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This is literally a goldmine for email marketers and copy writers. The space compliments your subject lines and allows you to pack in more meaning to your subject lines.
In the example below, the gibberish in the subject line will reduce open rates by at least 2%. From my experiments it did.
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In most circles,
email marketing is highly underestimated as a revenue driver for
businesses and even when the potentials are understood, it’s frequently
done wrong. So I put together a simple list of tricks you can act on now
without spending anything to improve your email marketing strategy.
1. The gist about sender names and email address
This is obvious, but
very much ignored. I see marketing emails with names such as
notifications@xyz.com and no-reply@xyz.com when the sender obviously
wants a reply.
Getting replies to your
emails is actually great for your email marketing practices as it
informs the algorithms of the inbox provider that your emails are
relevant to the recipient.
For your sender name, try and keep it consistent, but I have found out that the best variation of sender names are either:
a. The Brand’s name or;
b. Sender’s name + Brand Name, e.g: Joel from Buffer
But my favourite sender
name hack has to be from PushCV, they use a combination of the
recipient’s name and the intent of the newsletter, “Jobs for Adeyemi.”
This genius hack from them must have taken their open rates through the
roof — downside is that they send me too many emails so they remain
unopened in my inbox.
2. Give your subject line a boner
This is 70% of the
reasons your emails will ever be opened. And with so much competition
from other senders, how do you make your emails stand out?
Personally, I
receive at least 100 emails everyday across all my inboxes and I’ve
trained my eyes to quickly peruse for content that’s relevant to me at
the time. A great subject line could make your email more relevant at
the time and gets my open.
For short term tactics that can get you the results you seek:
A. Try personalizing your subject line with the recipient’s name.
B. Be creative with emojis in the subject line.
C. Use alliterations, copywriters swear they work wonders. Just ask Joanna of Copyhackers
3. Ever heard of Alt text?
On the web, it’s a
common standard for content creators to include alt text on all images
for SEO reasons and for readability purposes. So why not do it in email
when email clients are notorious for blocking images (I’m looking at you
Yahoo).
See how Buzzfeed does
this. They’re literally the kings of copywriting so don’t expect your
first attempt to look as awesome, but try hard regardless.
Bonus read — Writing for all people: How to use Alt-text well
4. What to do about your pre-header text
This is literally a goldmine for email marketers and copy writers. The space compliments your subject lines and allows you to pack in more meaning to your subject lines.
In the example below, the gibberish in the subject line will reduce open rates by at least 2%. From my experiments it did.
5. Consider ditching your nav bar
I see a lot of emails
coded with nav bars because marketers figured that they can make their
most common search terms visible which is great, but have you considered
other strategies. Maybe a search box instead?
Eliminating the jargons
that commonly appear in the nav bar will make your message easier to
communicate and your email distraction free.
I especially like this new email template that my good friend, Taqwa designed.
He got rid of the Nav bar and included the search box at the
bottom — The design solution to boring copy as click to see more.
6. The truth about your deliverability
You might actually be doing everything right but you are experiencing abysmal results. Don’t sweat it, there’s a solution.
For a lot of folks new
to email marketing, there are a lot of technicalities that you’ll only
figure out along the way if you don’t ask questions. One of those
questions are about your DNS records.
Because of the high rate
of spam mails and phishing out there, inbox providers cross check your
records in the DNS to authenticate your email and combat phishing. If
these records are not present, you could experience very low
deliverability rate even though you are a legitimate sender. Most
important of these records are your DKIM, and SPF records.
Learn more about SPF and DKIM.
7. Segment your list if you can
If you are gunning for
better results, then you must do this. Email gives you a great way to
market items that are relevant to a particular buyer so it makes obvious
sense to gather information about your audience when they join your
email list.
For a fashion eCommerce
store, it would be in the best interest of your store to send relevant
content to your subscribers. You really do not want to send an email
about beautiful sunflower dresses to your male subscribers unless you
are trying to get them to buy for the special ladies in their lives.
See how Adidas does
this — they send emails about male track suits to their male
subscribers, and female track suits to their feminine audience:
8. Much ado about CTAs
This right here is what will make or mar your CTR (click through rates).
Click here is about the
most banal phrase on the web, and as a marketer you deserve no points if
your default CTA is “click here.”
This is an avenue for
you to get creative and let your CTR soar like an eagle as this gives
you extra breath to be more creative with your email copy.
9. Re-engagement campaign? Ditch the coupon code!
Every email marketer is
presented with this nightmare — subscribers that no longer open your
emails. Most times, it means that this persons have churned and you
really want them back.
There are different
tactics out there to re-engage churned subscribers, and depending on
your business type you might go with what fits your business best.
One common tactic is to offer coupon codes, and this is exceptionally tricky as it could put you in debt.
And it’s for this reason
I love Dropbox’ email marketing. They go emotional with illustrations
and copy, and it touches me in the right places
If the
emotions don’t work, then you can gun for the coupon codes. As a rule of
thumb, it’s best to keep the coupons for your best customers because
they represent 80% of your revenue. Treat them special.
Need email inspiration and copy ideas? Check out really good emails and beetle.
While you at it, sign up to the best newsletter in the world and see
how the guys at The Hustle grow a business on their email newsletter.
Please use my referral link — the hustle newsletter
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