By David Baker on Wednesday, 12 February 2020
Category: Email Strategy

Email Marketing 2020 -- The Art of Scale

I had the opportunity to sit in on an executive presentation by Seth Godin. While it was a bit strange to see Seth trying to fit his routine into the email marketing industry, his outlook on solving big and small problems is sound. His way of communicating profound things in small bites is his talent. He said, “If it scares you, it might be a good thing." Email never really scared people, it was a safe place to start a career. Well, hitting send for the first time will unnerve you, even for the most tenured email markers. Email is a relatively low risk channel by comparison. It is having ISP driven technology limits, it has governmental and global compliance and privacy laws and the inbox experience hasn’t largely changed, outside of Google’s continued dominance.

The one thing that stands us today versus 10 years ago is: Scale problems. It's not half as risky today choosing a new ESP as it was 10 years ago. There are more consultants, more analyst evaluations and more community to share experiences amongst buyers.

Technology companies are going through a cycle of re-invention, some better than others. Many taking aggressive acquisition paths to scale, and new and adjacent entrants coming at it from specialty focuses (mobile, data management, personalization engines). The marketer is left with tons of decisions, varying definitions of what scale means to their company and the "oh sh*t" moment of making the decision to change to another provider. Given the sensitivity to risk, it makes a ton of sense that the “people and fit” are typically the highest consideration for choosing to switch vendors. Interesting for a technology choice, where people are the differentiator.

What gets lost in this endless search for a competitive technology advantage. Remember, you buy technology for parity, not for differentiation. Your differentiation is the pace you set

The root issue with scale it is largely misunderstood in terms of value. It is normally seen as a modifier of strategy, not a goal. Today, email marketers possess a bit of a whack-a-mole perspective and have a survivalist attitude. Understandable, when cost and effort are low, you have a commodity.

The only way we will “see around corners” is by being hyper focused on scale and the things that you can repeat, you can program, and things you can automate. Boring topic, but the differentiation in any leading marketing organization is tied to your ability to take the 60% that you do every day and minimize the labor cost it takes to produce that.

Scale to me is best explained through two things, Technology and Personalization:

 

I’ll take Seth’s quote and add a little T.S Eliot to his sentiments on risk, “Only those who risk going too far, can possibly find out how far to go.” When was the last time you had your hand slapped for taking a risk in your company? With that in mind, I’ll leave you with this when grabbling with trade-offs. As a mentor of mine said to me many times in the past when I had requests, he’d say, “So, what do we not do to make what you want to do happen?” Scale is this decision times 100, every day. If you really want to stand out today, challenge what you do, don’t let risk hinder your development and don’t be complacent.

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