There is abundant proof that email, after over a decade of successful use, is not only the connective tissue of all data-driven marketing but also the revenue-producing heart of digital efforts.

Yet, despite claiming the highest ROI of all direct marketing channels at $28.50 in sales generated for every $1 of spending (DMA 2012 Response Rate Report), the highest driver of online conversions, and the number two spot (behind only search) in new customer acquisition, email marketing is still too often swept out of sight, called upon only when we need miracles worked.

In over a decade of experience with the channel, I am too frequently surprised and dismayed that email is not receiving nearly the attention and investment it deserves.

Like Cinderella in the classic fairy tale, email dutifully goes about its business, quietly completing a wide variety of marketing tasks without complaint—from prospect qualification to lead nurturing to direct sales.

It also does plenty of less-attractive, more menial labor in the transactional messaging realm, such as conveying confirmations, notifications, reminders, and alerts; and, just like Cinderella, it is frequently under-resourced and kept out of sight until needed.

But when it's needed... you'd better batten down the hatches, for email will be heavily (if not impossibly) leaned upon to achieve quarterly or annual revenue goals, save jobs, and launch new products.

Also like Cinderella, email marketing professionals will be expected to work nearly 24 hours a day with barely enough energy to stumble into bed long after midnight only to wake before sunrise to do it all over again.

I recently led a training workshop for midsize businesses on integrating inbound marketing channels, a lynchpin of which was email. When showing the many campaign examples in my teaching materials, I was surprised at the reaction from some of my audience members. "But so-and-so is a well-known company/brand with an army of marketing staff," said one. "They're a big retailer with far more people to do email than we," moaned another.

What most marketing professionals don't realize is that even large, glitzy retail brands that pump out the highest volume and most visible of email marketing campaigns are often thinly staffed with professionals in the trenches. True, their budgets for email software and tech services might be heftier, but the staff responsible for executing email campaigns and triggered messaging is often fewer than five people.

To their credit, retailers have always been among the earliest adopters of the channel, largely due to their e-commerce nature, so investing in the marketing and automation needed for high volume messaging isn't news to them; they know well the (usually) linear connections between email message frequency/volume/segmentation and revenue.

However, even they don't sufficiently invest on the professional side—budgeting for adequate staff, providing email marketing strategic direction and support from agencies and consultants, and ensuring employee mindset and skillset training and professional development.

The crux of the problem?

In many companies—even the heaviest users of email marketing—email is still thought of as a "batch and blast" marketing channel that is inexpensive and easy to do.

Upper management sees it working "well enough" but doesn't realize that with in-depth results analysis, better targeting and automation, and a detailed road map for how email can support strategic initiatives, it can contribute exponentially more revenue or ROI. However, without increased budgets and resources, it remains unlikely that such companies will have the means for more analytics, automation, and strategy. Thus the catch-22.

So, how do you migrate email out of the servants' quarters and up to the manor house without causing a Downton-Abbey-style upheaval?

Focusing on these five objectives will take you more quickly down the road to obtaining the attention, resources, and budget email marketing deserves—without having to rely on a prince to come to the rescue!

1. Benchmark email performance over time AND against other marketing channels

We all know we're supposed to be bench marketing email performance over time (by campaign, year-over-year) or against itself, but are you also measuring and benchmarking key metrics such as AOV (average order value), ROI, and RPS (revenue per subscriber—whether email, social, mobile, or print) by channel?

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Your Email Marketing as Cinderella: Treat It Like a Princess, Not a Servant

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Karen Talavera

Karen Talavera is the founder of Synchronicity Marketing, a company specializing in digital marketing training, coaching, and education.