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Ten Commandments Of E-Mail Marketing: Lessons From The Experts

Subject lines, open rates, metrics and measures.  There's so much information and advice about e-mail marketing that we often feel overwhelmed. We wanted to shout, "Please just give me the bottom-line, the best practices, the big picture."

So after attending a recent conference on e-mail marketing, we sorted through all the information and advice from presenters: from Quris, Schwab, Aberdeen Group, Lincoln Mercury, Peppers and Rogers Group , Citigroup, ePrivacy Group, Yahoo!, Promotions.com, Sony Pictures Digital Entertainment, BVRP, and Optas to give you the essentials: The Ten Commanadments of E-Mail Marketing.

1.  Build an entire e-mail marketing program; the one-off message is dead.  Instead of sending single messages or offers, make your e-mail to customers long-term, ongoing, and valuable.  Integrate e-mail marketing efforts into offline marketing efforts.

2.  Be contagious; your customer is your best advocate.  With viral marketing, customers willingly pass on your message to people they predict will be interested.  What could be better?  Promote viral marketing by inviting customers to forward your message, rewarding them for forwarding it ($$$ or sweepstakes entry), or helping pass on your message via chat, lists, instant messaging.

3.  Stop tweaking your subject line.  IMT Strategies reports that the #1 reason customers open a message is that they trust the company that sent it.  Subject lines are important but the sender’s name (and the relationship the sender establishes) is MORE important.

4.  Make your e-mail pretty.  Plain text messages are going the way of the dinosaurs.  E-mail marketers are using HTML, rich media, and instant messaging to showcase their brand.  Move to the most compelling e-mail format you can afford.

5.  Don't "spray and pray."  Send your customers relevant messages when you have something new to offer or say.  E-mail fatigue hurts everyone.

6.  Merge online customer service and e-mail marketing functions. Train online call center representatives to integrate e- mail marketing with e-mail concern resolution. 

7.  Metrics means more than click-through rate.  The only way you’ll know if your e-mail marketing efforts are succeeding (or failing) is if you measure how customers respond.  You’ll learn more about what works if you collect data such as delivery status, number sent,  number delivered, average order size, error reporting, opens, open rate, viral pass-alongs, conversion rate, new customer acquisition, and opt-out rate.

8.  Permission means more than clicking “yes” in the opt-in box.  To keep customers’ loyalty and trust, be sure your subject lines aren’t misleading, your return address is valid, and it’s easy to opt- out.

9.  Personalization means more than “Dear First Name.”  To authentically personalize your marketing e-mail, include geographic or demographic information, custom content, references to the customer’s purchase history, or a link to the account review page.

10.  Give customers the controls.  Though the management issues may get complicated, customers want to control who in your company can market to them, what type of marketing materials you’ll send, and how often they’ll hear from you.  Your current e-mail marketing system or provider may not be up to this task, so take the long view.  Work toward an e-mail marketing relationship steered by your customers.

We’ll close with the words of Al Ries, marketing mastermind and co-author of the industry classic Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind.  (And let Al’s words be a warning to all of us!)  “Today, communication itself is the problem. We have become the world’s first overcommunicated society. Each year we send more and receive less.”



In Brief

What's the bottom line, the big picture on e-mail marketing? After attending a recent conference we sorted through all of the advice and information from the experts to come up with ten essentials for successful e-mail marketing.

(c) E-WRITE, 2004 - 2008.

Marilynne Rudick and Leslie O'Flahavan are partners in E-WRITE, a training and consulting company that specializes in writing for online readers. Rudick and O'Flahavan are authors of Clear, Correct, Concise E-Mail: A Writing Workbook for Customer Service Agents

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