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Holiday Cheer

Santa was good to the folks at DiscoveryStore.com over the holidays stuffing his sack with plenty of Night Vision Communicator Goggles, Remote Control Pterodactyls and the best-selling Remote Control Z-Cars, not to mention for grown-ups. The reason for his largess was an e-mail campaign to drive people to the Web site that performed better than any before. And the effort boosted revenue generated

Santa was good to the folks at DiscoveryStore.com over the holidays — stuffing his sack with plenty of Night Vision Communicator Goggles, Remote Control Pterodactyls and the best-selling Remote Control Z-Cars, not to mention “toys” for grown-ups.

The reason for his largess was an e-mail campaign to drive people to the Web site that performed better than any before. And the effort boosted revenue generated from e-mail by 74% over the year before. The average dollar sale on the Web site (www.discoverystore.com) shot up 18% from the third quarter.

This was the first time DiscoveryStore.com used e-mail to increase traffic.

The e-store had swelled its database to 400,000 throughout the year — enough e-mail addresses to really make a splash in a major communication.

The addresses came from two sources. One was a loyalty program, Discovery Passport Rewards, which people sign up for at the point of sale — online, catalog or in one of Discovery's 160 stores. They are awarded one point for every dollar they spend.

The other source was a file of subscribers to a free e-newsletter that people requested at the point of sale.

The holiday campaign put the newsletter program on hyper-drive, increasing broadcasts from once or twice a month to once a week, and refocusing the creative from product offers to attention-getting special promotions.

The first promotion launched the Wednesday before Thanksgiving and ran through the following Monday. It offered 30% off on any purchase on the site of $100 or more and could be shared with recipients' friends and family members. The conversion rate was 5.4%.

“This was the strongest performer of the year,” enthuses Doug Lerner, e-commerce marketing manager at DiscoveryStore.com.

The other promotion was a double-points program for Passport members that ran Nov. 15 to 17. Members received 200 points for every $100 they spent. This was open to all 2.2 million Passport members online and offline. The conversion rate on this transmission was 4.6%.

The double-points promo employed Flash technology, which let the recipient interact with pictures of 10 to 15 top-selling products right in the e-mail, as though it were a mini-catalog. With Flash, users click on what they like and read the description. When they click on “buy now,” they land on the specific product-ordering page.

“People like the interactivity of Flash,” says Laura Peck, senior account manager at New York-based CheetahMail, which manages DiscoveryStore.com's e-mail program.

CheetahMail ensured that even people whose browsers don't read Flash could easily click to a Web page that perfectly mirrored DiscoveryStore's pages.

Smart segmenting employed recency/frequency/monetary models to deliver the best-targeted offers. For instance, someone who'd never ordered would see a cheaper item than the person who'd ordered multiple times.

“If you show that person a product that's selling well with others and it's $9.99, it might do better than a $200 telescope,” Lerner points out.

Omniture software gave DiscoveryStore up-to-the-minute reporting.

“If something was a dud, we pulled that,” he says. “If something sold, we worked fast to get it in front of customers.”

The e-mail promotion was part of an all-out effort to drive sales throughout the division for holiday 2002. It included sending out 66% more catalogs than usual (annual circulation is 2.5 million) and heavy television marketing pushing all three channels.

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