How to Analyze and Act on an Unsubscribe Survey
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How to Analyze and Act on an Unsubscribe Survey

JARED EVERS - JUN 22, 2020

Even though we know it’s good to say goodbye to unengaged subscribers, it’s still easy to cringe at the sight of an unsubscribe. However, learning from feedback given in an unsubscribe survey could actually be the best way to inform and improve your email marketing strategy for the rest of your audience.

Losing a subscriber is like losing a customer to another company. It stings, but you’d do anything to learn why they chose to go somewhere else and what made them see greener grass beyond your product or offering.

An unsubscribe survey does just that: At the moment your subscriber decides to opt out, it allows you to capture their honest feedback about your email strategy. As an optional feature, not everyone will fill out the unsubscribe survey, but you’ll get immeasurable insights from those who do.

An unsubscribe survey is only as good as the analysis you give it, so read on to discover some actionable ways to act on the feedback. But, first, let’s explore how a subscriber would fill out this survey, as well as how to set it up.

What is an unsubscribe survey?

An unsubscribe survey is a simple form that subscribers can choose to answer after they opt out of your email list. It asks the question: “Why are you unsubscribing?” and provides a variety of response options.

The unsubscribe procedure

The typical process to unsubscribe from an email list looks like this:

Standard unsubscribe survey questions

In Campaign Monitor’s unsubscribe survey, we follow standard best practices for analyzing opt-out reasons. Our unsubscribe survey provides the following responses by default:

These responses cover the gamut of your subscribers’ attitudes. Below, we’ll cover how you can improve your strategy based on how respondents are leaning.

How to set up an unsubscribe survey in Campaign Monitor

Setting up an unsubscribe survey is quick and easy. If you’re not a Campaign Monitor customer, this might look different for your respective email platform.

Here’s how you enable an unsubscribe survey for one of your lists:

And here’s how you can view the responses to your unsubscribe survey:

Clicking this link will generate a CSV file download with the following data:

For more info on how to set up an unsubscribe survey in Campaign Monitor, check out the help doc.

Analyzing unsubscribe survey responses

This is really where rubber meets the road. Once you start getting unsubscriber feedback, it’s important to check the responses regularly and implement them into your strategy.

Schedule regular performance reviews.

The cadence for a review will depend on how often you send. Here’s a quick guide:

 

Sending cadence Performance review
Once a day Every 7–14 days
Once a week Every 30–45 days
Once a month Every 90–180 days

These meetings should contain an unsubscribe survey review, as well as some of these reports:

Determine next steps based on unsubscribe feedback.

Feedback is only as helpful as your response. Let’s take a look at each response a subscriber can give in this survey and what you can change to make your subscriber experience even better.

1. I never signed up for your emails.

Those that opt out because they don’t know who you are or are surprised by receiving an email from you are shining a light on your subscribe and welcome process.

First and foremost, make sure you never add an email to your list without their express consent. This is considered spamming and is an unacceptable practice. As long as you follow this principle, no one should ever choose this opt-out reason because they’re getting spammed.

The other reason they may be choosing this unsubscribe reason would be that they weren’t welcomed appropriately.

So, if you get a lot of responses in this category, try implementing some of the following steps:

2. The content is not what I expected.

This reason requires an additional mention from the previous section: Your expectations need to be explicitly stated in your email signup form. And then you need to deliver on those expectations.

This is a good indicator that either the inputs to your list need to be examined (i.e., how/where subscribers are signing up and what those forms are saying), or your emails vary too far from your brand experience on other platforms. This also happens a lot when someone enters their email to be sent a newsletter with helpful content, and then the emails they’re sent are filled with sales-oriented content.

Here are some things to try if your unsubscribe responses skew this way:

3. The context is no longer relevant to me.

“No longer relevant” is both a good and a bad answer for email marketers.

Pros: It shows that your content no longer aligns with this subscriber, meaning they’re likely not going to buy your product, so they’re just dragging your email performance down. These are the types of subscribers you want to see go.

Cons: This could show that your content just isn’t personalized enough to reach that subscriber. Personalization increases relevance (i.e., if it’s not for me, why am I getting it?), and someone opting out because of a lack of relevance might be exposing the weakness of your strategy.

Here are a few tips to improve relevance:

4. You email too frequently.

Inbox fatigue is a real thing—and, for some brands, it’s difficult to battle subscriber churn. This is a telltale sign that your subscribers get too many emails from your brand.

Now, for some organizations, your subscribers may be getting emails from your marketing team, customer service team, and product development team all at the same time. This is a common way to burn out subscribers. To you, your specific team might not be sending that much. But, to them, your brand just sent them 10 emails in a matter of days.

If you find your subscribers trend toward this unsubscribe response, here are some tips:

Wrap up

Even though it can be bittersweet to lose a subscriber, now you and your strategy have something to gain from it. Make sure you check on your unsubscribe survey regularly, and have a plan for how to approach these various responses, so you can curate the most engaged list possible.

Don’t have an unsubscribe survey in your email platform? Try out Campaign Monitor for free and take advantage of these insights.

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