| The 5 Cardinal Sins of Email
Marketing
One of the most frequent questions my customers ask me is "What should
I do to make sure my email marketing campaign is a success?" My answer
is always different, depending on the client's industry, campaign goal,
and many other factors. But in today's e-marketing landscape, there are
a few pointers that stand true for any client, a few things that can really
make or break an email campaign.
You could overlook these, and you'll still have an email campaign. But
if you're stuck wondering why your email messages are yielding little to
no response, you may want to take a closer look and consider if you're
commiting any of these 5 email marketing sins:
1. When new subscribers sign up, I should treat them just like my old
subscribers.
One of the most overlooked aspects of email marketing is the welcome
message, or the message your subscribers receive as soon as they sign up
for your email list. The welcome message is your first opportunity to connect
one-on-one with your subscribers. Think of it as your first impression,
since this is the very first of, hopefully, many email messages you'll
be sending them. Of course, you want to make a good first impression: be
courteous, friendly and very mindful of your audience. Make sure to remind
them of the benefits of signing up, include links to your website and tell
your readers how to get a hold of
you if they need. It's also important to ensure the welcome message
arrives shortly (if not immediately) after the recipient signs up. So your
best bet here is to choose an email service provider that sends automatic
welcome messages to your subscribers on your behalf. Some of the top email
programs will allow you to fully customize your welcome message, so it
reads, looks and feels just like your company.
2. All my subscribers are the same, so I should just send the same messages
to all of them.
Well.. actually, no, and no. It's not rocket science: subscribers are
individuals, just like you and I. They have different references, different
habits, different personalities. Addressing your subscribers by their names
is a good start (and an easy thing to do, since most reputable email service
providers automatically insert your subscribers' names into the greeting
field). But, in most cases, this personal greeting is just not enough.
Say you own a clothing store, and you sell men's, women's and children's
clothing. John Smith is a customer, and he loves your menswear collections.
But he's busy, and he has no women or kids to shop for. So why would he
waste his precious time browsing through your specials on blouses and bibs?
It's been proven: In a recent study by DoubleClick, email users were 72%
more likely to respond to a business e-mail if its content was based on
the interests they had specified. Choose an email service provider that
allows you to set up interest groups, and then allows your subscribers
to choose which groups they want to belong to. Back to the clothing store,
you would produce 3
separate emails (men's, women's, children's) and only send them out
to the subscribers who want to read them, creating higlhy-targeted, personalized
and effective email campaigns.
3. When a reader clicks on a link from my email, it doesn't matter if
they end up on a page that looks nothing like the actual email. Um,
actually, it does matter. First-off, you want to provide a consistent image
of your brand. That's just Branding 101. You wouldn't create business cards
that look one way, letterhead that looks another way, and a store sign
that looks completely different. So why would your email marketing campaign
look nothing like your website? Chances are you already have a website,
so all you really need to do is customize your email campaign to have the
same look and feel. Many email service providers will be able to create
you a custom template that matches the exact look and feel of your website.
However, beware of the price. While some email service providers charge
at least a few hundred for this, others offer free custom templates as
part of their services.
4. My email recipients may enjoy my messages, but they don't really
want to share them with their friends.
Here's the good news: According to a January 2006 report by Sharpe
Partners, 89% of US adult Internet users share email content with their
friends, family and associates. And 75% of them forward emails to up to
six other recipients. It's called viral marketing, and it basically translates
to word-of-mouth through email (as long as you provide good content, an
essential aspect of any email maketing campaign). Some email service providers
have taken this insight into consideration, so they
have integrated the all-important "Forward to a Friend" feature in
every email you send. A few email providers will even go a step further,
and allow you to track which subscribers are forwarding your messages,
so you can get a true glimpse at your "brand ambassadors" (and maybe offer
them some extra perks).
5. After I send out my email campaign, there's nothing left for me to
do.
If you look at it that way, you're really missing half the process,
and jeopardizing the success of your future campaigns. Here's why: any
reputable email marketing program will include campaign tracking and reporting.
These allow you to view how many of your messages were opened, which bounced
back, which links were clicked on, and, with some email providers, exaclty
which recipients clicked on each link. This data not only converts email
marketing into an incredible lead generation tool, but it also allows you
to learn more about your subscribers. So if you operate a travel agency,
and you see nobody clicked on the Mexico vacation link, but 200 readers
clicked on the New York vacation link, you'll know next time to place a
greater focus on New York vacations. You could even send a follow
up campaign to those 200 readers with a special offer for a New York vacation
upgrade. That's lead generation and a highly-targeted upsell in one shot.
Are you taking advantage of
these?
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