; for them, parenting is likely a motivating factor. Use this intelligence to promote action through family-targeted content.

3. Tie marketing messages to user-based cultural findings.Gathering detailed consumer datadoesn't matterif you don't act on the insights you glean and track your new campaigns' effectiveness. Driving higher open and click-through rates (CTRs) is the goal of every email campaign, so use what you learn about your audience's viewing habits to boost those rates. Average CTRs hover around the3 to 4 percent mark, according to SignUp.To. However, this can vary depending on sector and vertical.

If you already have a baseline of your typical click-through rate, use it to see whether creating culturally relevant emails makes a difference. Don't know what your CTR is? Start tracking it today. You might find --as have three-quarters of your marketing brethren, according to a DMA National Client Email Report -- that you're sending as many as five messages a month. Perhaps it's time to scale up or back, or merely change your messaging while keeping the frequency.

Related:The Best Days to Send Email Campaigns and Other Email Marketing Tips

客户喜欢什么类型的内容的线索n't impossible to find. If you dig deep into consumer viewing habits, you'll likely find the gold you need to boost engagement in your next email-marketing campaign. The closer you get to understanding your audience, the closer you'll get to eradicating email fatigue and building lasting loyalty.

Deren Baker

CEO, Jumpshot

Deren Bakeris the CEO ofJumpshot, a San Francisco-based startup that offers marketing analytics software tailored for the travel, retail, media and e-commerce industries. He has previously held senior roles at Travelocity and Switchfly.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

TikTok Is Using New Tracking Software to Keep Tabs on Employees

公司规定,员工在办公室ce at least three days a week.

Business News

'Nobody Helped Her Whatsoever': Elderly Woman Sues McDonald's For 'Severe Burns' After Spilling Hot Coffee

Mable Childress, a woman in her 80s, filed a lawsuit in San Francisco Superior Court last week.

Business News

他赢得了20亿美元的强力球头奖。现在,他Snatching Up Swanky Homes Across Los Angeles.

Thirty-one-year-old Edwin Castro took his winnings as a lump sum.

Living

Chris Hemsworth Used to Bomb Auditions. Then This Mindset Shift Made Him a Movie Star, and the Founder of a $200 Million Startup.

The Australian actor won't let himself forget where he came from, and what the point of success is.

Business News

Katy Perry Sells Music Catalog For Hundreds of Millions—More Than Justin Bieber and Bob Dylan

The singer sold the rights to all five of her albums for $225 million to British-based Litmus Music, according to a new report.

Money & Finance

Want to Become a Millionaire? Follow Warren Buffett's 4 Rules.

Too many entrepreneurs are counting too heavily on a company exit for their eventual 'win.' Do this instead.