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Frequently Asked Questions about
Email Marketing
These are the most common questions our clients and
prospects ask us about search engine optimization. If
your questions are not addressed from the list below, be
sure to contact us and we will be happy to discuss this
in more detail:
What is your conversion goal for the email campaign?
We believe a successful email campaign does more than
drive a lot of traffic to a site. A successful campaign
is measured by conversion from a call to action. What
are you offering: a white paper, free software trial
download, other promotional offer, or a sales contact
request? Similar to offline marketing, offer your
audience something valuable so that they will be willing
to give you something of value in return.
How can you get the recipients to open the email?
Subject is everything!!! State clearly and succinctly
what you are offering and how it will benefit them?
Throughout your campaign planning, put yourself in their
position. What makes you want to open an email? What
makes you want to click on the link? If you know your
audience, then you know what they want. If you’re not
sure how they will respond, test the list in small
increments and measure the results. Adjust the message
and possibly the target page to increase conversions.
What calls to action will the audience respond to?
Think about your audience and what they might
respond/convert to. If you’re targeting a high-level
audience (CEO, President), don’t offer them a free
software trial download. Write in a style that speaks to
them in the manner they are used to, as if you were
speaking to them face to face. Try to keep the message
short. If you feel you want to provide more detail, get
to the point early within two sentences. Provide the
link right after the two sentences. You can elaborate
further after this point within the message or take them
right to your site.
How do you focus your email message for conversion?
Again, you want to think about the audience. If you’ve
done some search engine optimization, you probably know
your target keywords. Use the most effective keyword(s)
in your subject. Repeat the keywords in your message
body. Make sure the keywords are repeated on the landing
page. A consistent and relative message is crucial. If
your audience comes to your web site through search
engines using certain keywords, they will probably
respond to these keywords in an email message. More
details about this subject are provided in the
Market-Vantage White Paper: Focus the Message for
Conversion
What target page on your site will you drive the
traffic to?
It’s important to make it as easy as possible for the
visitor to respond to the call to action. Provide a link
to the landing page that gives them exactly what the
email message said they could get. Don’t force them to
navigate your site to find the page for conversion. How
can you get the converted visitors to further
self-qualify?
If you’re a B2B that doesn’t sell your products or
services on your web site, you can use this opportunity
to get the converted visitor to self-qualify themselves
even further. For example, at the end of the request for
literature form, ask them if they want more information.
If so, ask them to complete a more detailed
questionnaire. If you have a very successful campaign,
this may help you prioritize the telemarketing or direct
sales phone follow up. Measuring these actions can be an
additional measure of success for the campaign. You’ll
have to work with your webmaster to automate this
process on your web site.
How can you avoid spamming your own email list?
You may be collecting email addresses as visitors submit
request forms or make purchases from your web site.
Indicate clearly your Privacy Statement to ensure
visitors that their email address will not be sold or
distributed. Be selective about how often you send them
email. Be careful not to spam the list by sending email
too often. They will either opt-out or simply delete the
message when they recognize the Sender name. Send email
only when you have something of high interest or value
to offer and they will be less likely to opt-out. I
prefer sending the message from a real person rather
than a generic email address. This way, the Recipient
feels any response they send will actually be read by
someone rather than ending up in a black hole. Be
honest. Don’t use any bait and switch techniques or they
will never open your email again and probably request to
opt-out. Always give them the opportunity to opt-out
with any email campaign. If they request to opt-out, be
very religious about removing them from your
distribution list. If you’re renting a list, make sure
the list provider follows best practices as well.
What do you look for when renting a list?
Portal web sites that provide valuable product or
industry vertical information often offer email list
rental opportunities to vendors. Shop around and compare
CPM (Cost Per Thousand) prices. Ask about Selects, the
ability to slice the list by selection criteria i.e. Job
Title, Annual Budget for your type of product,
Geography, and other demographics. Inquire as to whether
there is an additional charge for sending the email.
Sometimes the list rental and the actual sending of the
email blast are separate charges. Ask about content
guidelines i.e. text limits, HTML and text message
options. Many print magazines have web sites and offer
email list rental. Some email list rental providers
offer a CPA (Cost Per Action) or CPC (Cost Per Click)
model. This means you only pay when the Recipient
actually clicks on the link in the message to your site.
It is in their best interest to help you craft a
successful message for conversion and they typically
offer this type of service.
What type of results or ROI can you expect?
Think about your goals: online purchase, request for
literature, free trial software download, sales contact
request, response to some other promotional offer.
Whatever it is, you’ll want to implement mechanisms to
measure it. Divide the number of click-throughs by the
total number of email recipients to calculate your
click-through rate (CTR). Divide the number of
conversions by the number of clicks to calculate your
clicks to conversion rate. You could divide the number
of conversions by the number of recipients if you don’t
even care about clicks. Of course, the percentage will
be lower, but this may be your metric for success. A
rate of 3 to 8% of recipients to conversion is a
successful campaign. However, using a new rented list
could capture only 1% while your own in-house list
developed from previous campaigns could reach 5%. You
would also want to calculate the cost per conversion. If
the conversion rate was low, but the cost was
considerably lower than another campaign, it could still
be considered successful. If conversion is your goal,
then you want to make sure you have the mechanisms in
place to measure conversion. This information is also
useful if your campaign was not successful and you want
to seek compensation from the list provider.
Do you have enough email addresses to achieve your
goal?
Based on the conversion rates mentioned above, calculate
whether you are sending your message to enough
Recipients to achieve your campaign goals. If you don’t
have enough email addresses in your own database, you
may have to rent a list to supplement.
How do you manage your own email database?
It’s ideal to be able to maintain your email list in the
same SFA or CRM tool used to manage your prospects and
customers. How will the database be populated? Assuming
that email addresses gathered from your web site are the
result of a purchase or some other type of request form,
how is the contact data fed into the database, SFA or
CRM tool? Whatever database you’re using you will want
to think about the demographic fields you want to
maintain in the beginning i.e. original campaign source
for that contact, industry, product interest, geography.
This way, you can easily do your own selections based on
this criteria in the future. Think about how you will
manage opt-in, opt-out, and undeliverable records. If
you’re in the market for an SFA or CRM tool, the ability
to manage email campaigns may be a product requirement
to consider.

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614.225.0590
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