Over 40% of clients stated they had $100,000 or less of annual budget dedicated to email marketing. – EmailStatCenter.com “Compensation & Resources Study” (2010)
15% had an annual budget dedicated to email marketing of $100,001-$249,999. – EmailStatCenter.com “Compensation & Resources Study” (2010)
14% having an annual budget dedicated to email marketing of over $1,000,000. – EmailStatCenter.com “Compensation & Resources Study” (2010)
14% of clients did not know their budget. – EmailStatCenter.com “Compensation & Resources Study” (2010)
Less than 5% of email marketing professionals make $200,000 or greater per year. – EmailStatCenter.com “Compensation & Resources Study” (2010)
25% of email marketing professionals said they make between $50,000-$69,999 annually. – EmailStatCenter.com “Compensation & Resources Study” (2010)
Companies with an email budget of more than $100,000 the median salary falls between $70,000 and $84,999. – EmailStatCenter.com “Compensation & Resources Study” (2010)
Those working in agencies focused strictly on email have the lowest median salaries, between $50,000 and $69,999. – EmailStatCenter.com “Compensation & Resources Study” (2010)
54% of marketers plan to increase email budgets in 2010.- Exact Target (2010)
88% of retailers listed email as a high priority for the year, largely to retain customers, the study found. – Forrester Research and Shop.org, “Retailing Online 2009: Marketing Report” (2009)
58% of Senior Marketing Executives Worldwide say they will be increasing email marketing spend this year. – Ad Media Partners (2009)
65% of retailers are planning to spend more on email than originally planned. – Forrester Research and Shop.org, “Retailing Online 2009: Marketing Report” (2009)
Email marketing will generate an ROI of $43.52 in 2009. – DMA (2009)
13.4 billion: the number of direct marketing dollars forecast to go on email in the US in 2009. – Email Marketing Reports (2009)
The total spend for email at $11.9 billion in 2008 and, by 2013, it forecasts email will be a $27.8 billion business. – Veronis Suhler Stevenson (VSS) 2009
Email marketing spending will continue to expand at double-digit rates – 18.5% per year – for the next five years. – Veronis Suhler Stevenson (VSS) 2009
45% of CMOs label email marketing as their top area of marketing investment this year. – Chief Marketing Officer Council (2009)
81% of the firms that are increasing their budgets in the second half of 2009 said they are boosting their email spending. – StrongMail (2009)
While 60% of marketers plan to cut their traditional marketing budgets this year, 47% of marketers plan to boost their email marketing budgets. – Aberdeen Group, “Recessionary Marketing: How Best-in-Class Companies Are Weathering the Storm,” (Jan 2009)
49% of marketers deem email to third-party lists as a low-ROI tactic. – MarketingSherpa “2009 Email Marketing Benchmark Guide” (Oct 2008)
29% of B2B marketers said they plan to increase spending on third-party lists in 2009. – MarketingSherpa “2009 Email Marketing Benchmark Guide” (Oct 2008)
25% of B2B marketers said they plan cuts in this area in 2009. – MarketingSherpa “2009 Email Marketing Benchmark Guide” (Oct 2008)
80.4% of marketing executives surveyed say email performs strongly as an advertising channel for their companies. – Datran Media “3rd Annual Marketing & Media Survey Results” (2008)
58.5% of marketing executives surveyed say they will increase the budget allocation for email as an advertising channel on 2009. – Datran Media “3rd Annual Marketing & Media Survey Results” (2008)
62% of marketing executives surveyed say that email newsletters are tactics that are a part of their 2009 marketing strategy. – Datran Media “3rd Annual Marketing & Media Survey Results” (2008)
Spending on email will rise to $488 million in 2009, up from $472 million in 2008. – eMarketer (Nov 2008)
63% of marketing executives surveyed said they had increased their digital marketing spending in 2008; 59% said they had decreased traditional marketing spending. – Epsilon (Sept 2008)
Half of respondents said they handle their direct response marketing internally, while 37% conducted it though a combination of agency and internally. – Direct Partners (2008)
23% reported their budget would increase by 10% or higher this year compared to last. – Direct Partners (2008)
74% of marketers surveyed said they plan to increase their direct email spending. – Eloqua “State of the Marketer” (2008)
Email ad spending will jump to $677 million in 2011, from $492 million in 2008. – eMarketer (2008)
72% of the firms polled send email to customers; a 10% increase over 2007. – DirectMag (2008)
55% of the firms polled who use email plan to increase their budgets for it next year. – DirectMag (2008)
67 percent of respondents stated that email has helped boost sales through other channels. – Datran Media, “Marketing & Media Survey” (2008)
Nearly three-quarters of email marketers said in a recent survey that they plan to spend either the same amount or more on email marketing in 2008 as they did last year. – MarketingSherpa’s “E-Mail 2008: Top 10 Research Findings and Practical Ways to Increase E-Mail Performance” (2008)
More than a quarter of respondents said they would spend 1.5 times as much or more as they did in 2007. – MarketingSherpa’s “E-Mail 2008: Top 10 Research Findings and Practical Ways to Increase E-Mail Performance” (2008)
eMarketer predicts that spending on email marketing will grow by 5.1% in 2008, up 46% over 2007′s growth rate. – eMarketer (September 2007)
38% of companies with a large in-house list say that their email budget exists as a part of interactive (online) marketing budget. – MarketingSherpa “Email Marketing Benchmark Survey” (November 2007)
33% of companies with a large in-house list say that their budget has no separate line item for email. – MarketingSherpa “Email Marketing Benchmark Survey” (November 2007)
US spending on email advertising will grow to $2.1 billion by 2012 from $1.2 billion in 2007. – JupiterResearch (2007)
Marketers spent $500 million on commercial email in 2007, and that the figure would rise to $1.2 billion in 2012. – Direct Marketing Association (2007)
More than one-half of US email marketing executives get 20% or less of their firm’s email budgets – StrongMail Systems and JupiterResearch’s “Maturation of Email: Controlling Messaging Chaos Through Centralization” (2007)
Email advertising spending will grow from an estimated $338 million in 2006 to $616 million in 2011, a six-year increase of 82% – but only half the rate of overall online ad spending. – eMarketer 2007
31% of B2B marketers allocate 20% or more of their total media budgets to new media platforms, compared with only 5% of B2C marketers. – B2B Magazine and NAA (August 2007)
50% of the B2B respondents planned to allocate more than 10% of their budgets to new media. – B2B Magazine and NAA (August 2007)
78% of B2C marketers and 66% of B2B marketers report that they plan to increase their new media budget. – B2B Magazine and NAA (August 2007)
Email is delivering sales at an average cost per order of less than $7, compared to $71.89 for banner ads, $26.75 for paid search and $17.47 for affiliate programs. – Shop.org, State of Retailing Online 2007 report (Sept. 2007)
Average spending on email marketing to house files was $311,196 (10% of companies’ online marketing budgets). – Shop.org, State of Retailing Online 2007 report (Sept. 2007)
51% of surveyed marketing executives worldwide said they planned to increase their email spending in the next three years. – The McKinsey Quarterly (2007)
The email marketing industry is a $3 billion industry in the U.S. in 2007 – $456 million for email-generated advertising revenue, $1.15 billion for all the technology, agency, consultant, service providers out there, and $1.35 billion for the lead-gen portion. Bill McCloskey, EmailInsider (2007)
The Direct Marketing Association (DMA) estimates that in 2007 U.S. marketers will spend $500 million on email marketing to generate $21.9 billion in sales, an 18.3% increase in email marketing expenditures over 2006. – DMA (2007)
The average amount companies spend on personnel budgets for email marketing is $182,067, up from $169,710 in 2005. – JupiterResearch “E-mail Spending and Governance 2007″ (2007)
The average number of full-time email marketing professionals remains consistent at three. – JupiterResearch “E-mail Spending and Governance 2007″ (2007)
The current average salaries have increased from $50,526 in 2005 to $63,547. – JupiterResearch “E-mail Spending and Governance 2007″ (2007)
The majority of marketers annually allocate less than $250,000 to each of the discrete email functions of acquisition, retention and creative. – JupiterResearch “E-mail Spending and Governance 2007″ (2007)
Companies with annual revenue of more than $500 million budget $406,403 for their dedicated email marketing staff. – JupiterResearch “E-mail Spending and Governance 2007″ (2007)
Companies with revenue under $500 million pay out an average of $135,065 in email marketing employees’ salaries. – JupiterResearch “E-mail Spending and Governance 2007″ (2007)
B-to-b marketers have a combined yearly expenditure of $186,077 for email marketing employees’ salaries. – JupiterResearch “E-mail Spending and Governance 2007″ (2007)
B-to-c marketers have a combined yearly expenditure of$157,462 for email marketing employees’ salaries. – JupiterResearch “E-mail Spending and Governance 2007″ (2007)
21% of all companies surveyed, spend $200,000 or more on email marketing employees’ salaries. – JupiterResearch “E-mail Spending and Governance 2007″ (2007)
70.6% of marketers surveyed who plan on using email for customer acquisition in 2007 will increase their email acquisition budget in 2007. – Datran Media Research, “The 2007 Email Marketing Survey: Looking Forward” (2007)
81 percent of respondents to Alterian’s fourth transatlantic annual survey plan to increase spending on email marketing in 2007. – Alterian (2007)