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The Heatmap Method for Better Discounting

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Manage episode 231868427 series 1402915
Content provided by Conversio and Adii Pienaar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Conversio and Adii Pienaar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Sure, knowing that customers rated discounts in email as the biggest influence on their purchase decisions counts. But this doesn’t mean you should just hand out discount coupons to everyone in your mailing list, of course.

Consider your prospects who recently gave you their email addresses to sign up to your mailing list. At this stage, they’re still warm leads, right?

They gave their email addresses as a way to engage with your brand, so you’re not necessarily required to give them a discount code at your first contact with them. You already got their attention.

Now, the story changes if after a week or two, they still haven’t bought from you. At this stage, they’re becoming less warm: there may be less interest or less engagement with your brand. This is when sending a small discount -- $10 off their purchase or 5% off -- makes sense.

This is what the Heat Map Method of Better Discounting is all about. Take every customer category (prospect, first-time customer, repeated customer, inactive customer) and place them on the “heat map”.

Warm customers are those who are highly engaged, meaning, those who recently subscribed to your list, or those who recently bought from you.

Less warm customers are those who have been inactive for a specified time frame: those who’ve never bought from you, those who bought from you one year ago, or those who repeatedly bought from you in the past but abruptly stopped doing business with you.

Your customer is “warm”? Don’t send an email just yet. They’re “less warm”? Better get started on sending those discount coupons.

Now, this idea isn’t limited to your customer categories only. You can apply the Heat Map Method of Better Discounting to your abandoned cart emails as well. For your first recovery email, don’t send a discount code yet. Remind them of their abandoned cart. Find out what stopped them from finalizing their purchase. Listen to what they have to say first.

Then, if by the second and third emails, they still haven’t made their purchase yet, then by all means, include a discount code in your email so you can motivate them to finalize the transaction.

Pro tip: most customers want percentage off discounts (35%) and free shipping (20%) so keep these in mind when considering what kind of discount scheme you’ll offer in your email.

The “colder” a customer is, the better it is for you to do discounting. Simple, sweet, and straight-to-the-point, right?

I hope you find this video helpful! Any insights you’d like to add? Let me know in the comments section below. See you next week! Ciao.

  continue reading

87 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 231868427 series 1402915
Content provided by Conversio and Adii Pienaar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Conversio and Adii Pienaar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Sure, knowing that customers rated discounts in email as the biggest influence on their purchase decisions counts. But this doesn’t mean you should just hand out discount coupons to everyone in your mailing list, of course.

Consider your prospects who recently gave you their email addresses to sign up to your mailing list. At this stage, they’re still warm leads, right?

They gave their email addresses as a way to engage with your brand, so you’re not necessarily required to give them a discount code at your first contact with them. You already got their attention.

Now, the story changes if after a week or two, they still haven’t bought from you. At this stage, they’re becoming less warm: there may be less interest or less engagement with your brand. This is when sending a small discount -- $10 off their purchase or 5% off -- makes sense.

This is what the Heat Map Method of Better Discounting is all about. Take every customer category (prospect, first-time customer, repeated customer, inactive customer) and place them on the “heat map”.

Warm customers are those who are highly engaged, meaning, those who recently subscribed to your list, or those who recently bought from you.

Less warm customers are those who have been inactive for a specified time frame: those who’ve never bought from you, those who bought from you one year ago, or those who repeatedly bought from you in the past but abruptly stopped doing business with you.

Your customer is “warm”? Don’t send an email just yet. They’re “less warm”? Better get started on sending those discount coupons.

Now, this idea isn’t limited to your customer categories only. You can apply the Heat Map Method of Better Discounting to your abandoned cart emails as well. For your first recovery email, don’t send a discount code yet. Remind them of their abandoned cart. Find out what stopped them from finalizing their purchase. Listen to what they have to say first.

Then, if by the second and third emails, they still haven’t made their purchase yet, then by all means, include a discount code in your email so you can motivate them to finalize the transaction.

Pro tip: most customers want percentage off discounts (35%) and free shipping (20%) so keep these in mind when considering what kind of discount scheme you’ll offer in your email.

The “colder” a customer is, the better it is for you to do discounting. Simple, sweet, and straight-to-the-point, right?

I hope you find this video helpful! Any insights you’d like to add? Let me know in the comments section below. See you next week! Ciao.

  continue reading

87 episodes

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