Global Thoughtz Germany

Archive for November, 2007

Top 10 German Properties for October

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Google was the most visited property in Germany, with 23.1 million unique visitors age 15 or older, reaching 69 percent of the total German Internet audience. It was followed by eBay which attracted 17.4 million unique visitors, a 52 percent reach. T-Online Sites and Yahoo! Sites were the fastest growing of the top ten properties in Germany, both growing their visitor base by 8 percent from September to October. T-Online attracted 13.8 million visitors while Yahoo! reached 12.1 million. Source: comScore.

Top 10 German Online Properties

Ranked by German Unique Visitors

October 2007 vs. September 2007

Total Germany, Age 15+ - Home and Work Locations*

Source: comScore World Metrix

Property Total Unique Visitors (000) % Reach
Sep 2007 Oct 2007 % Change
Total German Internet Audience 33,174 33,356 1 100
Google Sites 23,216 23,062 -1 69
eBay 17,730 17,424 -2 52
Microsoft Sites 17,133 17,414 2 52
Time Warner Network 15,655 15,800 1 47
United-Internet Sites 15,581 15,708 1 47
Otto Gruppe 13,724 14,098 3 42
T-Online Sites 12,782 13,824 8 41
Wikipedia Sites 13,433 13,592 1 41
ProSiebenSat1 Sites 13,284 13,496 2 40
Yahoo! Sites 11,185 12,130 8 36

* Excludes traffic from public computers such as Internet cafes or access from mobile phones or PDAs

Emailmarketing: Sender Reputation

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

The sender reputation is one of the most important factors to deliver your email. One the one hand, it is the reputation with the ISP, who decide which mails to deliver to their user´s inboxes. And on the other hand, it is the reputation with the recipients of your emails, which decide to open and click your emails or just mark it as spam.

But what does make your sender reputation? There are some indicators, which are used by the major ISPs to select the good from the bad mails:

  1. Spam complaint rate: The most critical part of the process is the user himself. The more people complain about your emails, the more likely your emails will get blocked by the ISPs. The limit of complaints seems to be 1% - if you exceed this limit - you will have to face the ISP blocking all your emails.
  2. Unknown user / Hard Bounce rate: Sending repeadidly to e-mail addresses that don´t exist, will cause the ISPs to have a closer look on your emailmarketing doings.
  3. Spam traps: An old Emailadress that is inactive can be used by the providers to build a spam trap, because these email adresses won´t have signed into any subscriber list, and will show the providers that you have a bad customer acquisition tactic.

As we have seen the three elements to avoid (Don´ts), we can conclude the elements to build up a good reputation (Dos). Let´s have a closer look on them:

  1. Permission practices: Always make sure that you collect the direct consent of the subscribers of your mailing listst. Best practise ist still the Double Optin for this.
  2. Technical infrastructure: Use authentication like SIDF and DKIM, to build up a good technical reputation of your email marketing program.
  3. Relevancy: Make sure that the email communication to the users always holds a specific benefit for them. And make sure you you send the users what you promised them, that they would sign up to.
  4. Recognition: Always ensure that your emails identify where they’re coming from, to give the users the chance to buidl up a trust to your sending domain.
  5. Mailing list cleaning: Immediatly react on unsubscribe requests and remove bounced e-mail addresses and aged, unresponsive e-mail addresses on a regular basis, so that you always send to an agil and active subscriber list..
  6. Easy unsubscribe: Let users sign off easily, because if you make it too hard they will hit the spam button instead and your reputation will lower fast.

Further reading:

Three Metrics that Make Your E-mail Reputation
Your email sender reputation: the timing problem
E-Mail Reputation: An Important Factor in Restoring Trust
6 Steps to Higher Email Delivery Rates