Is Email Dead...
In today's world of overcrowded inboxes and spam filters, many businesses often wonder if email marketing is still worth the investment. Regardless of your industry, the right strategy and content can make the difference between mail being trashed or transformed into a profit.
So is email marketing really dead?
Email was never dead. As a marketing technique it's always generated more ROI than almost anything else. It was declared dead awhile back because social media exploded and everybody thought that was going to be the new thing.
But now even the major social media experts talk as much about building an email list as they talk about getting Facebook likes.
There are also several studies, that people actually prefer to receive commercial messages via email more than any other channel. A study also found 63% of consumers still prefer to get marketing offers via email.
Most small businesses don't have many email subscribers when they start. What's a good way to start building a subscriber list fast?
The easiest way is to start collecting email addresses is on your own site. You want to add an opt-in box, the form where people can directly enter their email address.
Consider offering an eBook, whitepaper, or some sort of incentive in exchange for your customer's email addresses. Building your list will absolutely pay off in the long term.
What about pop-ups? I've read they work, but they're really annoying sometimes.
They work beautifully, and they don't have to be annoying. I saw a case study not too long ago where a website owner saw a 1000% increase in sign-ups with a pop-up.
The trick is to delay them so they don't show in the first minute someone is on your site. Then don't show them too often--most pop-ups have a setting where you can show them only, say, every 7 days. That way your website visitors aren't getting bombarded with them. That is annoying.
Do we really have to build an email list at all? I've seen ads offering 5,000 email address for about £100. You can do that, but I really don't recommend it. Purchased lists tend to get awful results, results so bad you'll wish you had just been patient and built a list. Bought lists also get high spam complaints, which can affect the deliverability rates for your entire list. Not to mention that it's impossible to tell where and how these email addresses were collected originally, which could place you in violation of email marketing laws.
What about confirming new subscribers? Is it really necessary to ask people twice if they want your emails?
That's an issue of quality versus quantity. Asking people to click a link in a confirmation is typically called using "double opt-in" or "confirmed opt-in". There have been a bunch of studies, particularly one from MailChimp, that show double opt-in creates a significantly more responsive list long-term.
Double opt-in will cost you about 20% of your subscribers up front, but that MailChimp study found double opt-in lists tend to get double the open and click-through rates. Long-term, it's by far the better way to go.
Is it okay to add videos to email messages?
That's a great question, and yes, I'd love to see more small businesses using video.
But in emails, it's dicey. Depending on what software program a subscriber views their emails in, that video may or may not show. Videos also tend to make email file sizes larger than we'd like, we aim for about 50 kb or less.
There's a super-simple, totally effective work-around though. Just make an image that looks like a video, with the arrow within a circle icon. Link that image to a landing page where the video automatically plays.
How often should businesses be sending emails to their subscribers?
Any less than once a month and people tend to forget who you are. That creates more unsubscribes and just generally poor results. I like weekly emails, but that can be a strain for some small businesses. Sending every two weeks seems to be a happy medium.
What about mobile? How do you make your emails look good on mobile devices?
This is extremely important. More emails get opened on mobile devices now than on desktop or laptop computers. Fortunately it's pretty easy to make emails mobile friendly. You can use what's called a "responsive design", or just a "mobile-friendly" design. Pretty much every email service provider has templates that work well on mobile devices. Just start with one of those and adapt it to your content. Additionally, there are a variety of resources that sell mobile friendly templates, if your provider doesn't have a free one that you like.
Be useful! Besides that, you might want to give people a way to control how often they hear from you. And just give them a reason to keep reading your emails. Sending email subscribers something special, that non-subscribers don't get every so often helps. That might be a coupon, or it could be some really great content. Completely eliminating unsubscribes (and bounces) is impossible, but if you provide continuous value, the subscribers that matter will stick around.
Global Delivery Lead
9 年J, Next I need you to show me how to write one so I get better C-Level results! Keep up the good work brotha! K
Former Cabin Crew, Jet2.com
9 年I find that the inbox on my PC has replaced the letter box at my front door for the barrage of junk mail I receive on a daily basis. Good news for the environment, bad news for my local postman !
Social Media Trainer - Ranked Number 1 For Social Media Marketing in the UK on Freeindex / 800+ Reviews from Happy Customers
9 年It's not our number 1 channel for business, but every mail out I send I generally get at least one enquiry off the back of it - as part of our business model that works for us
Connecting people to create opportunities and results
9 年judging by my inbox...NO it is not.