Content Marketing

The Value of Integrating Marketing Automation with Email Marketing

Editor’s Note: How to Use This Guide

Quick answer: Use this page to make a clearer decision about content and audience development. Start with the reader or customer problem, check whether the advice still matches current platform behavior, and only then choose tools, tactics, or budget. The safest improvements are usually better measurement, clearer page structure, stronger examples, and more useful internal links.

Practical Decision Checklist

QuestionWhy it matters
What is the reader or campaign goal?Prevents advice from becoming generic or tool-led.
What has changed since the article was first published?Keeps platform, SEO, and tool recommendations realistic.
Can the result be measured?Avoids decisions based only on traffic, impressions, or vanity metrics.
What should be avoided?Protects budget, reader trust, and Google-policy compliance.
Which SEMUpdates page should readers visit next?Improves navigation without forcing keyword-heavy anchors.
Email marketing is one of the strongest and most efficient ways to reach your customers. In fact, the average person checks their email about 15 times per day. With an estimated 293.6 billion emails anticipated to be sent worldwide in 2019, it’s safe to assume that your customers are getting their fair share of email communication. So, how can your small or midsized business (SMB) make sure your email marketing stands out? Integrating marketing automation with your email marketing campaigns is absolutely essential to give your SMB the competitive edge it needs. The information in your customer relationship management (CRM) system is incredibly valuable, and it’s time to tap that value via complimentary marketing automation technology to enhance your email marketing. Email marketing can be as powerful a tool today as it’s ever been—it just can’t exist on an island anymore. Instead, consider the following tips for maximizing the value of your business’ email marketing campaigns with integrated marketing automation technology.

The Standard Email Campaigns

Back in the day, it was enough to simply have an email campaign. Especially as an SMB, there wasn’t much expectation from customers other than letting them know about updates or special offers. SMBs could reach out to their customers with a generic subject line and greeting such as “Dear Friend,” and the message would get across. Now that email capabilities and our target audiences have matured, so must our email marketing tactics. Targeted email marketing with personalization that leverages marketing automation and the data from your CRM will put your SMB in the best place to secure click-throughs and even grow revenue.

Actionable Customer Data & Measurement

Your CRM is full of fantastic, juicy data just waiting to be analyzed and used to help you grow your business. Below are just a few types of information gathered through marketing automation and likely found in your CRM that could help you build stronger email campaigns.

#1 Open rates

This is the percentage of people who are actually opening the email you sent. Not only that, but your CRM will be able to identify which customers are opening your emails for an even deeper dive into your base customer.

#2 CTR

The click-through rate, or CTR, is how many people not just opened your email, but clicked on the link inside to navigate to your website or landing page. This number can show you how compelling your content and calls to action were.

#3 Navigation

From the click-through to your website, you can now follow this customer’s journey and track where they visited on your website and how they got to each page.

#4 Length of visit

You’ll know how long your customers spent on each page, as well as how long they spent in total on your website.

#5 Outcome

Finally, you’ll also be able to track the sales funnel and determine the outcome of the visit such as if the customer dropped out and left your website or completed a purchase. All of this indispensable data will be captured and stored. By pairing this captured information with marketing automation, SMBs will be able to take additional steps to catch their customers’ attention and build upon the relationship.

Personalization

One of the most impactful ways in which marketing automation allows us to improve the email marketing experience is through personalization. Customers today expect a lot from the companies they purchase from, and an effective lead nurturing program can provide a completely tailored marketing experience to meet each customer’s needs. Statista notes that emails without personalization showed an open rate of 13.1 percent, while those that included personalization boasted an 18.8 percent open rate. Using marketing automation to personalize communication with your customers will pay off! Personalization can include anything from using the customers’ name, inquiring about performance of a recent purchase or individualized product suggestions based on their search history and interest.

Segmentation & Testing

With the information collected from their CRM, SMBs will also be able to digest and spot similarities between their customers. This will allow for segmentation (or grouping) of customers with similar traits including demographics, purchase history and even open or CTR rates. Separate campaigns can then be developed for each segmented group, targeting specific actions or interests for each email. Campaign According to DMA’s National Client Email Survey, a segmented email campaign can drive as much as a 760 percent increase in revenue compared to a one-size-fits-all campaign. Blending segmentation with marketing automation allows marketers to adapt to customer needs and test different approaches. Creative or alternate subject lines for a specific group of customers can be released as an A/B test. Customer retention can be addressed by attempting to engage customers who have stopped opening emails by testing a new and refreshed email template… This will allow SMBs to potentially cultivate a relationship, retain customers and secure purchase where previous marketing efforts may have been falling flat.

Identifying trends

All of this data and automation can help SMBs identify trends in their customers and business cycle. Perhaps emails that announce a special offer or sale have the largest open rate and lead to the biggest boost in revenue. Or, maybe it will be discovered that the CTR is the highest when an email links to a blog post with interesting and useful information. Through the use of marketing automation and your CRM, these trends can first be identified, and then used to predict the future performance of email marketing campaigns and can even help set ROI goals and expectations.

Open for business

Email marketing’s days are not numbered. In fact, email marketing campaigns will continue to grow and thrive over the next several years—as long as they are accompanied by the right complimentary marketing automation technology to help gather, analyze and utilize information to create robust and effective campaigns that target the customer and stimulate business growth.

Reader Questions

What is the main takeaway from The Value of Integrating Marketing Automation with Email Marketing?

The main takeaway is to treat content and audience development as a decision process, not a checklist copied from another site. First understand the audience, then check current data, choose the smallest useful improvement, and measure whether it changes behavior. This keeps the advice practical and avoids overpromising results.

What should readers check before applying the advice?

Readers should check the date of the guidance, the platform or tool being discussed, their own audience, tracking setup, and whether the recommendation fits their budget. A tactic that works for one site can fail on another if intent, offer, or measurement is different.

How can this page be used with other SEMUpdates resources?

Use this page as the starting point, then follow the internal links to the Content Marketing hub and related SEMUpdates guides. The goal is to connect strategy, tools, examples, and measurement instead of treating one article as a complete plan.

What should be avoided?

Avoid fake urgency, unsupported statistics, copied recommendations, keyword stuffing, paid-link manipulation, and claims that a single tactic will guarantee rankings, traffic, leads, or revenue. Good marketing advice should explain trade-offs and limitations, not just benefits.

About author

H. John Oechsle joined Swiftpage (www.act.com) in July 2012 and currently serves as president and chief executive officer. John came to Swiftpage with a 30 year track record of building highly profitable and sustainable revenue growth for emerging companies and established global leaders. John is an advocate for technology and education in Colorado and has been an active contributor to the Colorado Technology Association (CTA). John has received numerous recognitions, including the Technology Executive of the Year in 2006, the Titan of Technology in 2009, the Bob Newman Lifetime Achievement Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Community by the CTA in 2011 and the Nancy J. Sauer Philanthropy award in 2016. In 2015, John was appointed to the Business Experiential Learning Commission (BEL) by the Governor of Colorado and continues to serve on that commission today. In 2018, John joined the Rutgers CX Advisory Board for the Customer Experience Certificate Program at Rutgers.