It's birthday time again and it's nice to know that the folks at Clairol and winfreestuf.com haven't forgotten me this year.
It's quite spooky to get faceless birthday emails from corporations - makes me wonder what other info they have on me. What's next? Will I receive wedding gifts this October from the likes of Johnson & Johnson and Colgate?
This is a classic example of personalization gone wrong.
Now on the other hand... personalization can be done well.
Amazon, for example, knows what I like & what's on my wish list. I have a long standing interactive relationship with Amazon. The birthday greeting here may have been automated, but at least I got something tangible out of it - a discount for things I want anyway.
Wine.com also shot over a birthday greeting with a $10 coupon, which was great. Again - a long standing customer relationship where greetings and coupons are welcomed.
The lesson to be learned here: it's okay to reach out to your customers, even in an automated fashion, as long as it's relevant. It's never okay to use someone's birthday as a reason to spam them - it's empty and shallow and a big waste of your marketing dollars.
Now I'm off for that birthday latte. :)
It's quite spooky to get faceless birthday emails from corporations - makes me wonder what other info they have on me. What's next? Will I receive wedding gifts this October from the likes of Johnson & Johnson and Colgate?
This is a classic example of personalization gone wrong.
Now on the other hand... personalization can be done well.
Amazon, for example, knows what I like & what's on my wish list. I have a long standing interactive relationship with Amazon. The birthday greeting here may have been automated, but at least I got something tangible out of it - a discount for things I want anyway.
Wine.com also shot over a birthday greeting with a $10 coupon, which was great. Again - a long standing customer relationship where greetings and coupons are welcomed.
The lesson to be learned here: it's okay to reach out to your customers, even in an automated fashion, as long as it's relevant. It's never okay to use someone's birthday as a reason to spam them - it's empty and shallow and a big waste of your marketing dollars.
Now I'm off for that birthday latte. :)
