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Archive for the ‘MailChimp API’ Category

YouCalc Dashboard Widget for MailChimp

Friday, March 20th, 2009

youcalc3_logoEver wanted a way to see your MailChimp stats without having to log in to MailChimp? If you’re a web designer, ever wanted to setup a page or a widget for your client to see their campaign stats, without logging in to MailChimp and breaking stuff?

Youcalc, the same folks who make plugins and widgets for Basecamp, Salesforce, Highrise, and other CRMs, has created a stats mashup widget for MailChimp.

Dynamically customized transactional emails with MailChimp

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

farecompare-logoAt Farecompare.com, you can setup fare alerts, like “tell me if airfare for ATL to NYC drops by 20%.” Farecompare will check 3 times a day, and then instantly alert you if they detect the changes you’re looking for. They’re the first to offer such a service, and it’s extremely cool.

They use MailChimp’s API and our powerful dynamic merge tags to send these highly customized “transactional” emails.

Here’s what one of their email alerts looks like:

fare-compare-final

Now let’s take a look at how they use MailChimp’s dynamic merge tags to get this done…

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Joomla plugin for MailChimp

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

joomla-logo1Brent at 3by400 has developed an updated MailChimp/Joomla module for Joomla 1.5 (the current version). You can download it from the MailChimp Plugins page.

Thanks, Brent! Some MailChimp swag is on its way.

BTW, if you’re using a CMS in conjunction with MailChimp, be sure to check out this tutorial on importing campaigns via URL. You can setup your CMS to publish news on your site, then tell MailChimp to create email newsletter versions. You can even use MailChimp tags to hide certain email-specific code (like unsub links, email CSS, etc) from the browser, but make it display in email apps.

Flash Email Signup Forms for MailChimp

Friday, January 16th, 2009

Christian Cox has created a nice tutorial (and some sample code) for building a Flash email signup form that passes subscribers to your MailChimp list. He used the MailChimp API to create some ActionScript for you.

We’d seen some examples of Flash integration w/MailChimp before, but they usually required a little PHP know-how and lacked documentation.

So a HUGE thank you goes out to Christian for all this. If you’re building websites or web apps in Flash, and want seamless email marketing integration, be sure to check this out.

vBulletin Email Marketing Plugin

Friday, January 16th, 2009

The folks at BestRecipes.com.au have created a vBulletin MailChimp plugin.

It allows vBulletin forum administrators to add email newsletter subscription options to their member registration forms like this:

btw, I’ll be trying this Banana Pikelets recipe this morning. eep eep!

Batchbook CRM Integration with MailChimp

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Batchbook is “the CRM that knows the business of social.” It’s kinda like Salesforce, but for small business. I’ve been tinkering with it, and it’s a delight to work with.

Their dashboard is nicely laid out, so I can see my “things to do” and quickly enter new contacts and log communications (you know, if I were important enough to have to do such things). It’s all really simple and fast. WebWorkerDaily has a nice review of Batchbook, and I totally agree re: the “Super Tags” feature. Awesome.

If you’re looking for an easy-to-use CRM for your small business, you should give Batchbook a try.

Especially because Batchbook just announced they’ve integrated their service with MailChimp.

I setup my own Batchbook account and linked it over to my MailChimp list in about 1 minute. It was reee-DICULOUS-ly easy (and a little fun).

Ecommerce Tracking Plugin

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

The MailChimp Ecommerce Tracking plugin is a new feature designed to help you measure the ROI of your email campaigns.  By syncing our MailChimp API with your Ecommerce shopping cart solution, you can now track when people click from your email campaigns, visit your website, all the way to purchase. Even better, MailChimp then aggregates the information and displays it on your MailChimp campaign report!

The Ecommerce Tracking plugin is a free add-on that is available for installation from your account.  We currently support Magento, Zen Cart, osCommerce and PrestaShop, or if you’re a developer, you can even create your own.
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osCommerce and Joomla Plugins for MailChimp

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

The MailChimp Plugins page just keeps growing.

osCommerce logoGraith Internet gives us an osCommerce plugin that adds a “subscribe me to your newsletter” checkbox to your ecommerce checkout process. Their first name and email are then added to your MailChimp list. Great for e-retailers to grow your list and send offers! Be sure to also check out our Google Analytics integration and new email campaign ROI tracking tools.

Joomla logoGenerationSix posted a Joomla! extension for MailChimp. I’m really happy about this one, because whenever I mention MailChimp’s API and our plugins page, all I ever hear in response is, “Any Joomla plugins?” and “Got any Joomla plugins?” and “Haven’t you guys ever heard of Joomla?” and “Why aren’t there any Joomla plugins?” Now when people ask me if we have Joomla plugins, I can finally say, “YES!” (but then people ask me why I say “yes” so loudly).

Plugins are an easy way to just plug MailChimp functionality into just about any product. Developers have created plugins for Drupal, Foxy Cart, Movable Type, Wordpress, Ruby on Rails, Zen Cart, and TypePad.

I’m Running Circles Around My Industry!

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

Jesse’s our new API engineer. He’s been quietly beefing up the MailChimp API’s functionality, and making it work with just about any application or database that you can think of hooking us into, or building a plugin for.

He just recently sent an email announcement to our API users about some upcoming changes. Of course Jesse’s used MailChimp to send countless tests to himself. But this was his first time sending out a “real campaign, to a real list with real people” using MailChimp. It was also our first-ever attempt at contacting  just our API users, so this was a learning experience for all of us.

Compare your stats to your industry peersI casually walked past his desk a few hours after he sent the campaign, and asked him how his stats looked. I thought he’d say, “Hmm, I dunno, let me check” and then he’d open his browser, log in, etc. But nope, he made this quick flick of his wrist, and up popped his email campaign report.

Turns out he’d been watching his stats change by the minute (like all our new customers who send their first campaigns).It was cool to see him so happy about his stats.

It’s exciting to see your email stats go up, up, up for the first time. Eventually, you get past that first high, and will prefer to receive your stats later, via RSS.

Anyway, before his campaign stats page fully loaded, and before our pie charts boing-boinged into place, he told me, “I’m running circles around the software industry.”

He was referring to our email marketing benchmark data, which we embed right into  your MailChimp email marketing stats (screenshot of how that works).

Jesse got a 50% open rate and 11% click rate, which when compared to the average for the software industry, is pretty darn good. How do you compare to your industry peers?

http://www.mailchimp.com/nonrestrictiveocean.php