Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Following Up Marketing with E-mail

By Lee Duncan


E-mail provides an intensely efficient and inexpensive way of sending your message out to customers and prospective customers. And the simplicity and the great value that you can achieve using email as your primary follow-up technique is second to none.

But before rushing into setting up your e-mail marketing campaign, it's worth spending a while to plan and make sure that it is likely to deliver results for you. These are some basic tips to get you going.

The topic line on the e-mail is vital - most folks delete just promotional e-mails and so you have to be a bit more creative with what you write, to encourage them to open your e-mail and read the contents. At the same time, make sure that your subject line reflects the content in some way, like a newspaper headline reflects the editorial.

After grabbing their attention with a good headline, make sure the content of the email is worth checking out too. Do not only do a promotion - entertain or teach your readers so they enjoy receiving your emails.

Keep the sentences and paragraphs short. People find that it's easier to read on-screen when there are no more than 3 lines of text together.

Maybe the most import of all email marketing tips is to incorporate an offer to get your customers to make contact with you, or buy something. Ensure you have some kind of call to action in at least fifty percent of your emails.

Use opted-in emails for your marketing, because sending email to people who have not asked for them is just spamming, and you know how you tend to feel about receiving e-mail from someone unknown to you.

Make sure that no attachments are ever sent with your emails. The bulk of IT firms around the globe warn that attachments are possibly carrying a virus and this may simply mean that your e-mails can be blacklisted and are unlikely to get read. Rather than having attachments on your emails, it is far more effective to just add links to websites and other Web resources.

Before you broadcast make sure that you proof read every e-mail you send out to fix any gaffes. Daft spelling errors can reflect badly on the standard of services your business provides.




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