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So, finally you have the email list which means you are done with the framework. Now, it’s time to start rewarding your subscribers and growing your email list even further. You know, all the things you need to do on your road to total world domination.
Email is an indispensable part of our life. It is where all forms of communications take place; personal and work life, both. Everyone is increasingly using emails and you need to learn how to make money with email marketing.
Let’s see what to do next once you have an email list. Here are a few ways to put those email addresses to work for your business, tips on what to say in your emails, and best practices for getting more recipients to open your emails and click-through to your website.
The people on your list have already said yes to hearing from your business. It’s usually easier to sell to an existing or interested customer than to sell to someone who doesn’t know you or your business, because existing customers already trust your brand. That’s part of the reason it also costs less to earn a new sale from a current customer than it does to earn the first sale from a brand-new customer.
That’s not to say that everyone on your list will take you up on an offer, of course, but you stand a better chance of converting email list members as you get better at creating offers, segmenting your list and formatting your emails.
The main thing to remember about growing your email list is that members need to opt in. Not only is it unprofessional to add people to your list without their express permission (for example, by adding everyone in your Contacts list), but it can also cause you to run afoul of spam rules. Once your emails are flagged as spam, you’ll have a harder time reaching the legitimate members of your list.
As long as you’re following the rules, you can extend the opt-in invitation in as many different ways as you wish. For example, you can:
Check out this article for more creative list-building suggestions you can adapt for your business and audience. For example, you may not have a business that operates joint ventures with other companies, but you might be able to collect email addresses from participants in a webinar you host, social livestreams where you demonstrate your products, and community events where you’re a vendor.
The ultimate DIY is to simply BCC your list recipients from your professional email address, but this is not a great idea.
First, you’ll have no way to track how many recipients get your email, open it, and click on links inside it. This is crucial information you need so you can keep using the tactics that work and replace the tactics that don’t with something else.
Second, unless you make sure to include unsubscribe information in each email, you risk getting your email account flagged as a spam sender by recipients who want to opt out but don’t know how.
Third, without an email platform, you won’t be able to set up the automated drip campaigns that are the core of successful email marketing. (More on drip campaigns in a minute!)
To get the tracking tools you need to measure your email campaigns’ performance, and to give recipients a way to opt out without flagging your emails as spam, HostGator recommends Constant Contact for email marketing services. For small businesses, a basic subscription starts at $20 per month, and there’s a free trial period.
With an email marketing platform, you can store your contacts, note the date that they opted in, collect demographic and customer-specific information (like ZIP code and birthday), and collect data on which topics they’re interested in so you can segment your list and target your emails accordingly.
You can also segment your list so you send members only the content they’re interested in. They’ll appreciate your respect for their time and be less likely to unsubscribe. For example, when I ran a dancewear business, I segment my list into customers who were interested in products for adults, products for kids and products for both. That way I didn’t bother the customers who wanted women’s products with promotions for kids’ products, and vice versa.
Your email platform should make it super easy to set up segments, update them as customer preferences change, and create content for each segment. So, what should you send to the folks in each segment on your list?
Sending a “welcome to the newsletter” email confirms your new member’s subscription and makes them feel, well, welcome. It starts off with a greeting and then gets right to the point – free and fun stuff, exclusive items, An explanation of subscriber benefit levels, And by letting readers know what’s coming next. By the end of the message, the reader’s probably excited about all the perks they just signed up for, ready to shop, and looking forward to the next email.
Promotions are always popular. If you’re running a sale, offering a limited-time deal, or introducing a new product, email your list. For example, new subscribers to this wine subscription service’s newsletter get an introductory discount offer via email if they don’t place an order during their first visit to the site.
Cool, useful, and entertaining information can help keep warm leads interested in your business, even if you don’t have an offer. Just keep the content relevant to your audience. For example, business and technology news site Quartz regularly sends exclusive collections of stories to its subscribers, organized around a timely theme.
Product recommendations based on your subscribers’ past purchases and items they looked at on your website. This helps create a personalized experience, which customers now expect from stores of all sizes. Your email platform’s segmentation tools will help you sort and automate your product recommendation emails so that you’re matching recommendations to people who want them.
Surveys and requests for input from current customers can give you ideas to improve your products, pricing or service. We have an entire post for you on using customer surveys to grow your business, including tips on creating email surveys that your customers will actually want to take.
If you’d rather get the executive summary, here it is: Pick one or two things you want to find out from your customers. Keep the survey short and let customers know about how long it will take. Thank your customers and give them a reward for participating, like a coupon code or loyalty points.
Shipping updates so customers know when their orders will arrive—especially if the order is running late. For example, the discount retailer sent several updates after a shipment was delayed. This reassures the customer that you haven’t forgotten their order and that it hasn’t been lost in transit.
Give your customers a reminder about upcoming events like webinars, social livestreams, live chats and virtual conferences. For example, the nonprofit’s newsletter lets subscribers sign up for multiple webinars in their series.
Seasonal buying guides help your subscribers start planning for big events like graduations, Christmas, Valentine’s Day and back-to-school/back-to-college. Feature your gift baskets, popular items, zippy shipping, gift wrap options, and whatever else your customers need.
How often should you email your list? That depends on how often your customers want to hear from you. You’ll need to start with a schedule that you think will work and then adjust it based on open rates, unsubscribes and other customer feedback. Here are some general recommendations you can use as a starting point for:
One thing to keep in mind is that a single email about a promotion or upcoming event is almost certainly not going to be enough. Constant Contact recommends creating a three-part email series for each time-limited event you want to promote, because let’s face it, most of us could use a reminder or two.
How are you going to keep your three-series emails organized and sent out on time? The same way you’re going to automate your welcome and post-purchase survey emails: with drip campaigns.
Drip campaign is a powerful email marketing tool. It sounds like something you wouldn’t want to send or receive, but it’s an incredibly useful way to set up and run your email marketing. Also, It’s simply a series of email messages that are pre-automated to go out to the list members you select on a schedule you choose in advance.
For example, An awesome welcome email landed in my inbox less than a minute after I signed up on the website, because the company’s new-subscriber drip campaign was ready to spring into action. This kind of frequent, targeted messaging works well – drip campaign emails typically have higher open rates than other marketing emails – and customers are more likely to click-through from drip emails to the sender’s website.
You can set up drip campaigns for any of the ways to use your email list that we covered above, and more. If you sell products that require some extra guidance and support after the sale, you can create a post-purchase drip campaign that highlights all the cool things buyers can do with their new purchase and where they can get extra help. Drip campaigns don’t take long to set up.
Setting up your email campaigns is the first step. From there, your job is to make sure your emails perform well and keep improving. Managing your email list is just one step in growing your business. Here are a few best practices.
You’ve made the first and hardest step, you’ve committed to maintaining an email list. Now, it’s all about adding value to your subscribers. Use these tips and you’ll undoubtedly grow your email list and make merry your current subscribers.