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How to Maximize Your Black Friday & Cyber Monday Email Data

Nov 28, 2022   |   5 min read

Knowledge Center  ❯   Blog

All right! You made it through the madness of Black Friday and Cyber Monday! Now the real work begins.

We hope you gathered in lots of sales and a bunch of new customers. But you’ve also generated a spreadsheet full of numbers that tell you a lot about how your campaigns performed.

They also can prompt you to change some variables in your remaining holiday campaigns for better results. Slicing and dicing your site visits, opt-ins and visitor behavior in new ways can shed a lot of light on what works, what you need to improve and where you’re overlooking opportunities.


3 ways to use Black Friday & Cyber Monday email data to your advantage

1. Review all of your process metrics

These are metrics that measure how your subscribers acted on your emails, like opens, clicks, unsubscribes and spam complaints. They don’t measure how successful your campaigns were, but they will show you how well your emails connected with your subscribers.

But don’t stop there. Dive deeper into those stats and break them down by segments, conversions, time of day, platform (desktop, mobile and other devices) and any other variables at your disposal.

These questions will get you started:

What to do with the data: If you find minor differences – slightly higher unsubscribes and spam complaints, for example, or lower open or delivery rates – you don’t necessarily have to spring into action to correct the problems. There was a lot going on in people’s inboxes over the long Thanksgiving weekend, after all. Big spikes, however, needed to be checked out ASAP.

2. Study your subscriber acquisition

Black Friday and Cyber Monday should have driven a stream of new shoppers to your websites. How many of them signed up for your emails?

You already should know your overall acquisition rate. Did you see a bump over the five-day shopping extravaganza? Higher web traffic without a corresponding increase in acquisition could mean you have problems either with your opt-in form or the way you word your invitation.

These questions will help you isolate the issues:

What to do with the data: A big drop-off in form-completion rates or activity could point to glitches in the process. Test-drive it now, before the heaviest shopping days (and then make a note to test this and all of your forms and processes repeatedly next year).

About those invalid email addresses: They could be accidental or deliberate typos. If you’re seeing a spike in invalid addresses, check out real-time email address validation on your forms, and be sure those invalid addresses don’t get added to your email database.

If you want to scan your list quickly for problem addresses, use our no-obligation Free List Check service. It will reveal whether your list has issues with invalid addresses, suspected spam traps and forced sign-ups.

3. Assess what you’re doing to welcome your new subscribers

Shoppers who join your email program this time of year are probably more goal-oriented than people who opt in at other times. A welcome message that recognizes their special needs can help you stand out in the flood of confirmations and welcome messages that these shoppers will see in their inboxes.

If your email or CRM databases allow it, track your Black Friday/Cyber Monday customers’ behavior through the holiday season:

What to do with the data: At this point in the season, you don’t have time to start a whole new email program. Instead, try adding helpful content to your regular welcome email that will make your brand more useful to your new customers.

Looking ahead: More ways to dissect the data

Email marketing is a game of numbers, and you have plenty of them to work with. We’ve covered some tactics to take with your Black Friday/Cyber Monday email subscribers, but you’ve got a whole season of campaigns and shopper behavior ahead of you.

Keep your eyes on your new subscribers and how they engage – or fall away – during the holiday season and on into the New Year. You could get valuable information that could help you create a more engaging opt-in process, keep more of your newbies on board and reduce your customer churn.

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