Posts Tagged ‘email marketing campaigns’

Using emails in marketing

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010
  • Email marketing software available today provides much more than just sending basic emails to your work colleagues, suppliers and customers.

    Whilst email clients such as Outlook and Incredimail will remain the backbone of people to people contact services – in addition alongside these can be run a whole range of online based email services like Mailchimp and Constant Contact that can be used to send out and control a wide range of business information to prospects and customers. With their costs starting from just £20 per month for an email campaign it’s very affordable and effective.

    Why use email marketing?
    There are numerous benefits to email marketing. The following are a few examples:
    • Promotion of new products
    • Brochure registration and distribution service
    • Sending out service updates and changes
    • Automated distribution of periodic training courses
    • Distribution of newsletters
    • Distribution of promotional offers

    However, one of the key benefits of email marketing, if carried out timely and professionally, is the ability to remain front of mind with your customer/prospect in a less intrusive and more cost effective way than sending the sales rep around for a cuppa each month.

    Professionalism and standards
    All of this does not go without regulation. The sending of all electronic marketing communications in the UK is subject to “The Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003” – which covers telephone, email, fax and text communications. In general this shouldn’t restrict you in your marketing communications, however it is stressed that that you take a permission-based approach with your contact lists.

    Email tools:
    There are a whole host of tools that can be used to enrich your email marketing campaigns and help to generate interest, such as:
    • Video and Podcasts for sending multimedia messages. (This is a huge growth area at the moment)
    • Surveys enabling you to obtain feedback, viewpoints, and reactions to your products and services.
    • Management Tools enabling you to track the recipients who opened your emails and even particular links they clicked onto.

    Steps for a successful campaign:
    • Only use permission based contact emails
    • Segment your customers based on your individual offers
    • Create one theme/hook/message to the email campaign and stick to it
    • Include one or two links that you can use for tracking
    • Personalise each email to the named recipient
    • Include a unsubscribe option in every email sent out

    As with all marketing activities, your email marketing should be integrated both online and offline to ensure your campaign message does not conflict with any other promotions or information that exists.

    So onwards and upwards with your email campaigns and remember; most customers now expect to have regular email contact and notifications from their suppliers, and if you don’t do it, then your competitors certainly will.

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Growing your email marketing lists

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

In previous posts we’ve discussed how to write winning email newsletters. However, If you’ve just started out in business or only recently started capturing email addresses through sign up forms etc then you probably don't have a big list to send your email marketing campaigns or email newsletters to. So what do you do?

 

Here are some inspirational ideas to grow your opt-in email marketing list:

•    Place your email newsletter signup form on your home page. Or if this doesn’t fit with the look and feel of your design then have a visual cue, or noticeable link to take users directly to the signup form page.

•    Link to your signup form from every page of your website (you might even add a link to your footer or side navigation).

•    Place a link to your email signup form in your email signature (ask everyone in your company to do the same).

•    Offer free giveaways to one lucky subscriber (it can be an exclusive promotional discount or a limited edition offer of some sort).

•    Post free whitepapers or helpful articles on your site. They'll get downloaded and hopefully spread around the web if you offer them for free and with no registration. Inside your whitepaper you could place your add or promotion of your newsletter and the benefits of signing up (see above).

•    Send out personal, one-to-one emails to all your clients who haven’t already opted-in and ask them to please sign up to your newsletter.

•    In your "Contact Us" form on your website, add a checkbox to "signup to our newsletter"

 

  • Already Have a List of Customers?

    What if you already have a customer list with email contact details of people that you've been doing business with for years? Just because they're your customers it doesn't necessarily mean that they want to start receiving your email newsletters. For example, if you run a small consultancy business with a about 25 clients who are very close to you. If you just assume they'd want your newsletter and you automatically subscribe them to your list without their permission, you're just going to irritate a lot of them (or worse, get yourself reported as a spammer). If you've got an online store you're probably sitting on a huge email list of customers who have purchased something from you in the past. But if they didn't check a box for email marketing, or if you haven't emailed them anything in years, you shouldn't start sending them emails out of the blue. So what can you do? If you have a list of customer email addresses and you want to start sending them email marketing, but you don't have their permission yet, ask them for permission by sending a "Re-Introduction Email." It can be extremely effective in re-energising dormant contacts and will certainly help you on your way to increasing your opt-in subscribers.

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