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7 Steps for Improving Your Email Marketing
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The success of your email marketing
campaign is often based on a set of complex factors. However, a number of
these issues can be proactively managed to ensure an optimized response.
When developing your next email campaign, consider the following guidelines.
by Michael Fleischner
Contributing
Author
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The success of your email marketing campaign is often based on a set of
complex factors. However, a number of these issues can be proactively
managed to ensure an optimized response. When developing your next email
campaign, consider the following guidelines.
(article continued below ...)
1. Your list.
Certainly one of the most important aspects of any email
marketing campaign, your list is directly correlated to your success. Are
your names recent? Have they agreed to be marketed to? Have they shown an
interest in products or services similar to your own? Make sure that you are
using a house list (names you collected on your own) or have been purchases
from a reputable broker.
2. Your subject line.
Getting a user to open your message is paramount
any email marketing campaign. The best way to determine the subject line
that works best is to break your emails into three random yet equal groups.
Measure the response to each email and use the highest producing one as your
control. In follow up emails, try to beat the response rate of your control
email.
3. Your sender information.
What information appears on the sender line
of your email? Will your prospects recognize it? Do they want to hear from
you? Often times, emails are deleted without ever being opened due to an
indiscernible sender name. Your sender name should be brief and easily
understood.
4. Track your results.
Tracking allows you to determine who opened your
message and clicked on a link or multiple links within your email. By
determining what worked and what didn't, you can replicate success on your
next email. As described above, tracking is particularly important when
testing subject lines, imbedded links, and other direct response vehicles.
5. Make sure your unsubscribe method is in place and working.
The
CAN-SPAM act of 2003 requires that all email messages contain clear
directions on how to opt-out from subsequent mailings. Provide an
unsubscribe mechanism that allows those receiving your email to send you and
email and indicate their desire to opt-out from receiving further emails
from you or your business. If recipients no longer want to hear from you, it
s in your best interest to remove them from your list.
6. Your images are correctly referenced and you've used alt tags in each
image.
Improperly referencing your images can cause them to appear broken
when you send your message - the dreaded red x. To insure the image is
referenced correctly it must appear as, img
src="http://www.yourdomain.com...." rather than, img
src="/images/picture.jpg". Alt tags are another important part of your
images. The new security features on almost every email client these days
disables images automatically. Having alt tags in place allow your reader to
identify the image and determine if it is safe to enable.
7. Test, Test, Test!
No matter what your involvement with email marketing
happens to be, it is essential that you follow the guidelines above for
successful results. In addition, the key is to test, test, test! After each
email campaign, measure your opens, click-throughs, and purchases. Document
the specific date, time, list, subject line, and content used to produce
your results. Refer back to your documentation prior to your next campaign.
Email doesn't have to be a complex form of marketing. There are many best
practices you can follow and some simple rules that ensure effectively
delivery, open and conversion. By following the simple rules presented in
this article, you'll not only deliver and effective email campaign, you'll
discover a consistent method for generation revenue for your business.
About The Author:
Michael Fleischner is the founder and President of MarketingScoop.com.
With more than 12 years of marketing experience, he has appeared on major
media including the TODAY Show, Bloomberg Radio, and more. Visit
http://www.MarketingScoop.com
for further details, FREE Marketing resources, or more FREE articles.
March 2006
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