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    Uber Emails and how they can improve

    I'm a copywriter and tend to notice when people are screwing up on their email.

    This time I've noticed someone who has room to grow: UBER. 

    Love the service.

    Love the company.

    Meh on the emails.  

    I pulled a big list of the emails Uber has sent me since I signed up for Uber in July 2013 when I needed a looong ride from the Seattle airport to the suburbs:

    Uber email frequency

    Of all these emails, the only inherently interesting emails I really get are when they send my receipt.

    The receipt email is great because it's all about ME!  I even save them in a special expenses folder.

    These receipt emails are inherently helpful to me:

    uber-receipt

     

    But if you take a look at some of the other Uber email marketing attempts, they're not inherently interesting:

    uber-email-5-star

    This email I thought was actually on the higher-end of being interesting, but it fell flat.

    Problems with this email:

    • Doesn't particularly teach you anything useful.
    • There was a chance to tell a good emotional story, but it seemed like someone at Uber "wanted to keep the email short" and cut it off.  It lost all the emotions because it was so short.  (Guy gives ride to another guy to jump-start his car.  BFD).  If there's a great story to tell, don't worry about the length.  Keep it long if necessary to tell a good story.

     

     

    "Ok Neville, how do you KNOW FOR SURE these emails could be better??  You don't know their actual stats....."

     

    I started poking around to see if I could find some "pseudo-stats" from the emails.  Time-and-time again I found results such as this:

    Checkout this "#WomenMoveUs" campaign email:

    uber-women-email

    Ok, that's a noble cause.....but the message is all over the place and not correctly explained.

    But more troubling was that I checked the "psedudo-stats" from a lot of emails like this, and the numbers were surprisingly low for some of them....like the view count on the YouTube video from the email:

    Uber email video count

    That video is 4+ months old and barely has any views for a company on the size of Uber.

    Even if this video was only sent to Uber subscribers in Seattle, this number still seems jokingly-small for how much effort must've been put into that campaign.

     

    So how can we make Uber emails better....and actually get people to use the service more?

    Let's play a simple thought-experiment:

    Let's pretend you have been named Uber's VP of Email Marketing Growth, and you have to get people ACTUALLY READING the Uber emails or else Travis Kalanick will bitch-slap you.

    How would we do this?

    I think the key point is to make Uber's emails inherently interesting.  This means writing about topics such as:

    • Showing alternate uses for Uber people may not have thought of.  This helps ME.

    • Stories of people using Uber in unique and useful ways.  This helps ME think of new ways to use Uber.
    • Cool features customers may not know of.  This helps ME understand the product better.
    • How Uber dramatically improved someone's life.  This gets ME emotionally involved.
    • A case study of how much money someone saved because they take Uber instead of owning a car.  This helps ME make decisions about my vehicle situation.

    It's very tempting to "brag" about how cool your company is, but it's far more effective to show what the services can do for THEM.

    Let's take a couple of examples.

    In the blue boxes below I've made a sample email in the same format Uber currently sends it's emails:

    [[Headline]]

    [[image]]

    [[Text]]

    This email is meant to show the email subscriber some cool ideas for using an Uber Black (they may have never even THOUGHT of using the service for these):

    "Want to roll in style?  Order an Uber Black and get a luxury car picking you up."

    Uber Black Car

    An Uber Black will only cost you 20% more than an UberX, but you get a Black Car (either Mercedes, Jaguar, BMW, or Audi) picking you up.

    An Uber Black car is great for:

    • Date nights.
    • Looking baller at the club.
    • Transporting wedding parties.
    • Picking up VIP guests from the airport in style.

    Next time you want to feel like a million bucks, order yourself an Uber Black.

     

    This email shows some cool uses about Uber XL.  A lot of people may not even know you could carry this many people in an Uber.  This pops the idea into their brain that for their next group outing, everyone could take a single vehicle:

    "Did you know you can take up to 7 people in an Uber XL?"

    Uber XL

    When you've got a group of people going somewhere and don't want to split up, just select "Uber XL" on your app. We'll send a van or SUV capable of taking 7 adults.

    A taxi will normally take only 4 passengers.  But you my friend have FAR more friends than that to shuttle around.

    • Use an Uber XL when going out on the town with a group of friends.
    • Shuttle your big family around on a rainy day.
    • Have tons of bags from shopping?  They'll easily fit in an Uber XL.

    Just select "Uber XL" when calling your Uber, and a big SUV or van will come your way with plenty of room!

     

    This email shows "unique uses" of the service.  Most people think of Uber as only "a car service kind of like a taxi."  So giving real life examples like this of "alternate uses" expands someone's view of what Uber is:

    "Uber helped us move the big stuff!"

    uber-moving

    "All of our friends live in the city and no one has a truck or car big enough to move stuff.

    We only had a couch and a dresser that needed a large van to be moved.  We selected "Uber XL" and got a Honda Odyssey van big enough to fit the couch with no problem!

    The cheapest moving service we could find was $300.......but our Uber XL trip only cost $12!  Thanks Uber!"

    Sincerely,

    Ashlee Tacohm - Happy Uber Rider

     

    This is another "alternate use" email which people may not have even realized.  A large number of teenagers are using Uber with their parents permission, this could bolster more of that use by letting parents know some crucial info:

    "Jason's new ride home from school is Uber"

    uber-bus

    Our oldest son is 15 and part of over 6 different after-school activities.

    Between 3 different kids, we end up shuttling the kids across the city.....and sometimes literally couldn't make some activities.  Thanks to Uber, we sometimes have our 15 year old grab an Uber to wherever he needs to go.

    It's comforting to know that even when swamped with errands for the other kids, he can still safely get where he needs to.

    The best part is that Uber tracks the entire trip for us.  We know where his pickup location was, drop-off point, who the driver is, and the route they took.  As parents this is a must-have for our peace of mind.  We'd never let him take a random taxi.

    Thanks to Uber Jason can be active as he wants.

     

     

    Before these email marketing campaigns, a person signed up to Uber may think of it just in this little circle:

    uber-scope

    .....but after getting a bunch of USEFUL emails from Uber, someone's scope of what the product will be FAR LARGER like this!

    uber-scope-big

     

    Now you don't have to be a genius to figure out that the person who is well-informed of all the cool uses of the product will use it more.  

    Sincerely,

    Neville Medhora

     

    P.S. Comment below with some ways YOU think you could improve the Uber newsletter, I would love to help get them more feedback!

     

     

     


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Guest Daniel

    Posted

    I, personally, am not a huge fan of email, as you could probably tell from my post. I think we all get enough email already, why add to it?

    Thanks for the response sir.

    Link to comment
    Guest Martín

    Posted

    Thanks Nev!

    I've been getting on board with longer emails, and found myself sucked into great ones.

    Do you have any posts on deciding if the story needs to be longer?

    What do you think about measurement for longer emails?

    - I'm sure click rates go down... but how do you know if the reader is engaged with the content?

    Link to comment
    Guest Martín

    Posted

    Scratch that - I"m not sure click rates go down... but i'd guess.
    Link to comment
    Guest Carey

    Posted

    Thanks Nev!

    This lesson helps me think about how I can make my emails more "inherently interesting" to my target audience(s). I have to make it about THEM!

    ~Love your stuff

    Link to comment

    Kool post Nev!

    Some great advice there - reframing "taxi" is pure krugerrands! (Uber could do with a Nev special konsult for sure)

    Also kudos for using one of the great sales tactics too... ie. me showy not telly (sure to get bumps on konversions)

    Can't wait for that Nevbox :)

    K'mon - Max

    Link to comment
    Guest Cameron

    Posted

    Ha Nev, you've given me some great new reasons to use an Uber!

    I live in South Africa, but live about 50km (~25mi) out of Cape Town, where I work. Uber recently launched UberChopper (I think that was what they called it) and I've wanted to catch an Uber Chopper into work ever since.

    I think it'll cost in the region of $1000 just for the single trip, but dammit it'll be worth it!

    Link to comment
    Guest Niloufer

    Posted

    Hi Neville,

    As a part time Uber driver and a full time student at the end of my last semester in computer engineering I was looking for a full time job to pay off my Uber sized student loan. I reached out to everyone I knew and one of my sorority sisters who was working on the "left" coast reached out to me. She said she could arrange an interview for me. We spoke on June 25th and she was leaving for a vacation and so asked me to be there on July 7th.

    I did not want to spend four car payments on a last minute ticket to LAX. I quickly packed my bag with my few belongings and took my car. I decided that I would earn money while driving for my interview. I started from Iselin, New Jersey and started picking up rides heading west.

    I took rides during the commuter hours as the money was good. There were a few times when I did not get any rides. On July 3th, I was in Fremont, CA. I earned enough money to pay for gas, motel and food. I also had enough left over for motel and food until my interview on July 7th.

    Today was my interview and my last ride as an Uber driver !

    To all my Uber driver friends all I will say is BELIEVE.

    Link to comment
    Guest King

    Posted

    Nice Neville-

    I learned something. A thought- you said you often reply to emails that you get from uber.

     

    Do you find that doing this over and over as an exercise helps you become a better copywriter? I feel like it'd be pretty good practice to take emails and pick apart what they're doing well vs what needs improvement.

    Link to comment
    Guest Dustin Hyle

    Posted

    Love the post as usual. Another possible angle could be using it as a delivery service.

    Your car isn't big enough for that TV you just bought from a discount store that doesn't have delivery.

    Your favorite restaurant is across town and you are working with your team late. You decide to order out and have your driver pick up the food for you so that your team can meet the deadline.

    Link to comment

    Ooops... I just caught your request for how I would improve these emails. Here goes:

    Macro - Focus on what makes Uber unique and better from taxi's, and other transportation public and private.

    When writing stories, try using present tense; gets the reader closer to the action.

    Example:

    "Nick just wants to collapse into his own bed after a loooong 10-hour flight from Asia.

    As arranged, Dahir meets him at the airport. They drive to Nick's car which he'd parked at his friend's place. When they get there, Nick's engine won't start. Not even a whirrr...

    Dead battery.

    Even though the trip is officially over, Dahir drives Nick to a nearby store for jumper cables, drives him back and helps get him moving again.

     

    That was July 1st, 2015. We get stories like this every day..."

    [Note: I also added some context to tweak the emotions a bit]

    Micro - Choosing better verbs - you can often replace verbs like: went, is, make, etc... with more exciting verbs. This raises the interest/excitement factor.

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Lol.....I always laugh at this, because Uber drivers you know who they are, and they're usually regular dudes and gals with jobs.

    About half the time the taxi drivers I get are HELLA SKETCHY though!

    Uber does have campaigns that show the redundant safety.

    You also hear about ONE incident, whereas there's millions of safe rides for each incident.

    But yes, they do address is.

    Thanks for pitching in Mateusz!!

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Ohhhh that's a good idea!

    Like if they're in Seattle, give a cool recommendation....and of course pimp Uber as the way to get there :)

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Lol.....this is probably true!

    And why? Because the emails are about YOU! So of course they're inherently interesting.

    Would be interesting to see the driver emails they send out, haven't seen those yet.

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    BAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHA!!!!! These were awesome!!

    I'm no longer quick to diss someone in a big marketing dept, because it's tough to pass an email through without 20 sets of eyes (and feedback) going through it.

    NevBox worthy post, you made me laugh :)

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Lawyers often WANT the language to be vague and confusing so they can twist it whichever way they want.

    In the past, every deal I've had that was SUPER CLEAR AND SUPER SIMPLE did the best and no one got screwed over.

    Complex deals often create tension.

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Bahahhaha......I bet it's actually a big team, and MULTIPLE one's at that.
    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Ohh nice, a whole craft-brew thing with Uber as the driver. I like it!!
    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Lol......I thought that one was great on so many levels :)
    Link to comment



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