
Email Marketing Tips
Tip 1: Interpreting the stats to improve results in email marketing
When it comes to email marketing everyone's looking for
definitive answers.
You know the kinds of questions I'm talking about. What sort
of open rate should we get? What's an average click-through
rate? If our unsubscribe rate is 2%, is that good?
Unfortunately, there are no absolutes. The answers are
dependent on so many factors. Firstly you can seek out
industry benchmarks from firms such as Marketing Sherpa
or E-Consultancy, which
is a good starting point. You can even try carrying out
your own research, either formally or just by asking around.
Next, look at your own campaign statistics over a period
of time and establishing your own benchmarks. Then you
can get down to interpreting what the numbers mean and
using that information to improve results next time.
For example, if a campaign achieves a lower than average
open rate, this probably means that:
- either the subject line was poor
- or the email got filtered as spam and went to the junk folder
- or the average age of the email addresses is going up
If a campaign achieves a lower than average click-through
rate, this probably means that:
- either the offer wasn't enticing enough
- or the creative (copy, design or both) wasn't strong enough
- or (if combined with a high open rate) the subject line
was misleading
You might then decide to go back to the testing stage,
remembering to test one factor at a time in order to find
out just what makes a difference.
Of course, there are many more stats on an typical report
than just open and click through rates, and the principle
applies to all. Establish your own benchmarks, interpret
what the numbers actually mean, identify areas for
improvement, tweak and test.
Tip 2: Do I know you? Why the 'from' field counts
Does your inbox groan under the weight of email, both wanted and
unwanted? For most of us, it's a split-second decision whether
to open an email or not. If you use a preview pane, you can
see a small section of the email. But if there's no preview
pane, you only have two pieces of information to go on. The
subject line, and who it's from. I've talked about subject
lines in a previous eTip ,
and there'll be an update on that very soon. But what about
the 'from' field?
According to research by Return Path*, 'knowing and trusting
the sender' is still the number one factor influencing opens.
Overall, people are opening less - so becoming a 'trusted sender'
is more important than ever. It doesn't happen overnight, but
here are a few simple things you can do for starters:
- Make the 'from' field a recognisable name, and keep it
consistent. The most obvious choice is your company name,
or a version of it that people are familiar with. For some
businesses, having the email appear to come from a named
person may be appropriate, for example Boden's newsletters
come from 'Johnny Boden'. Or you could use the actual email
address, such as 'Dina@wordfeeder.com'.
- Monitor the return address. There's nothing more discouraging
than hitting 'reply' only to get zero response. It amazes me
how many companies forget that email is essentially a two-way
communication medium. It's like calling someone on the phone,
talking for five minutes, then hanging up without giving them
a chance to say anything. Plain rude!
- Ask recipients to add your 'from' address to their address
book or contacts. It gets you special treatment in some email
clients and will help make sure your emails arrive in the
inbox rather than the junk folder.
These tips have been provided by Robin Houghton of Eggbox Marketing and Eggblogg
"cracking online marketing: helping you attract, convert and keep customers coming back"
Category: Email Marketing

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