Is Your Email Marketing Going Social? (Networking)

Is Your Email Marketing Going Social? (Networking)

Have you heard the news?

Social Media is the “only”, “new”, “best” way to market your goods and services.

Find a niche, tweet your brand, get a zillion likes and publish pictures – preferably pictures of your smiling employees holding puppies. For some organizations, this works… especially if you’re a well-known brand, such as televised chocolate-coated peanut.

Typically, the “Social Media Arena” for well-known brands isn’t about the initial sale, it is about brand awareness.  Social media allows people to make that emotional connection to their favorite brand by showing their loyalty with likes or actions; they can vote for their favorite pizza and upload pictures of themselves eating their favorite pizza from different locations.  However, for those of us who are not touting a well-known brand, the climate of the Social Media may change; we’re looking for that initial sale (and customer loyalty.)   In addition, unlike a nation brand, small businesses do not advertise on TV.   They have found, like the national brands, they can set up a social media business presence.  They need little or no initial investment other than time and dedication.

Does social media marketing work as the exclusive advertising venue for your service or product?

Have you found that that social media is just that, the social side of marketing (e-commerce) which typically means more people talking about your brand and services than actually buying your brand or services? Think of it like this: even though your homemade chocolate probably is “not your average chocolate™ ” besides sales from your local area, family and friends, most people aren’t eating your chocolates.  Clearly, in those cases, the hype of social media marketing is greater than the results.

Social media marketing takes time, resources and energy away from your business.   You’re tweeting instead of cooking, you are updating instead of sleeping or you pay someone else to do all this for you.  Should you give up social media marketing altogether and concentrate on proven marketing channels to increase your ROI – no, instead capitalize on the potential reach and use it in conjunction with the channel that produces the highest ROI, email marketing.  Did you know according to the latest research by the DMA ( The Direct Marketing Association ) “Email is the channel that produces the highest ROI. For every dollar, a marketer invests in this highly profitable channel, the ROI in 2012 is $39.40: six years later, that number has increased 3 +times.”   In  addition to the duality of Social Networking and email lists you can discover and reinforce new markets that you may not have identified in the past.”   It’s all in how you wield it.

Advantages of using Email and Social Media

  1. Email list membership growth. Use your social media “likes” and offer your facebook members the opportunity to opted-in to your existing email-marketing list: likewise, offer a signup link to peeking throughyour email list on your Twitter™ posts.

    Be creative, offer value for their likes and email address.  Look at other FB™ business pages for ideas, such as those created by Target, Sears, and JCPenneys.

  2. Create email campaigns for sharing: send a coupon that encourages your recipients to pass your email around.

  3. Keep your email campaigns interesting and valuable.  Send offers that cannot be refused such as  Chili’s who sends out a Free Dessert or Free Appetizer emailS.  Chili’s tweets out their specials, which post on facebook™. These FB posts encourage visitors, to join their mailing list for specials.

  4. Include a share your newsletter link to Facebook™, Twitter™ and LinkedIn™.

  5. Don’t fill your newsletter with clickable icons making your newsletter look hurried and disorderly; strategically place your social media icons, paying attention to the size of the icon and graphic you’re using.

  6. Have others review your newsletter.

  7. Consider where your social sharing icons are placed.  Do they work better on the top of the page or the bottom of the page?

  8. Track your emails, discover who has forwarded or shared your offers.  Those who referred to a friend are people who like your product or service – treat them good, perhaps a special discount only they are privy to.  With Lyris ListManager and Dundee Internet List hosting,  referrals allow your list members to invite their friends to join your list. You may track how many friends were referred by list members, how many opened or clicked on a tracking link in the invitation, and how many ultimately joined the list.

  9. Do all the links work?  Test test test

Is Your Email Marketing Going Social? (Networking) Read More »

Email Marketing Essentials for Better Response Rates 2013

Email Marketing Essentials for Better Response Rates 2013

Efficacious Email marketing campaigns are in part luck, art and science, and an understanding your subscriber base for better response rates…

…which is the most trash cansignificant part of any marketing campaign. Better response rates happen when your subscribers to react to your email, (other than hitting the trash or delete key). You want them to take an action such as visit a link, buy a product, take a survey, share with social media or forward the email to a friend. To figure out how to make subscribers perform any of those actions often requires a personalized approach from the marketer so here are essential things to keep in mind when composing engaging e-mail marketing campaigns.

Use the news. Make mention to what’s going on in the news that week, or that day in your subject line.  You may have to be creative and definitely tie it into your content and you will find this will pay off in the end with better response rates.

Whet the appetite with content snippets.  Give away partial content where you normally would require a click-through or a fill in the blank to receive the information in the form of a small how-to or other timely information about your product or service.  Lead them to a landing page with additional information.  Free is equated with the internet, free content is expected more times than not.

Keep a consistent look and style; send the right email format for the browser your recipient uses. Dundee Internet powered by Lyris ListManager(TM) offers multipart-alternative. ListManager(TM) will create the correct headers and boundaries automatically so recipients who can see HTML will only see your HTML message; those who cannot see the text.

Offers incentives and rewards.  Subscribers like rewards, offer a coupon or promotion code to redeem on your website.   Change your offers often; they will open your email to see the new offer.

Email Marketing Essentials for Better Response Rates 2013 Read More »

Experienced Email Marketers 6 Quick Hot Tips from 2012

Experienced Email Marketers 6 Quick Hot Tips from 2012

1. Engage with your signups and existing members with a preference center, capture data and content interests.

2. Personalize your messages, tested and proven to realize higher open rates.

checklist

Hot Tips for 2012

3. When planning an integrated marketing campaign: keep your messages consistent in all marketing channels. Center your efforts around email marketing to drive awareness, responsiveness, want and action.

4. When you understand your audience, use a strong call to action in your marketing messages, don’t be wimpy – And always tell the recipients what’s in it for them.

5. Segment your email list to speak to individual groups and their interests.  Targeted messages work wonders.

6. Mobile marketing is not for every business.

Comments from Dundee Internet customers:  “They are experts at what they do and they are an absolute pleasure to work with. If you have a need to build a mail list for your small or medium business and you are reading this testimonial, it means you have found the best!”
Gregg Co-founder & CEO Guy
JibJab.com

Dundee Internet Email List Services    Create * Share * Grow

Experienced Email Marketers 6 Quick Hot Tips from 2012 Read More »

*It’s* never too late to share tips for Holiday Email Campaigns

*It’s* never too late to share tips for Holiday Email Campaigns

  1. Always follow “Email Best Practices”.
  2. Be cognizant of your “Sender’s Reputation”.  A sender reputation is composed of many marketing layers. It answers questions such as who are you (i.e. A well know Brand of Hot Dogs), what are you known for (i.e. Great tasting all Beef Hot Dogs) and your email delivery character. (Are you a spammer?).   A sender’s reputation is your reputation. Do not share it or slight it by using (for example) purchased lists, as they may contain Spam Traps and other reputation killers.
  3. Along with email marketing, you need to think through your Social Media and Mobile marketing strategies; how they work together, because, they too, play a big part in the marketing mix.
  4. Include a link in your mailings to a subscriber preference and profile page.  You want your subscribers to add or change their email address when necessary and it’s useful to know how often they want to hear from you.  Make it a goal to know your subscribers.  Use that knowledge to send personal triggered email, made to order just for them.
  5. Test, implement, track and engage – harness the lifecycle of email using simple strategies to deliver the right message at the right time.
  6. Warmly welcome your new subscribers; never overlook the opportunity to start building a positive relationship.
  7. Use Subject lines that matter.
  8. With email marketing, build your own brand awareness and support a more earnest relationship with your email subscribers coupled with facebook, pininterst and blogs.
  9. Do a creative audit of your current email templates.  Are your customers having a positive experience with your messages?
  10. Evaluate triggered messaging.

Revel with extended multi-channel deals.  Continue to grow your mailing lists for future promotions and branding campaigns with all the available marketing channels; your web site to phone-in mail orders.  Traditional sales, such as in store live retail, may not be able to glean as much information about a current customer.  During and after the holiday’s target those with email only specials, print out coupons and free shipping.

Plan your after the Holidays email campaigning now, it’s a New Year and so much potential.

star

Be A Marketing Star

Be a marketing star, with Dundee Internet email list services.

*It’s* never too late to share tips for Holiday Email Campaigns Read More »

Tis the Month before Email

Tis the Month before Email

Tis the month before Christmas, and in every house,

Bell

@ Christmas Marketing Time

There’s e-buying, e-carding with a click of their mouse.
The email marketers have prepared their holiday mails,
Anticipating click-throughs that translate into sales.

There’s been meetings, planning, and things, no telling,
With the ROI pressure level raised to make this season oh so compelling.
“We need more help and expertise they cried with a tear”,
An email guru from Dundee Internet winst did appear.

The email marketers then seeing the light,
Could expect great things to happen after this night.
Dundee Internet proved by experienced in years,
with the power of Lyris ListManager ™,put their email in high gear.

With segments and triggers for each mailing day,
Proper subject lines and following best email practices, what could you say.
The all-knowing guru assured them telling,
you’re all opted in, not spammers, your sales will be swelling.

With no less than technical magic and a solid email reputation,
The marketers were poised in expectation.
With Dundee’s fast reliable delivery, the emails then came,
Raining in sales and calling out fame.

“Now, Coupons! Now, Announcements! Now, Mobile and Text!
On, opens! On referrals! On, sales and increased ROI, that comes next!

From the top of the list, to the top of the wall!

“Now Mail away! Mail away! Mail away all”!

Sent was the email the mailboxes abound, reports showed opens, sales all around.

With tidings of Christmas and holiday cheer, we wish you good holidays and a great upcoming Marketing year.

Tis the Month before Email Read More »

Are all email clients created equal?

Are all email clients created equal?

For your first email campaign, you decide to use one of the free css templates offered with your email hosting service.  As you work with the template of your choice, you discover that there are limits on what you can do, not enough colors, limit on the size and number of graphics, unforgiving borders AND font types? …forget about it.

You stick with it: some tweaking hours later, you finally get what you might consider the almost “perfect” HTML message.  The colors are okay, as are the fonts and graphics: they work with your message. Testing is next and by testing, you discover your email message displays perfectly in some browsers and email clients but looks like crap in others.  What’s going on??

Unfortunately, not all email clients or browsers are created equal; some may render your email message differently because of a different presentation of HTML or CSS. (Cascading Style Sheets.); your email message for example looks great in Hotmail but not so great in Outlook.

You can find email templates that are optimized, code validated and reader browser friendly and you always have an option to create your own.

Taking control, designing your own email template, is one way to maintain uniformity across all email clients and browsers.  Is this easy to do?  Depends on how you do it.  Consider the following suggestions when creating your email template:

  • Avoid external or embedded CSS; this code is typically stripped or ignored by a number of email clients.
  • Avoid extra coding elements such as Word inserts.
  • Be cognizant of where you place your CSS code, as most email clients remove the body and head tags.
  • Do not overuse images or rely on them to grab the recipient’s attention.  Email clients are turning off images as a default so the recipient needs to perform an action (click on a link) to view them. Therefore, you should not rely on images for a call to action or other important messages (i.e. Price reduction today only)
  • Do not use big image sizes: it has been suggested to keep images around 100KB or 600 pixels wide.
  • Don’t count on visual HTML editors exclusively, such as Dreamweaver; you will run into problems creating HTML emails, as programs such as Dreamweaver is a website designing tool the  CSS coding  generated may not be compatible in an email client.
  • Avoid FLASH, embedded videos, adding surveys and other types of opt -in forms to your template; many email clients will not support them or they will completely ignore these components.
  • Stay away from using JavaScript as this is normally ignored and your email message maybe considered a security issue by some ISPs.
  • Do thoroughly test your template before you use it
  • An “Add my email address to your address book” link
  • Mobile friendly link
  • View with images alternative (link to a web-hosted version of your message) 

Don’t dismiss the three basic elements to your HTML template.

  • Preheaders
  • Body
  • Footer

The preheader text or snippet, as viewed in the email inbox, is the small written summary following the subject line.  It’s a great way to grab your recipient’s attention.  Even with templates, it’s a good idea to customize your preheader for each new email campaign.

Also take in consideration the mobile email recipient (you already included the mobile friendly link), they often preview (as does the inbox in Gmail) the first line of an email; so write accordingly.

Use format in your template that is easy for you to use when composing each campaign.  Your template should allow the body, the gist of you message, for example, have strong headlines; consider bullet points and the amount of links and images to have.  Keep the fonts consistent and avoid small font sizes.  There’s a great deal of suggestions and dos and don’ts for body template format on the Internet. Review the goal of your email campaign when you create the body or content Select what works best for you.

The Footer has its own set of rules.

Always provide an unsubscribe line.  It is a requirement.   Then, as an option consider adding a link to your user’s profile page, of an “add us to your address book” link or any other information you deem important.

Are all email clients created equal? Read More »

The Key That Unlocks Your Marketing Emails

The Key That Unlocks Your Marketing Emails

All sent emails, at the very least, contain two parts, the body of the message and the message header.  In fact, each part is analogous to an actual mail piece, the header being the fully addressed envelope (address of the recipient and sender) along with the subject line and other identifying data.  In other cases, the header is considered “the stamp” of the envelope.  The body, or letter, is the actual message with attachments.

email marketing hands

Key to Email Opens

Depending on the email client used, the header information is usually displayed as:

From: – Sender@mycompany.com
To: – Reciever@hotmail.com
Date: – The date when the message was sent.
Subject: – The subject line

Simple stuff, right?  Well yes and no.  Headers can be mandatory, displaying specific information whereas other information can be optional.   Some headers contain the sending and the receiving time stamps of all actions taken on an email, such as forwarding the message to a friend to transferring the message from one computer to another.  In fact, if the email had several destinations, there may be several RECEIVED headers.  Likewise, a physical mail piece, routed by the post office to different destinations, will receive a stamp at each post office: hence, the analogy of the header instead of the envelope becomes the stamp on an actual envelope.

So you’re sitting at your desk opening todays delivered mail.  There’s an envelope sitting on top of the pile, it’s stamped, the stamp canceled by the local post office with yesterday’s date, your name and address is typed on the front, but there’s no return address.  Do you toss it or open it?   Curiosity gets the best of most of us, so you open it.  It’s junk mail, without so much as a glance, you toss it in the circular bin.  Next, an envelope correctly addressed to you with a return address from the Local Farmers Market.  You received these from this vendor before, discount coupons, coupons that you look for and want.   You put that letter aside; it’s useful, in fact, now that you have coupons today, you may go shopping after you open the rest of your mail, why wait.

Just like the envelope’s return address, sent from a name you know, prompted you to open the letter, the “from” line in your email,

is the prompt or key for recipients to unlock your marketing emails and actually open and read them.

Designing the right key is essential. There’s a few rules to consider deciding who the email should actually be coming from.  There’s several reasons to use different From Addresses, even went sent from the same company.  A company with many product and services may use a specific “Brand” in their “from” address: From Penny Lane Paper Towels, a person: From the Desk Peter your Gift Wrap Expert, or just “From”: Paper Mills Product.

Regardless of the “From” address used the name needs to fit, so the senders identity is clear to the recipient.   It also needs to be:

  1. Obvious and transparent – never a trick or alias
  2. Identifiable, not changing each time you send out a campaign
  3. From your company or service, not sent from an @yahoo or @aol home address
  4. Non-assuming, they may have signed up but don’t remember you
  5. More importantly if it’s your first marketing email to them your “from” address should spark some familiarity; you had sent them a confirmation and hello letter.  Always use the “from” address combined with a persuasive subject line to target higher open rates.

Finally yet essential, realize when your recipients receive email their email client may only display the “From” name, address (or both) from the header.  Therefore the “From” address needs to:

  1. Be consistent so that it is recognized and your message read
  2. Become regarded as a trusted sender
  3. Be significant so the recipient has a reason to open your email
  4. Use a From Name and Address the recipient will recognize
  5. Kept at a reasonable length,  so the entire name or From address is displayed

In summary, the recipient of your email, sees the “From” (and the “Subject” line) before any other part of your message.  As stated in a prior blog, if the subject line is dull and spammy, coming “from” a non-recognizable or trusted source, your message has a high delete probability: unlikely your message will be open and read.   Keep your “From” transparent, build a relationship “from” consistency – because who the email is “From” may have more influence than what you have to say.   Need help: contact Dundee Internet email List Services today.

The Key That Unlocks Your Marketing Emails Read More »

Confirmed opted-in email addresses; more valuable than the “likes” on your FB page

Confirmed opted-in email addresses; more valuable than the “likes” on your FB page

Email marketing…successful, but is it successful by the number of Facebook likes you have?

Are you always under pressure to outdo your last campaign, even though your campaigns are working better than expected?

Are you concerned that your numbers are behind the industry standard, (is there an industry standard)?  Do you find yourself struggling to keep up with those perceived industry numbers?

And what about “Management”  – doesn’t it seem they always expect bigger and better results, frowning on inconsistency and unexpected declines?

And to top it off is your manager making the claim that email is passé –everything should be tweeted and Facebooked instead.  Aren’t you tired of hearing “how many likes do we have?” 

As an email marketer, you already know a well-conceived and implemented email marketing campaign has been proven, over and over again, to be the most cost-effective way to:

  1. Produce leads
  2. Acquire new customers
  3. Bring in more revenue

In a perfect world, with a little effort, your subscriber base would grow and all your subscribers would respond to all your campaigns with enthusiasm and interest.

However, we operate in a not so perfect world, there’s no guarantee you’ll maintain your subscribers base numbers or how your subscribers will respond to a mailing.  That fact that list membership shrinks naturally, by attrition, there’s always pressure to continue to grow your list. You want to maintain subscriber numbers, preferably all with good opted-in addresses.

This is important because the constant addition of qualified/permission-based list members is one of the keys to effective list building and ultimately the success of your campaigns.

List building in itself is the easy part. “Permission” based list building, the preferred way, can take time as, as duly noted in some circles as the biggest obstacle for list marketers to overcome.

There are many strategies to collect names:  and wouldn’t it make life simple just to be able to add email addresses to your list, regardless of how you obtained them.  However, possession of an email address does not give you the owner’s unequivocal permission to send email to it.  Ideally, you want to collect opted-in to your list addresses.  An opt-in subscriber wants your email: they told you so by an action of some type, giving you permission to send email to them.  However, even with opted-in email addresses, not all address are created equal, they could be an address that is:

  1. Single opted-in – In theory, the email recipient has, at some point, given permission to receive email from you.  They provided their email address on a form, website, response card and so on.  The list owner does not confirm their email address; hence, it’s a single contact.  In theory, this is okay but in actuality, there’s a lot of room for inaccuracy, misuses, input mistakes, and spelling errors. There is also malicious intent, like signing up your boss for every email list under the sun.
  2. Double opt-in – This is the ideal way to get permission, as your recipient confirms their subscription when they sign up for your list. They do this with a response (an action) of some type.  They are sent an email to confirm, they respond, hence double contact.  (Double opted-in is also known as closed-loop confirmed opted-in or verified opted-in).

Neither method is foolproof: unlike single opted-in, double opt-in subscriptions provide an auditable trail of responsibility, supporting the legitimacy of the address. You have proof they confirmed their address to be on your list, evidence that you may need (to keep you off a blacklist) if a recipient reports your mail as spam, which as we all know does happen.

Then, there is the definition of “permission” where potential subscriber permission may be:

  1. Expressed permission, the best type of consent to get, as it comes directly from the user himself (herself).  An example of an action, checking a box on a website registration form to request your email newsletter.
  2. Implied permission, permission that is not given, it’s inferred from an action or relationship, such as not removing a pre-check on a website form for list membership.

So what do you do with single-opted-in implied permission addresses?  Convert them into confirmed opted-in, at the collection point.

Always look for a way to give your potential recipient an opportunity to opt-in to your list by:

  1. Selecting a visible area on your webpages to your registration page: right on top of the home page.
  2. Placing a link to your list registration page from every web page (you own) that your prospects and customers may go to.
  3. Inviting potential recipients to join your list when they checkout online – and tell them why they should and offer them a discount if they do.
  4. Designing specific list registration landing pages for all those paid Google ads you’re running
  5. Sponsoring another list, find a list offering complementary products to your own.  You sell Salt; find a company who sells Pepper.
  6. Offering webinars, white pages, youtube instructions or other incentives.  Include an offer to sign up to your newsletters for additional information, email-only discounts or monthly specials.
  7. Asking your current subscribers to “refer a friend”: include your registration link to a specific landing page just for referring friend signup.
  8. Using mobile marketing incentives – include a link to your email registration page.
  9. AND include an opt-in link to your mailing list on all your outbound email.

Upfront and Personal, ask them to sign up:

  1. At Trade Shows Conferences and More.  Technology allows show vendors to scan the bar codes embedded on the back of those little entrance badges we wear. Those codes normally include our email address, name, company name, and other tidbits.  Simply use your trade show supplied scanner too, with their permission, of course, to add them to your mailing list.  Automatically email a confirmation when the address is added.
  2. Manually, traditionally a pen and paperwork well too. You will have to add their name to your list, but automatically send them a confirmation email. This will catch most input errors.
  3. On your printed materials:  Publish the link to your subscription page on everything you produce, business cards, yellow page ads (are they still used?), giveaways, flyers, in-store advertisements, customer surveys, ads, and catalog listings.
  4. On your direct mail pieces.  Postcards work well, in fact, if you would like to sign up to our postcard mailing “Quick Tip” you can sign up now and see how we do it.
  5. At every customer contact point. All customer service representatives should be trained to ask customers and prospects if they would like to be added to your mailing list with a brief explanation of why they should join. Again, have a confirmation sent to them as soon as their name is added.
  6. When you speak at a live seminar.  Include a link to your list signup on the last slide, and handout.  Bring up your mailing list in the summary of your presentation and offer an incentive for signing up that day. Don’t forget the confirmation!
  7. At the point of sale. Invite customers to sign up for your list as they check out.  A downloadable discount coupon may be offered after they confirm their subscription.

Continual list subscription acquisition and verification take effort. The constant addition of qualified/permission-based list members is one of the keys to effective list building and ultimately the success of your campaigns.  This is followed by the challenge to maintain a relationship with each subscriber after they are opted-in.  What you do with your list and the type of follow up for your subscribers will determine if your subscribers will continue to be your subscribers.  For example, an easy subscription management process will encourage subscribers to update their information on a regular basis and allow them to change preferences instead of opting out. Because there are several parts to a successful email campaign, mailing schedules, segments, content, length of a message, graphics, subject lines, text or HTML all those parts will come together with the proper foundation: a strong list membership strengthen by confirmed opted-in addresses making them more valuable than the “likes” on your FB pages. For more information, please contact info@dundee.net

Confirmed opted-in email addresses; more valuable than the “likes” on your FB page Read More »

6 reasons to Make a Wake Up Call to your Discussion Lists

6 reasons to Make a Wake Up Call to your Discussion Lists

Discussion Lists Need a Wake up Call?

Don’t settle for out-of- date List Hosting Web Tools.  Switch to Dundee Internet Discussion List Hosting Services and:

phone

Need a wake up call?

1. Create a customize landing page
2. Brand your list(s)
3. Integrate with your existing database & website
4. Share photos
5. Share files
6. Run numerous discussion lists under one URL and brand, using one or many list administrators, or resell services to others with all discussion list benefits

Create * Share * Grow

“I can’t imagine doing our e-mail marketing with anyone else”
    Mark – WWD Director of Operations

6 reasons to Make a Wake Up Call to your Discussion Lists Read More »