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

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

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

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

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.
