Email and Facebook: In a Relationship

“Email – I can’t imagine my life without it – is probably going away,” Sheryl Sandberg Facebook’s COO boldly claimed at the Nielsen’s Consumer 360 conference earlier this summer.

Obviously, We beg to differ!

On the contrary, it seems obvious to us that email is stronger than ever – particularly when used hand-in-hand with social networks like Facebook and Twitter.

In fact, in our recent survey of email marketers, we found that:

  1. 33% reported integrating social media and email marketing has increased their subscriber base.
  2. 30% reported after integrating social media and email marketing they saw an increase in friends/fans/followers.

With email and social working hand-in-hand, how could email possibly go away?

The Allegation

Just as the Wall Street Journal made the claim that 2009 was “the end of the email era,” Sandberg spoke for Facebook, suggesting that the use of social media will bring about the demise of email.

Our Rebuttal

Email is still alive, thriving and only helping social media become an even more powerful tool than it already is.

The Nielsen Company, the same organization that held the conference that brought about the controversial claim, agrees. The results of their 2009 study of email and social media use indicate that “social media use makes people consume email more, not less…particularly for the highest social media users.”

The Nielsen Company

“If you want to know what people like us will do tomorrow, you look at what teenagers are doing today,” Sandberg touted.

So let’s take a look at what they are doing today. In a 2009 survey of people 18-24, the Participatory Marketing Network and Pace University found that the majority of those surveyed would rather abandon social networks long before they stopped using email.

Generation Y spends a large amount of time on social sites. Their average time spent on social networks each month is 33 hours, making them high social media users.

When they were asked which activity they would least like to give up for one week, only 9% said social networks, as compared to 26% for email.

Generation Y Survey Results

Graph from Marketing Charts via WebProNews.

That doesn’t sound to us like email is going anywhere any time soon. In fact, take a look at what positive effects the respondents of our recent survey have had with email and social media:

AWeber Survey

Clearly, there’s a correlation between the two mediums, and there is some truth to Ms. Sandberg’s presentation. As she attests, “Facebook connects people in really extraordinary ways.”

There are 400 million people who use Facebook worldwide. It obliterates communication barriers and can put you in touch with people all over the globe who otherwise would never have come in contact with your business or brand.

Working Together

When it comes down to it, people are people. Whether you are growing your email list or looking for people to “like” your brand on Facebook, any and all eyeballs on your service are welcome.

You have to remember that social networks rely on email in the most basic sense. Facebook requires an email address to log on, and their emails notify you of updates, friend requests and comments.

Rather than deny the importance of email, Facebook should embrace it! The two make a rather powerful pair – both play a significant role in that relationship.

They have the potential to increase awareness of the other and encourage users to participate with both mediums and they cultivate and nurture true brand advocates.

If you use social media and email together, or have ideas of your own for using Facebook or other social media sites along with email to create the biggest buzz, please share them!

Email Preferences Make Readers Happy

Email marketing blogs are constantly buzzing with talk of value; they go on and on about all of the different ways you can add it to your campaign.

But how can they possibly know exactly what readers find valuable? As Mark Brownlow attests, “value is defined by the reader and not by you.” It doesn’t matter how valuable you think your messages are. If a reader doesn’t find your content to be of interest, they’re going to stop opening your emails.

In fact, a recent survey found that 85% of consumers prefer that companies ask about their e-mail preferences at sign up. So instead of playing the value guessing game, read on to learn how to use email preferences to let your subscribers decide what they deem to be valuable.

Give Them What They Want

The easiest and least time consuming way to learn what information subscribers want to receive is to simply ask. Hershey’s Chocolate does this exceptionally well on their email subscription page.

They require only the most basic information…

Hershey's Newsletter Sign Up

and then leave the important choices of which emails to sign up for up to the subscriber:

Hershey's Sign Up

You Can Do This With Your Web Form, Too!

Your potential subscribers are accustomed to making choices both on and offline, and they’re used to having things their way. After all, they can customize everything from their cars and coffee drinks down to the sneakers on their feet online with Mini, Volkswagen, Starbucks and NikeiD.

Since they are used to the convention of customizing the things they are most interested in, your prospective readers will be way more likely to fill out your form when you offer preferences because they’ll feel like they are in control.

Decide What Messages You Want to Send

This might be as simple as breaking up your content into a monthly newsletter, a weekly special and a daily deal. Or, your content could be entirely different for each choice, but that will depend on your business offering.

Regardless, you have to commit to sending these messages, so don’t give yourself an impossible workload. Choose a manageable number of messages that you can easily keep up with without becoming overwhelmed.

Create a Web Form with Checkboxes for Each Message

Each field on your form will represent a different email. This way, when the selection comes in with a new email sign up, their preferences are saved in your account and you know exactly which emails they want to receive from you.

Save a Segment for Each Email

With the choices saved as fields in your account, you’ll then create segments that automatically update whenever someone is added to your list.

Screen shot 2010-06-11 at 10.59.15 AM

When searching for fields that were added via checkbox, you must enter “yes” to indicate that the box was checked.

Send Specific Messages

As sign-ups start rolling in, you’ll send your separate messages only to those subscribers who checked certain boxes when signing up.

Send to Segment

This way, readers will get what they asked for, and your content will be right on target and true to what they requested from you.

Will You Try This Tactic?

By offering a few simple preferences, your email campaign will be more professional and customizable and your website visitors will be happy to subscribe to it because they can control what they’ll be receiving.

Let us know if you’ve tried this before, or what kind of response you get when testing it out!

How To Reengage Inactive Subscribers

Your subscribers are busy people. It’s completely normal for a percentage of your messages to go unopened each time you broadcast – that is just the nature of email marketing.

But for all of the busy people on your list, there are also email addresses that belong to genuinely disinterested subscribers and it is difficult to separate them from the busy ones.

A reengagement campaign can help you identify those subscribers that still want to hear from you and part ways with the ones who don’t.

Inactivity and Why It Matters to Your Campaign

Inactive subscribers include all contacts who haven’t opened or clicked through your messages over an extended period of time.

With all of the emails that your subscribers receive on a daily basis, it is easy for them to lose interest in your campaign for a variety of reasons – from bland subject lines and irrelevant message content to a change in their lifestyle or financial situation.

It’s a reality that you must accept: if subscribers no longer fit your target audience, they will quickly become inactive and take up space on your list.

According to a study by Merkle Interactive Services (PDF), subscribers who receive permission-based, promotional messages delete 55% of those emails without ever opening them.

That is over half of all requested email!

You want your subscribers to open your mail no matter what when they request it, but if you don’t address the truth that subscribers interests change over the course of your campaign, you run the risk of losing subscriber attention and damaging your deliverability and reputation.

As the late Stefan Pollard points out in an article about engagement and deliverability for clickz.com, the “top metrics generated from activity that make up a sender’s reputation include bounce rates, spam complaints, and recipient interaction.”

Many ISPs now look at what recipients have been doing with your emails when deciding whether your messages belong in the inbox. All interactions (both positive and negative) are noted so that the ISPs can get a better idea of your individual reputation as a sender.

You always want your subscribers to interact positively with your messages so that they are delivered consistently. A bloated list full of inactive addresses will not perform well and could negatively impact your sender reputation.

How to Handle Inactive Subscribers

Assess the Situation

How often are you sending emails? Is the information about your product or service something that a subscriber would value? The frequency and relevancy of your messages go into a subscriber’s decision to stop interacting with you.

There are lots of ways to investigate the activity on your list, but segmenting and sending surveys is a good place to start.

Identify the Inactives

On the Search Subscribers page in your account, you can find out exactly who hasn’t opened your messages in a certain amount of time.

Perform a search for “No Opens” since a previous date. Most marketers find that 90 days without opening is an appropriate time-frame, however you can always adjust the length to suit the needs of your campaign.

Search for No Opens

Finally, save the segment so that you can send emails only to those subscribers.

Save Inactive Subscribers Segment

Send a Series of Reengagement Messages

Even back when your inactive subscribers were engaged, they didn’t open or click on every single message from you. And they won’t all open/click on your first try at reengaging them.

To find the people who are really still interested in your campaign, set up a series of three broadcast messages that make it easy for them to take action.

Send the second message to people who didn’t respond to the first one by creating a new segment after you send the first message, and then send the third message to people who didn’t respond to the second.

Note: with Broadcast QuickStats, targeting non-responsive subscribers is a simple process.

For example, to email non-openers, click the “Unopened” button:

Did not open button

Then scroll down and click the “Send Directly to These Subscribers” button:

Send to non-openers

Make it very clear starting with the second message that if they do not take action you will remove them from your email list. If they still haven’t responded by the third and final message, use urgency tactics to let subscribers know that they will never, ever hear from you again unless they take immediate action.

Not sure what kind of information to include in your emails?

  • Send a survey, asking them to provide feedback and offer suggestions for content that they would like to see.
  • Create a whitepaper or a download about your particular service or specialty.
  • Reward subscribers for (hopefully) taking action: include exclusive coupons or discounts for products.

Know When to Say Goodbye

Going into this task, you must accept that there will be people who don’t respond to your reengagement messages. Although it’s hard to let go of those subscribers, you want the most responsive and interested list in the long run.

Stay firm with the decision to remove inactive subscribers. Run one final search for people who haven’t opened your messages and delete them from your list for good.

Ever Run a Reengagement Campaign?

What was your experience? Was it hard to let go of subscribers in that final moment?

We’d love to hear all about it!

Segmenting: The #1 Sales Technique

Salespeople often get a bad rap. It doesn’t matter what they’re selling – one bad experience with a scummy, slimy swindler and you’re left with a bad taste in your mouth for quite a while.

But for every scalawag salesguy, there are dozens of serviceable and accommodating sales reps that truly want to help you find the best product out there.

They engage you, ask you questions and soak up clues that could possibly aid them in closing the sale. They aren’t pushy, overbearing or deceitful, but instead they’re informative, helpful and driven to find a good fit for you – no matter if you’re buying a car, a pair of shoes, a puppy or a television.

Segmentation can help your email marketing campaign function in the same way. Read on to find out how to use this tool to maximize profit and keep existing customers happy.

Give Subscribers What They Want

When you segment your list, your email campaign assists your prospective customers and clients by providing them with emails that match their specific interests, just the same way a salesman would.

Here’s a compilation of our most informative segmentation posts to help you turn your campaign into a selling machine.


Start Segmenting: 3 Easy Steps
If you have more than one web form on your website and you’d like to track which form pulls in the most subscribers, learn how to segment using our ad tracking feature.

Email Web Analytics: 2 New Segmenting and Targeting Options
Ever wonder which subscribers aren’t opening your emails? Want to know who is clicking on certain links to your website? Segmentation makes both of those things possible.

Email Segmentation: 5 Groups You Can Easily Target
Learn how to focus on your non-responsive subscribers and those people who actually open your messages to make your campaign more relevant.

Email Segmentation: More Groups to Target
New subscribers and people who click on links throughout your messages are also important groups to target. Figure out how and why you should follow those subscriber trends in this post.

Segment Customers to Build Loyalty
When you have an existing customer base, it’s important to focus your energy on retention. Keeping those buyers happy and encouraging repeat business can be tricky. Take a softer approach to win their loyalty using segmentation.

Email Segmentation: Easily Target Customers
Your existing customers are just as important to your business as new ones. Reward repeat customers for their loyalty and drive repeat purchases by separating them from the masses and sending them specialized messages.

Email Segmentation Lifts Sales over $31,000
Ever run into a predicament and send a message to the wrong group of people? Here’s how to correct the mess up.

Segmentation Screwups: How to Recover
When you have an existing customer base, it’s important to focus your energy on retention. Keeping those buyers happy and encouraging repeat business can be tricky. Take a softer approach to win their loyalty using segmentation.

See for Yourself

If you haven’t tried segmenting your campaign before, there’s no time like the present to try it out.

Hopefully your subscribers will thank you for providing timely, relevant and targeted information by spending their hard-earned money with your company.

Let us know how it goes!

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Testimonials: The Ultimate Social Proof

Your email marketing relies on that one decisive moment when someone cruising around the internet ends up on your landing page and signs up for email updates from your company.

Once visitors click around and develop interest in your product, it’s natural for there to be some hesitation. People are very protective of their inboxes, but one surefire way to combat that tension is to use testimonials.

It’s a tactic that stems from the logic of social proof. As Robert Cialdini, author of Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion, explains, “we view a behavior as more correct in a given situation to the degree that we see others performing it.”

Let’s explore how you can use testimonials to encourage interested individuals to complete their requests for information and help you close sales with your email campaign.

Tactic #1: Influence at Sign Up

On their web form, Unique Fitness Group includes two testimonials from satisfied customers that are meant to positively influence website visitors who are on the fence about signing up.

Testimonial

The specific social proof that these women achieved real results with their product is a testament to their service and quells concerns from wary, but interested, visitors.

Regardless of what type of business you own, using a stats-driven testimonial will validate your product and show prospects tangible results that they can aspire to.

But when you’re collecting testimonials, avoid generalization and vague praise. Your service is stellar and you know that, but if someone simply says, “Hey, you’re the best!” that won’t be enough to inspire people to immediately sign up.

Remember that today’s consumers are savvy – they can detect fabricated stories in seconds so your testimonials must be sincere and authentic.

Web Form Testimonial Placement Ideas

  1. In the Header:

    When a visitor considers signing up for your email list, the header of your web form is the first thing they see prior to forking over their contact information. Using this space to highlight a particularly strong testimonial can be enough to compel an apprehensive person to go through with their request for information.

  2. In the Footer:

    You could also add a testimonial to the footer of your form as one final good word before the big subscription commitment. This way, the additional praise from an existing subscriber will ease new recruits’ minds and make them feel good about their choice to sign up.

  3. On the Page Next to the Form:

    If your product lends itself to visible and tangible results, you might not have enough room in your sign up form to do a testimonial justice. Simply use the remaining page space to exhibit pictures, graphs, charts and any other data from happy customers that would convince new visitors that they can also profit from your emails.

Tactic #2: Persuade Via Email

You can also use the social influence of testimonials as a sales tactic with subscribers who are already on your email list, just like Shape FX does with their product.

Shape FX

According to Cialdini, “when people are uncertain, they are more likely to use others’ actions to decide how they themselves should act.” The personal experiences that others have with your service give you credibility and situate your product favorably in the eyes of the subscriber.

Your testimonials have to be relevant and address “what-ifs” and hesitations. If you are selling a specific product, using a customer testimonial about a different product is a big no-no.

And don’t use a testimonial just for the sake of using one. Make sure that the kind words you use about your company really reflect how your service can help prospects.

Think about the questions that potential customers might have, and review your positive customer feedback to see if anyone addresses those issues. Prospects might be wondering what makes you different from your competition, or how your service will really benefit them – your testimonials should help them overcome that initial hesitation.

Where To Try Testimonials in an Email

  1. In the Header:

    A quick quote from a satisfied consumer makes a great slogan or tag-line for your business. Incorporate a particularly persuasive testimonial in your email header and readers will be compelled to read on.

  2. In the Body:

    If you are out of ideas for what to include in your emails, highlighting a particular customer’s story and documenting their experience with your product can provide you with relevant and inspiring content to include somewhere in your email before the call to action. The testimonial will build the reader’s confidence and reduce their apprehension before making your request.You can also include a testimonial next to, above or below the call to action. As we mentioned earlier in regard to web forms, some testimonials require more proof than just words. The best way to exhibit that proof in email is to place images, charts and other visuals in close proximity to the quote.

  3. In the Footer:

    Similarly to the header, you can use testimonials to close out your message. An account of how your company has impacted the life of a real customer will end your message on a strong note and encourage readers to consider your product.

Not Convinced Testimonials are Right for You?

As with all marketing techniques, the only way to truly know whether or not testimonials are right for your campaign is to test them.

  • If you place a testimonial in the headline of your form, split test web forms on your sign up page to see how the social proof performs.
  • Including testimonials in your broadcast messages? Split test the emails to find out which ones have better response rates.

Do You Use Social Proof Tactics?

How have they helped your campaign?

Do you find that they encourage prospects and customers alike? Share your thoughts on the blog!

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A Cowboy’s Guide to Email Marketing

Just like a seasoned email marketing pro, a successful cowboy (or cowgirl!) always learns from his experiences and acknowledges his own limits.

He is self-reliant, innovative and constantly looking for new ways to succeed out on the frontier. And he always outsmarts his opponents using wit, knowledge and skill.

Saddle up your horse and read on to find out how your email campaign can benefit from the legendary ways of the Wild West.

Cowboys are well-known for their dexterity. Cool, calm and collected, they are confident in their herding skills and never return to the ranch empty-handed.

Round up your interested subscribers with ease and seek out individuals who want to learn everything they can about your product or service.

Always remember to mention your newsletter to people you speak with offline. It’s a great conversation starter, and also leads interested people to your website to sign up.

Send a lot of personal emails? Add a hosted web form to your email signature so that prospects can sign up to receive your emails on the spot.

While it’s great to work toward total uniqueness in business, the truth is that there are not many enterprises out there that are 100% unique.

There are other vendors that your subscribers can do business with, who sell the same things you do, and there are other companies sending email newsletters about products similar to yours.

The difference is all in the way you portray your product and your service. You need to carve a specific niche for yourself using your email campaign.

Highlight what makes your business stand out from others in your niche.

For Instance

If your town has a commercial barbecue restaurant, but you’re just venturing into email marketing as the one-store BBQ underdog, focus on the things that you do especially well that those other establishments don’t.

  • Do you specialize in slow-cooked pork? Homemade barbeque sauce? Can you cater to restaurants and suppliers out of town?
  • What makes your business special? Make a list of the things that set you apart, and focus on those in your email newsletters.

In Westerns, the barkeep is the main source of news for patrons and town-dwellers. He is well-connected, well-liked and well-respected; he really knows his stuff.

Make your brand the “go-to” source for your industry. Consumers are sponges for information, but don’t always like to find it on their own.

You must build trust and credibility in your brand, so that subscribers are ready and willing to read your emails when they appear in their inboxes.

Package all of the information you possibly can into easily digestible emails. When it’s time for your subscribers to make a purchase, they can revisit your emails and make an educated choice, from a brand that has informed them well.

Mining for gold is a strenuous, backbreaking task. In the same way, it can be hard work for subscribers to dissect your emails and get to the meat of your messages.

Write emails that subscribers can quickly sift through to find the “nuggets” of highest value. Use headlines, bulleted lists, bold font and succinct, short paragraphs to grab their attention and keep them engaged.

By making your text scannable, readers will remain attentive and not lose interest in your messages.

Cowboys are not known for being flamboyant or over the top. They naturally understand the importance of simplicity in their day-to-day lives, and they embody it in the way that they dress and carry themselves.

If you struggle to put together your email campaign, let us help you. We have hundreds of professionally designed templates that are easy to customize.

Not sure if you want to commit to one specific look for your emails? Stick with plain text for now. Readers will appreciate the straightforward approach, and it can even seem more personal and sincere.

Any Email Marketing Cowboys Out There?

We’d love to hear how you use email to benefit your business and grow your prospect-base.

Leave your comments on the blog

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How to Get Email Addresses for Email Marketing

Email is an incredible marketing tool. With its widespread reach and viral potential, it allows your business to connect with prospects in ways that no other marketing medium can.

But without a list of subscribers with valid email addresses to send messages to, it’s hard to justify using email as a means of marketing your business.

Fortunately, there are lots of easy ways to collect email addresses so that you reap the benefits of an email marketing campaign. Here are some of the basics.

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What Your House Can Teach You About Email Marketing

An effective email marketing campaign requires framework. Successful marketers will always be the first to tell you that their campaigns are the work of careful planning and diligent consideration.

It’s actually much like building a house. There’s no way you can construct a building haphazardly, without direction, and turn out a flawless finished product. The result would be chaotic!

The same goes for email. You can’t randomly send messages to your clients and prospects without establishing expectations and formulating a plan, or they will tune out and unsubscribe due to your lack of organization.

Follow these guidelines for constructing a well built house and you’ll be on your way to creating a profitable and manageable email campaign in no time.

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3 Ways to Build Your List with the Broadcast Archive

3 Ways to Build Your List with the Broadcast ArchiveIn an earlier post, we covered the cool new features of the recently redesigned broadcast archive.

The new archive saves a web version of each broadcast in a central location, making it simple for you to share message content with subscribers new and old.

With it, you are able to resurrect your dusty emails for new purposes and strengthen your existing relationships with your subscribers.

But did you know that the broadcast archive can also help you build your list? Here’s how.

Link to an Online Version

Link to an Online Version

Placing a link on your web form to an example of your newsletter shows that your intentions as an email marketer are crystal clear.

Given the chance to preview a real message, subscribers know exactly what they are getting into when providing their email address. There are no questions as to whether or not your campaign will apply to them, since they can sample your content beforehand.

This can also lead to a higher retention rate, because subscribers are better informed prior to signing up to your list.

Make the Most of Forwarding To A Friend

Make the Most of Forwarding To A Friend

When a subscriber forwards your email, your audience expands for a moment – a blip in eternity. And then it shrinks back, unless the recipient takes initiative and hunts down your sign-up form.

Now, the web version of your newsletter automatically displays a sign-up form. If your subscribers forward your emails to their friends, they will be able to sign up effortlessly.

Even better, you’ve just suggested subscribing to those who might never have thought of it at all.

Leverage Social Media

Leverage Social Media

Twitter and Facebook are fantastic complements to any email campaign, and now integrating them is even more beneficial.

You’ve had the ability to link to your archive in your Facebook status or tweet your newest newsletter to create some buzz and generate traffic for some time. You can even publish each broadcast to Twitter with one click.

Now, as with forwarding, that web form on the archive page means interested readers don’t have to hunt to sign up for more of you – the option is automatically available when they are directed to your archive from your Facebook or Twitter status.

How Do You Use Your Archive?

Using the new and improved archive, the full value of your campaign is available to all of your readers: past, present and future. It’s also a great way to get new subscribers when using these methods.

Do you have any interesting uses for your archived newsletters? We would love to hear about them!

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Email Spring Cleaning: 4 Easy Ways

Just a few months ago, New Year’s resolutions were the highlight of many email marketing conversations.

With the best intentions, businesses set out to grow their lists by the thousands and send more targeted, relevant messages. They made lists and reviewed last year’s figures, invigorated by the new year and certain that they could increase click through rates and ROI by leaps and bounds.

Perhaps you even set lofty goals for your own campaign, only to be sidetracked by more pressing issues. If you’ve temporarily put your resolutions on the back burner, refocus your efforts with these spring cleaning techniques.

Dust Off Your Messages

Dust Off Your Messages

You should treat old emails like attic treasures. Just like you stash your belongings away, only to rediscover them in a flurry of excitement later on, take a close look at your existing messages and examine the available reports for your account.

The Verified Subscribers report shows exactly how many people have confirmed their subscription in the past 30 days. If you aren’t satisfied with your current results, re-purpose your old confirmation email to make it sparkle.

The Follow Up Totals report displays the total number of clicks and opens for each message. If necessary, change up your content to make it more conversational and engaging and fine tune your follow up messages to reflect questions that you frequently receive from subscribers. Examine your subject lines and determine if they are compelling and consistent enough to click through.

Using templates? Make sure your messages look good in all email clients – test them.

Polish Your Web Forms

Polish Your Web Forms

If you haven’t tried the new Web Form Generator yet, now is the time.

Make your forms shine without any HTML knowledge whatsoever. You can create visually appealing forms that give your website a more polished and professional look in only 5 minutes.

Because you don’t need to edit the HTML for your page each time you work on your form, you can make changes whenever you want without a hassle – you could even try seasonal templates if you’re feeling festive.

Campaign Overhaul: Renovating Emails and Forms

Campaign Overhaul: Renovating Emails and Forms

When you’re pouring over various reports and rewriting entire message sequences, how can you be sure that the changes you’re making are the best for your email marketing efforts? By split testing, of course.

Split testing lets you conduct a controlled experiment with your sign up forms and messages to help to see which factors make them perform better for your campaigns.

Web Forms

Split testing web forms lets you evaluate:

Which type of form works best for you (e.g.pop-over vs. inline)

How many fields you should use

Which field labels work best

Whether or not your headline copy is compelling enough

Email Messages

Split test your new messages against your old ones to learn…

Does sending in the morning work better than sending in the afternoon?

Does using a button instead of a text link get me more clicks?

Does subject line personalization get you more, or fewer, opens?

For accurate results, split test broadcasts can only be created for lists that have at least 100 active subscribers.

Revive Your List With Some Careful Pruning

Revive Your List With Some Careful Pruning

Yard work goes hand in hand with spring cleaning, and it’s common landscaping knowledge that most plants benefit from regular maintenance. Take a cue from mother nature – with careful pruning, your list can flourish.

This is not to say that you should immediately unsubscribe anyone who hasn’t opened recent emails.

Consider the number of disengaged subscribers on your list. To start, search for subscribers that haven’t opened a message in 3-6 months. Are there a lot of them?

Resist the urge to channel your inner Edward Scissorhands; don’t delete them them – try to reengage them first!

Think about what you offer in your emails. If your product is seasonal, are those subscribers really inactive? Perhaps they are simply not opening your messages because they are familiar with your brand and assume that they will still receive emails when they are ready to purchase.

What are Your Housekeeping Plans?

Are you clearing out your unsubscribes anyway, despite our advice to think it over? Rewriting messages?

We’d love to hear what you’re doing next with your lists! Share your thoughts on the blog.

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