From: ModernseedSubject Line: Capture Your Mini!
Date: Wednesday, April 5, 2006
Modernseed is the self-proclaimed "starting point in a lifestyle rich in design knowledge and well-conceived, functional products." While Modernseed does offer a wide selection of smart, stylish product, their "fresh scoop!" newsletter offers too much: too many words and too many images. While the messages (Product Test Contest, Gitta Bags, Doodles Coloring Book and Gift Registry) may be compelling, they get lost in tiny type and thumbnail imagery. This type of format might work for a print newsletter, but for an EDM, which needs to capture a busy customer's attention in 8 seconds or less, we have to feature one or two messages very clearly using large images, a few well-chosen words, and a strong call-to-action: "Click here to shop now!" While at first a simpler presentation may seem inferior or watered-down, we have to create messages appropriate to the medium, and in the rapid-fire email environment, a brief, clear campaign better serves both the customer and the merchant.
Now for the technical piece. This EDM is implemented as a single, flat graphic. Links are constructed using image maps. In the complex world of Email Browser Compatability, this is a no-no for two reasons:
1) Image maps are stripped by several email programs, meaning that here, since they were constructed using image maps, the blue text that looks like links will not be clickable for some users. In order for links to work properly in every email program, it is necessary to cut up a message into separate graphics and tag each linkable piece with it's own "href" (or, obviously, and in this case more appropriately, to use HTML text.)
2) More and more email browsers are hiding graphics by default. A customer has to click a "show images" option on a campaign-by-campaign basis in order to view a message with graphics. This includes Microsoft Outlook. One way we can entice customers to elect to "show images" is to use as many interesting "alt" tags as possible. "Alt" tag text appears in place of graphics when they are stripped. We can attach a different "alt" tag to every graphic within a single message. The more separate graphic pieces we have, the more "alt" tag text we can show in a customer's browser window, and the more chances we have to interest them enough to opt to "show images."
In short, I'm a Modernseed fan, and they would gain more fans (and more dollars) via Email Direct Marketing using simpler creative and more sophisticated technical executions.
