邮件地址,邮件营销专家  
 
   

Revisiting the Email Newsletter

   

Chris Maher is president of Fosforus, a B2B marketing, media and interactive firm based in Austin, Texas. You can reach him at Chris@fosforus.com.

This will come as no surprise, but I am a great proponent of email newsletters, especially for business-to-business (B2B) technology companies.

Some technology providers find themselves ahead of the marketplace, that is, the space is far from mature and there is a great deal of confusion about how a given set of technologies competes with or complements another, more-established set of technologies.

So there is a real need for marketplace education, and it has been my experience that an email newsletter is one good way to address that need.

How you should go about this, though, is a subject that might spark some differing opinions.

When your vice president of sales hears the words "marketplace education," he thinks of a slightly less throat-grabbing pitch.

When your chief software architect hears "marketplace education," she thinks of long-winded, company-drafted white papers that, in reality, only the programmers themselves are qualified to fully appreciate.

With these misapprehensions of what an email newsletter should do, it's a marvel that any good ones are created at all. To those who do this and do this well every single month, all I can say is, congratulations.

Now for some pointers derived from reviewing several months worth of various clients' email newsletter click-through data and other metrics.

Lead With Your Best

Sometimes, your newsletter recipient will read all the way to the end of a given issue. But, generally speaking, we live in dive-in, dive-out times, during which sustained attention is the exception not the rule. So, lead with your strongest or most important information.

The Reader Is in Education Mode

Why does someone sign up for an email newsletter in the first place? Some readers will tell you when asked that they are interested in more information about the company. But that's misleading. What they're really interested in is doing their jobs better, raising their professional profiles, and allying themselves with projects that improve their companies.

Easily 80 percent of folks sitting at their desks are killing time and spending their professional lives as amiable lint traps. Harsh, but true.

You're trying to find that 20 percent who are at least semi-awake and want to try to change things for the better. I'm convinced that the members of this class are most likely to subscribe.

These folks are information-hungry. Please inform them.

How Not to Inform Them

A company-drafted case study gets a 1 percent click-through rate. A case study drafted by respected industry-analyst group gets a 2 percent click-through rate. Putting aside the fact that click-through rates aren't the be-all, end-all of metrics, what do these statistics mean, especially if this is a pattern you've seen in a year's worth of data?

The lesson here is one about trust. The reader is suspicious of anything that smacks of self-promotion. (Of course, people in the know realize that the use of industry analysts is a dandified, tarted-up form of self-promotion in which cologne and nice suits are worn. Apparently, the cologne and nice suits work.)

Thus, if you are determined to not inform your audience, keep putting out information with the house brand. And, while you're at it, be sure to push out some recent press releases. There is nothing more boring than a company that keeps talking about itself.

Venture Off the Topic

I know you. You won't like this. But, occasionally, venture off the core topic of your newsletter. Let's say the topic is "optimizing your field service organization." Every issue, make sure to throw in an article about, for example, business ethics or bad bosses.

Why? Because it's important to remember that your readers are people, not just job titles. The straight lines we marketers draw -- the tendency to think in terms of mechanical stimulus and response -- can only take us so far.

Eventually -- with time and age, I think -- you discover a new range of possibilities. You enter into true dialogues with those you seek to serve (and that changes everything).

Take the Measured Risk

Every once in a while, take a stand. Make a bold assertion. Challenge the reader.

Think of your email newsletter in terms of a musical composition. You may like massive doses of unrelenting harmony, but let me assure you that your (and my and everyone's) ears appreciate harmony all the more because of the dissonances that "need" resolution.

 
 
 
精品邮件地址
 ·精品行业邮件地址A盘
 ·精品地区邮件地址B盘
 ·精品综合邮件地址C盘
 ·2008最新搜索邮件地址D盘
 ·2008最新442个论坛邮址E盘

购买邮件地址请联系我们

服务电话
  021-51875673
服务传真
  021-51875679
联系地址
  上海浦东新区泰谷路77号华信大厦

邮件营销经验谈
 ·邮件营销的八种模式及八项建议
 ·邮件营销的12项缺点
 ·邮件开信率最高的那天不一定是点进率最高的日子
 ·邮件内容的署名问题
 ·可改进现有Email营销效果
 ·Email营销的现状和问题
 ·邮件列表内容的六项原则
 ·单封邮件收件人数超限制
 ·邮件无主题或主题不明确
 ·国内eMail营销的现状
 ·看美国人是怎样做网络营销的
 ·向邮件列表发布信息
 ·给顾客一个必答复的理由
 ·Email是所有目标市场营销手段中最节约成本的方式
 ·Email广告的六个基本技巧
 ·应如何实施email营销策略
 ·如何利用Email进行营销
 ·找出信件被退的原因并改善
 ·群发邮件营销的七点建议
 ·邮件广告市场供求信息不畅通
 ·减少邮件退信的九种策略
 ·如何发送html格式的邮件
 ·群发邮件的一些小技巧
 ·搜索仍是第一营销工具
 ·基于Web的安全邮件服务
邮件营销友情站点
 ·邮件地址
 ·电子邮件地址
 ·邮件营销
Copyright© 2006-2008 136邮址站版权所有 网站地图
本站主要产品:邮件地址 邮件群发 电子邮件地址 邮件营销 邮件代发