Let’s look
at three real-life examples:
1. One
marketer sent a holiday card to its customers with an invitation to login to a
personalized URL to select a charity to receive a donation in their name. Of
those responding to the campaign, 11% chose to log in by scanning a QR Code
rather than typing in the personalized URL.
2. An online
educational institution serving the high school market wanted to boost
enrollment. It sent a promotional campaign inviting students and their parents
to log in to a personalized URL to learn more about online education and enter
a sweepstakes to win an iPad2. More than
one-third (37%) of the logins came via QR Code.
3. In order
to refresh its retail location, an herbal supplements and vitamin company
wanted to find out what products and services its customers were looking for
that might be missing from its existing mix. To find out,
it sent a survey via personalized URL to nearly 20,000 contacts. QR Code scans
accounted for almost 20% of all PURL visitors.
We could
give lots more examples, but you get the idea. People love mobile, but they
don’t love typing in long web addresses. If you provide them with a way to skip
right to the content they are looking for, they’ll very likely to take it,
especially when they are responding to a personalized URL campaign. That’s a
huge benefit of QR Codes.
This can also
lead to an elevated response rate to the overall campaign. Why? Because the
easier it is to respond to a marketing message (including multiple ways to
respond), the more responses you’re going to get.
Jeff Lampert
Director of Marketing & Business Development
The great accomplishments of man have resulted from the transmission of ideas of enthusiasm. – Thomas J. Watson
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