Site icon CXL

How to QA Ecommerce Email Campaigns to Increase ROI

person holding phone

I don’t have to convince you that email is important:

But do you work on your email? Is email an actively managed and QA’d operation in your business?

In our experience, most stores seem to “set it and forget it” with email. People don’t go through email campaigns from the customer’s perspective to see what they’re receiving prior to or after an online purchase.

And, as a result, your email marketing may not fit your customers’ needs, which, in turn, reduces email conversions. In this post, you’ll learn how to QA your email campaigns so they work for you and your customers.

But first, what is email “quality assurance”?

Email quality assurance, or QA, is a process that lets you check whether your email campaign works as it should. (Most examples—and some steps—in this post apply only to ecommerce stores, but many apply to non-ecommerce companies, too.)

In short, you subscribe with separate email addresses from everywhere that your store gathers an email address, and wait to see what happens.

First, create unique email addresses for each behavior in your store, including:

Then, wait for your store’s emails to roll in. We’ll talk about the exact process for QAing in a moment. But first, here are some signs that you’re not managing your email campaigns effectively.

8 symptoms of poorly QA’d email

My consultancy, Draft, has been running a long-term research project on email for the past few months. For 30 stores, we did the same process above: We placed an order, abandoned a cart, signed up for the primary mailing list, and signed up for an in-stock notification using four unique email addresses—and waited to see what came in.

So far, we’ve found a lot of common mistakes that people tend to make with their email—even if they’re doing lots of other things right. QA’ing your email could solve all of the mistakes, earning new customers and reorders in the process.

Here are eight of the biggest ones:

1. Multiple review requests

We frequently got pinged to write a review from multiple apps. We presume that, had we written a review, it would’ve ended up in different places on the store.

Reviews should be requested from one source, with one touchpoint, and posted to one place on the store.

For example, Taylor Stitch asks for a review and then, later, a Net Promoter Score survey (likely the culprit of an app that they installed and forgot about).

2. Off-brand emails

Emails should always scan like they’re coming from the same source, with a consistent voice, tone, and appearance. Transactional emails, such as receipts and event invitations, tend not to be styled like the rest of the brand’s primary marketing list.

For example, Chubbies’ emails follow a consistent format:

Which makes it jarring when we get emails from Chubbies that look like this (replete with a broken image):

3. Poorly targeted emails

Personalization is tremendously important in any email strategy, yet we rarely saw a store doing any discernible personalization. There’s a risk to getting personalization wrong, of course—false positives can result in confusion and increase unsubscribes—but the potential benefits are significant.

Usually, poorly targeted emails announced products that were completely irrelevant to me or unrelated to the order that we placed. For example, Sportique recommended women’s products to a person named “Nicholas” after I placed an order for a gear bag:

If you’re going to personalize your emails, start at the highest level: If you sell products that are mutually exclusive for men and women, personalize by gender. If you sell products that naturally “upgrade” from one to the next, sell the next product up to purchasers of your introductory product.

4. In-stock notification issues

With many stores, products quietly come back in stock without notifying us—even though we signed up to be notified. Or they would be quietly discontinued, but we weren’t provided with any alternatives.

For example, Outdoor Voices restocked a product without telling us. And Jeni’s Ice Cream discontinued a t-shirt that we signed up for without telling us:

5. Letting the list go cold

This is 101-level, but it bears mentioning since we saw so many stores mess it up. You should be emailing consistently, lest any attempts to revive the list result in a bunch of unsubscribes. After three months of no activity at all, Taylor Stitch began emailing us a few times a week:

6. Link target mismatch

For example, on this Rothy’s email, “Shop Now” should go to a collection of pink products, not all flats:

7. Non-durable links

If a sale ends, the link to that sale should go to a page that provides alternatives, not a generic “all sale items” section or—worse—a 404 page.

For example, when Kettle & Fire’s sales end, clicking their calls to action takes you to their home page (albeit with a UTM tag appended):

Instead, the customer should be taken to a page that explains the sale has ended, apologizes for the inconvenience, and provides alternatives.

8. Unmanaged failure modes and edge cases

Now that you know what to look for, let’s talk about the step-by-step QA process to manage your email campaigns.

The QA process for managing email campaigns

First, create some smart folders to filter by each inbox and store name:

(This screenshot is for Apple Mail. Here are how-tos for setting up smart folders in iOS Mail, Apple Mail, and Gmail.)

Then, go through each email that’s sent and identify:

These are the key components to review in your email marketing:

1. Orders

We place orders for real products, without returning them, to get as close to a real customer experience as possible. Once that happens, we look for the following:

You’ll also want to place a separate order and return it to see if there are follow-up emails about the return experience.

2. In-stock notifications

In-stock notifications are something of a special case since the end state can differ significantly. For example, what happens when:

You’ll want to create a hidden test product that you can use to trigger these end states and see which emails fire for each case. (Here’s how you do it on Shopify to keep the product from being indexed by search engines or available on your own store’s search.) Then, sign up and immediately discontinue or restock the product to see what happens.

Here are all the potential elements you should QA for in-stock notification emails:

Overall

Restocked products

Discontinued products

Products that remain out of stock

3. Subscriptions to the general list

4. Cart abandonments

5. General

Conclusion

In analyzing 30 stores, one of the biggest things we’ve learned is that stores rarely make email a line item in their marketing budgets. But they should. The ROI is there, and in the long run it could result in happier and more passionate customers.

Start by QAing your email. This is a process that takes a few minutes to set up, a morning to analyze, and could reap a significant reward for any business. In short:

With this post, you should be able to manage your email more effectively—isolating and resolving the most common issues that your campaigns face.

Related Posts

Exit mobile version