Posts Tagged ‘emails’

10 Quick E-mail Tips to Reach Customer Inboxes

Friday, March 27th, 2009

neilphotoE-mail marketing is an effective marketing method with a very high ROI. Unfortunately, spammers and scammers have made it more difficult for legitimate senders to get their e-mails past Internet Service Provider (ISP) junk filters and into the inbox, while consumers are all too ready to hit the spam button. The good news is there are steps you can take to avoid the spam label and increase your e-mail marketing effectiveness.

1. Here are some key words to skip: Urgent, money back guarantees, and why pay more?
2. Avoid using ALL CAPITAL LETTERS and exclamation marks in your subject line and in your E-MAIL CONTENT!!
3. If something sounds too good to be true, the junk mail filters probably agree. Do not claim a “once in a lifetime opportunity” and other grandiose offers.
4. Never send out an e-mail that is one giant image. The filters will likely filter it but even if it gets to the inbox, the recipient will have no enticement to turn on images. A good balance is 60 percent text and 40 percent graphics. Do not forget the ALT text.
5. While discussing money is unavoidable, try to avoid excessive mentions of money in your e-mails as the spammers and scammers have made that hard to get through.
6. I think most of us have seen e-mails with red font, flashing objects, etc. Keep it simple to maximize your chances of getting into the inbox.
7. Do not buy a list both because this violate the terms of service of almost all E-mail Service Providers (ESPs) and because your recipients are more likely to hit the spam complaint button that is a common feature of many e-mail clients these days. More than one complaint out of each 1,000 e-mails sent is very likely to get you blocked by one or more ISPs and make it more difficult to get emails through to your best customers.
8. Do not harvest e-mails from the web to send in bulk. Not only will you run into the same problems as when you buy a list, you will also be violating the CAN-SPAM Act.
9. Keep your e-mail frequency reasonably steady to keep your sending reputation intact. For instance, if you send only once every six months the ISPs and the recipients may have forgotten about you resulting in delivery problems and spam complaints.
10. On the other hand, do not send so often that you annoy your subscribers. You probably want to send at least once per month, but you’ll need to carefully consider what volume will start to annoy your subscribers—who will unsubscribe from your list or worse, hit the spam button, sticking a label on you that can be hard to remove.

Neil Anuskiewicz is the director of business development at StreamSend Email Marketing.

Landing Page Neglect – Are You Losing Money?

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

tim_grey_cropped_brighter1.jpg In the online marketing world, a lot of time and resources are spent buying media, tracking pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns, driving organic traffic via search engine optimization (SEO), and installing and customizing web analytics software to properly track all online marketing activities.

Dedicated in-house or agency staff craft keyword lists, write ad copy and manage keyword bidding to achieve the proper profitability, cost per action (CPA) and return on investment (ROI). Copywriters adjust our sales copy to improve click-through rates (CTR).

But we’ve almost completely ignored our website and landing page. Sure, we occasionally do facelifts, or even wholesale redesigns of our sites. But these changes are rarely tested and are simply assumed to improve the situation. They are just a cost of doing business.

Missed Opportunity
In almost every other area, performance is scrutinized under a microscope as we drill down on mind-numbingly detailed reports. Once someone converts, extensive retention e-mail campaigns are set in motion to persuade visitors to deepen their level of engagement.

We worry about every single word in our e-mails as we test headlines and offers. We analyze “bounce rates,” “open rates” and “unsubscribe rates” with almost religious fervor in order to extract the last penny of revenue and profit possible over the lifetime of our interaction with someone.

Even though we spend obscene amounts of money to buy traffic, the effort devoted to the landing pages to which that traffic is sent is negligible. A couple of hours of a graphic designer’s and copywriter’s time are often all that the landing page merits. With a cursory review by the higher-ups, the landing page goes live.

Worse yet, we assume that the quality of the landing page can’t be changed, so we don’t even look for ways to improve it. We turn all of the other knobs and dials at our disposal and continue to neglect the biggest profit-driver under our control—the conversion efficiency of the landing page.

This is costing a lot of money in the form of missed opportunity. Double- or triple-digit conversion rate gains are routinely realized through engagements. Yet, there’s still a widespread perception among online marketers that their landing pages are already solid and can’t be improved through testing.

What’s Wrong With This Picture?
There are three important activities in online marketing:

• Acquisition: Getting people to your website or landing page.
• Conversion: Persuading them to take the desired action(s).
• Retention: Deepening the relationship and increasing its lifetime value.

But not all of these receive equal weight or attention in most companies.

Because of the large amounts of money spent on acquisition and retention, sophisticated systems have been created to maximize the ROI of these activities. But the efficiency of the website or landing page has been largely neglected. Many companies are beginning to understand that website and landing page conversion can have a dramatic impact on online marketing program profits. That’s where the new battleground is in the coming years.

You can meet with Tim Ash of SiteTuners as he optimizes e-commerce sites for increased revenue live at ERA’s eRetailer Summit on Monday, March 2, from 3:00 p.m.—4:00 p.m. Register here! To have your company’s website considered for a makeover, contact Ashley Cavell at acavell@retailing.org or via phone at (703) 908-1020.