Email marketing is an inexpensive yet highly effective way to reach customers. Get the most from it by using these eight tips.
Have you ever wished you had a magic wand that would send customers your way every time you waved it? Magic wands don’t exist, but there is a tool you can make work like magic. It’s email marketing. And, it’s one of the most inexpensive and effective marketing tools available to you. If you’re not using it, you should be.If you’re using email marketing and aren’t getting the results you’d like, review your email strategy and use these tips to improve your results.
Successful email marketing starts with an understanding of who you want to reach and what it will take to make them want to do business with you.
For some businesses, that means your email marketing campaigns will consist, at least in part, of information that educates, informs, or entertains your readers to build brand familiarity and trust.
For others, it means sending existing customers notices about new products and special offers. Before you start any email campaign, work out your strategy and deliver the right type of message to your customers and prospects.
A receptive audience is a permission-based list. People you add to your list without first getting permission will ignore your email, or mark it as spam. Build a responsive list by inviting prospects to sign up for your email list at every possible opportunity.
Here are just a few suggestions:
Your target audience is more likely to give you their email address if they know what you will and won’t be doing with it. Will you be using the list to announce new products or to send out discounts and special offers to your subscribers? Or will they be getting regular emails that are educational or entertaining?
Will you be sending out an email once a month? Or once a day? The person who thought you would be sending them industry updates will unsubscribe if you barrage them with ads.
Your email marketing message is one of hundreds of email messages that hit your subscribers’ inboxes each week. To get your email opened and read, you need a compelling subject line — one that appeals to the recipient’s self-interests, not yours. You may be pleased that you will start manufacturing fashionable leather handbags with storage space for a tablet computer, and it may be something retailers want, but few will open your email if the subject line reads “MiLady Manufacturing Announces New Product Line.”
Encourage recipients to open your emails by using short, action-oriented headlines that promise a benefit or solution to a problem.
Just like direct mail or printed ads, your emails need a call to action. If your readers are expecting promotional mailings, the call to action would focus on getting the customer to make a purchase today. If your email campaign is aimed at building brand recognition and trust, the call to action would be presented along with helpful information and could urge readers to visit your website for more problem-solving tips, or call your office for a free consultation or free sample.
A Constant Contact report on email opens by device showed that in July, 2020, 60% of emails were opened on a mobile device. Pew Research Center reports that as of 2021, 97% of Americans own a mobile device of some sort. According to their research, 37% of cell Internet users go online mostly using their phones, and not using some other device such as a desktop or laptop computer.
The device a person uses to connect to the Internet (and read their email) has a big impact on what they see and read. If they open your email on their smart phone and have to scroll from side to side to read each line, or see only an X at the top of the email because a photo didn’t load, you’ve lost them.
The solution: put text at the top of your emails, and use a smartphone-friendly email template to prepare the email. Major email services offer mobile-friendly templates for their subscribers to use.
Unless you have a small or very niche list, don’t blast out the same email to everyone on your primary mailing list. The small business with one or two employees is going to have different accounting needs and interests than the small business that has 20 employees. The avid skier may have no interest in the snowboards you’re putting on special next week but may want boots for extreme skiing.
You’ll get better open rates and responses from your email marketing efforts by sending appropriate material to each group. You can ask people to indicate their preferences when they sign up for your email list. Other options might be to segment your main list by products purchased or by the number of communications you’ve sent to that particular customer.
Many businesses find that their top sources of new business are referrals and word-of-mouth. Encourage your email readers to spread the word by making it easy to share your email. Social media buttons and forward-to-a-friend links let subscribers “tell” their friends about you with a click of the mouse or the touch of an on-screen button.
And, don’t forget to include a link to subscribe to your newsletter in the newsletter itself. That will make it easy for people who receive the forwarded email to add themselves to your mailing list.
RELATED: 9 Email Marketing Mistakes to Avoid
Disclaimer: The content on this page is for informational purposes only, and does not constitute legal, tax, or accounting advice. If you have specific questions about any of these topics, seek the counsel of a licensed professional.
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