Feature Article
by Corey Rudl
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Seven Steps To Guaranteeing Your E-mail Promotions Generate
The Clicks, Hits, and Sales You Need!
Thanks to e-mail, online business
owners have the option of instant and repeated communication
with an audience of potential clients and previous customers.
Not that this is news to you. You're already well-aware that e-mail
gives you the power to contact people again and again, promoting
your products, your service, your web site, whatever you like…
for FREE!
Unfortunately, too often this power
goes to the heads of newbie marketers. And this is where the trouble
begins… and their business ends!
A poorly designed e-mail campaign
is a dangerous thing. You can enrage 90% of your e-mail list…
you can be accused of spamming... your ISP can cancel your account…
and the list goes on!
If you have any pride in your business
whatsoever, then I suggest that you consider the information I’m
about to present you with very carefully. I’m about to share with
you the key steps that you'll need to follow to guarantee
the success of any e-mail marketing promotions you send...
| Step
1: |
E-mail a
"targeted" list of people who will be interested
in your offer. |
Perhaps the most critical step in guaranteeing the success
of your e-mail promotions is that you e-mail a targeted list
of opt-in subscribers who have specifically requested to receive
information on a particular topic from you. You'll be wasting
your time and energy if you don't.
Remember that your job is NOT to sell your product to everyone.
Not everyone wants your product. Focus your energy on the people
who do! Those who have opted-in to your mailing list, your customers
and leads, and individuals who have requested information from
your autoresponder are all excellent prospects!
| Step
2: |
Personalize
each and every e-mail. |
People
are more likely to read (as opposed to delete) e-mail that addresses
them personally.
For example, by sending your subscriber
"Bob Smith" an e-mail that presents his e-mail address
directly in the "To:" field, instead of the BBC (blind
carbon copy) field, Bob will know that he has given you his e-mail
address. He'll be less likely to assume you're some spammer or
scam artist trying to sell him another widget he doesn't need.
And by addressing the e-mail "Dear
Bob" as opposed to "Dear Everyone" in the salutation,
Bob automatically assumes that you know him, making him even
more likely to read your e-mail.
In various tests that we have done,
we have discovered that personalized e-mail increases the response
we receive by a drastic 64%! So
I would advise you not to underestimate the power of this seemingly
simple technique!
| Step
3: |
Write benefit-oriented
subject lines. |
When
doing e-mail promotions, your subject line can literally make
or break your success -- a critical point that the
majority of marketers miss.
Think about
all of those e-mails you're probably getting on a daily basis
with subjects like:
"MAKE
$75,000 EVERY WEEK GUARANTEED!"
"EXPLOSIVE
STOCK PICK AT $0.45!!!!"
"newsletter"
"THIS
IS NOT SPAM!"
Do you open
these e-mails? Because I know I sure don't! The subject line makes
it obvious that the e-mail is spam... that it's from someone you
don't know... or it doesn't offer a clear benefit that
makes you want to read it.
Now let me
ask you a question: How many of your legitimate newsletters and
e-mails are mistakenly deleted by your subscribers who read your
subject lines and assume it must be spam! How many potential
sales could you have saved simply by rewriting your
subject lines?
Obviously
I can't answer these questions for you. However, I CAN teach you
how to write subject lines that will compel your subscribers to
open and read any e-mail you send them.
When you write
your subject lines, you basically have 3 choices:
- You can
make an announcement or give news (e.g.,"IMC shows
subscribers how to write killer subject lines").
- You can
make the reader curious (e.g., "IMC gives subscribers
this secret marketing strategy...").
- You can
emphasize how the reader will benefit from opening
your e-mail (e.g., Discover tips for writing subject lines
that will increase your sales).
Out of these
3 techniques, you will always be most successful if you write
subject lines that state a clear benefit and tell the reader
exactly how they are going to save money, save time, make their
life easier, etc., by opening and reading your e-mail.
If you can
state a benefit AND create curiosity (e.g., Discover this proven
marketing strategy that will increase your sales!), so much the
better!
But again,
the key when writing subject lines is to emphasize benefits by
considering your product or service from your customers' point
of view...
- How will
they benefit from taking the time to read your e-mail?
- What
will they learn?
- Is your
product/service going to save them time?
- Is it
going to save them money?
- Or is
it going to improve their lives in some way?
Write subject
lines that emphasize these benefits and I guarantee that you'll
dramatically increase the number of subscribers who open
and read your e-mail.
| Step
4: |
Your entire
sales pitch should be summarized within the first paragraph. |
The first paragraph should make reference
to your headline, building further excitement and motivating
your potential customer to continue reading. Just because
you've convinced them to open your e-mail with a compelling subject
line doesn't mean that you’re home free! You need to build more
excitement and make them curious about what's to come!
Again, the key is to focus on
benefits!
| Step
5: |
Make it easy
to read! |
Did
you know that how you format your e-mail can literally make or
break the success of your e-mail campaign? It's
true... If
you make mistakes formatting your e-mail to your customers and
subscribers, you risk looking unprofessional, destroying
your credibility, and having your hard work tossed in the trash
without ever being read!
After all,
why should readers take your offer seriously if you don't know
how to format an e-mail correctly?
Remember that
different e-mail programs will display your e-mail differently.
Plus, different people will have their personal program set to
read their incoming mail in different fonts, different sizes,
different widths, etc...
So to ensure
that, on average, readers have a similar view of any correspondence
you send them, follow these simple formatting tips for text e-mail...
- Use
a good text editor.
As wonderful
as Microsoft Word may be, it is NOT the tool to be using when
formatting e-mail copy. To skip the quirky formatting mistakes
and avoid the frustrating comedy of errors Word frequently
generates in a situation like this, I highly recommend using
a good text editor.
My personal
favorite is UltraEdit-32, which you can download for a free
45-day trial at http://www.ultraedit.com/downloads/index.html
(Registration is $30.)
However,
Notepad and Wordpad, which come with Windows and can be found
under Programs>Accessories in your Start menu, will do
the trick as well.
- Set
your line length to 65 characters.
Have you
ever received an e-mail that looked like this?
>
You might be wondering how anyone could
>let this
> happen. After all, wouldn't they notice
>that their e-mail has been broken up into numerous different
> lines,
>each a different length?
... I'm
sure you've probably received e-mail that looks like this
before. It's not only hard to read, it's annoying!
Fortunately,
it's a mistake that's easily avoided by setting your line
length to 65 characters (or by setting your right indentation
to 2.5"). The
typical default width your readers' e-mail clients will open
to is 65 characters, so by setting your line length to this
width, you'll avoid having long lines of text cut off and
displayed like in the example above.
- Use
hard carriage returns (i.e. press "Enter") at the
end of each line.
Some older
e-mail clients don't actually have "word wrap,"
so to avoid having your e-mail appear as one long line of
text that readers will need to use the horizontal scroll bar
to view, manually press "enter" at the end of each
line (i.e. every 65 characters).
- Use
a fixed-width font.
When formatting
your e-mail, do so in a fixed-width font like Courier that uses
an equal amount of space to display each character.
For example,
This is
Courier.
This is Arial.
As you can
see, Courier consistently uses the same amount of space to display
each character, while Arial varies in width. This is important
because the majority of e-mail clients use fixed-width fonts
as their default (the exception being Eudora, which defaults
to Arial).
While an
e-mail formatted in a fixed-width font typically looks good
when displayed in a font like Arial, an e-mail formatted in
a font like Arial looks terrible displayed in a fixed-width
font. By formatting your e-mail in a fixed-width font, you'll
ensure that it looks good no matter what font your reader's
e-mail client defaults to.
- Spell
check and proofread everything!
While
I'm the first to admit that everyone makes mistakes now and
then, there is absolutely no excuse for the blatant errors
I see made in many e-mail promotions I receive. Remember that
spelling mistakes and poor grammar make you look unprofessional
and damage your credibility.
So before
clicking "Send," take that extra minute to spell
check your work and have a couple of other people read it.
You may save yourself some embarrassment... and prevent lost
sales!
- Keep
paragraphs 4-5 lines in length -- no longer!
By keeping
your paragraphs 4 to 5 lines in length, you ensure that your
e-mail is easy to read. The more white space you use, the
better. Long, never-ending sentences that run on for 8 lines
get very difficult to follow, causing readers to become frustrated
and delete your e-mail.
- Test,
test, test!
Before
sending your e-mail to your entire list, take an extra 15
minutes to test how it looks in a variety of e-mail clients
such as:
As well as in a couple of web-based e-mail clients such as:
By setting up these different "test accounts," you'll
give yourself the opportunity you need to fix any problems and
guarantee that all of your subscribers receive the same professional
looking e-mail.
| Step
6: |
Give your
subscribers the opportunity to "opt-out" of your
mailing list. |
At the end
of all e-mail you send, it's extremely important that you give
people the opportunity to opt-out of (i.e., be removed from) your
e-mail database. This is really, really important! I simply can't
overemphasize the importance of giving your customers and subscribers
the opportunity to be removed from your mailing list.
I know a lot of e-business
owners are afraid to include an unsubscribe link at the bottom
of their e-mails, but I would argue that those people who want
to be removed from your list (a) have no interest in what you're
selling anyway, and (b) obviously don't want to buy from you.
Why would you anger them by not giving them a legitimate opportunity
to be removed from your mailing list?
| Step
7: |
Test your
e-mail on a small percentage of your opt-in list. |
This is one of the most important
techniques that I teach, yet so few people actually do it. When
trying to increase the response to your offer, you want to test
the headline or opening paragraph, your offer, and your pricing
(too cheap can be just as bad as too expensive). And be sure that
you test these three things one at a time so you can accurately
measure the results.
Testing your offer and your sales
copy is the cheapest, most efficient way to maximize your sales!
In fact, this should be an ongoing part of your business. Instead
of sending your latest promotional letter to your entire customer
base, try sending it to a small test group. Doing a trial run
will allow you the opportunity to iron out any kinks, saving you
time, money, and hassle!
Final
Thoughts:
Given the sheer volume of spam and unsolicited junk e-mail that
consumers now receive on a daily basis, it comes as no surprise
that those who are successful with their e-mail campaigns carefully
consider and test each one of the steps we've discussed above.
The three biggest mistakes you
could make with your e-mail campaigns are:
- Not
taking precautions to be sure that your legitimate e-mail
doesn't look like spam.
- Not
e-mailing a targeted list of opt-in subscribers; people who
have asked to receive information from you and who have give
you permission to contact them.
- Not
testing!
E-mail has
made contacting thousands of your customers and subscribers at
the click of a button easy -- almost too easy, in fact. And personally,
I think this is what gets many new marketers into trouble.
The bottom
line is that, today, a successful e-mail campaign requires strategic
planning. It won't matter if you've spent a year writing your
copy. If you don't carefully follow the seven steps I've outlined
above, you'll be no further ahead.
A professionally
formatted and thoroughly tested e-mail makes you look like a credible
business owner who takes what you do very seriously. It invites
readers to examine your e-mail... check out your offer... and
seriously consider making a purchase.
Which basically means that, while they require a bit of extra
effort, these seven steps can easily translate into increased
sales! And I think you'll agree, there's nothing wrong
with that.
| ABOUT
THE AUTHOR: Corey Rudl is the owner of four highly
successful online businesses that attract more than 1.8 million
visitors per month and generate over $6.6 million each year.
He is also the author of the #1 best-selling Internet Marketing
course online.
To check
out his site that's JAM-PACKED WITH THE EXACT INFORMATION YOU
NEED to start, build, and grow your very own profitable Internet
business, I highly recommend visiting http://www.marketingtips.com/tipsltr.html
This guy
really knows what he's talking about! |
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