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Constant Contact's expanded online marketing platform is designed to help small business owners, side-hustlers, nonprofits and individuals do more and grow more than ever before.
Mailjet has offices worldwide (including Paris, New York, London and Berlin) and operates with 100k+ clients and partners across 150 countries.
It is a great product, with great customer support. I liked the way that they walked me through everything when i first started using it.
It's very difficult to cancel the account, you can not delete your data online, also they will argue with you to cancel. No refunds are given if you are unhappy with the products.
Constant Contact is the perfect software for helping you to stay in contact with those important people that can have a positive impact on our organization.
Lack of responsiveness by vendor to problems. Feedback and problem reports get an autogenerated email.
Its easy to use once you get the hang of it, its user friendly, its cost effective, and their customer service is excellent.
I called the following Monday to cancel my service and they refused to refund my subscription cost even though no service had been provided.
I like the customer service. How they set up a call with you to determine what your objectives are and how they can help you succeed in your goals.
Email editor shortcomings: no way to create reusable items to be used across emails; hard to get to html when editor features are insufficient or inaccurate.
Mailjet helps make this easier, and helps get our emails to our customers, and consistently offers excellent advice and functionality for making this work better both for us and for our customers.
Much of it does not work as it is supposed to. You can waste a lot of time repeating actions until the system finally reacts.
Best email-templatebuilder that is for a very good price, even when compared to the most expensive alternatives.
If you're sending large scale campaigns, it could ruin your email list size because of the lack of functionality around reengagement campaign parameters.
I like that Mailjet is very simple to use. It has a clean interface, great documentation, beautiful email templates, and we can create our custom email templates as well.
But many other good companies, they are not doing this. Your problem is your problem, don’t try to blame someone else.
Excellent reporting, easy to use design tool for creating marketing emails. Brilliant well thought out developer API, clear documentation & good daily free mail amounts.
Horrible customer service and horrible review policies.
Stephen: Hi, my name is Stephen. I'm the CEO of Kayak Capital, and I give Constant Contact, a four out of five rating. Before using Constant Contact, I considered MailChimp as an alternative. The reason I chose Constant Contact, it's more widely recognized as a professional service, and it also integrated with my CRM more easily. Integration with Constant Contact was relatively easy. They worked directly with my CRM to integrate it and to upload my contacts into Constant Contact. My recommendation would be to work with Constant Contact to customize your output, to take off the constant contact name off the bottom, that's doable if you pay an additional fee.
Kathryn W.: Hi, my name's Kathryn. I'm the CEO of an online marketing company, and I give Mailjet a one out of five. Originally, we were with Sailthru as our ESP, because we're sending a volume of emails, sending around a million emails twice a day. We met Mailjet at an expo and it looked like they could do everything that Sailthru could do and for a lot less money, so we switched over to Mailjet. At the same time, we considered Selligent and making our own emails and sending them with AWS, which would mean a lot more work on our part but would have been more of a cost saving, but instead we decided to use something like Mailjet that allows you to build the emails in there and send them from the same place. We ended up choosing Mailjet mainly for a cost saving. They also seemed to have some really good editing software that meant you could lock down certain parts of a newsletter you were building and then allow other editors to come in and just change certain parts of it that weren't locked down. They also seemed to have very good reputation in terms of deliverability and we were really assured at the time that we were going to be really well looked after. I have to say, the salesperson was fantastic at his job, so that's what made us leave Sailthru through and go to Mailjet in the first instance. As with any software, when you change it internally, there's a bit of learning to be done. Especially with email service providers, they all seem to have their own language. Sailthru has Zephyr and Mailjet similarly had their own coding language for their emails. That's really to make it so the HTML is lighter and that the emails get into your inbox. There was a bit of learning from the developers' side to learn the new language that they were going to be coding in to make these emails, but in terms of integration for the newsletter builders and the content creators, that was quite straightforward. If you've ever used something like MailChimp, you wouldn't have a problem with using Mailjet. It's a very similar user interface. For anybody considering moving to Mailjet, I think it's really important that you consider how much control you want to be able to have over your own lists. Something very strange that Mailjet does is if they get a soft bounce too many times from somebody on your list, an email contact, then they blacklist them. What we found, after several months of being with Mailjet, is it all of a sudden our email list was shrinking at a massive rate. Now, with someone like Sailthru, they continue to ping an email address because sometimes people, their email inbox is full or perhaps the email is just being throttled by their internet service provider, which we see with some of the smaller domains. Then all of a sudden on switching to Mailjet, we were seeing the situation, literally, we're talking about 30,000 users a month, which for anybody who knows how difficult and how costly it is to get somebody to sign up to an email list and especially an engaged list, we were losing these engaged people really quickly. I think if what you're looking for is something that's automated, maybe you want to send transactional email automatically, you can set up different web books and say, "When somebody signs up, send them a welcome email," maybe when they purchase something you want to send them a receipt and another transactional email, I think it would still be suitable for that. If you're using email as your primary source of income for e-commerce or email marketing, I would seriously look at using something that's specifically designed for that and not Mailjet.
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