Marketing Blog for Conversion Rate Optimization Experts | Pagewiz

A Spotlight on Drip Email Campaigns: Buffer

We recently introduced how drip email campaigns can have a profound effect on the growth of your business.

For most online businesses, email marketing plays a large role in the process of acquiring new leads, converting warm leads, and retargeting existing leads and current customers.

The company in the spotlight today is Buffer, a leading social media app. They use drip email campaigns as a great lead nurturing tactic.

Buffer’s emails don’t typically include a hard sell which can be very effective given the email saturation of the modern world. Their email campaigns work to convert and retain customers through nurturing, soft selling and “zero selling.”

On average, their email course campaigns convert at 2.8% and some even as high as 7-9%!

Let’s look at how Buffer uses drip campaigns in their email marketing plan to further their brand message and customer base.

An Introduction to Buffer

Buffer allows you to automate posting on a number of social media platforms.

The app was launched in November 2010 and is the brainchild of Joel Gascoigne who developed it after being frustrated with the complicated scheduling tools available at the time.

Originally, the application was only available for Twitter but now you can schedule posts on Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, Instagram and Pinterest.

In just 3 short years Buffer grew from nothing to 1 million users, $2 million revenue and 13 employees.

As of October 2016, the site has over 63,000 paying customers and revenue of $12.36 million.

Defining Moments

Buffer grew dramatically in the beginning through a range of innovative digital marketing methods. They used aggressive content marketing, which wasn’t as popular a tactic then as it is now, and clever growth hacks skillfully supported by mailing campaigns.

Leo Widrich, co-founder of Buffer, stated that they gained 100,000 users from guest blogging in the first 9 months.

Buffer also purchased Digg Digg, a floating social share bar WordPress plugin once it reached 300,000 downloads. They added a Buffer share button and then put it back out for free download, spreading awareness of their platform even further.

Kevan Lee, the company’s Director of Marketing recently commented on email marketing saying, “We’ve enjoyed focusing on email marketing as a way to communicate with our users, and we’ve noticed a few different ways this looks for us from the marketing side: information sharing (like announcements and launches), surprise and delight (campaigns that celebrate user success and milestones), and education.”

Today, Buffer uses email campaigns for a variety of functions including customer onboarding and even email-based courses, with great success. Their first email course campaign ran through MailChimp and had a 39% open rate. 10% of readers signed up to their main mailing list.

Drip Campaign Email Examples

Let’s take a look at some of the campaigns and emails Buffer uses.

Onboarding Campaign

Onboarding campaigns are one of the most important drip campaigns when it comes to the success of your business. A great example of an onboarding campaign is one that takes a potential customer who has signed up for a free trial of your product and turns them into an actual paying customer.

[tweetthis]Buffer gained 100,000 users from guest blogging in the first 9 months.[/tweetthis]

Buffer’s campaign is very effective at doing this. Here are some of the stages of their onboarding email campaign:

Welcome Email

Welcome emails are the most important message of an onboarding campaign. This is where you create the first impression of your business. Welcome emails are one of the most opened emails in email marketing and the postscript is one of the most read parts of an email message. Groove describes the text you put in the P.S. section as “prime real estate” for making a strong impact.

Pros:

Cons:

Article Suggestions

In the early stages of onboarding you shouldn’t push your product on subscribers, but instead start to build a relationship. Sendwithus hit the nail on the head when they said, “onboarding emails should focus on educating users, not pitching them.”

Buffer is well known for their friendly and helpful communication style and have recently tried a “zero sell” mindset for their email campaigns.

Buffer follows up their welcome email with a reading suggestion on Twitter Hacks:

Pros:

Cons:

Reconnection Email

The final email in this set is triggered if users don’t use Buffer for an extended period of time. The message gently encourages the reader to give Buffer a chance.

Pros:

Cons:

 

Re-engagement Campaign

Drip emails are a great way to encourage reengagement for people who don’t use your product as often as they could – or have stopped using it altogether. Monitoring their click through rate can also tell you a lot about how your product is being received.

VWO recommends having multiple trigger points for sending reengagement emails – for example at three months, six months and at one year – but you must monitor interaction to determine the best frequency for your audience.

Below is a reengagement email sent by Buffer:

Pros:

Cons:

Referral Emails

Referral emails are a great email to add to any campaign at a point when you know that the reader is happy with your service. SuperOffice advocates sending one of these emails to customers who didn’t sign up so that you can continue the conversation and get feedback on where you went wrong.

Below is one of Buffer’s referral emails:

Pros:

Cons:

[tweetthis]Drip emails are a great way to encourage reengagement for people who don’t use your product as often as they could[/tweetthis]

Compare and Contrast: Hootsuite

One of Buffer’s main competitors in social media scheduling is Hootsuite. Let’s take a look at some of their emails and compare it to some we have already seen from Buffer.

Welcome Email

Buffer’s welcome email:

Pros:

Cons:

Upgrade Email

Drip campaigns are great for upselling because you can segment readers into groups that you know already like your service, and are likely to want more. Tie this to the right trigger and you should have the workings of a successful campaign.

Buffer and Hootsuite go about this in slightly different ways:

Buffer’s upgrade email:

Pros:

Cons:

Drip Email Campaigns and Pagewiz

Landing pages and email campaigns are a killer combination – they go hand in hand. Add a call to action in a targeted email sent just at the right time, link it to a fully optimized landing page, and you have a recipe for high conversions.

Pagewiz creates beautiful landing page templates that can be fully optimized with free unlimited A/B testing to keep them that way. The combination of email campaigns and landing pages is so popular Pagewiz has built-in integration with many popular mailing providers such as MailChimp. There is no such integration with Buffer yet, but you can easily link up your own pages and emails to make your sales funnel excel.

Wrapping it Up

It’s clear that Buffer has a good thing going with their drip email campaigns. They know exactly what works with an onboarding campaign to educate their subscribers about their product and encourage them to take full advantage of their app.

Buffer understands their target audience of young professionals, bloggers, and small business owners and tailors their message in a conversational tone to reach a broader range of subscribers.

By automating their email marketing with a drip campaign, Buffer grows their reach and business with highly targeted, nurtured leads – eventually turning a portion into paying customers.

Over to you – how do you construct email drip sequences for your business?


Also published on Medium.