Monday, October 31, 2016

All the Marketing Tools You Need This Season

As soon as the last jack-o’-lantern is extinguished, the holiday marketing season begins in full force. In many cases, it doesn’t even wait that long! Fortunately, our Everything Holiday resource center has all the tips, tools, guides, giveaways, and festive freebies you need to make the remaining months of the year a smash success for your business. 

Here are some of the highlights that we unlocked last week:

Those are just a taste of what Everything Holiday has to offer. All 24 days are hung from the chimney with care, ready to help your holiday marketing reach new heights. Check out some of some of these seasonal goodies:

With Everything Holiday, you’re sure to have smooth sledding this holiday season. Happy holidays!

Shine Bright This Season

24 Days of Email Marketing Tips, Tools, and Festive Freebies

Everything Holiday

 

© 2016, John Habib. All rights reserved.

The post All the Marketing Tools You Need This Season appeared first on Vertical Response Blog.

Thursday, October 27, 2016

5 Tactics for Short Emails that Pack a Punch

Sometimes, less is more. And when it comes to your email marketing strategy, this can absolutely be true.

While some audiences love to receive a long, descriptive email, others may quickly become bored or overwhelmed by messages that contain a mountain of text.

For these subscribers, a short, snappy, attention-grabbing email is both more engaging and more effective. And as you deliver content your audience wants, it can also mean higher open and click-through rates for you in the long run.

If you’ve tried long-form emails and aren’t seeing results, it may be time to try a short-form email (an email with not much written content) instead.

To help get you started, here are five tactics and examples for writing and designing short form emails your subscribers will love.

1. Convey meaning with images instead of copy.

Instead of using words to convey meaning, you can use images to create connection, feeling and meaning. This is also an easy way to shorten the length of your message.

In this email from Paypal, they use an image to show one of the benefits of their service and to create emotion:

Subject line: STOP! Don’t enter your info repeatedly

screen-shot-2016-10-25-at-3-20-08-pm

 

Notice how the image demonstrates a benefit of faster checkout times: more family time. And the fall background adds a nice nostalgic touch that can connect with readers.

Challenge: In your next email, try using an image or two instead of additional copy to convey meaning, feeling and product/service benefits. The copy you do choose to include should still be concise, meaningful and relevant.

2. Use powerful words that create mental images.

One of the secrets to writing a great short-form email is to get your reader to mentally engage with your email immediately. Creating mental imagery is a great way to accomplish this. When your reader begins to picture in their mind what you’re writing about, they start to engage personally with your email in a powerful way. And this can get them to click on your call to action

In this brief email, Airbnb includes words such as “sumo wrestlers,” “up and coming musicians” and “imaginative chefs” to help the reader picture the kind of people they’d meet while using their service:

Subject line: Elisabeth, you have an exclusive invite from Airbnb

screen-shot-2016-10-26-at-11-08-05-am

They chose these words because they create imagery the moment you read them. How can you think of a sumo wrestler without picturing their iconic outfit? Or a chef without his uniform and bustling kitchen?

These powerful words also create the feeling that the reader will be meeting new and exciting city dwellers, which might be a stark contrast compared to their usual travel adventures. Instead of writing that you’ll “meet new and exciting people” when using the service, they use specific examples to encourage the reader to envision this experience.

Challenge: Experiment with words you wouldn’t normally use in your next email, and be specific about the benefits a reader would gain. Use words that create mental pictures, and don’t be afraid to try ones that are unusual.

3. Use humor in your content.

What are you more likely to fondly recall years later? A college lecture on American history or a comedy show with Kevin Hart?

Unless you’re a history teacher or fanatic, you’ll probably recall Kevin Hart’s best joke over the year George Washington was born (1732, in case you were wondering).

Humor connects with people. It sticks in their memory, lightens their mood and often creates a sense of admiration (especially for a witty joke). And best of all, humor can be a powerful way to convey meaning in fewer words and get people to engage with your emails.

In this email, Really Good Emails adds a witty, humorous tone that simply draws in readers:

Subject line: Announcing our new series—Exploring the magic behind emails

screen-shot-2016-10-26-at-1-57-47-pm

I mean really, who doesn’t sit and wonder at the magic of “David Copperfield, bacon, and ligers” (bacon especially)?

Challenge: Use humor in your next email’s content to connect with your subscribers quickly. Your first sentence can be humorous while your second and third can set the context and encourage people to act. By using humor, you can grab your reader’s attention quickly and create positive vibes that encourage them to click. Which means you’ll need less content later on trying to convince them to act.  Just make sure that your humor is relevant to your message and that it’ll make sense to your unique audience.

4. Show off your products.

If you’ve got a great product, let it speak for itself. Instead of writing long descriptions of your products and their benefits, try using images in your emails that’ll show off your product’s benefits with visuals instead of words.

In the below email, Etsy writes very little – just a subject line and brief sentence about how you can find the perfect gift with Etsy. But they include tons of images of their sellers’ products fitted into categories that will help readers find what they’re looking for:

Subject line: The perfect gift does exist

screen-shot-2016-10-26-at-10-47-53-am

screen-shot-2016-10-26-at-10-48-04-am

This email needs very little written content, because the images demonstrate the benefits of the products, instead of words.

Challenge: If you have pictures of your product, try sending an email to subscribers that includes those pictures. If you offer a service, try incorporating pictures that demonstrate it in action. For example, if you’re a personal fitness trainer, try including images of you demonstrating a workout routine or guiding clients during a workout. Using pictures can save you from writing a lot of extra content and catch your subscribers’ attention right away.

5. Evoke the senses with descriptive words.

We experience the world with our five senses. So when you incorporate the senses in your emails, you can turn an email into something your reader can feel, smell, see, touch and hear while sitting at their computer hundreds or thousands of miles away. By engaging your subscriber in this way, you can encourage them to act with less written content.

Blue Apron does a great job of using descriptive language in their email below:

Subject line: The apple of our eye? This special Guest Chef recipe & $30 off!

screen-shot-2016-10-26-at-10-56-17-am

By using powerful adjectives, this email transports the reader from wherever they are to a quaint, charming home. Their headline “Cold Nights, Warm Kitchens” allows readers to envision and feel the warmth of a cozy kitchen during winter.

The words “crisp apples to sweet butternut squash” helps you also imagine the taste of those foods, and the background visuals of this tasty produce evokes the sense of sight to bring it all together.

Challenge: Create an email that appeals to the senses by using adjectives and imagery in your content. You don’t needs lot of email content if your language can engage people right away, and using the senses is a great way to do this. To see if this encourages subscriber engagement, be sure review your click-through rate to see if it’s higher than usual.

Challenge Yourself! Write Short Emails

Although the perfect email length depends on your business needs and audience, keep in mind that you don’t need to write a 200-word email to convince people to act.

With the right words and images, you can get people to engage with just a quick email.

Ready to try one of the challenges above? Get started today and tell me about your experience in the comments section below – I’d love to hear about it!

The post 5 Tactics for Short Emails that Pack a Punch appeared first on Email Marketing Tips.



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‘Tis the Season: How to “Sleigh” Your Holiday Social Media Campaigns

With cooler weather about to usher in the holiday season, it’s not too early to start making plans for your holiday social media campaign. In fact, some five million consumers in the U.S. last year had already wrapped up their holiday shopping before the end of summer.

Social media remains one of the most popular tools for business marketing, with 74 percent of marketers planning to increase its use within the next year, and 48 percent actively measuring related click-through rates. A poll this year shows the medium is most commonly being used for brand awareness (51 percent), lead generation (23 percent), and direct sales (17 percent). Overall, social media use increased 13 percent in the past year alone.

Once the holiday season really gets rolling, you’ll be glad for any social post preparation you made ahead of time. This year your social media and email can work in conjunction to promote your business, highlight specific products, and facilitate interest and trust in your brand.

While forecasters hadn’t made big predictions when this went to print, last year’s nationwide holiday sales crept up 3 percent to $626.1 billion. Act now to get your piece of the festive (pumpkin) pie with these social media tips.

Make a list, check it twice

  • Establish objectives. Are you trying to boost sales, reinforce your brand, drive followers to your website, boost email subscriptions, promote specific deals or products, create buzz, drive more foot traffic, or all of the above? Use that wish list to set specific goals for the season, like this for example: “We will entice 50 customers to redeem the coupons we post on Facebook.”
  • Choose effective venues. Each social media platform skews toward a demographic, so your decision may require market research and a review of where your competitors are active.
  • Establish a frequent posting schedule. Decide who will take on responsibility for the posting itself, understanding that posts can be pre-programmed to publish at different intervals. As a guideline, consider posting on Facebook three to 10 times weekly; Twitter five times daily; LinkedIn two to five times weekly; and Pinterest five to 10 times daily. 
  • Map out a seasonal calendar. Online tools offer schedule spreadsheets that can incorporate plans for the timing, subject, and content of each post or Tweet while storing images and videos. Jotting down topics and image links on a paper calendar works fine, too. The most popular kickoff is sometime during the first two weeks of November, though some businesses like to start earlier to include Halloween.
  • Be observant. In general, your audiences should receive relevant messages several days ahead of any event so they have time to plan and ship any gifts. Possibilities include Movember (all of November); daylight saving time (Nov. 6); Veterans Day (Nov. 11); Thanksgiving (Nov. 24); Black Friday (Nov. 25); Small Business Saturday (Nov. 26); Cyber Monday (Nov. 28); Free Shipping Day (Dec. 16); Hanukkah (Dec. 24 through Jan. 1); Kwanzaa (Dec. 26 through Jan. 1); Christmas Eve and Day (Dec. 24 and 25); and New Year’s Eve and Day (Dec. 31 and Jan. 1). This year, some forecasters are also predicting Singles Day (Nov. 11) will migrate from China.
  • Take advantage of cross-marketing. That means getting out your message on multiple channels to increase visibility. If you’re taking the time to create a compelling social media post about an upcoming event, sale or promotion, for example, it’s fairly easy to tweak that information into a corresponding email or blog.

Hitting Santa’s workshop 

  • Offer a variety. In general, the industry-standard “Rule of Thirds” dictates that a third of your posts build your brand via personal posts and responses; a third promote your business and its bottom line; and a third provide visitors useful information or opinions related to your industry.
  • Publicly support philanthropic causes and events. When appropriate, give your brand a bit of personality beyond business as usual by using your social media accounts to acknowledge charitable organizations that are important to you. Also, consider giving a shout-out to employees who are going above and beyond.
  • Choose quality over quantity. When in doubt, avoid overly promotional messages.
  • Be interactive. Ask for opinions, respond to comments, sponsor contests, and so on. You might ask customers for one-minute videos about how they’ll use your products during the holidays, host ugly sweater contests, or ask for worst weather or favorite gift photos. A custom Facebook app from a company like PromoJam can help. Research shows customers who engage with companies over social media spend 20 to 40 percent more money with that company. 
  • Feature clear, compelling visuals. The human brain perceives images in just 13 milliseconds, far more quickly than it perceives copy. Find a dozen interchangeable photos for your Facebook cover art, create a holiday-themed Pinterest board, and Tweet images from classic holiday movies, for example.
  • Offer exclusive giveaways, promotions, discounts, or info on special sales. Who doesn’t want free stuff, especially during the holidays?
  • Share holiday tips or advice. Find and present information that’s relevant to your audience, perhaps helping followers solve a problem. Consider festive recipes, decorating and entertaining ideas, or beauty and fashion tips.
  • Use surveys. A survey can be used to solicit and share valuable and timely information.
  • Conduct research on post timing. Determine the best times to publish posts for your given industry and audience.
  • Gather intelligence. Find out which posts and Tweets are performing best for current and future reference. Free tools like Facebook Insights and Google Analytics can help.
  • Count down to major holidays. Drum up excitement with a countdown.
  • Celebrate the 12 days of Christmas. A 12 Days of Christmas-themed campaign can be a fun way to spread out promotions, as RentMoola did here.
  • Tap into the urgency of last-minute shopping. Actively communicate shipping deadlines, product availability, and other time-sensitive information across all your social networks, as Walgreens did here. More than 40 percent of U.S. consumers do the majority of shopping in December or later.
  • Help them shop. Almost 65 percent of shoppers scroll through their social feeds to find ideas for the perfect present, so Tweet links to your products or set up a regularly updated gift guide on your Facebook page.
  • Respond quickly to comments, questions, complaints, and kudos. These days customers on social media expect immediate responses from brands, meaning your company will be viewed negatively if it fails in that regard.
  • Stay positive. Research shows customers who have a positive exchange with a business on social media are 71 percent more likely to recommend that business to others, so do everything you can to garner referrals.
  • Stay on top of unflattering reviews. Apologize for any inconvenience, be sympathetic to the customer’s needs, and offer to speak about the problem in private.
  • Promote trust. Offering stellar customer service and troubleshooting around the holidays will help build trust in your business.
  • Team up with a local charity. Consider holding a food drive or staging a BOGO promotion through which your business donates the other item to a family in need.

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© 2016, Tori Tsu. All rights reserved.

The post ‘Tis the Season: How to “Sleigh” Your Holiday Social Media Campaigns appeared first on Vertical Response Blog.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

New Feature: Advanced Reporting Shows What Clicks With Your Readers

Now VerticalResponse helps you track how well your email campaigns are resonating with your contacts. Our new Advanced Reporting provides Pro Plan and Pay As You Go users with insightful metrics on open and click rates, how your emails are being read, and more — all of which can help improve future email campaign performance.

To access Advanced Reporting, simply select a sent email campaign from your messages home page and then navigate to the top of the results page. There you’ll find the report menu tab and these new, easy-to-use tools:

Device and browser statistics

When you know how your emails are being consumed, you can tweak the design and formatting of your messages to ensure they are displaying correctly on the device or browser your contacts are using. Device reporting presents that valuable information to you with a device breakdown, telling you how many of your emails are opened on desktop and on mobile. It also breaks that data down even further by client — you can see which browser, mobile device, and software your emails look and perform best on.

Geographic data

Geographic reporting tells you where in the world your emails are being read. This data, which is helpful when crafting personalized content, is presented both graphically through a map view, and in a table list that shows you the top opens and top clicks by location. This way you can adjust your messaging according to where your contacts are located. Geographic data is particularly useful for online businesses with customers in many different locations.

Heat map

The heat map feature lets you see how your contacts are interacting with your emails and what’s working best for your campaigns. A heat map provides a visual representation of where clicks occur within your email, so you can see which links attract the most attention. Do more readers click links at the top of the email, or after scrolling down? The heat map feature answers that, so you can determine where to place high priority content in future emails.

Domain reports

Find out which email clients (Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, and so on) your contacts use, and track how each is performing in terms of opens, bounces, clicks, and unsubscribes. Because email content may display differently with different clients, you can use these metrics to determine if you need to do any troubleshooting or make changes to your email design.

Comparison reports

See how the performance of your most recent email campaign stacks up against previous emails. Under the comparison tab, you’ll find five different options:

  • Number of Words in Subject Line vs. Open Rate
  • Characters in Subject Line vs. Open Rate
  • Recently Sent Emails Compare Open and Click Rate
  • By Time Open and Click Rate
  • By Day Open and Click Rate

By monitoring these metrics, you’ll get a more detailed picture of your readers’ habits and what they’re responding to, so you can create stronger emails.

Multiple lists metrics

If you have multiple contact lists, you no longer need to copy an email campaign and send it to each of your lists separately. With this update, you can save time by sending the same campaign to multiple lists. You’ll then receive individual reports for each list, detailing opens, clicks, bounces, and unsubscribes.

List reports can be viewed by clicking “Lists” on the report menu tab or the “Lists” drop-down menu above the report menu tab.

You can then use this data to focus your outreach strategy. For example, say you have three contact lists — one list collected at events, the second through your website, and the third at your store. If your “events” list ends up snagging the best open and click rates, you might decide to devote more energy into using more events to grow that list. 

Check out the Product Updates category to learn more about VerticalResponse’s newest features and updates.

 

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© 2016, Amber Humphrey. All rights reserved.

The post New Feature: Advanced Reporting Shows What Clicks With Your Readers appeared first on Vertical Response Blog.

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

51 Open-Worthy Subject Line Ideas

They say don’t judge an email by its subject line, but let’s be honest: We’re always keeping an eye out for the best of the best. After all, the subject line is one of the first impressions your message has on its recipients and can help you improve your opens and clicks.

That’s a lot of pressure for a seemingly short line of text.

While there is no secret to the perfect subject line, there are a few words and phrases that we turn to time and time again to get more eyes on our emails. To add some bling to your subject lines , check out these tips and tricks you can use today.

Create a sense of urgency

Stop everything and read this.

Got you, didn’t it? Getting people to take action from your email can be difficult. There’s a lot that goes into getting more opens and clicks. Urgency is one of those things that can have a big impact on whether or not your email gets read.

Here are some examples to get you started:

1. Back in stock, so don’t miss out

2. This is your *last chance* to shop our sale

3. Tick, tock! 30% off sale ends soon!

4. Going once, going twice!

5. Members get first dibs.

6. We couldn’t wait ‘til Friday!

7. When it’s gone, it’s gone.

8. You might want to hurry

9. A little (limited-time-only) present

10. Available for 24 hours only

6 Types of Subject Lines That Will Improve Your Open Rates

Have a strong call-to-action

When it comes down to getting your emails opened, experiential verbs (like “celebrate” and “love”) perform better than functional verbs (like “spend” and “grab”). That’s not to say these words won’t work – it’s really all about context.

The thing that everyone can agree on is that if you don’t ask, subscribers won’t take action. So try throwing some of these high-performing words in your next subject line:

11. Celebrate with savings!

12. Act now for friends and family savings!

13. 3 DIY Frame Hacks You Need to Try Now

14. Trust me, you need this

15. send some. get some.

16. Don’t Let These Get Away

 Get personal

Personalization. When it’s done right, it’s AWesome! But when it’s done wrong? It can be borderline creepy. Here are a few examples of how to do it the right way:

17. Because you need this…

18. Join me for a marg, Olivia?

19. You deserve a treat

20. Special delivery for Olivia

21. The jeans you don’t have (yet)

Repeat yourself

Being redundant pays off, especially when it comes to your subject line. That’s because it keeps you, the sender, top-of-mind. And being top-of-mind helps build trust, which can lead to more sales. It’s a win-win!

Try including your name or your company name in the subject line, à la these brands:

22. Welcome to the Away family ✈️

23. New and exclusive to Kaufmann Mercantile

24. The Madewell essentials

25. Did somebody say new Glossier?

26. The Giant Weekly Newsletter

27. New and Exclusive to Sephora

Quick Tips Video: 6 Tricks to Help You Create an Engaging Subject Line

We don’t mean to brag, but…

Just kidding, we totally do. And that’s because adding key superlatives to your subject line can help strengthen your core message and make it more effective.

Just check out these example subject lines to see what I mean:

28. new favorite dress, hands down

29. Here’s a special treat, just for you!

30. This is big, huge, gigantic, amazing, incredible

31. Our latest styles have just arrived

32. The PERFECT Facebook Ad

33. Best of the blog

34. A little luxury at a great price

Pose a question

A question is a great way to spark some curiosity around your email, but it’s the type of question that matters. Yes or no questions perform better than open-ended questions. And don’t forget about sentiment: Questions with a negative association (like don’t or can’t) are the worst-performers.

35. What do you think?

36. Do you like prizes?

37. Can you keep a secret?

38. How could you top this?

39. Today’s the day! Are you in?

40. Best gift ever?

41. Details, please! Did you like your purchase?

Punctuation and capitalization matter

Punctuation can completely change the tone of your subject line with one simple character. And that can impact how your subscribers respond to your message. Even the lack of punctuation can change the gist of your subject, keeping things casual.

Capitalization also has the same effect. Take notes.

42. MAJOR announcement!

43. Extra 30% off sale styles (!)

44. *permission to brag*

45. It’s giveaway time again

46. T.G.I.SAAALE!

47. we’re melting

48. alert! today only

49. And the winner goes to

50. N-E-W

51. Flash. Sale. Alert.

Try these out for yourself

We’re big proponents of trying out tricks and tactics to see what works best. While you can’t predict results by looking at how past subject lines performed, you can use them as a basis for future iteration.

Try adding some of these words and phrases in your next few subject lines and watch your open rates skyrocket.

Have a tried-and-true subject line trick of your own? Let us know in the comments!

The post 51 Open-Worthy Subject Line Ideas appeared first on Email Marketing Tips.



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Monday, October 24, 2016

Marketing Magic for the Holiday Season: Highlights from Everything Holiday

The Everything Holiday party is in full swing! Every day through October 28, we’re unlocking a tip, tool, resource, guide, how-to, or festive freebie to help you market your business this holiday season. If 24 days of holiday-themed gifts aren’t enough, we’re also giving away a free year of Pro email marketing to the lucky winner of our Everything Holiday sweepstakes

Here’s a look at some of what was unlocked on the site last week: 

If you don’t want to miss a single day (and who would?), be sure to sign up for daily reminder emails that will take you to each day’s holiday helper as soon as it’s unlocked.

Shine Bright This Season

24 Days of Email Marketing Tips, Tools, and Festive Freebies

Everything Holiday

 

© 2016, John Habib. All rights reserved.

The post Marketing Magic for the Holiday Season: Highlights from Everything Holiday appeared first on Vertical Response Blog.

Friday, October 21, 2016

How Personalization Can Help You Connect with Subscribers

Hello [name],

I’m so happy you found us! [The place you signed up] is really a great place to get started, but you’ve come to the right place. Our blog is a wonderful resource on [your interests].

Look familiar?

We’ve all received that kind of email before – where you’re addressed directly in a way that doesn’t quite sit right. The information you’ve just entered into a form is spat back at you in an attempt to connect on a deeper level. But it still feels robotic…and disingenuous.

To send personalized emails that truly resonate with your audience, it’s all about sending targeted content to those who want it most. Learning more about the people who sign up to your list can help build stronger relationships as well as target subscribers based on their interests. According to a study from Pew Internet & American Life Project, personalized emails on average receive a 14 percent increase in click-through rates and 10 percent increase in overall conversions.

But the results don’t stop there – beyond increasing engagement, you can also use personalized emails to delight your subscribers and nurture connections that build trust.  

To help you personalize your emails for your subscribers and start seeing these kind of results, let’s take a look at how you can gather the information you need to begin personalizing, as well as practical tips you can apply to your own email strategy today.

Gathering information about your subscribers

Just like any relationship, the best ones are established when you get to know one another. As you learn more about the people signing up to your email list, you can target them with the right kind of content to build your relationship.

To effectively personalize your emails, you need to collect information about your subscribers. Since your sign up form is often your first interaction with a subscriber joining your email list, it’s a great opportunity to get started.

In addition to asking for name and email, you can include custom fields that require subscribers to provide more information about themselves, such as the city where they live or favorite color.

Let’s say you own an animal rescue and want to provide potential new owners with information on what kind of care their pets will need. Setting up a form with selections for the type of animal, experience with fostering and current pets in the household makes it much easier to send relevant information to your subscribers.

With this information, you can then send relevant content based on the selections subscribers make. If someone who fills out your sign up form is fostering a new dog for the first time, you can send content with advice on adjusting to the new situation. If you were to send information on how to acclimate cats to their new housemates, however, that wouldn’t really fit that person’s needs.

Besides your sign up form, another great way to gather information about your subscribers is through customer surveys.

With a survey, you can learn directly from the people who are already on your list. What kind of content would they like to receive from you? At what cadence do they want to receive your emails?

When you reach out to to your customers directly, you not only get valuable feedback in return, you also show them you care about how they are doing.

As you hear from your audience, you can use your survey insight as you craft your next emails.

Using personalization to delight subscribers

By personalizing your emails so they solve your subscribers’ unique problems or give them content related to their specific interests, you’re able to immediately provide value. And the sooner you can do that, the sooner your subscribers will understand how important your emails are.

Your welcome message is your first opportunity to do this. In your welcome message, establish yourself as an expert in the field. Make sure to provide original content on a topic you know subscribers are interested in and they’ll be more likely to trust you when they’re ready to make a purchase.

Here’s a great example of a targeted, personalized welcome email from WeddingWire, a go-to resource for everything wedding related, which subscribers receive immediately after signing up for an account:

In the sign up form, visitors are asked to provide their expected wedding date. With that information, WeddingWire knows to send content related to where you are in the wedding process.

They use this message to congratulate you on your engagement and go the extra step to clarify what you’re likely to receive in the future. The checklist is also the perfect resource for couples during the early planning process.

As the wedding date gets closer, WeddingWire sends content based on other checklist tasks the engaged couple should be completing, such as choosing attire, picking out invitations and more.

By continuing to send content to your subscribers throughout your relationship with them, you can increase awareness of what you have to offer, show you care and keep your brand top of mind.

Another great way to show you care is by celebrating the big milestones together. It can be as simple as a birthday message to let your customers know you’re thinking about them. Facebook does a great job of this in their birthday celebration emails, like the one below:

screen-shot-2016-10-21-at-2-51-29-pm

They provide a quick and simple email that is totally contextual, and the goal is just to make you smile.

You can celebrate important business milestones as well. Kickstarter’s congratulatory emails are a delightful example of how they celebrate their users’ successes. Check out the message you receive when you hit 100 backers:

kickstartersuccess-2

While these are only a few examples of how you can send personalized content, consider how you might be able to do the same for your own audience.

When someone purchases your product, are there any tips you can give that would help them get started faster? Do you have a tool that is underutilized? And are there subscribers on your list who could benefit from it? Segment them and send a quick reminder that you offer more functionality than they’re currently using.

Have your subscribers been clicking through to content on one topic more than others? Check into why that link is performing better than others, and use those learnings in your next message. You can see what kind of subject lines resonate with your subscribers by tracking message opens too.

Personalizing emails based on your subscribers’ geographical location is another great way to provide value to specific segments of your email list. If you’re running an event in their area, or want to reach out and let people know that your nearby store is open, you can collect their geographical information through your forms directly.

While all of these examples are contextually personalized emails, there are still effective ways to use a subscriber’s first name in your messages – aside from the greeting.

A fun example of this can be found in Weekly Coffee, a productivity newsletter created by AWeber’s Product Marketing Manager (and host of our Ask Me About Anything Podcast series!), Tom Tate. Check out what he does at the end of this message:

screen-shot-2016-10-21-at-2-50-47-pm

Not only does he call me out by name in a way that makes me feel like I’m his friend, but I also get a sweet little ‘P.S’ at the end as a thank you. Little details go a long way.

Personalizing your content, one email at a time

Building deep connections with your subscribers is what email marketing is all about – but it all begins with sending the right content to your audience at the right time.

As you get to know your subscribers and send them content based on their needs, you’ll not only see increases in engagement, but also positive feelings towards your business. 

Already personalizing your emails? Let us know what works for you in the comments!

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The post How Personalization Can Help You Connect with Subscribers appeared first on Email Marketing Tips.



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