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Sarah Worsham / Mar 30, 2009

12 Tips for More Effective Email Marketing

emailfrozenchipmunkEmailing a prospective client can be difficult at best.  Following up on potential leads is important, but so is saying the right thing.  It may help to consider your email piece as an elevator pitch – you only have a few seconds to grab attention and entice the customer to continue the conversation.  Here are a few tips to help make your email more effective:

  1. Keep it short – No one wants to read pages of text in an email.  If it’s longer than 3 or 4 paragraphs, it’s too long.  One or two paragraphs (short!) are best.
  2. Focus on the customer – What benefits are you offering them?  What will they gain from your product or services?
  3. Be concise – Get right to the point about who you are and what you’re offering.
  4. Use bullet points – Short phrases in bullet points can be effective for getting across a message succinctly.
  5. Provide examples – Potential customers want to know what you’ve successfully done in the past.  Keep examples short and link to longer explanations or case studies on your website.
  6. Keep it simple – Even people in your industry won’t want to read wordy technical explanations.  Make sure just about anyone can understand what you’re talking about.
  7. Link to your website – for more information or longer testimonials or stories.
  8. Include a call to action – Whatever you’d like the person to do.  It’s most effective if its something you’re offering them on your website (for free) that you can use to gather the lead (and measure that they’re actually interested).
  9. Introduce Yourself – Customers want to know who you are, but keep it to 1 or 2 sentences (think elevator pitch).  Link to more information on your website.
  10. Followup – Don’t rely on customers to contact you.  Followup with another email or a phone call during a specified time period. Ask when and how they prefer to be contacted.
  11. Respect privacy – Have a privacy policy and follow it.  Allow people the option to opt-out of receiving emails from you. Post it on your website and link to it in your emails.
  12. Give them space –  Don’t bombard potential customers with phone calls and emails.  Give them time to think and do their own work.  Contact them at specific times through their preferred channel.

This an evolving list.  Do you have tips that you’d like to share?  We’d love to hear them in the comments!

(photo by frozenchipmunk @ Flickr CC)

Technorati tags:  direct marketing, email marketing, internet marketing, business, leads, lead generation, sales, marketing

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Sarah Worsham / Mar 30, 2009

Internet Marketing, Strategy & Technology Links – Mar 30, 2009

Monday again. Hope you’re feeling relaxed and well-rested.

  • Study: TV Still Rules, But Online Video Has a Lot of Room to Grow (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Service-Oriented Architecture: Using Our APIs Internally (Open Blog – NYT)
  • Consumers Go Online to Curb Impulses, Avoid Taxes (Marketing Charts)
  • Akamai Data: Internet, Broadband Still Going & Growing (GigaOM)
  • Marketers and SMBs Disconnect over Online Tactics (Marketing Charts)
  • How Do You Feel About “Ghost Twittering?” (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Flickr Founder Launches New Startup, Hunch (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • Newspapers Read by 75% of US Population (Marketing Charts)
  • BlackBerry Gets Sling Player, More Video (GigaOM)
  • ExactTarget Releases One-to-One Field Guides to Help Marketers Build Better Integrated Campaigns (Ad Ops Online)
  • Pirate Moves – The Value of Passionate Communities (Chris Brogan)
  • How to Embrace the Process of Social Media (Social Media Explorer)
  • YouTube Adds A Twitter Button (TechCrunch)
  • Weekly Digest of the Social Networking Space: March 26, 2009 (Web Strategy by Jeremiah)
  • Carol Bartz’s Yahoo Paying More Attention To Mobile (YHOO) (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • Content is the Most Trusted Form of Advertising (Duct Tape Marketing)

We post links to stories about how to use the web effectively throughout the day on Twitter, Google Reader Shared or Delicious.  Also, if you have a post or link you think is worth sharing, please let us know!

Sarah Worsham / Mar 27, 2009

Internet Marketing, Strategy & Technology Links – Mar 27, 2009

Happy Friday to Everyone!  Hope you have a great weekend!

  • What Could Go Wrong With Google: The Slideshow (TechCrunch)
  • 6 Features Twitter Users Say They’d Pay For (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • When Do You Stop Commenting on Other Blogs? (Daily Blog Tips)
  • Skype for iPhone to Be Released as Early as Next Week (GigaOM)
  • Facebook Introduces Private Groups for Families (ReadWriteWeb)
  • SES NY: Improve SEO Through Blogs & Feeds (Online Marketing Blog)
  • Facebook is Growing Up Fast: Number of Users Over 35 Doubled in Last 60 Days (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Social Media for Social Causes Study: The Results (Mashable)
  • More Security Loopholes Found In Google Docs (TechCrunch)
  • Actually, Most Facebook Users Are Over 25 (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • Opera Taps Skyhook for Location Awareness (GigaOM)
  • Opera, Now With Geolocation (Mashable)
  • 4 Ways Companies Use Twitter for Business (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Six Very Official Ways to Improve Your Writing (ProBlogger)
  • Online Publishers Association Members Announce New Display Advertising Units (Ad Ops Online)
  • One Can’t Miss Blogging For Business Event (Social Media Explorer)
  • Gen Y Says: “I Want My Social TV!” (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Subtitles Lend Staying Power to Online Video (Marketing Charts)
  • The Best Way to Build a Twitter Account? Step by Step. (HubSpot)
  • Tweeting For Business (TwiTip)
  • Bridging the Software Gap (Blue Wave Media)

We post links to stories about how to use the web effectively throughout the day on Twitter, Google Reader Shared or Delicious.  Also, if you have a post or link you think is worth sharing, please let us know!

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About Sazbean


Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

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