E-mail marketing spending will grow to $2.1 billion in 2012 from $1.2 billion in 2007, according to JupiterResearch’s "US E-mail Marketing Forecast, 2007 to 2012" report.
“E-mail service providers have done a solid job of standardizing
feedback loops with Internet service providers and are continuing to
make needed improvements in e-mail delivery,” said David Daniels, vice
president and research director at JupiterResearch.
“This will create better opportunities for e-mail marketing,
although marketers will have to work harder to remain relevant in their
communications with their intended audiences,” Mr. Daniels said.
JupiterResearch also said that spending on retention e-mail would
more than double through 2012 and account for more than half of total
e-mail marketing spending by then.
Acquisition e-mail marketing was pegged to grow more slowly,
with sponsorships such as ad-supported newsletters accounting for most
spending.
In its own calculations of e-mail marketing spending,
eMarketer includes payments to e-mail service providers, list rental
and the costs of in-house e-mail. eMarketer projects that e-mail
marketing spending will creep up steadily, reaching $1.65 billion by
2011.
"E-mail marketing is effective, but spending is tempered by the
somewhat but not entirely valid impression among many companies that
e-mail is inexpensive marketing and that they therefore need not throw
too much money at those programs," said David Hallerman, senior analyst
at eMarketer.
Spending on e-mail marketing is also moderated by its own efficiency. Because e-mail is a low-cost medium, even relatively large
increases in the number of commercial e-mails are not reflected in large spending increases.
Spending will jump by 5.1% in 2008, supported by marketing for
both the national and local elections. Similarly, but to a lesser
extent,
marketing spending growth in 2010 will be boosted by election activity.
"US e-mail marketing spending in 2007
will reach nearly $1.5 billion," Mr. Hallerman said.
"That is about $3.60 for e-mail marketing for every $1 that goes to e-mail advertising."
Via eMarketer


