Business

How to Get Positive Response from your Email Marketing

Email marketing is a great, inexpensive way to reach the people on who will be your business client. If done correctly, this type of marketing will take your business to the next level and bring great returns for years to come. Here are the most important things you need to do to improve your email marketing and get a positive response from your email marketing

 
Are your emails getting opened? Before we get there, it might be good to know if you’re even tracking your email open rates. If not, start doing so immediately. Your email marketing provider should have these statistics available for you, and you should definitely start paying attention. Once you determine your rates, you’ll probably want to improve them.

 
There are several reasons why your emails might not be getting to the inbox of your prospects and/or not being getting opened. The following are what you need to avoid so as to get a positive response from your email marketing

 
Avoid SPAM words

If your emails contain a lot of SPAM related words (such as free, cheap, %, work-from-home, click-here, discount, coupon, special offer, limited time), chances are slim your prospects are even getting them. SPAM filters are becoming more and more sensitive, and they can remove your email before it even gets to the inbox. Try to avoid words that might sound like SPAM, even if you think you’ll be safe this time.

 
Subject Lines and Sender

Once your email gets through the SPAM filters, your readers have to decide whether or not to open it. The subject line and “from” address will be big factors in leading them to make that decision. Make sure that your subject lines are intriguing, but that they don’t over promise. Consumers have been surprised by companies promising the world and not delivering. Avoid sensational subject lines that claim “800% increase in sales” or “I lost 200 pounds in 1 week.” Besides being unbelievable, these subject lines probably wouldn’t make it past the SPAM filters.

 
Be real, be convincing, be a little mysterious. Subject lines are only half of the equation. Be sure that the “from” field is full of useful information, too. Typically, your company name is a good way to ensure recognition and trust. Personal names work too, provided that they are recognizable. Don’t insert a name that your prospects or customers won’t recognize. Avoid using “noreply” or “systems” addresses – these are not at all personal and are less likely to be opened.

 
Send Relevant Content

When you send an e-mail, make sure the content is of value to your prospects. A valuable email could contain a special offer that appeals to the buyer, useful educational content, entertainment or content that gives requested information. Emails should also be sent to current lists. And your marketing isn’t relevant to people who didn’t ask for it. Don’t use outdated lists, purchased lists or lists that aren’t yours…that is a sure-fire recipe for SPAM complaints and poor open rates.

 
Frequency

Sending out too many emails will make you a nuisance that ends up in the trash bin almost immediately. Waiting too long in between emails might cause your prospects to forget you, and will also land your “unrecognizable” email in the trash bin. Find a happy medium where you can stay in touch with prospects without bombarding them with daily emails. But the only way to know how often you should be sending is to ask your contacts. You may be in an industry where they want an email a day. Or maybe once a week is appropriate. Take a survey and find out what your contacts are looking for.

 
Make Sure Your Emails Are Interesting

Your emails should be interesting. This starts with the subject line, but it also includes the headline, design, and content. It is important to be personal – think of your target audience as if they were sitting in a room with you. Be yourself, and be different. You have to differentiate yourself from the other emails sitting in that inbox. You don’t have to include everything in the email. Build anticipation by offering a brief explanation and then sending them to a landing page, blog post, product page or other destination that can give them more information.

 
If you are promoting an event, build anticipation by sending reminder emails or emails that prepare your prospects for the big day. Send a little bit at a time and gain their trust by offering valuable information each time. To get your contacts looking forward to more emails, try this technique: – Tell them you’re sending them a gift in the mail…so keep an eye out.

 
Then when that gift arrives, you can bet your contacts will be looking forward to the next email from you – to see what other surprises you have in store. Your content should also walk your customers down the path towards sales. Everything you write should help the prospect get answers, clarify misconceptions, climb over stumbling blocks and otherwise help them arrive at your product/service, ready to buy. For an in-depth look at how to accomplish this, read our previous posts on copywriting

 
Use Permission-Based Marketing

Prospects need to opt-in in order to receive email communications from you. This is called permission-based marketing, and it is crucial if you want to do it the right way. When a prospect opts-in to your list, he/she should know what to expect from your future communications. Tell them if you are going to be sending weekly tips, occasional promotions or daily offers. Be sure to spell out both the frequency and content matter of your future emails. It is also important to allow your prospects to easily opt-out of communications when they desire. Allow them to manage their data, including the option to stop receiving all communication.

 

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