I’m watching. We’re all watching….
Warning: this post may make you paranoid…
I’m writing an article about organizations’ use of wikis, and I sent out a small email blast to a select group of contacts. I got a note back from my mother:
Beth, I don’t know if I have a wiki. What is a wiki?
I know my mom doesn’t have a wiki. Why in the world would I have selected her for an email blast about wikis?
Mom was in that select group of contacts because I created a list of people who had engaged in some of my previous emails. I wrote the email blast about wikis to make it look personal, and I sent it to people who had clicked on at least one link in at least one of my emails in the past.
Tracking email behavior is quite a science. Each time I send a newsletter out, I get reports of how many emails were delivered, how many people opened the email, how many people clicked on the email, how many times, etc. And I know exactly who clicked and when. I know that San Diego ex-boyfriend #1 opens each email exactly one time but doesn’t click on anything. I know San Diego ex-boyfriend #2 went to my website the other day, and that made my heart race a little (was he going to call? Nope.). [I also know that after this post, both San Diego ex-boyfriends are going to unsubscribe from everything with my name on it.]
My basic little email service costs $30 a month. As a freelance copywriter, I find myself creating more and more email campaigns for companies who have invested thousands in sophisticated email tracking/drip marketing services. We write one email, and based on what the person does from that first email (clicks this, ignores that), we write other emails that will go out automatically. For example, I get emails from Staples. I was looking for furniture for my new office, so I clicked on a furniture ad. For the next three weeks, I received all kinds of ads from Staples about office furniture sales. This is not a coincidence.
When I tell people I write email campaigns like this, I’m often surprised about how surprised people are that their behaviors are being tracked. But this has been happening for many years. Systems are getting more sophisticated, but for quite some time people have been able to determine if you’ve taken any action on an email you received. The same goes for your click behavior on a website. People can tell where you came in, what you clicked, how long you stayed, where you left, etc.
Of course, I teach sessions on improving your email open rate, and I’m equally surprised about the number of organizations that do not track email statistics. I work with a lot of professional nonprofit associations, and many are still using the BCC method for mass emails, where they officially send the email to themselves and put hundreds of recipients into the BCC field.
When I track people’s clicking habits, I find out what types of topics interest my readers. For example, my last newsletter focused on free and low-cost tech tools, and I had a small teaser of some of the tools in the body of the email. An unusually high number of people clicked on the link to the free wiki, and that prompted my decision to write an article about organizations’ use of wikis. I can also see who clicks through to my website, and that gives me info about who might be interested in my services. But I generally don’t bug people. I just like the stats.




Papa on 20 May 2008 at 12:38 pm #
I certainly raised a nosy daughter
Beth on 20 May 2008 at 12:45 pm #
Don’t tell Mom. She already thinks I’m a hacker because I used remote access to find a picture on her computer once.
SD ex-boyfriend #1 on 20 May 2008 at 4:51 pm #
A revealing and thought provoking post indeed. I was already aware that you had the ability to track all of the various link clicks/mail openings/site visits pertaining to you blog and website, but I didn’t know to what extent you kept track of this information. Most casual web surfers have no idea how much of their privacy they readily surrender every time they hit that right-click button. It’s a message that can’t be repeated often enough.
In the case of your blog and emails, I know that you have no sinister agendas so I never had any issue with your ability to track all my Avenue Z related movements. With other sites I am not always so trusting. I almost never use my credit card on line. When ordering from Amazon, for example, I place the order and use the “mail in payment” option and send a postal money order. On the other hand, when booking a flight, I’ll go ahead and use my card. Under the lunacy of fatherland security, it’s impossible to board an airplane without giving up every last bit of your personal information anyway….
In other cases though, there are ways to evade, being part of the sorts of information gathering you refer to. I am fortunate enough to be in a situation where I have easy access to library computers which can be used anonymously. This is a safe way to visit sites that might want to infect your system with viruses, gather your data etc.
There are plenty of resources on line that give tips on how to surf safely and privately. The real point is to be aware. Forewarned is forearmed….
Beth on 20 May 2008 at 4:58 pm #
SD Ex #1, you have officially cracked me up. Time to stop working for the day. Erin’s waiting to take a jog.
So, what's your sign? | Life on Avenue Z on 11 Aug 2008 at 6:21 am #
[...] Each weekday 200+ people stop by Life on Avenue Z. Some find me through Google images and are just here to steal pictures. But many of you stay a while, checking out recent posts and comments, adding an opinion here and there. (How do I know you stay? Remember that internet stats are very thorough these days….) [...]