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About Multivariate Tests

by Intuit Updated 2 months ago

Multivariate tests let you try out multiple variables to see how small changes to your marketing can have a big impact on your engagement. Choose what you want to test, like the subject line or content, and compare results to see what resonates the most with your subscribed contacts.

Unlike A/B tests, multivariate tests compare more than one variable type to show how multiple variables interact with each other.

This feature is included with the Standard plan or higher.

Definitions

Here are some terms you'll come across when you use multivariate tests.

  • Variable
    The element of your marketing that you want to test. Multivariate tests let you experiment with 4 variables: Subject line, From name, Content, and Send time. Each version of the variable is called a variation.
  • Combination
    Each version of your test is created from the variables you choose. If you want to test 2 From names and 2 Subject lines, we'd create 4 different combinations of your test. Combinations sent in the test phase are called test combinations.
  • Test phase
    The period of time after the combinations are sent out and we compare the results. Data collected during the test phase can be used to determine the test's winning combination automatically or manually.
  • Winner or winning combination
    The combination that performs the best. This may be automatically determined by click rate, open rate, or total revenue, or manually chosen based on the reporting data you find the most valuable.

How multivariate tests work

Set up the multivariate test

You'll choose up to 3 of 4 variables—Subject line, From name, Content, or Send time—and create up to 8 variations. We'll generate all possible combinations and send them to different sets of subscribed contacts, so no one receives more than 1 combination of your test. The combinations that your subscribed contacts receive are chosen at random and tracked solely for the purpose of choosing a winner. This means you won't be able to see which combination a subscribed contact receives.

Send the combinations to all your subscribed contacts at once if you have a small audience or if you're testing Send time. With other variables or a large audience, send your test combinations to a percentage of your subscribed contacts, and send the winning combination to your remaining subscribed contacts.

Choose winner criteria

To choose the winner, use 1 of these options.

  • Automatic: open rate, click rate, or total revenue
    Use this option to send the winning combination to your remaining subscribed contacts after a set amount of time. The winner can be determined by the highest open or click rate, or total revenue if your online store is connected to your account.
  • Manual: report statistics
    Use this option to choose the winner yourself based on reporting data or other factors that you find to be the most valuable.

Variables you can test

Here's some information on the variables you can test along with some ideas to help you get started.

  • Subject line
    Try different phrasing, sales offers, or emoji to see what gets the most attention.

  • From name
    See if your subscribed contacts are more responsive to emails coming from a person's name or from the name of your company or organization. You'll provide the From name and From email address you want to use for each combination.

  • Content
    Create different versions of your content to see what gets a better response. Use this variable to test small content changes or completely different templates.

    When you test content, you may want to better understand how successful your calls to action, links, or buttons are. Use our link comparison tool in the email report to see how your links performed in each combination.

  • Send time
    Learn when your subscribed contacts are most likely to open your emails. Since this option tests specific days and times, you must send your combinations to all of your subscribed contacts at once because the winning combination can't be sent at a past time. Instead, use this data to inform when to send or schedule future emails.

Multivariate test ideas

Here are some ways that multivariate tests can be used to compare engagement among your subscribed contacts.

  • Does including your company name in your subject line and From name increase engagement?
  • Are subscribed contacts more likely to click a linked image or linked text?
  • Should you use your personal name as the From name in combination with a subject line that has an emoji, or use your company name with an all-text subject line?
  • Will a different template increase click rate, even if text content is the same in all the variations you test?
  • Do your subscribed contacts prefer an email that contains a GIF or one with static images?
  • Are people more likely to click a link that is just colored text, or one that is styled as a button?
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