| 1. |
Start by building a permission-based list. |
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| 2. |
In exchange for contact information,
offer your customers something of value: a newsletter, a free seminar,
or more information about your products & services. |
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| 3. |
When gathering contact information, only
ask for the information you really need. Asking unnecessary questions
annoys people and may keep them from signing up. |
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| 4. |
Be sure to include a way for people to
unsubscribe in all your email campaigns. Unsolicited email or spam can
be damaging to your reputation. |
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| 5. |
Manage your contact lists so you can respond quickly and efficiently to requests for more information or to unsubscribe. |
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| 6. |
Since email addresses can change
frequently, keep your list current by carefully tracking the number of
bounce-backs or undeliverable emails after every campaign. |
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| 7. |
Be sure you have a clear and concise
privacy policy that details how you will treat your customers’ personal
contact information. Include a link to it in every email you send. |
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| 8. |
Respect the terms of your privacy policy and never breach your customers’ trust. |
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Craft your Message An interesting message that offers value is critical to the success of any email campaign. |
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| 9. |
See what others are doing. Take a few
minutes and sign up for email newsletters from competitors. Choose a
few on your favorite hobby or a topic you’re interested in too. |
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| 10. |
When you get online newsletters from
other companies, pay attention to what makes you open some and delete
others without reading. |
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| 11. |
Before you create the right message, develop a marketing strategy that addresses goals and objectives. |
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| 12. |
Use email marketing to accomplish what
email does best: increase revenue, generate leads, strengthen customer
relationships, increase website traffic, and build brand awareness. |
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| 13. |
Get the length right. A good rule of
thumb is the more frequent your emails, the shorter they should be.
People will open a short "Tip of the Day", but almost no one wants to
get something longer on a daily basis. |
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| 14. |
Keep the message personal and casual.
Think like a customer and write in a conversational tone. People want
to see a little humanity behind the corporate mask. |
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| 15. |
People respond best to messages written
by one particular person at a company who they can get to know over
time. This is part of building relationships. |
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| 16. |
Personalize the ‘From’ part of your email and be clear who the email is from. |
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| 17. |
Avoid using ‘FREE’ in your subject line since it has been abused by spam marketers and arouses suspicion. |
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| 18. |
Be honest in your subject line and make
sure it reflects what’s inside. State a clear benefit that makes the
recipient open your message. Only messages that seem relevant and offer
value will be opened. |
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| 19. |
Choose a subject line that grabs your
reader’s attention. Avoid vague content like "Our September Newsletter."
Instead, use an interesting topic or headline from the newsletter, such
as "Best Practices for Email Marketing" or "Inside: Exclusive Interview
with Tiger Woods!" |
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| 20. |
Encourage forwarding right in your
subject line. The Association for Interactive Marketing (AIM) always
adds "Pls. Forward" to the ends of their newsletter subject lines and
they report it's more than doubled their circulation! |
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| 21. |
Personalize each message and watch response rates climb. At the very least, always include the recipient’s name. |
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| 22. |
Write your messages so they appeal to
customer interests and hobbies. Ask your customers what they want to
hear about: special offers, new services, etc. |
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Choose the Right Format Once you have the right message, you need to present it in the right way. |
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| 23. |
HTML and Rich media messages that
include audio, video, and animation generate high response rates, but
it’s still important to always have a text version for people who prefer
or can only receive text. |
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| 24. |
Always include a hyperlinked table of
contents at the top of your message so people can click or scroll right
to the section of their choice. Usability studies show most people won't
look beyond the first screen if there's not something immediately
interesting to them. Give them a reason to scroll down! |
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| 25. |
Use bullet points and lots of white space for plain text messages. |
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| 26. |
Minimize the use of ALL CAPS and italics as they are hard to read. |
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| 27. |
To make it easy for readers to scan your message, keep columns of copy narrow. |
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| 28. |
Test your messages through a number of email accounts to make sure they look good in all mainstream email clients. |
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| 29. |
Consider writing your message in the
same format it will appear on your customers’ screens so you can see
what they will see. For text-based emails set your font to 10 point
Courier going 60 characters (five inches) across. |
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| 30. |
Unless your newsletter is unusually
long, recipients will probably read it on their screen. Your job is to
make this as easy as possible. For headlines, use a larger, bold font
that can be scanned the quickly. |
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Look for Measurable Results Being
able to measure your email marketing efforts is key. Measuring allows
you to understand what works and what doesn’t so you can improve each
and every campaign. |
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| 31. |
Gathering results through trackable
links and having access to real-time reports will help you understand
what works and what doesn't. |
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| 32. |
Test using different subject lines,
copy, offers, and creative designs, etc. Use real-time results to see
which get the best response rates. Consider sending out an A/B test to
two sub-segments of your email list to see which is more successful.
Refine, and then send the more successful email to your larger email
base for better results. |
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| 33. |
When running a series of email campaigns, tweak your message as soon as you understand the results of your first campaign. |
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| 34. |
Above all, take the time to understand
email as a marketing medium. Always analyze results and think of new
ways to provide value to your members and customers. |
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