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Five email marketing sins you need to avoid

Despite widespread predictions over the death of email as a marketing tool for businesses, it appears that the upcoming Christmas shopping season is set to be heavily influenced by the contents of consumersโ€™ inboxes. An Experian report released this week shows online retailers are set for a surge of traffic on December 23 as a […]
Oliver Milman
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PRIVACY HAS BECOME A NEW WORK-FROM-HOME CONUNDRUM FOR EMPLOYERS AND STAFF.

Despite widespread predictions over the death of email as a marketing tool for businesses, it appears that the upcoming Christmas shopping season is set to be heavily influenced by the contents of consumersโ€™ inboxes.

An Experian report released this week shows online retailers are set for a surge of traffic on December 23 as a result of email campaigns.

With Australians increasingly waiting for sought-after discounts before parting with their money, a well-timed offer sent to the right audience can prove fruitful for start-ups.

And even with the reach provided by the likes of Facebook and Twitter, it appears that email is still king when it comes to provoking a response among buyers, as our analysis of the key online marketing trends confirmed recently.

So how should you craft your email marketing campaigns this festive season โ€“ and beyond? Here are five classic errors that you must avoid if your email shoot isnโ€™t to turn into a damp squib.

1. A lack of strategic thinking

Email marketing can be nimble and spontaneous, but you really need a solid strategy underpinning it if you are to get the results you desire.

โ€œFigure out why you’re sending these emails,โ€ says Ned Dwyer, an online specialist who co-founded Native Digital and website customisation start-up Tweaky.

โ€œIs it because you want everyone to think you’re cool? Is it because you want them to buy a particular product? Maybe you just want to build your brand so you want them to share it with their friends.โ€

โ€œWhatever it is, make sure that you state it explicitly. Tell your readers what you want.โ€

โ€œTake five minutes to work out what your email marketing plan is.โ€

โ€œWhat are you going to send out? Why should people care about it? How regularly are you going to send it? Who are you going to send it to?โ€

2. Poor quality content

A sure-fire way to condemn your email campaign to the deleted folder is to provide poor quality content.

If your email doesnโ€™t grab attention and provide something of value โ€“ with its core offer, insight or even humour โ€“ then people will quickly move on.

โ€œThe people on your mailing list, whether your customers, suppliers or just general subscribers, have given you permission to contact them periodically with relevant information,โ€ explains Dwyer.

โ€œDon’t abuse that trust by sending them poor quality content or marketing materials.โ€

โ€œGive them something of value. Work out who they are and why they should care about what you’re sending them.โ€

โ€œIn our case, we wanted to give our friends something of value โ€“ our knowledge, our insights into the market and hopefully motivation to help them nail their job.โ€

3. No consistency

Email marketing isnโ€™t something you should dabble in when youโ€™re in the mood and have the time. You need to be providing consistent, high-quality updates to your subscribers in order to establish your business in their minds.

โ€œYou have to send it out every week/fortnight/month,โ€ says Dwyer.

โ€œSo many people suck at this. They can do it for the first few times but generally tap out and forget about it completely.โ€

โ€œDo not fall into this trap. To avoid this make it a KPI for someoneโ€™s job, if they fail to get it out then you should make a big deal out of it.โ€

โ€œEven if it’s your job as a business owner, your employees should be given permission to hassle you about it.โ€

โ€œKeeping it consistent shows you’re reliable and trustworthy.โ€

4. Information overload

Naturally, you want to make your email look attractive, with lots of nice pictures and links. But donโ€™t go overboard.

A simple email setting out exactly what youโ€™re offering and why the recipient should take action in a clear, uncomplicated way is far more likely to work than a cluttered, gaudy missive that is hard to digest.

Not only that, but oversized files can be tricky for people to access. Donโ€™t take the risk.

As US tech consultant Ben Brooks puts it: โ€œIt is really awesome that you figured out how to embed your company logo in your email signature, but I know who you are and what your company logo looks like.โ€

โ€œI still hate it. Donโ€™t waste bandwidth sending me email attachments of your logo. Further, it really screws me over when I go to look for emails that you sent me a file in โ€“ every email you send me has a damned attachment. โ€œ

5. Getting the basics wrong

If writing isnโ€™t your strong point, get someone skilled in this area to create the emailโ€™s content for you.

At the very least, have another set of eyes look over the copy before you press the โ€˜sendโ€™ button. Careless mistakes and garbled syntax will make your business look amateurish and will turn off consumers.

โ€œIf you send me an email in all caps I will assume you are yelling at me and take my damn sweet time responding,โ€ Brooks says.

โ€œLikewise if you send me an email in all lowercase I will assume that you couldnโ€™t care less about the email you sent; resulting in me taking my damn sweet time responding.โ€

โ€œTypos and grammar problems abound, but we all know how to properly capitalize an email, so donโ€™t be lazy.โ€

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