| Ten Easy Email Resolutions for 2008 |
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| Email Marketing | |
| Written by Lyris HQ Staff Writer | |
| Wednesday, 02 January 2008 | |
Be it therefore resolved: 2008 will be the year you either fine-tune your email marketing program or finally kick it into high gear and work out the thorny problems that have been preventing you from getting your highest return possible.
Not sure where to start? Pick one of the 10 easy email resolutions listed below. Each one attacks a common problem area, stumbling block or barrier to better returns. Better yet, you should be able to accomplish each one in a day or so without having to hire specialists, spend part of your budget, or burden your IT people. 1. Resolved: I will not add an email address to my mailing list unless the owner gives me explicit permission first.
2. Resolved: I will write a new welcome message to help engage my new subscribers right from the start.
Message A: Subject line: "Successfully subscribed." Message copy: "You have successfully subscribed to Newsletter A." Message B: Subject line: "Welcome to Newsletter B!" Message copy: "Thank you for signing up for Newsletter B. Here are the details of your subscription: You signed up on Dec. 31 to receive our weekly newsletter in HTML format. As we stated when you signed up, we will guard your email address and use it only to send the emails you have requested. "Please tell us a little more about yourself so that we can send you the information you want most by filling out a customer profile; here's the link: http://www.newsletterB.com/ . "Here's a special offer, just for you, our newest subscriber! Want to review the latest newsletter? Find it here: (link)" "If you need to contact our staff with questions or concerns, you can reach at the following email addresses and telephone numbers …." "Finally, if you didn't intend to sign up, you can unsubscribe by clicking this link, and we will remove your name immediately." On your next lunch break, rewrite your welcome message, or create a new one to be sent out automatically when your subscriber confirms. This engages your newcomers more quickly and restates what the subscriber signed up for, eliminating confusion and making you more trustworthy. It also brings your newcomer up to speed more quickly and invites them into the program immediately, rather than making them wait for your next message. 3. Resolved: I will cull the deadwood from my mailing list.
You can measure how much of your list is asleep just by looking at the delivery reports on your last couple of campaigns. If your open rate hovers at 20% or less, you've got a lot of hibernators, who are costing you money and contributing nothing to your program. Wake them up by asking them either to resubscribe, update their profiles, or unsubscribe. However, don't send this message to everyone on your list or you'll irritate your most loyal customers. Instead, create a list segment of all subscribers who haven't opened or clicked for at least six months. Send them a special message and a reminder, and then eliminate anyone who doesn't answer. 4. Resolved: I will authenticate myself to the domains I send email to.
5. Resolved: I will improve my sender reputation by getting listed on ISP whitelists and feedback loops or becoming an accredited sender.
You can help keep it shiny by getting on an ISP whitelist or by winning accreditation from third-party agencies, such as Goodmail, Habeas or trustE. Getting whitelisted means your email is more likely to end up in the inbox, but it's not permanent. If you violate the ISPs’ sending rules too often, you'll get kicked off. If you can't get whitelisted, you can see if the ISP offers feedback loops, which pass along spam complaints from their users. Use the feedback loop to remove addresses that generate spam complaints and to pinpoint sending problems at specific ISPs. Here are a few links to get you started:
AOL: http://postmaster.aol.com/ 6. Resolved: I will test every email function to make sure it works, especially the unsubscribe link.
7. Resolved: I will validate all of my message templates to make sure the images render correctly, the links work, and the message is optimized for mobile readers.
8. Resolved: I will review my entire opt-in procedure to remove all barriers to subscribing and make it as visible as possible to new subscribers.
9. Resolved: I will start reading all those delivery reports, even if I'm not exactly sure what all those numbers mean.
10. Resolved: I will find at least one new way to learn what my subscribers want from me or think about my email program.
Instead, find new ways to tap into your customers' thoughts and feelings by seeking feedback in different ways. The unsubscribe is one place to start. What you might see as strictly a technical function – your subscriber asks to get off your list, and your list software removes the address permanently – is actually an excellent source of information. You can put up a one- or two-question survey on the unsubscribe confirmation page (although the caveats mentioned before about the quality of the information still hold). Or, you can let your unsubscribers know about other options: different mailing lists, frequencies or formats. Tracking what people are telling you, or the actions they're taking, can help you refocus your program to make it more relevant and useful. Here's to a successful and profitable 2008! Comments (0)
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Be it therefore resolved: 2008 will be the year you either fine-tune your email marketing program or finally kick it into high gear and work out the thorny problems that have been preventing you from getting your highest return possible.



