The Three Elements of a Successful Emailing by Al Bredenberg
Marketers often complain that
they tried email and "It didn't work." The email medium might not be
the problem. Consider these three factors.
A solid emailing
rests on three "legs": offer, list and creative. If you've been
involved in traditional direct mail marketing (the postal variety),
these three elements should ring a bell, as they apply in both media.
1. Offer
Basically, your offer means, What are you going to give them and what are they going to give you? In
the most basic kind of offer, you are going to give them a product and
they are going to give you money. You can make an offer more compelling
by giving the customer a better deal, "Save $43.00," for example, or
"Buy one, get one free."
An offer doesn't have to involve the
exchange of money. You might offer a free gift in exchange for
marketing data; perhaps the user can download a free software program
in exchange for providing personal information or filling out a survey
form. Or you might offer a free newsletter. In this case, the user
might not have to give anything in return; it's enough for them to let
you into their inbox every week or every month.
The
offer is critical to the success of your email effort. You need to be
crystal-clear about what your offer is, and you need to be
crystal-clear in communicating it to your recipient.
2. List
You might have a great offer, but if you send it to the wrong list it will flop.
On the Internet, list buying is trickier than in the world of direct
mail, where you can examine a standard-format rate card, look over
demographic data, or get help from an experienced list broker or
consultant. The email list business has few standards, and it can be
hard to be sure who you are dealing with.
Stay away from the
spammers -- the bulk emailers who will sell you an email list on CD-ROM
or offer to send your ad out to a half-million people for $500.
Spamming will cause you nothing but trouble.
Find a reliable
opt-in email list owner or broker. Make sure you're dealing with a
legitimate company with a good track record. Talk with them directly on
the phone. Find out how each list was compiled. Make sure recipients
were added to the list only with their explicit permission.
Find
out all you can about the audience. Does the list owner have
demographic information or survey data from list recipients? If you're
buying advertising in an email newsletter (e-zine), what is the topic
and target audience of the newsletter? Make sure that the list's
recipients are the right market for your offer.
Finding email
lists can be quite a challenge. One good place to start is the Direct
Email List Source, a Web directory of opt-in email lists.
3. Creative
In
advertising, "creative" refers to the concept, copy and design of an
advertising piece. Most email advertising is sent out in plain text, so
you can't do much with design. But good strategy and copywriting can
make a big difference.
Focus your copy around your offer. In email, we recommend copy that's brief, straightforward and to-the-point. Make it interesting, compelling and personal. But no hyperbole, no hard-sell.
Make the offer clear. Include a call to action -- in other words, tell them what you want them to do and ask them to do it.
Make it easy for people to respond. Most email promotional messages
will direct the user to a Web page, where they can find out more
details, fill out a form or send in an order.
Give special
attention to your subject line. Avoid subject lines that scream out
"This is an ad!" Make it something simple, unassuming and short, while
implying a benefit -- maybe something like, "Discount tickets?" or "New
opera recording." Avoid deceptive "gotcha" subject lines that trick the
recipient into opening the email.
Give careful attention to
these three elements of an emailing. If your effort falls short in any
one of these three areas -- offer, list or creative -- you can expect a
poor response.
Al Bredenberg is publisher of EmailResults.com
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