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  1. #1
    natashpro is offline Junior Member
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    7 Common Mistakes when Email Marketing

    Here's a great post I wanted to share on mistakes people make when email marketing:

    1. Wrong list. The right audience is paramount. It seems quite obvious, but also presupposes knowledge of your target reader. If you have slowly developed your own list through a double opt in subscription on your Web site, congratulations. You should have this list issue pretty well dialed. It's when you start renting lists that this becomes a major issue. You can use magazines' list rentals and the information they provide on their audience as your barometer for all list procurement. Based on direct mail metrics, the list is said to account for 40% of your success rate. That's pretty significant. If you're out list shopping, be cautious, metrics driven, demand more information, and test the waters.

    2. Irrelevant content. Once you're pretty sure you have the right audience, it makes sense that you need the right content. Relevancy takes into account content, creative, audience, timing. This doesn't require higher calculus to figure out, but does support of lot of marketing strategy development. It is said to account for another 40% of your success rate. Readers will only respond to information that is important to them and engaging enough to consider. Of course, this is always easier said than it is to actually accomplish.

    3. Poor creative execution. Even with the correct list and great content, your message will be lost without reasonably professional creative development. This includes "from" and subject lines, graphic treatments, artwork, photos, logos, colors, fonts, formatting, as well as spelling, grammar, and the amount of information. Traditionally, creative is said to account for the last part of the 40-40-20 percent rule of your success rate, though I tend to believe it's far more important, intricate and subtle. With all the sales drumming and information bombardment nowadays, how are you going to attract your audience? Is your email engaging? Is the offer and its layout intriguing? Do you offer a reason to learn more?

    4. No call to action nor landing page. Now that I've opened your email and I'm reading it because the artwork and offer are quite interesting, you need to give me a reason to click, a purpose to learn more, a sense of urgency to act, a hook to take the plunge. Any combination of: "call today," "act now," "learn more," "sale ends Friday," will usually do the trick, depending on your sales style and needs. Once I do click on the link, I want the landing page on your Web site to be just as relevant. It should continue with stellar content and creative to bring me closer to browsing, shopping, finalizing the sale, or sharing information.

    5. Ill timed frequency and delivery. Readers can only tolerate receiving so many marketing emails from you each month. It's necessary to know where you must draw the line before you cross it. Readers who feel badgered will unsubscribe from your list. Be cautious and nurture your list. Make each email matter. And when you do hit the send button, do it on Tuesdays or Wednesdays, sometimes Thursdays. Statistics show these are the best times of the week. The good news here is that timing and frequency are completely flexible, testable, and easy to change. Start tracking when you send your emails and how often, then watch to see how these affect your success rate.

    6. Dearth of strategy and campaign. Successful email marketing requires forethought, planning and a budget to continue with a campaign. The same holds true for advertising in any medium. A single insertion ad in the local newspaper, for instance, is nearly a complete waste of money. However, an ongoing media buy in several local and regional publications along with radio, Web and outdoor is a powerful combination. The trick is to hit your audience with the right message more than once, without violating email frequency expectations. For example, if you have a yearly event, you can email pre-show to elicit excitement, during the show with news, and post-show with pictures and commentary. To do it well requires some thoughts around a campaign that ties into the event.

    7. Opaque to transparency. The work necessary to appear transparent is part and parcel in the email marketing gig, especially for a list that you rent. Your audience needs to trust that you're not hiding online viruses or worse. Interestingly, the same elements that can help alleviate these concerns are also helpful for improving click through rates. Here's another area where writing superior "from" and subject lines becomes essential to your success. It's also helpful to include a signature with contact information and make it super simple to manage subscription accounts and to unsubscribe.

    7 Common Mistakes of Email Marketing

  2. #2
    Henryj's Avatar
    Henryj is offline Member
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    Nice find, really helpful article. I have been starting email marketing, and its not really working cause I have been doing these mistakes
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  3. #3
    gregdavidson is offline Senior Member
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    I think "Not having enough knowledge to market to your list" should be #1. Lots of people are trying to copy something they read in a book yet they don't have the knowledge to be able to get their customer's attention.

  4. #4
    rejoice's Avatar
    rejoice is offline YE Veteran
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    Quote Originally Posted by gregdavidson View Post
    I think "Not having enough knowledge to market to your list" should be #1. Lots of people are trying to copy something they read in a book yet they don't have the knowledge to be able to get their customer's attention.
    that's why there are expert authors who write articles... sure you have to add their resource box when sending the email... but atleast you know you are getting quality content ")
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  5. #5
    myrightbrain is offline Junior Member
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    Great Post... Thanks for your knowledge sharing.

  6. #6
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    andrewlm is offline Senior Member
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    Really very helpful article. I found this interesting article. Hope this helps you all.

  7. #7
    spencereartle is offline Junior Member
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    amazing article.. thanks for taking the tiem.

  8. #8
    gregdavidson is offline Senior Member
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    Quote Originally Posted by rejoice View Post
    that's why there are expert authors who write articles... sure you have to add their resource box when sending the email... but atleast you know you are getting quality content ")
    Expert authors? If you don't know enough about the subject to write your own articles then how do you know the author is an expert? For example, I couldn't market to a list of PHP developers because I don't know the first thing about PHP coding.

  9. #9
    rejoice's Avatar
    rejoice is offline YE Veteran
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    Quote Originally Posted by gregdavidson View Post
    Expert authors? If you don't know enough about the subject to write your own articles then how do you know the author is an expert? For example, I couldn't market to a list of PHP developers because I don't know the first thing about PHP coding.
    do you write all your articles? some people when starting out with an ezine do not feel confident writing articles... one way to get around that would be to use articles written by your mentor and/or educator and/or other experts in the field... it's a form of very effective leverage for both parties involved

    others like to automate the process and provide quality content to their lists, and then pop a sales letter in the mix with their affiliate link (or whatever)... saves them time and allows them to once again leverage experts that enjoy writing articles

    obviously they are missing out on critical online cred that published articles provide (especially over the long term), but i guess they have done their due diligence and have their reasons... it's not as black and white as you think as there are pros and cons for both sides of the arguament
    1. Fast MLM Fortunes Ebook - FREE For A Limited Time And Then Back To $197
    2. Home Beer Brewing Secrets Affiliate Center - Huge Thirsty Untapped Niche
    3. Karmic Health - Accepting Joint Venture (JV) Proposals In "Yeast Infection"

  10. #10
    sampros is offline Junior Member
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    great article and great tips. those guys at interspire are great!

  11. #11
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    CybFun.com is offline Senior Member
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    I am generally negative about email marketing.

  12. #12
    discountedclothing is offline Senior Member
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    This is true and reliable. Let us be careful in sending emails to our customers.

  13. #13
    marianusher is offline Junior Member
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    Good post!!! I like those mistakes, because everytime you think in your email, and read it and read it, you can find something wrong on it, maybe because everytime you can change the content and you need to write something else you think can be good for the email.

  14. #14
    rebemor is offline Junior Member
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    I think the article is a good piece of work. Be aware about mistakes is a key of success, not repeat others mistakes can really save your time. This is not an easy business and get some advices and good info from experienced people is a good option.

  15. #15
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    karmSnack is offline Junior Member
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    Really great article. What is the best software to track it?

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