Five Tips for Effective Email Marketing
Ten years ago, I'd get about 50 to 100 voice mails a day. That message volume has now moved into email -- and exploded as email has become the dominant method of business communication. And just like we took our phones to go, now we're taking our email along, too, moving out of the office and onto home computers, laptops and handheld devices like BlackBerries and Treos. And we mix business and personal email together more than ever.
The increase in the sheer volume and diversity of email has significantly changed the ways we interact with our inboxes. First, we've become experts at quick, visual sorting. We have to be! Otherwise, we risk falling into a perpetual state of email backlog. Technology is also changing how we digest our daily email intake. Here's how: Sneak peak: Programs like Outlook give users the option to read a portion of email message contents in a preview pane, without actually opening the email. See no evil: Email software now includes "block images" as a default setting. This is an anti-porn measure that blocks all images -- including your advertising graphics. Users who want to receive images need to manually turn the images setting back on. Handheld nation: Busy professionals, parents, students and consumers are reading their email on the run. Emails viewed on PDAs and even cell phones leave no room for anything but the basics. Thumbs up to email portability. Thumbs down to HTML formatting. Are these changes challenging to marketers? You bet. But don't get discouraged. These trends and innovations are opportunities for smart email marketers to be seen. So how do you win? 1. Identify your business' brand, and spell out your subject. People are far more likely to open an email when they know who it's from and what they'll get if they click. Put your business name in the "From" line -- not the name of the employee who distributes the email campaign. Make sure the "Subject" line is specific and spells out the email's contents. Don't make readers guess at the who or what of your message (because they won't). Give them a good reason to click.- Loading Comments...
- Loading Comments...
Recent Comments
Featured Photo Galleries
-
Swiss bank UBS returns to profit
BBC
-
China's Auto Sales Rise Sharply
The Wall Street Journal.
-
Google Adds 'Buzz' to Gmail
The Wall Street Journal.
-
What SAP Needs After Apotheker
BusinessWeek Online
-
Japan Airlines Decides to Stick With American Airlines
New York Times
-
Why fret about Greece?
The Economist
-
Stiglitz Sees No Greek Default as ‘Speculative Attacks’ Persist
BusinessWeek Online
-
Opels Strategy Has Fewer Jobs and Less Capacity
New York Times
-
NFIB: Small Business Owners Report "shortage of customers"
Calculated Risk
-
BLS: Few Job Openings in December
Calculated Risk
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,058.64 | 1,070.52 | 2,150.87 | 36.33 |
Oil *
72.02
|
|
UP
150.25
|
UP
13.78
|
UP
24.82
|
UP
0.41
|
10 Yr
3.63%
SPDR Gold
105.45
|
|
+1.52%
|
+1.30%
|
+1.17%
|
+1.14%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |
More From TheStreet
Latest HeadlinesBrokerage Partners
Sponsored Links














