According to a study by the Direct Marketing Association, email
marketing delivers the highest return on investment of all media
available to marketers. The study also projects that email driven sales
in the United States will show a compound annual growth rate of 14.9%
between 2006 and 2011. But statistics like that only bring about real
value when email marketing can show it impacts long-term
customer-relationship-based revenue streams.
Patrick Valtin, a.k.a. “Mr. Crisis Buster” by his many clients, President
of M2-TEC USA, INC. and author of the book Crisis Buster, claims email
marketing is highly profitable if done correctly. The main mistake is trying
to convert a prospect when embarking on email marketing, he says. The
direction one should take is instead is trying to attract a qualified
prospect.
But in tough business environments, people get desperate and violate the
most important principles of email marketing. Valtin, whose motto is:
‘Success should NOT depend on economic conditions!’ says email marketing, is
an especially vital business activity when done correctly.
Attract first, don’t try to convert. It’s actually common sense if you
think about it. What if some one came up to you and said BUY THIS with no
enticement as to what it was and what it could do for you? Would you buy
(convert)? Probably not. But say a girl scout comes to your door with a tray
of cookies for you to pick one to sample. Did she entice you, attract your
attention first? Yep, mostly likely. And how many boxes did you buy? And
moreover, how many will you buy year after year after year on a regular
basis?
Those emails that do attract your attention and entice you by putting
that cookie in front of you to nibble on – those are the successful
approaches.
That begs the question if they already are opt-in prospects, do you still
have to attract - aren’t they already qualified prospects if they are in
your database?
Not always, according to Patrick. Patrick points out the best ROI
approach to email marketing is to promote to inactive prospects and sleeping
customers in your data base with the purpose to get them active - to turn
them into (entice them to be) regular, loyal customers. Sleeping customers
should also be treated as prospects. Old, inactive prospects were curious
enough to inquire into your company to begin with. That is the crucial point
as Valtin explains. “The biggest false data out there is the saying ‘they
were just curious’ as to the reason a prospect didn’t close. Look up curious
in the dictionary – it is interest.” So curiosity IS interest. It is up to
you to entice them even further so they become “sold”. Sold equates to being
a repeat customer.
Valtin goes on to say that the ways to first attract prospects are done
with classical marketing techniques before email marketing comes into the
picture: pay-per-click advertising, search engine optimization with your
website, direct mail marketing – the “more traditional” forms are the
channels used to attract. Then once you get a prospect or even a first-time
customer you can start email marketing to them.
Once your prospects are on your opt-in list, you have to entice. Just on
a different level. You have their interest – now hook them.
Three common mistakes in email marketing are:
- Trying to sell through the marketing email. You have to cut the
gradient to attract and then convert. The question is: what will
motivate them to join your list?
- Making the subject line too ambiguous; using trite phrases that are
actually considered SPAM. What you have to watch, Valtin also warns, is
“too hot or too juicy is looked upon as SPAM by search engine spiders.”
And
- Not being consistent with “From” address line. From very beginning,
the “From” line should be consistent. Even here there is a need to have
instant recognition.
With customers receiving hundreds of emails per week and checking their
email an average of 4 times per day, it is no wonder that email marketing
has taken off. But don’t fall in the trap of using it incorrectly. According
to Valtin, when you screw up on email marketing lines with prospects or
customers, you get cut off and most likely don’t get another chance. It’s
too easy to junk your email address and be shut off from further
communication.
Three Valtin tips for being successful in email marketing are:
- Make the subject line personalized. “How would you like a free
weekend in Acapulco” compared with “Dear Jane, how would you….”
increases by 200-300% your chances it will be opened. (Note: opened not
converted…but attracted.)
- Make one-time customers into repeat customers. Offer an exclusive
newsletter only for customers with highly valuable content.
- Have an option for people who subscribe to your newsletter to
systematically send it to a friend which acts as a referral and
consequently per Valtin, makes it viral. SPAM legislation still requires
those friends to opt-in before you can start emailing to them, but the
referral raises your credibility and will give you more “bang for your
buck!”
Valtin says there are many more principles to learn about email
marketing. Having studied marketing and sales trends for the last 35-plus
years, he packs a lot of lore under his skull. He’s been in the
training/coaching business for over 22 years and has personally trained over
75,000 people in 27 countries on the subjects of sales, sales management and
marketing strategies.