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Microsite Defined
A web term referring to an individual
web page or set of pages also referred to as a minisite or weblet
and may be auxiliary to a main site or is a small scalable site
Email
Acronyms and
Terms of Interest
A/B
Split
When a list is divided into two equal segments, each of which can
be tested with different variables as part an effort to determine
which is more effective
Above
the fold
When you launch your internet browser or while viewing your email
in your email reader, the bottom of the window is commonly
referred to as the “fold”. The viewable areas before one has to
start scrolling are “above the fold”.
API
(or Application Programming Interface)
An application programming interface (API) allows a software’s
functionality to be extended to ‘the outside world’.
ASP
(or Application Service Provider)
An application service provider (ASP) is a company that provides
access to software applications via the Internet that otherwise
would have to be installed on a user’s personal computer.
Auto
Reply
When an email recipient is “Out of the Office” or “Away on
Vacation” they often set up an automated reply message alerting
the sender to this fact.
B2B
B2B (business-to-business) companies that primarily sell products
or provide services to other businesses.
B2C
B2C (business-to-consumer) companies are those firms that sell
products or provide services primarily to end-user consumers.
Bandwidth
The amount of information that can be transmitted over a network
such as the Internet in a specific amount of time.
Blacklists
Blacklists are made up of lists of IP addresses belonging to
organizations that have been identified as senders of SPAM
(unsolicited commercial email). Blacklists are often used by ISPs
and corporations as part of the filtering process that determines
which IP addresses they prohibit from sending mail to their
members.
Blocking
When emails are prevented from reaching their intended
destination, typically due to action taken on the part of the
Internet Service Provider (ISP).
Blog
A user-generated website where entries are made in an informal
journal style and displayed in date order with the most recent
entries first. Readers may or may not be able to comment on
specific posts within the blog.
Bounce
A “Bounced” email indicates that an attempt to deliver an email to
a particular address has failed. This may occur if the email
address is no longer valid or the intended recipient's ISP and/or
email servers were not functioning over a period of 3 consecutive
days.
Bounce
- Hard
An email address that is rejected for a permanent reason that
cannot be resolved, such as: “the address does not exist”.
Bounce
- Soft
An email address that is rejected for what is most likely a
temporary reason, such as an overfilled inbox.
Call-to-Action
Phrasing that encourages a reader to take action. For example,
"Click here to register"
CAN-SPAM Act
The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited
Pornography and Marketing Act) is a federal law that establishes
requirements for those who send commercial email. It spells out
penalties for spammers and companies whose products are advertised
in spam if they violate the law, and gives consumers the right to
ask emailers to stop spamming them.
Confirmed Opt-in
“Confirmed opt-in”, also known as “double opt-in” or “closed loop”
in some circles, provides an additional layer of security by
requiring that an email account be both subscribed and then
verified by a confirmation email before it is added to the list.
As a result, only those people with access to the account can
respond to the confirmation message, greatly reducing the chance
of abuse. For this reason, confirmed opt-in is regarded as the
gold standard for secure email marketing.
Content
The copy, graphics and images that comprise your email, website or
marketing materials.
Conversion Rate
A metric which measures the percentage of people converted into
subscribers or buyers out of the total population exposed to a
particular campaign.
Copy
The text of the campaign, distinct from the graphics.
CRM
(or Customer relationship management)
Customer relationship management (CRM) is a broad term that refers
to concepts businesses use to maintain and improve relationships
with customers. CRM involves collecting, storing and analyzing
customer information. CRM enables businesses to provide
personalized services to meet their customers’ needs and retain
their business.
Database
A database is a collection of information stored in a computer in
a systematic way, such that a computer program can consult it to
answer questions. For email marketing purposes, a database is the
software that stores your records or lists. Your database may be
in the following forms: ACT!, Filemaker, GoldMine, MS Excel,
Access, Netscape, Outlook, Outlook Express, Oracle, Salesforce,
Saleslogix, Sybase or many other forms.
Dedupe
Deduplication refers to a data cleansing technique where duplicate
data is removed from a set.
Deliverability
The ability of the email sender to consistently deliver an email
to a recipient’s inbox with HTML and text intact. Marketers
operating permission-based email schemes need to carefully
consider deliverability due to aggressive SPAM filters.
Domain
Generally refers to internet addresses, the memorable form of a
website’s numerical IP address.
DomainKeys or DKIM: Domain Keys Identified Mail
An anti-spam software application that uses a combination of
public and private keys to authenticate the sender's domain (A
name by which a computer connected to the Internet is identified)
and reduce the chance that a spammer or hacker will fake the
domain sending address.
Double
Opt-in
“Double opt-in”, also known as “confirmed opt-in” or “closed-loop”
in some circles, provides an additional layer of security by
requiring that email accounts be both subscribed and then verified
by a confirmation email before they are added to the list. As a
result, only those people with access to the account can respond
to the confirmation message, greatly reducing the chance of abuse.
For this reason, double opt-in is regarded as the gold standard
for secure email marketing.
Email
Campaign
When you build an email and send it to your recipients Your
campaign may be a newsletter or may consist of offers. Some
marketers may define a campaign as a series of email messages
using a common theme.
Email
Client
An application used to send, receive, store and view email like
Outlook, Mac Mail, Yahoo! Mail, Gmail, etc.
ESP
(or Email Service Provider)
Email Service Providers (ESPs) are companies that provide a
service of enabling a user to send permission-based email
campaigns to designated users. They are usually
Software-as-a-Service Providers (SaaS) who offer their services in
an online fashion. There are also software ESPs.
Font
A specific size and style of type within a type family.
Footer
Some emails include a “footer”. This is the area at the bottom of
an email where you might find unsubscribe information.
Frequency
The intervals at which email marketing efforts are repeated:
weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, bi-monthly, etc.
From
Line
The information that appears in the “From” line at the top of the
email and typically indicates the identity of the sender.
Hard Bounced
Email
A hard bounce is an e-mail message that has been returned to the
sender because the recipient's address is not valid. A hard bounce
might occur because the domain name doesn't exist or because the
recipient is unknown.
Header
The header in an email is the part of the email that is not
transparent to the recipient unless they have their “View Headers”
turned on. This tells the recipient what servers the email is
coming from and what programs are being used to generate this
email. Headers contain information on the email itself and the
route it's taken across the Internet. Recipients can normally see
the "to" (identity of recipient), "from" (identity of sender) and
"subject" (information in the subject line) headers in their
inbox. You can modify these to influence their decision to open or
delete an email.
Headline
The announcement recipients see when they open an email. Ideally,
the headline expresses the company’s value proposition and
encourages the recipient to read further.
House List
A permission-based list that you build yourself. Use it to market,
cross sell and up-sell, and to establish a relationship with
customers over time. Your house list is one of your most valuable
assets.
HTML (or
Hypertext Markup Language)
A “markup” language designed for the creation of web pages and
other information viewable in a Web browser.
HTML Email
HTML email is simply an email created with HTML that allows for
the display of images as opposed to simple text. Many
readers have the default where images are “turned off” or not
viewable by the recipient. For this reason you need to make sure
your recipients add you to their address book so you’ll always go
into the inbox where images will show.
IP Address
The Internet Protocol (IP) address is simply a computer’s address.
The IP address refers to the numerical component of an internet
address or domain name. An IP address looks like this:
153.48.6.709
ISP (or
Internet Service Provider)
Internet Service Provider is a company that provides access to the
Internet. AOL, Yahoo!, MSN, Comcast and various local phone
companies are common ISPs.
Landing Page
The page on a website where the visitor arrives (which may or may
not be the home page). In terms of an email campaign, if a user
wants to track a campaign separately they set up an additional
page for recipients to visit. This way they can track distinctive
traffic to this page from their email.
Layout
The arrangement of content within an email. A layout is
designed to optimize the use of space while presenting the
critical content in the portions of screen most likely to attract
the recipient’s immediate attention.
Links
Text links, hyperlinks, graphics or images which, when clicked or
when pasted into the browser, direct the reader to another online
location.
Load Time
The length of time it takes for a page to open completely in the
browser window. You’ll want your load time to be as fast as
possible.
Look and
Feel
The degree to which design, layout and functionality are appealing
to prospects and fits the image the business is trying to portray.
Mailing List
A set of email addresses designated for receiving specific email
messages.
Navigation
The path by which a user can click from page to page on a website
and move around within a page.
Open Rate
The number of HTML message recipients who opened your email,
typically measured as a percentage of the total number of emails
sent, although calculation methods may differ. The open rate is
considered a useful metric for judging response to an email
campaign but it should be noted that open rates for text emails
can’t be calculated.
Open Relay
An open relay is an email server configured so that anyone on the
internet can dispatch email. Once an acceptable means of sending
email in the past, spammers have used open relay to re-route their
email through a third party to avoid detection. The CAN SPAM Act
of 2003 made it illegal to send spam through an open relay.
Opt-in
Opting-In is the action a person takes when he or she actively
agrees, by email or other means, to receive communications from an
email sender. There are different types of opt-in practices, some
of which are more demanding than others (See also: Single Opt-in
and Double Opt-in)See also: Opt-in form
Opt-in form
A form that website owners can add to their site to collect
newsletter signups from visitors. (See also: Single Opt-in and
Double Opt-in). See also: Opt-in
Opt-Out
Opt-out email marketing assumes the recipient wants to receive
email unless they specifically ask to be removed from the list –
in other words, “opt-out” or “unsubscribe”. If readers fail to
state explicitly that they no longer wish to remain on the list,
they can expect to receive messages until they make their desire
known. Response rates tend to be lower when sending opt-out email,
so be prepared for this result when you’re analyzing your
campaigns.
Payoff
When offering customers further information, such as a whitepaper
or article via a link in an email, the payoff is the information
they gain access to when clicking on that link.
Permission-based email
The practice of only sending email messages to those recipients
who have agreed (or asked) to receive them.
Personalization
The practice of writing the email to make the recipient feel that
it is more personal and was sent with him or her in mind. This
might include using the recipient's name in the salutation or
subject line, referring to previous purchases or correspondence,
or offering recommendations based on previous buying patterns.
Phishing
In a phishing scam, a spammer, posing as a trusted party such as a
bank or reputable online vendor, sends email messages directing
recipients to Web sites that appear to be official but are in
reality fraudulent. Visitors to these Web sites are asked to
disclose personal information, such as credit card numbers, or to
purchase counterfeit or pirated products.See also: SenderID,
Spoofing
Preview Pane
Email programs such as Microsoft Outlook and Mac Mail allow users
to view email through a preview pane. The preview pane is
important to bear in mind when composing the opening lines of an
email.
ROI (Return
On Investment)
A measure of the profit realized and/or costs saved at a company,
or as the result of a specific project within the company. ROI
measures how effectively the firm uses its capital and resources
to generate profit; the higher the ROI, the better. An ROI
calculation is sometimes used along with other approaches to
develop a business case for a given proposal.
Salutation
This is the area in an email where you address your recipient.
Examples are “Dear Customer”, “Hello Larry”, and “Dear Member”.
SasS
(Software as a Service)
Software as a service (SaaS) is a software distribution model in
which applications are hosted by a vendor or service provider and
made available to customers over a network, typically the
Internet. See also: ASP (or Application Service Provider)
Sender ID
Sender ID is an email industry initiative championed by Microsoft
and other industry leaders as a technical solution to help counter
spoofing—the No. 1 deceptive practice used by spammers. See also:
Phishing, Spoofing
Signature
File
A short block of text at the end of a message identifying the
sender and providing additional information about them.
Single
Opt-in
Under single opt-in formats, businesses only mail addresses that
have been actively subscribed to their list, typically by
completing a web form, filling out a business reply card or
sending an email to a specific address. Because the registration
process is proactive, a single-opt in policy offers a higher level
of security than the opt-out approach, but also has the following
limitations:
Since single opt-in procedure does not require email address
verification, it is possible to register other people without
their consent, merely by having knowledge of that person’s email
address.
A mistyped
address or the entry of a bogus email account that happens to
belong to someone else can result in a company mailing a customer
who has not registered to receive messages.
Single opt-in
email policies are susceptible to spam traps. Spam traps are
essentially email addresses or domains that have not registered to
receive any email. Therefore, any messages they do receive must be
spam. The problem for marketers comes when people deliberately
subscribe spam trap addresses to their lists, or one is
inadvertently added. This scenario exposes the mailer to
blacklisting by ISPs or the organization operating the spam trap.
Soft Bounced
Email
A soft bounce is an email message that gets to the recipient's
mail server but is returned undelivered before it reaches the
recipient. A soft bounce might occur because the recipient's inbox
is full and may be deliverable at another time or may be forwarded
manually by the network administrator in charge of redirecting
mail on the recipient's domain.
Spam Trap
A spam trap is a seemingly valid email address used to identify
spam messages. The idea is to take an address that hasn't been
subscribed to any email lists and monitor the email it receives.
As it wasn't subscribed to any email, anything it receives must be
unsolicited – in other words – spam.
SPAM, UCE
SPAM or Unsolicited Commercial Email (UCE) is unsolicited email,
particularly of a commercial nature. Sending email to people who
have not requested to receive messages from you will likely result
in SPAM complaints.
SPF (Sender
Policy Framework)
An email authentication system that verifies that a message came
from an authorized mail server. SPF is designed to detect messages
from spammers and phishers who falsify the sender's IP address in
the email header.
Spoofing
Email spoofing involves forging a sender's address on email
messages. It can be used by malicious individuals to mislead email
recipients into reading and responding to deceptive mail. These
fake messages can jeopardize the online privacy of consumers and
damage the reputation of the companies purported to have sent the
messages. Spoofed email often contains phishing scams. See also:
Phishing, SenderID
Subheads (or
Subheadings)
A line within a body of text that serves as a subtitle for the
content that follows. Subheads break up paragraphs of copy and
make the page more attractive or easy on the eye. They also often
act as signposts indicating specific topics, offers, promotions,
etc.
Subject Line
The email subject line is the line that appears in an email client
indicating the topic of the message. This is the line used to
entice the recipient to open the email and read further. It is the
most important part of your email.
Suppression
List
A list of addresses that is never sent emails. When a campaign is
launched, addresses on the suppression list are automatically
removed from the mailing list for that campaign. Suppression Lists
are used for organizations to remain CAN SPAM compliant as well as
segmenting different recipients.
Targeting
The ability to serve messaging to the users most likely to be
receptive to the message, based on their geographic, demographic,
psychographic and behavioral characteristics.
Teaser
A message, or part of a message, designed to arouse curiosity and
interest and cause the reader to explore further, but without
revealing too much detail about the offer being promoted.
Timing
Scheduling the email campaign to reach the audience at the most
opportune time for it to be read. Timing might be seasonal or
mailings might go out on a standard schedule. Even the day of the
week and what time of day the mailing goes out are important
considerations: for example, a Friday afternoon mailing may be
great for retailing customers, but bad for business-to-business
customers.
Tracking
Collecting and evaluating the statistics so that one can measure
an event, such as a click or an open.
Type Size
A size of typewritten or printed character. For example, a serif
type (or typeface), a sans-serif type, 10 point type, 14 point
type for print, size=1, size=2 for the web.
Unique
Forwarders
The number of unique individuals who forward an email. When the
number of unique forwards is totaled, each person that forwards a
particular email is counted just once, no matter how many times
they forward that message.
Unsubscribe
When the owner of an email address unsubscribes, this indicates
that the individual no longer wishes to receive emails from your
organization. People can unsubscribe either by clicking the
"Unsubscribe" link at the bottom of each email sent through a
system, or by replying to the email with the word "Unsubscribe" in
the subject line. This process is also known as opting-out.
Including an unsubscribe mechanism is now part of CAN-SPAM Federal
Legislation.
URL
A Uniform Resource Locator (URL) is the technical term for a web
address (www....)
Usability
A measure of how easy it is for a user to complete a task. In the
context of Web pages this concerns how easy it is for a user to
find the information they require from a given Web site.
Value
The overall appeal and usefulness of the product or service to the
prospect.
Viral
Forwards
The number of referrals sent.
Viral
Marketing
Elements and functions included in a communication that encourages
and allows recipients to pass the offer along to others, thereby
leveraging the marketing effort ("tell a friend," "please
forward," etc.).
Viral
Responses
The number of recipients who received the referral, opened it and
clicked on a link.
Web-friendly
Fonts
Almost all web browsers are capable of displaying four primary
fonts properly: Times, Arial, Helvetica, and Verdana, as well as
their variants (Arial Narrow, Times New Roman, etc.) If a web
developer decides to stray from one of these fonts he or she risks
browser compatibility problems and the prospect that their pages
may render inaccurately when viewed through certain web browsers. |