This invention is drawn to an e-mail affiliate program and process for marketing purposes. It includes software for the implementation of a system to produce e-mail marketing lists. A preferred embodiment for these lists is to supply subscribers for Internet publications commonly known as “ezines”.
In recent years, the exponential growth of the network of computer networks known as the Internet has also lead to enormous growth in the area of “on-line” advertising. One popular channel of on-line advertising has been e-mail.
Typically, entities have collected e-mail addresses from various sources, such as by manually collecting or using spiders or bots to collect e-mail addresses from news groups or auction sites on the Internet. They then broadcast or “spam” an identical, unsolicited marketing message to their collected list. Needless to say, these unsolicited messages annoy most recipients and result in very low response rates. Additionally, many recipients regard the “spam” as an invasion of their privacy. What is needed is a system that sends marketing messages only to those who “opt-in” and increases both the number of participants and/or the number of responses by offering incentives.
The present invention is drawn to software that allows an enterprise to offer cash, prizes, or incentives to webmasters or consumers in exchange for their assistance in (i) accumulating subscribers or e-mail addresses and/or (ii) getting subscribers to view advertisements or to refer associates to the program.
The subscribers (typically subscribed via their e-mail address) may subscribe for content-based subscriptions/newsletters/alerts, marketing message only-based subscriptions/mailings, and incentive-based subscriptions where the subscriber may receive incentives, such as payment in cash, program points toward prizes, discounts on products or opportunities to win sweepstakes, in exchange for responding to future e-mails and other marketing messages or content delivered through internet-enabled channels.
The present invention includes:
The software allows a consumer to sign-up to subscribe for delivery of information or content such as ezines, newsletters, alerts or marketing messages with each such delivery to be sent to the subscriber's e-mail address. Consumers may subscribe for more than one offering (i.e., co-registration).
The e-mail delivery system of the present invention includes a system that consists of software and hardware allowing the owner of a mailing list the ability to e-mail out marketing messages to their subscribers and enable them to track the responses of those messages.
Tracking of responses includes:
It is an object of the present invention to provide software that allows an enterprise to offer cash, prizes, or incentives to webmasters or consumers in exchange for their assistance in (i) accumulating subscribers or e-mail addresses and/or (ii) getting subscribers to view advertisements or to refer associates to the program.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability to reliably deliver marketing messages to millions of recipients on a periodic or demand basis.
It is a further object of the invention to store e-mail marketing information directly in a database instead of flat files or other file formats.
It is another object of the invention to import existing participant e-mail marketing information from flat files or other file formats into a new database.
It is another object of the invention to keep e-mail marketing statistics about each e-mail subscriber, including: lists subscribed (including start and end date), total number of e-mails sent to this subscriber, which ads e-mailed to this subscriber, and which ads clicked by this subscriber.
It is yet another object of the invention to keep statistics about each referring participant in an e-mail marketing program, including the number of subscribers referred and the referring (multi-level) participant.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability for e-mail marketing list creator to submit each issue's content via a web interface.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability for e-mail marketing recipients to subscribe or unsubscribe to one or more lists via e-mail via an internet, with web-based confirmation.
It is another object of the invention to provide the ability to launch list distribution for e-mail marketing via a web-based interface for one or more mailing lists, allowing administrators to specify a time to automatically launch the distribution.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability for participants to sign-up for an e-mail marketing program via a web-based interface, and indicate a referring webmaster or subscriber.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability for participants in an e-mail marketing program to check their statistics via a web-based interface.
It is another object of the invention to allow subscribers to modify their sign-up profile, including the list of information or content they want to receive.
It is another object of the invention to provide the ability to monitor the performance of the content delivery in an e-mail marketing system, including status of particular content (current status, % of content delivered, time started/stopped, etc), system throughput (number of recipients per each piece of content delivered, per day, bounced e-mails, etc.), subscription/unsubscription per day per particular content, and bandwidth usage.
It is another object of the invention to remove bogus/undeliverable addresses in an e-mail marketing system.
It is another object of the invention to provide an e-mail marketing program with real-time or batch subscribe and delete facilities via a web or an e-mail interface.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability to show ads on “public” web interfaces to the content delivery system in an e-mail marketing program (i.e., when subscribers confirm their subscription, show an ad on that page).
It is an object of the invention to provide documentation on how each component of an e-mail marketing system works.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability to test an e-mail marketing system.
It is an object of the invention to provide a web or an e-mail interface to allow e-mail marketing subscribers to retrieve ezine back issues with new ads.
It is an object of the invention to provide personalized content and ads for individual recipients, specifically selecting content based upon attributes in a subscriber database (e.g., gender, age, chosen topics, etc.).
It is an object of the invention to provide an HTML sniffer to determine if a given e-mail marketing subscriber can receive HTML e-mail.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability to add/edit/modify ads stored in a database via web interface.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability to detect fraud in an e-mail marketing program.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability to monitor e-mail marketing system CPU/memory/disk/throughput usage on an hourly/daily/monthly or other assessment period basis.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability to gather info about qmail usage via qmailanalog package.
It is an object of the invention to integrate ad responses in an e-mail marketing system with an advertising server, including the ability to track which ads a subscriber responded to.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability to send cookies to subscribers when they confirm their subscription to an e-mail marketing program and link these up with advertiser server cookies.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability to construct new (temporary) “sub-lists” from any set of e-mail marketing subscribers in the database via a web interface.
It is an object of the invention to provide the ability for content creators to automatically include ads in an issue without manually inserting lengthy code.
It is an object of the invention to keep e-mail marketing statistics about each ad e-mailed, including total times each ad e-mailed, how many times each ad e-mailed per ezine, total times each ad responded to, and total unique responses for each ad.
As used herein, the term “webmaster” refers to any entity, including an individual or publisher, who uses a website to deliver or generate new subscribers to a product or service. A “participant” refers to any user of the present invention, including a webmaster or a subscriber.
The term “click(s)” refers to any measurable response from a consumer, including, but not limited to, selection by a mouse, rollerball, pointer, stylus, jog-dial, or any other user-selection device, and/or conversions or sales resulting therefrom. The term “internet” refers to any network of networks, whether wired or wireless, including WANs and global networks such as the ARPAnet-derived network commonly referred to as the Internet and the high-bandwidth Internet2.
The terms “ad(s)” and “advertisement(s)” refer to any creative or content produced, at least in part, for advertising purposes such as branding or the promotion of products or services. The term “e-mail” refers to any messaging to a specific entity over an internet to an internet-enabled device, including, but not limited to, both ordinary SMTP-based POP3 and IMAP e-mail, instant messaging (IM), and short messaging service (SMS). The term “e-mail address” refers to any identifier of a participant that allows for delivery of messages and/or content to the participant's internet-enabled device, including, but not limited to, standard “name@domain.tld” e-mail addresses, IP addresses, and phone numbers.
The following is a rough schema of the tables required by an ezine database of the preferred embodiment. Although described below with reference to an ezine, the system is equally suited for delivery of any information or content requested by subscribers to any internet-enabled device, including, but not limited to, newsletters, marketing messages, alerts and other subscriber requested content.
The “basic” tables describe individual entities in the ezine system: users (subscribers and webmasters), ads, and the different ezines themselves. These tables do not rely on information from other tables, and so have unique primary (i.e., not composite) keys.
Each row of this table describes one subscriber's confirmation information. Each row need only persist until a subscriber has confirmed their subscription, and can then be deleted.
Columns:
Each row of this table describes information common to any participant (either subscriber or webmaster)
Columns:
Info for all participants (webmasters or subscribers)
Each row of this table describes one subscriber.
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one webmaster.
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one possible field of data we want to collect for users.
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one ezine.
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one ad that can be inserted into an ezine issue
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one advertiser
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one advertiser campaign
Columns:
The following tables are derived from information in the basic tables above. They also contain some information unique to themselves. Note that these tables could have duplicate ID keys, but will have unique composite keys.
Each row of this table describes a webmaster and a website (since a webmaster might own several different sites).
Columns:
Each row of this table describes a sign-up field to be displayed to new subscribers when they are referred by the specified website.
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one ezine that can be hosted by a given website when the website is being used by a webmaster to generate subscriptions.
Columns:
Each row is the payout for a given participant on a given date if the participant is to be paid for the subscription.
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one subscriber to a given ezine
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one mailing or issue of any ezine
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one ad's impression and click statistics for a given ezine or individual mailing of an ezine.
Columns:
Each row of this table describes one ad that a subscriber has clicked on
Columns:
The following tables are for ezines administration purposes
Columns:
Columns:
Columns:
Columns:
The software of the invention also provides various web interface tools for the ezine system, including those used by ezine administrators, webmasters, subscribers, including:
Ezine Content Creation
Distribution Administration
Stats Viewer
Subscriber Sign-Up
Subscriber Confirmation
Subscriber Ezine Change
Webmaster Sign-Up
Webmaster Stats/Admin
Conversion Utility
Bounce Remover
An example of the webmaster coding which can be provided as part of this invention is disclosed in the following JavaScript:
This is how the <form> tag is defined:
The following line is added to the form:
In operating the present invention, it is preferable to use a webmaster's account_number instead of account_name in referring_account field. This requires changes to the import script. Also, if user logs in via account_name, the system can get the corresponding number and pass that along to the webmaster-*.cgi scripts.
In a preferred embodiment, the ad server 110 provides both an ad server database 112 and a referral/payout database 114. The system also can include a separate list server 140, that maintains its own subscriber list database 142, and a separate content server 150.
Consumers, likewise at 220, sign-up and download the software they need to practice the invention from an enabling entity such as an ad server or webmaster server. Again, this sign-up can be done in any suitable manner, but is preferably accomplished through use of a web-based sign-up form or page, wherein the consumer provides the input required for the confirmation table, user table, and subscriber table, as described above. This input can also include any referring webmaster or referring subscriber information.
As participants, the webmasters and subscribers have the necessary software/code to refer, at 230, other webmasters and subscribers and this information is tracked by the ad server, at 250.
The information or content that the subscriber has opted-in to receive is e-mailed to the subscriber at 240, and the subscriber responses are tracked at 250.
The information collected is then used for purposes such as to calculate incentives and payouts for the program participants, at 260. Additionally, the ad server can analyze the collected information by categories/fields, including but not limited to, website, ezine, ad campaign, ad, ad position, subscriber (including demographics, etc.), time, etc. to improve the effectiveness of the marketing response.
As disclosed above, the present invention makes it easy to collect, manage, and communicate with consumers using e-mail and other forms of push-based messaging as the primary vehicle for communication of marketing content. The present system makes it simple to offer bounties or other types of compensation to any participant interested in referring new users into the system as well as offer a multiple tier referral system so that those participants can refer others as well. The present invention makes it possible to track the entire path of a communication and all of the actions inside of it for modeling, reporting, auditing and other analytical purposes. The system also simplifies the process for generating custom marketing communications in large capacity. The present invention simplifies the process of enabling the selection, insertion and delivery of marketing communications inside of the main communication layer and enables an administrator to easily administer all aspects of the software from an intuitive web based interface. As disclosed, it enables the systems to run self-sufficient and be monitored for maximum performance. The present invention also enables the entire system to be scaleable.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/166,690, titled “E-mail Affiliate Program and Process,” filed Nov. 20, 1999.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5721827 | Logan et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
5740549 | Reilly et al. | Apr 1998 | A |
5848396 | Gerace | Dec 1998 | A |
5937392 | Alberts | Aug 1999 | A |
6029141 | Bezos et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6663105 | Sullivan et al. | Dec 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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WO 9858334 | Dec 1998 | WO |
WO 0062879 | Oct 2000 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60166690 | Nov 1999 | US |