Does your small business send personal emails?

by Mark on April 29, 2008

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Back in January, Denny Hatch was discussing some emails he received: some personalized, some not.

I wanna hold your hand
Creative Commons License photo credit: batega

Would you rather receive this (his example):

Date: 14 Jan 2008 03:58:31- 0800
From: “Ticketmaster”
To: xxxxx
Subject: Event Reminder: Young Frankenstein

Ticketmaster Event Reminder
Hello Denison Hatch. Your event is happening soon!
Young Frankenstein.

When:
Friday, January18, 2008
8:00pm

Where:
Hilton Theater
213 West 42nd Street
New York, NY 10036

Or this:

Dear Valued Customer,

On behalf of the hundreds of Delta Global Sales professionals dedicated to serving you and your travelers worldwide, “Thank You!” for choosing Delta as your preferred airline

To Delta’s credit, they no longer send me “Dear Valued Customer” emails, they got a clue sometime after I posted that and started using my name. I don’t know if the blog post had anything to do with it or not. I mean, sure, I know that automated systems sent the email, but someone, somewhere at Delta had to write the template. A real person. Presumably, that person was charged with writing a personal note to a client whose business they appreciate.

However, there are dozens of other businesses that continue to send me “Dear Valued Customer” emails.

Credit card companies. Utility companies. Car dealerships. Clothing and outdoor gear vendors.

The fact that Ticketmaster was smart enough to send a reminder email was pretty cool. People are busy. We need reminders, even if we have a Day-Timer, a PDA, a smart phone, a spouse, Outlook reminders and a personal assistant.

The fact that Ticketmaster made the email timely and personalized made it seem real, as if a person typed it.

Would Denny be as impressed if he received the email after the show? Or if it said “Dear Valued Ticketmaster Customer” or similar?

This doesn’t just extend to emails. Same goes for letters, postcards, phone calls, packaging, shipping info, and so on.

How many contacts in your business touch your customers personally? How many are annoying, impersonal Dear Valued Customer grams?

What would you rather receive from the businesses you frequent?

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{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

Doug McIsaac April 29, 2008 at 2:40 pm

Mark,

I’m always amazed and confused when a large company that obviously has the resources sends “valued customers” emails.
In the direct mail world at least they have the cost difference excuse, but with email their is no excuse. The technology is readily available for any size company.

Doug

Doug McIsaac’s last blog post..Small Business Marketing Conference

Glenn May 4, 2008 at 1:16 pm

What about when you e-mail a business through their “Contact Me” link on their Web site and they don’t bother to reply?

http://www.allbusiness.com/technology/software-services-applications-internet-social/10019010-1.html

Why bother to have the link in the first place?

Regards,

Glenn

Mark May 4, 2008 at 1:54 pm

Glenn,

That’s the great part of being a small business owner. BigCorp seemingly uses those things to avoid contact with their customers.

We dont want to hide from ours and we can use that difference as a selling point.

Mark

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