Proven Income Opportunities Work At Home Business Blog

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Make Your Promotional Emails Worth Reading

by Nick Usborne, of www.ExcessVoice.com

The secret to improving your email readership and response is to make it worth the reader's time. Is your email useful, timely, relevant, entertaining or unique? Does it make the reader feel special, important, or privileged? Creating promotional content that stands up to any of these adjectives requires some thought about your readers' needs and desires - while keeping your own objectives in mind, of course.

In this issue, our friend and copywriting expert, Nick Usborne, talks about three approaches to content creation and provides great tips to help you get started.

Companies and organizations often struggle over what to "do" with their email marketing. What should they say in their emails? What should they talk about? What information or promotions should they include?

These companies know there is a potential gold mine in their subscriber lists, but have yet to figure out how to make the most of the opportunity.

The three approaches to email content creation:

If you study the marketing emails you receive from other companies, they probably fall within one of three categories.

  1. Purely promotional
  2. Informative and promotional
  3. Entertaining and promotional

Purely Promotional

You know the kind of emails I am talking about. They are the email equivalent of flyers or coupons. You get a short email telling you about a great product or service, often with a special offer included.

These may be welcome if you are a serial-buyer of those kinds of products or services. However, the straight sales approach to email marketing is basically "interruption marketing". You interrupt someone with your sales pitch in the hope that a small percentage will be persuaded to buy.

These interruptions are no more welcome than TV ads. You'll get some results, but you're limiting your opportunity.

Informative and Promotional

These emails come from companies that seek to do a little more. They deliver useful, timely and interesting information to their subscribers.

The information and tips they provide are, of course, associated with the products and services they provide.

As an easy example, let's look at Constant Contact. A while back I signed up for a trial account, and started to receive emails from them. These emails didn't simply seek to sell me a paid-for account or upsell me in some way. Each email delivered useful information for anyone involved in email and newsletter marketing.

The result? Emails from Constant Contact get opened. I open them because I know I might learn something useful and new.

Do they also pitch their services? Sure they do. But that's OK. The pitch has become contextual. It's not a traditional sales pitch, it's the offering of a service that can help me improve my email marketing results - and they take the trouble to tell me how.

You'll see the same approach in traditional direct mail. You get the junk mail that simply pressures you to buy, and sells "at" you. And then you'll get those longer direct mail packages that include tons of useful and new information on a particular topic. The latter approach is the one that builds you a real business with a growing subscriber list.

Informative email campaigns built loyalty and interest. And they build trust. Become a trusted provider of useful information and you also gain the status of a trusted vendor.

Entertaining and Promotional

This approach isn't so common, but can work very well.

As an example, let's look at Lands' End. They used to send out simple, promotional emails, pitching various clothing items.

Then someone there had an unusual idea. Now those emails start by telling a story. These are human interest stories, always well-written and always worth reading.

In each email, after the story, they feature the clothes they want to sell.

The result of this change in approach? Their subscriber list grew from 20,000 to 500,000 in two years.

Why? Because their emails became interesting and engaging. People opened them and forwarded them to their friends.

That's what happens when your emails are worth reading.

Nick Usborne is a copywriter, author and speaker. You can access his newsletter articles on writing for the web, emails and newsletters at www.ExcessVoice.com. Download his free 35- page guide, "Writing for the Web #1" when you sign up for his newsletter.

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