The
Initial Greeting
The initial greeting has a tremendous impact on whether a
recipient will read the rest of a communication. The tone
must match the type of communication and the type of relationship
that exists between the sender and recipient. For example,
"Hi John" is good for an email from a business to
consumer, but too casual for a message to a business recipient.
A "Dear Mr. Smith" or "Dear John Smith"
is more appropriate for a business to business communication
in email just as in a business letter.
Providing References
A very strong technique is including a reference to a specific
product or service that the recipient has either already purchased,
or that they have requested information about. Don't forget
to link directly to the page on the site that corresponds
to the product or service you are trying to sell.
Affiliation
When recipients are members of a known group or organization,
you can create a positive tie-in. When using this kind of
personalization, you must make sure that the relevancy will
be obvious for the recipient. This works particularly well
for sending partner offers, but again only as long as the
offer tightly matches the needs of the target group, and will
be perceived as relevant.
The more reliance your email marketing campaign has on your
database, the more important that it is to have the correct
data. Errors in your data can lead to your mailing showing
how poorly you know the recipient, not how well. Always have
default information to substitute in case you are missing
data. You can write your copy so that substituting this default
text maintains the flow of the narrative. For example, let's
say you plan on merging the "Company Name" from
your database into your email.
Using
default text of "your company" works well as in
"We know that XYZ Corp. can benefit from our services"
or "We know that your company can benefit from our services".
Lastly, always respect the privacy of the recipient and avoid
all sensitive information. Anything that might make the recipient
uncomfortable such as financial status or health status are
best left off limits when it comes to email personalization.
In conclusion, leverage the full power of your database to
personalize email content to individual names, histories,
likes and dislikes. In the world of direct email marketing,
one size does not fit all, so use available tools to make
your email as personal and as relevant to each person as possible.
Creative
Segmentation
If you look at the overall behavior of all of your website
visitors, you'll be inundated with a ton of information. Trying
to distinguish and identify patterns among such a large group
is xtremely difficult, if not impossible.
If you segment or divide your users into logical groups and
then compare and contrast how they behave and what they do,
you'll have more accurate, actionable information that actually
means something. Segmenting your website visitors allows you
to develop a clearer
overall picture of your site's performance. If the metric
you're trying to measure is how many people buy a particular
product, it makes sense to measure that within the context
of how many people interacted with the site in a meaningful
way.
Since prospects and customers are always more likely to respond
to messages that match their interest sets, it makes sense
to chop the database into smaller, segmented slices based
on preferences and past behaviors, making email messages as
relevant as possible to each group. You may use historical
data to apply what you know about the likes and dislikes of
your target market segments, and develop your messages and
offers to fit.
How
Often And When to Mail?
Email marketing is a powerful yet inexpensive way to make
contact with customers and prospects. Depending on whom you
are trying to touch, there may be certain times of day, or
days of the week, when the recipient may be more responsive
to your message. In addition to specific timing for your email
marketing campaigns, the frequency and the number of times
to send can all play a big role in helping to improve your
results.
When to Email?
For a mailing to business recipients, sending midday from
11 AM through 3 PM is generally the best time. Sending a message
earlier in the day can result in a higher risk of the message
getting lost in the rush to prepare for morning meetings.
Send it too late in the day and it may end up quickly deleted
before the recipient leaves for their commute home.
On the other hand, when mailing to consumers, 5 PM through
8 PM is the best time. People tend to check their personal
email when they get home from work or after dinner. Most consumers
are too busy getting ready for work in the morning to read
their email. Like the time of the day, different days of the
week can affect your results as well. The best days to contact
businesses are weekdays except for Monday and Friday. Monday
has proven to have too many meetings to reach decision makers,
and on Friday, most people would prefer to leave early before
the rush hour than receive your email, no matter how exciting
the email and offer may be.
Consumers are more likely to spend more time on the Internet
on weekends, and hence have more time to consider your offer.
One observation is that since many people tend to check their
personal email at various points throughout the day, selecting
a specific time to hit your target group while they are online
is much more difficult.
Avoid Mailing During Holidays
During the holidays, people tend to be away from their computers
and don’t check their email regularly. This means they
may get your message when they return together with a ton
of other mail that has piled up during the holidays. Chances
are all but the most important messages will be deleted in
a rush without a second look.
Frequency of the Email
Sending email too often can be annoying, resulting in recipients
asking to be removed. Don't send often enough and you may
be forgotten when the recipient is finally ready to buy. Generally,
once every 2-3 weeks is best. A few exceptions are a daily
newspaper or a time-dependant offer like a seminar invitation.
Sending three variations of the same offer to the same recipient
is a good way to improve response rates. You should never
send the exact same offer more than once. Otherwise you risk
the recipient thinking that it’s just another copy of
the same email and deleting it. If a recipient has not responded
by the third attempt, they are not going to respond at all,
either because it’s the right offer/wrong time, or the
wrong offer altogether.
Following-Up
It is important to follow up at least once after an initial
offer. Many times it has been observed that a number of recipients
will click through on the first mailing only after receiving
a second mailing. You cannot wait too long to send a follow-up
message or they may have forgotten about the original offer.
Follow-up contact is recommended 1-2 weeks after the original
offer is sent.
Refrain
from Spamming
The proliferation of abusive email marketing has dramatically
changed the landscape for anyone with an email address. Legitimate
marketers now not only have to work harder to obtain a positive
response for a campaign, but they also have to avoid a negative
response and all this while trying to avoid getting filtered
right out of the inbox before recipients even see your message.
Make sure you have permission to communicate with every person
on your lists. Many spam emails are now claiming "you
signed up for the XYZ list" when in reality there is
no existing relationship. If someone has indeed opted-in to
your list, make sure they understand when and where this took
place. If their relationship is with a third party that you
are partnered with, make sure to spell that out instead.
You may be better off with a partner sending on your behalf,
so as to avoid any confusion about exactly why the recipient
is being emailed. Once you've crossed the line with a recipient
by spamming, there is usually no going back. The same ability
of email marketing to directly reach recipients, can inadvertently
offend them. Like the difference between using a chainsaw
to cut up a fallen tree versus accidentally severing your
own limb, email marketing requires both care and knowledge
to use correctly. Make sure you stay on the correct side of
the line, and you can put that power to work and start improving
your bottom line results.
Avoid Looking Like Spam
These days, many people’s email inboxes are protected
by some sort of spam filter. The purpose of the filter is
to block spam email from arriving in the user’s inbox.
One of the methods used by spam filters is to identify certain
words, known as “spam triggers”, found within
your message. If your email contains too many spam triggers,
it will automatically get deleted before reaching your subscriber’s
inbox.
Here’s a few frequently used spam trigger words: money
back, order today, cards accepted, order now, extra income,
money-back guarantee, for free, 100% satisfied, special promotion,
check or money order. To avoid having your message automatically
blocked, check your message content first BEFORE sending it186
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