True Influence™ Roundtable

Archive for the ‘Metrics’ Category


Ready! Acquire! Aim?

Posted by: Andrew Kordek

One of the biggest topics in organizations today is the need
and desire to grow their subscriber list.
Most companies believe that the bigger the list they have, the greater
chance they have to sell more stuff.
More stuff sold + more revenue = happy companies.

Some organizations take the hard road and build their list
organically and spend money and resources on properly activating and creating
brand advocates in their subscriber base.
They recognize that the size of their list is not as important as the
overall lifetime value of their subscriber. These organizations often have pressure internally to grow
faster by out of touch executives with unrealistic expectations on subscriber
growth. In most cases though,
these companies follow the good path to growth and are prosperous in the long
run.

Then, every once in awhile there are organizations that take
the easy road. They use so many
different channels, spend a ton of money on third parties that promise the
world who often are using the same 50 Million Opt In, Can-Spam compliant list
to try and bring in as many subscribers as they can. These organizations say they are interested in quality, but
often mask that with a “yea butt” statement of “we still need to get to X
million subscribers by X date”.  Activation, welcome and engagement strategies are
thrown out the window and the focus becomes on getting their X subscribers to
buy stuff so their investment is not wasted.

Sit back for a minute and think of acquiring a single or 5
million new subscribers as a party that you are hosting. You certainly would not invite anyone
over to your party unless you had cleaned up your house, got the hors d’oeuvres,
the drinks, music etc. When your guests arrive, do you open the
door and let them stand there or do you give the tour of where everything is so
that they can enjoy themselves. As
more and more people hear about how great your party is, folks will want a
piece of the action and convince you to invite their friends. Eventually it will lead to a bunch of
riff raffs wanting in which will eventually ruin it for everyone.

Before you put some super aggressive acquisition plan
together, ensure that your house is in order and you are ready to greet your
guests. One of my colleagues and fellow bloggers here, Matt Vernhount says is
beautifully: “It’s not the size of your list, its what you do with it”

Invest time and money to the more important part of
acquisition. You and your
subscribers will be glad you did.