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The Bad Writer's Guide to Creating Your Own Marketing Emails

Of all of the marketing strategies for small business, email marketing can provide one of the best returns on investment. But that’s only if you can get your email subscribers to open, read, and respond to your emails.


As a marketer, I’ve written hundreds of marketing emails.  Here are a few tips and tricks I’ve learned along the way that can help even a so-so writer boost open rates and increase click-throughs for your emails:


1. Spend the Most Time on the Subject Line


A subject line that falls flat can sabotage an entire email.  No matter how good your email copy is, no one will want to read it unless they want to open the email and learn more.  So how do you write a great subject line?


  • Consult your own inbox: Consider the emails that you receive in your inbox each day. Which ones do you open, and which ones do you skip over?

  • Keep it personal: Research suggests that personal and localized subject lines, rather than overly promotional subject lines, get more clicks.

  • Call out a name: There’s no sweeter sound than the sound of your own name.  If your email software allows it, you can test including the recipient’s name in the subject line.

  • Be Brief:  Longer subject lines get cut off in the inbox, so get to the point quickly. According to Marketing Sherpa, subject lines of 61 to 70 characters have a 17% average read rate — the highest of any length.

  • Set and meet expectations: No one likes to be tricked into reading an email.  Peak their curiosity, yes, but don’t make an outrageous claim in the subject line just to get some one to open your sales pitch – that will land you right in the spam folder.

For more subject line best practices, I highly recommend reading this subject line article from our Hatchbuck Consultant, Katie.


2. Add Value


For B2B businesses with a longer sales cycle, email marketing is all about building a relationships with your audience. You can’t rely on email campaigns that only advertise special promotions or good deals. Luckily, getting your emails read is as easy as consistently offering solutions to a pain-point for your audience.


For instance, at Hatchbuck, we know that small business owners struggle with sales and marketing.  We address this painpoint by sending helpful articles and small business resources our contacts.  Our content gets read and our email links get clicked because our audience consistently finds value in our communication.


You don’t need a masters in communication to write an effective email.  Focus on adding value and your emails will get read whether you write funny, boring, serious or friendly emails.


3.  Get to the Point


If I open an email and it’s several paragraphs long, chances are I’m not going to read it.  Even if it’s from someone super important, like my sister.  Even if it’s about something super important, like a high-priority project at work.  There are just too many distractions in the inbox to be able to focus on a long email. I’d rather get the bulk of the information in person, over the phone or in a meeting, for instance.


Most people receive hundreds of emails, text messages, and phone calls each week. If they open your communications, they probably only have patience for a couple of short paragraphs – even just a few sentences can be effective.  In fact, our Hatchbuck Consultant, Lindsey, suggests taking a page from Twitter and keeping your emails to 140 characters.


Keeping your message short and sweet is tough, I know.  So, here are a few ways to cut down the length of your correspondence:


  • Take another page from Twitter and get to the heart of the matter in your email, then use a link to direct recipients to a landing page on your website where they can learn more.

  • Avoid word bloat.  I like to go through each sentence in my emails and make sure every word counts. I ruthlessly cut out any unnecessary words or phrases. It’s actually kind of fun, and always helps my emails make a greater impact.

  • Break one email up into multiple emails.  If you’re struggling to get your message across quickly, you may be tackling too many topics in one email.  Consider breaking up a long email into a short email campaign.

4. Practice, Test and Learn from the Best


Let those emails fly and then test out of few different strategies to see which ones work well for your targeted audience. Even if you have a solid open rate and click-through rate, that’s not to say it can’t be better.  Continued testing of your emails gives you an overall lift in engagement, helping you generate better ROI from your email marketing efforts.


What are some things to test?  Here are a few ideas:


  • Subject line

  • Using a contact’s name in the subject line

  • Content in your email body

  • Images in your email

  • HTML vs. all-text

  • The link text in your call-to-action

  • Your signature block

  • Which person the email is sent from

Finally, you can’t learn everything about email marketing from one blog post, so I recommend subscribing to our monthly newsletter for more email marketing tips.


You don’t have to be an outstanding writer to craft engaging marketing emails. It’s really as simple as sharing your expertise with your audience in bite-sized chunks.



The Bad Writer"s Guide to Creating Your Own Marketing Emails

Fake Facebook emails contain malware


If you’re familiar with email marketing, it’s one way companies entice you to open up an email. It may have a call-to-action-type subject line, where they’re asking you to do something.


That may be promising you something, like “Act now for your chance to win.” Or, it may be something that alarms you, like “This is your final warning.”


-advertisement-

As it turns out, cybercriminals are becoming more sophisticated in their email marketing efforts. That includes emails containing malware that appear to have been sent by Facebook. (See photo above.)


In this phishing scam, the cybercriminals use a subject line that could get anyone’s attention. It might say, “You just received a voicemail,” or “An audio announcement has been delivered.”


Of course, you’ll wonder what type of voicemail or audio message you’re getting from Facebook. However, this is a phishing scam.


Next page: Malware in there




 






Would you wear this weird thing on your neck if it could save you from neck pain?

Previous Happening Now


Would you wear this weird thing on your neck if it could save you from neck pain?





Could your thermostat leak your home location online?

Next Happening Now


Could your thermostat leak your home location online?






Fake Facebook emails contain malware

Hipmunk Uses Keywords To Personalize Promotional Travel Emails

Travel search company Hipmunk has built a virtual assistant for email powered by artificial intelligence (AI) that identifies travel dates and locations in emails to make flight and hotel recommendations. 


Hello Hipmunk, the product, applies AI to personalize a consumer’s travel experience through their email and/or calendar, the company’s CEO Adam Goldstein announced Tuesday at the PhocusWright Conference in Fort Lauderdale.


The company offers two travel planning features for email and calendar, both available in beta. 


Hello Hipmunk for email offers users a quick and easy way to search for travel accomodations directly within their email inboxes. Travelers can email questions to hello@hipmunk.com and Hipmunk will respond with suggested travel recommendations. Hipmunk’s email also includes links to additional information that is available across channels on the Hipmunk app or Web site. 


Users can also cc the email address to any ongoing email conversation about travel plans, and the machine will send suggested travel recommendations to the entire group. Hello Hipmunk for email is compatible with any email provider.


A customer service representative at Hipmunk says Hello Hipmunk can answer round-trip and one-way flight searches and can search for hotels and vacation rentals if users specify the date range and city within their email inquiry.


Hello Hipmunk for calendar integrates with a user’s Google Calendar to anticipate any upcoming travel needs by reading the location and date of upcoming scheduled meetings. Hipmunk then emails users recommended travel accommodations and flights for those dates and prioritizes hotels and services nearest to the meeting location.


Travel and email marketing have been moving in tandem toward offering a more personalized customer experiences — a probable factor in travel’s role as the top performer in email marketing ROI.


Consumers also expect personalized content from travel brands. Eighty-five percent of consumers prefer customized itineraries to generic plans and 72% would spend more time planning a trip that is tailored to their needs, according to a recent study by American Express Travel.



Hipmunk Uses Keywords To Personalize Promotional Travel Emails

Holiday Email Marketing Insights: Send Emails Early, Avoid Thanksgiving Day & Segment Your Lists

opening-email-ss-1920
Adobe predicts this year’s online holiday sales will reach a record $83 billion, an 11 percent year-over-year increase compared to last year.


With so much up for grabs between now and the end of the year, brands are already escalating their email marketing campaigns as we enter the holiday season – but, reaching consumers through their inbox may prove to be more challenging compared to this time last year.


Email marketing provider ReturnPath reports global inbox placement rates have slid below 80 percent in 2015. According to ReturnPath, U.S. brands identified as “legitimate senders” saw 24 percent of their marketing emails blocked or placed in spam folders this year – a steep rise compared last year’s 13 percent.


The email marketing platform blames decline in inbox placement on refined technology and filtering approaches by mailbox providers.


“While inbox placement decision-making is highly proprietary, the mailbox provider community has has been expanding its filtering criteria into engagement-based and individualized signals in recent years,” says Return Path.


To help improve holiday email engagement rates, GoDaddy recommends brands avoid sending emails on Thanksgiving Day all together.


“On Thanksgiving Day, open rates hit their lowest rate for the entire month of November,” says GoDaddy.


The email service provider says brands planning Cyber Monday emails should be ready to compete as it saw a huge surge of marketing emails sent on Cyber Monday 2014.


“Email is one of the primary marketing channels that drives e-commerce orders during the holiday shopping season,” says GoDaddy’s SVP of business applications Steven Aldrich, “It’s a key time for small businesses to engage with their customers, but our data shows that many are missing an opportunity to stand out when it comes to scheduling their marketing efforts.”


SendGrid reports the same, with data from 2014 showing brands sent a high volume of email on Black Friday and Cyber Monday versus sending campaigns in advance.


“We expected holiday shopping marketing volume to be concentrated in advance of the big day, we found that wasn’t the case,” says SendGrid, “Plenty of emails went out pretty late in the day as well, despite Black Friday’s reputation for early morning – or even midnight – deals.”


Black Friday Versus Cyber Monday Email Send Volume in 2014


SendGrid black friday vs cyber monday


SendGrid says marketers should consider sending Black Friday-related marketing emails earlier this year, “While it probably pays to be top of mind on the big day, it may also be worth getting on shopper’s minds when they’re planning their Black Friday strategy.”


The email marketing platform also offered tips on formatting:



“Most email templates are designed for a standard desktop, with a set HTML width of about 600 pixels. This is too wide for most phones, and could result in unnecessary horizontal scrolling.”



SendGrid said brands need to offer a plain text version in HTML for their marketing emails, and not overuse images as they increase the risk of emails being marked as spam.


Additionally, SendGrid reinforces the importance of more targeted send lists versus large email blasts, using the following chart to show how engagement rates decline as the size of an email send list grows.


Email List Size Versus Engagement Rates


SendGrid engagment rates


When looking at send frequency, SendGrid reports more sends equal more unsubscribes, and that higher send rates have a direct correlation with lower engagement.


“According to our data, senders who sent 100 Black Friday emails – multiple per day – would be expected to average an 11 percent engagement, compared to 16.5 percent for senders who sent only 10 Black Friday emails.”


Email Send Frequency Versus Engagement Rates


SendGrid send frequency


SendGrid says brands should be wary of sending too many emails as it could result in email fatigue. “You should send multiple emails per day only rarely, and only to recipients who consistently engage with your mail.”


One resource email marketers may want to check out is the recently launched email marketing search engine Notablist. Indexing more than four million email marketing newsletters, Notablist offers a broad view of the email marketing design landscape.





(Some images used under license from Shutterstock.com.)


Holiday Email Marketing Insights: Send Emails Early, Avoid Thanksgiving Day & Segment Your Lists

Email Marketing: Increase CTR up to 50% Using Trigger Emails!

Email Marketing: Increase CTR up to 50% Using Trigger Emails! – Skillshare

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In this email marketing course, I will be showing you exactly how to use trigger emails to increase open rates and click through rates while running your campaign. Trigger emails are email sequences that reach your prospect’s inbox after they have performed a certain action (like opening your previous email), and is a feature that’s available with most big autoresponders. Enroll now… Read More






Howard Lynch, Business Owner


Call me if you have any questions! Skype: HowardEdwardLynch or send me a PM here on Skillshare. Hello everyone! I am an experienced internet marketer. I specialize in selling ebooks and producing videos. I wish to share what I have learned and connec… Read More













Email Marketing: Increase CTR up to 50% Using Trigger Emails!

5-Minute Email Tips: Sending Segmented Emails

Creating content, such as emails, is a great way to connect with a mass audience.


But there’s a lot more to it than simply writing an email and hitting send.


While you may have a dozen, hundreds or even thousands of subscribers, it’s important to remember that among that list exists a variety of individuals with different needs, motivations and experiences.


As a result, this means that, sadly, not every piece of content you create will be a perfect fit for everyone.


So how can you nurture your diverse audience with content that’s relevant to every individual?


By creating segmented emails.


Why You Should Send Segmented Emails


Segmented emails are messages you send to specific subscribers in your list. They can be based on where they are in the customer journey, demographics and more. Doing so gives you the chance to send specific content that is relevant to that unique group, encouraging them to take a certain action.


Here’s an example of a scenario of when you might use a segmented email:


Let’s say you owned a bakery, and you send out an email to your entire list with a link to an updated dessert menu. Instead of just letting the one email do all the work, you might want to send an email with a coupon off their purchase to those who clicked the link. This way, you’re making a strategic effort to influence those who have already expressed interest in your product.


Creating messages that meet the specific needs of your customers can be super powerful when providing a killer customer experience.


Ideas for Segments You Can Create Today


So what are some segments you can create for your list?


Almost anything, really. But it depends on the subscriber information you asked for in your sign up form and the data provided in your email analytics (city, opens, email provider, etc.).


Here at AWeber, we use segmenting in a number of scenarios. Here’s an example of a segmented email we sent to our subscribers who opened but didn’t click the call-to-action link to register for a webinar:


Email Example


But the possibilities for sending segments goes beyond sending reminder emails for webinars.


Here are some other ideas for segments you can start sending today:


Geography/Location


Sending emails based on where your subscribers live can come in handy in a lot of situations.


If you own multiple stores in different locations, for example, you might want to send emails to subscribers who live closest to each location. You can send things like exclusive shop offers, upcoming events and even advice or news from local employees.


You can also send tailored emails that speak to events that might be going on locally, different seasons, holidays and more.


If you have customers from countries all around the world, that’s a good indicator of what language they speak, so you might want to send emails in their native languages, too.


Want to start sending emails based on geography?


There are two ways of discovering where your subscribers are located.


One way is by asking your subscribers where in your sign up form. Simply add a custom field that asks for information, such as city and state. This way, every time you get a new subscriber, you’ll also get their location.


If you’re an AWeber customer, you also can find your subscribers’ general location (city, state, country) in the Reports section of your account.


Click-Throughs


Sending emails based on subscriber behavior is a great way to assist each of your customers throughout the buyer journey. Why? Because those who clicked a link in an email might want to receive further information on that topic.


Let’s go back to the bakery example. Say you send out an email with a link to a recipe for apple turnovers. You might want to send an email with additional apple-related treats sold at your store (and maybe a coupon!) to a segment of your subscribers who clicked the link.



Pro Tip: If you find that a number of subscribers aren’t clicking on any of your content, it might be time to ask what kind of content interests them.



Custom Fields


Want to learn more about your unique customers that you just can’t find in any report list?


Consider adding a couple of custom fields to your sign up form to discover your audience’s interests. When you do, you’ll get more information that can help you create more relevant content for your subscribers.


Instead of just assuming what kind of delectable desserts your subscribers will love, for example, why not ask them for their favorite dessert when they’re signing up to your email list?


With that information, it’ll be easier to create content for your diverse audience and send broadcasts to groups of individuals with similar interests. Cookie of the Week emails, anyone?



Pro Tip: Tap into your subscribers’ interests by offering exclusive content just for them!



Open Rates


Not every email you send will have an open rate of 100 percent. And that’s okay.


But that doesn’t mean you have to sit back and let the numbers remain as they are. To encourage more engagement with your subscribers, consider sending an email to the segment of subscribers who did not open your first message – and be sure to tweak the subject line!



Pro Tip: Split test the subject lines of your emails to see which gets the most opens. Do your subscribers prefer shorter or longer subject lines? Do they love emojis? Test different variables to find out!



If you find that you have many inactive subscribers (those who haven’t opened an email or clicked a link in a long time), you might want to run a reactivation campaign.


Segment All the Emails!


Okay, so you don’t have to necessarily segment every single email you send to customers. But you should start looking into ways you can include it as part of your email marketing strategy.


Are you using segmenting in any of your emails? Tell us in the comments!



5-Minute Email Tips: Sending Segmented Emails

Marketing E-Mails Your Clients Want to Click


How do you stay out of your customers’ spam inbox and get your customers to click on your e-mails? A recent study by Constant Contact looked at more than 2.1 million customer e-mails that were sent to more than 100 recipients over a 13 week time span to find out which e-mails had the highest click-through rate.


Overall, e-mails with three or fewer images and about 20 lines of text tended to have the highest open rates among e-mail subscribers.



Evaluating by industry, Constant Contact researchers found that real estate professionals saw the highest click-through rates when their messages were limited to around 35 lines of text. Also, the e-mails that were specific to new listings tended to get the highest click-through rates.


Ron Cates, director of digital marketing education for Constant Contact, emphasizes that to get higher click-through rates, e-mails should be concise, to-the-point, accurate (avoid misleading readers by using words or jargon that don’t offer a clear representation of your message), and courteous.


“While every brand and business has their own ‘voice’ in terms of communication, the general rule of thumb is to keep it nice and friendly,” writes Nicole Leinbach Reyhle, author of “Retail 101: The Guide to Managing and Marketing Your Retail Business,” in an article for Forbes.com. “Sure, you can offer a sassy twist if that’s your style, but keeping it courteous is always in style, as well.”


Watching your click-through rates on your e-mails is important in judging the success of your campaigns.


“Click-through rates are perhaps the truest measurement of the quality of an email’s content and its effectiveness as a marketing tool,” Christopher M. Litster, senior vice president, sales and marketing at Constant Contact, told Forbes.com. “Regardless of industry or customer base, click-through rates convey how often you are able to get your e-mail subscribers to go where you want them to go and complete your call-to-action. This new research is a big step forward in helping small businesses craft e-mail content that will result in even more successful campaigns going forward.”




Marketing E-Mails Your Clients Want to Click