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Email benchmark report

September 2nd, 2009

Signup.to have produced a really useful email benchmarking report for UK email marketers on email marketing performance. The report is based on emails sent from their own clients across a number of different industries. It’s useful to see how your email marketing stacks up against others in your given industry.

To see how your email bench marks against others in your industry, pick up a copu of the report

Get the full email marketing report here

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Don’t email more email smarter.

August 20th, 2009

In these times of recession, email marketers are under more pressure than ever to get the best return from their email marketing campaigns. So it’s tempting to crank up the frequency in which you hit your list or lists.

As email marketers we’re under increasing pressure to maximise the ROI from email marketing campaigns and in the short term there may well be a lift in sales or website visits but how much long term damage could this do to your overall reputation? You risk potentially doing more harm than good if you increase the frequency in the number of emails you send, you could end up bombarding your subscribers with more emails than they are happy to receive from you – don’t forget you’re not the only one sending them emails!!

So what can email marketers do?

Well sometimes less is more! A well targeted and timely email campaign will yield far better results than an untargeted blast to your entire file.

Segment your list

I’ve known companies (and I’ve done it myself) segment to the most very basic level, for example, if your database contains people who have bought different products from you, then email people who have bought product A promoting product B. (not forgetting to make sure you exclude anyone who already owns both products!)

You could send a targeted offer to the male and female readers of your list; it could even promote the same product but with a different message that appeal to that demographic.

Depending on how much you know about your subscribers there is so much you can do. If you don’t know much about your subscribers (perhaps you have only collected the most basic information) then you can ask them, run a questionnaire or poll on your website and find out more about them, these can be targeted to your business needs, then make segments based on the feedback and email accordingly.

Timing your email campaigns

Timing your email campaign is critical to its success; I have learnt this from bitter experience. I’d recommend thoroughly testing the day and time that you send your email campaigns to see when you get the best response. From experience it tends to be Tuesday to Thursday, between 5 & 9 in the evening. Of course this may be different for your industry and also for your market, for instance those in a B2B environment may notice that’s it better to send early in the week opposed to sending on a Friday afternoon when people are winding down for the weekend.

Of course a timely offer is a great way to increase the response of your campaign. Email campaigns around a specific event work well. If you know the date of your subscriber’s birthday you could do a special offer available on that day. Or its known event coming up (mothers day, Valentines Day or the kids going back to school)

As with all marketing test, test and test again.

Run split campaigns against creative to see which works best and if your as not testing subject lines on EVERY send you should be!

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Why your email subject lines are so important

August 11th, 2009

The subject line one of the most important elements to your email campaign, it’s what gets people to open your email, get it wrong and your email just gets ignored and your message is lost.

Yet it continually amazes me how little thought is put into some email subject lines. If I had a pound for the amount of times I had received copy from an editor with no subject line attached I would be a very rich chap indeed.

My point is that the subject line is often an after thought, when in fact it’s one of the most important parts of your overall campaign. It needs to be well thought out and related closely to the content of your email.

You’ve done all the hard work in getting your email delivered into your subscribers inbox don’t go and blow it all with a weak and ill thought out subject line.

Your email is competing with an already crowded inbox so if it doesn’t entice the reader to open it you’re going to get binned.

If you’re email gets binned it doesn’t get read and your message is lost, you can make huge improvements in the profitability of your email campaigns by spending a little time thinking about the content of your subject lines.

A good subject line needs to be engaging and intriguing and make your reader want to open the email and read the message contained within, you may have a great offer for them, a download or freebie or just a great message that you want to share with them. It should also relate closely to the content, readers are not silly, they have probably opened hundreds of emails that have promised much and delivered very little, which just leaves your reader feeling cheated and let down, and unlikely to open more of your emails.

Your subject line needs to be brief, you have approx 45-55 characters to play with, some email clients allow longer subject lines but the general rule of thumb is that the shorter the subject line the higher the open and click through rates will be.

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