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Segmenting your email campaign based on subscriber engagement

October 28th, 2009 | by Ben

We just added the ability to segment based on subscriber engagement:

thm_segment-member-rating

So now you can send a special campaign to your most loyal customers. Or, send a “come-back” campaign to the inactive members on your list before you clean them out.

Here’s why this feature is so important.

The Move To Engagement Measuring

If you follow the email marketing industry, you know that engagement is quite the buzzword lately. We recently talked about how one of the major ISPs is measuring engagement and using it to decide who gets to the inbox, and who goes to the junk folder (See: Feedback Loops Being Replaced by Engagement?).

That ISP is basically looking at whether or not your subscribers open, click, and in general, “interact” with you. If you send an email that mistakenly goes to the junk folder, then the subscriber moves it back out, you scored some engagement points. If your subscriber hits “reply” to send you a message, you get some engagement points.

Cleaning Inactives Helps Deliverability

Returnpath’s George Bilbrey goes into more detail in this article on Mediapost: “Engagement: The New Frontier in Deliverability?” At one point, he advises that senders:

“Treat inactive subscribers differently: This is probably the biggest change that most marketers need to think about.  Mailing to a lot of inactive accounts may actually make your reputation look worse at some ISPs.  Segment out inactive users and run a win-back campaign. If you cannot win back these subscribers, you may simply want to stop mailing them altogether.”

Fascinating? Then you’ll also like this from ReturnPath: How Engagement Metrics Influence Deliverability

Over at Clickz, Jeanne Jennings had this to say about inactive members of your list:

“If these folks really aren’t that into you, they may take the next step and report you as spam. It’s like that shunned suitor who just won’t go away; eventually the victim will consider him a stalker and get a restraining order. Keeping inactive names on your list can open you up to blacklisting and deliverability issues.”

See: Really Simple E-mail Segmentation: Reengaging Inactives

More Sophisticated Than Open and Click Ratings

Some clued-in users have asked us for ways to “segment based on those who haven’t opened the last 6 months” or “those who haven’t clicked in my most recent 3 campaigns.”

It’s awesome that people want to follow best practices and clean out their lists. But the problem with this approach is: 1) open tracking isn’t totally accurate, and 2) “my most recent campaigns” can mean something very different if you send daily emails vs. monthly or quarterly emails.

And neither of these approaches take bounces, spam complaints, and un-then-re-subscribers into account.

So we take a more holistic approach to measuring engagement, by looking at the historical activity of all your subscribers, and taking into account even more variables that are indicative of engagement.

BTW, if you’re into complicated equations, there’s some talk about metrics one could measure in “Future Vision of Email Measurement” at Deliverability.com.

How and Why MailChimp Measures Engagment

We’ve actually been tracking engagement data across our entire system for quite some time now (Chart: Gmail users more engaged?).

Then in March of this year, we unveiled our “List Activity Score” to make sure your best recipients got rewarded with the best deliverability rates.

Note that I did NOT say that our “best senders got the best deliverability rates.”

That’s because we found that our best customers often had multiple lists. And some lists were not as well maintained as others. So we stopped putting our “best senders” on our best IPs, and started sending emails to our best subscribers from our best IPs.

This is meant to reward senders for proper list management. Hence the awesome laurels you’ll find for the best lists:

laurels-list-rating

But if you’re good at reading between the lines, you’ve picked up on the fact that this also means you really, really, really should clean out inactive members from your list.

And with this new release, we’ve made each of your subscribers’ activity score (or level of engagement) visible to you, so you can clean your list appropriately.

Here’s what the stars mean:

1 Star – negative rating, this person has unsubscribe and resubscribed, or soft bounced in the past
2 Star – no activity, never opened or clicked, most likely a new member
3 Star – this recipient has started opening or clicking your campaigns, limited activity
4 Star – this recipient has started opening or clicking your campaigns, a little more activity
5 Star – this recipient has started opening or clicking your campaigns, lotsa activity

How To Segment by Engagement in MailChimp

Whenever you create a campaign, step 1. is to select your list.

Click on “send to segment:”

send-to-segment

Next, choose to segment by “member rating:”

segment-by-member-rating

If you want to send a special “come-back” campaign to your inactive members, you might select subscribers with 1 or 2 stars.

1-star-member-rating

If you want to send a special offer to your most loyal subscribers, you’d click 5 stars:

5-star-member-rating

In both cases, be sure to hit the “refresh” button to see an updated count of the segment:

refresh-count

Alternatively, you can perform a search on your list under the Lists tab, then click “View All” members:

search-list-by-members

Note the handy “download spreadsheet” link.

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9 Comments

    • Isti Bardos says:

      OMG…how great is this?! I will most definitely use this when!

      Thanks, most awesome MailChimp team.

      (Please, no need to send me a super hip MailChimp XL t-shirt to me c/o Temple Israel, 1376 E. Massey Road, Memphis, TN 38120.)

    • Michel says:

      Hi there,
      How are the A.I.M, reports in comparison to this new feature… is it possible with AIM to segment a list like.. “Send mail only to people who opened the last 3 mails”?

      • Ben says:

        Michel – yes, A.I.M. reports let you do just that. Segmenting by engagement is a more comprehensive approach that goes back way beyond 3 campaigns, and takes into consideration bounces, resubs, clicks, and more.

    • Robert says:

      Excellent feature, easy to use but very powerful. Amazing how you come up with all these ideas all the time.

    • Dara Fitzgerald says:

      This is fantastic news. Really excited to hear you can now segment by engagement. Shows again that MailChimp are at the forefront of e-marketing solutions :-)

    • Bob Lancaster says:

      If I import a new list of contacts (that already exist in MailChimp) will my new list be automatically rated too?

      • Ben says:

        Hi Bob, engagement is per-list, and clears out for each new set. So don’t think it’s going to do what you need.

    • Ande says:

      Thanks for the post and links. This is really enlightening stuff. What I am wondering is if you have any information on the way engagement effects deliverability in corporate emails that use something like Message Labs versus your ISPs out there…

      Thanks
      Ande

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