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Product Talk

Dave Cormier Director of Product Marketing

June 2008 Archives

Roles in Message Studio

If your company has multiple staff members working on your email marketing programs, you are probably interested in learning more about Message Studio's role capabilities. Roles can streamline your work flow and insure that individuals working on your email only have access to the functions relevant to them. This is especially important for those companies that are governed by security processes or by compliance regulations.

In Message Studio, a role is a collection of permissions that is assigned to a user. A role belongs to a single organization, but is available across that organization’s sub-organizations.

Message Studio includes four pre-defined roles: Approver, Content Manager, Data Manager, and Mailing Manager, each with different permissions across the functional areas of the application.

role_sm.gifA description of each in included below.

  • Approver - An approver can edit, view, and approve message templates and mailings
  • Content Manager - A content manager can create, edit, delete, and view message templates, attachments, and content blocks
  • Data Manager - A data manager can create, edit, delete, and view internal data sources, external data sources, targets, suppression lists, and seed lists
  • Mailing Manager - The mailing manager has all permissions pertaining to a mailing

But those are not the only roles you can have. Message Studio allows you to create roles using any of the permissions that are available for each functional area. Below, you can see all of the different permissions that are available.

permissions_sm.gifYou can create roles specific to your business or based on the needs of different types of users. For security reasons, only super-users and administrators can create and edit roles, so you don't have to worry about unwanted roles popping up or existing roles changing beyond their intended scope.

Posted by: Ivan Chalif at 11:58 AM
Categories: Administration , Application

Sending Content in Multiple Languages

If you are a marketer (or support a marketing team) that needs or wants to send emails in multiple languages which use different character sets, you can use Message Studio or EAS to accomplish that. EAS provides a bit more flexibility, since it allows users to set both the incoming and outgoing character set for an email template, but for most users, setting the outgoing character set is sufficient to meet their needs.

You may be saying right now, "Ivan, you're right, I HAVE been wanting to send emails in multiple languages, but I don't know how." Well, let me get you started. There are few concepts you need to understand so that yo can make the right choices about how to best create your content and configure your mailings.

For starters, let's differentiate between a language and a character set:

  • A language is the set of characters, signs, symbols, sounds of a communication system. It includes both syntax, semantics and phonetics that guide how the components of the language are used. English is a language; so are Hebrew, Italian, German, Spanish, Japanese, Tlingit, and Chinese, just to name a few of the approximately 7000 living languages.

  • A character set is a collection codes that reference characters/symbols of a language so that they can be used to display/process/store those characters/symbols electronically (typically in computer programs and in telecommunications. The character set is only a mapping; it does not contain any logic for how the characters are used.
Now that you are an expert in languages and character sets, let me clarify how you can send messages using different character sets. Like any mailing, you need content. In Message Studio, content has to be imported into the system in either ASCII or UTF-8.

ASCII is a character set comprised of the characters commonly found on keyboards in the United States. It is one of the most basic character sets and acts as sort of a minimum requirement for character sets. It supports most latin-based languages, but does lack some of the special characters of some languages.

UTF-8 is a super-set of characters from a variety of languages including single-byte characters like the ones in ASCII, as well as languages which use glyphs to represent whole words, such as Chinese. The great thing about UTF-8 is that it can be used to create content for many languages. The less great thing about UTF-8 is that it is not widely adopted in countries outside of the US and Canada.

Luckily, Message Studio (and StrongMail EAS) can both convert content from one character set to another. So, in order to send content to Chinese recipients using the Big-5 character set, you can create the original content in UTF-8, import it into Message Studio and then have Message Studio automatically send the message out using Big-5, which the email reader that the Chinese recipient uses can display properly.

The steps in the mailing work flow to do this require only a few extra clicks. When you upload the template into Message Studio, you open the ADVANCED section on the CREATE/EDIT TEMPLATE screen. You can then set the character set for both the headers and the body. When you launch the mailing, the message assembly engine will convert the characters from UTF-8 to the character set you specified and also set the appropriate header values.

edit_temp_sm.gifAs with all mailings, but especially for content in foreign languages (at least foreign to you), make sure that you test the template and the mailing. Beyond the normal testing process you may have in place, be sure to view the message using the same applications that recipients will be using. This will aid you in avoiding any embarrassments should the applications that recipients use have rendering issues that would not be evident using your normal testing environment.



Posted by: Ivan Chalif at 6:40 AM
Categories: Application , Content , International