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Are Websites Over-rated? A $500 website and email strategy (Part 2)
by Tim Slavin
While there are reasons to have a multi-page website, many
businesses on a budget would be better off if they spent on a one page
website and saved their money for regular email contact. The creation
and maintenance of a multi-page website costs more and returns less
immediate measurable value than email sent to customers who have
provided their email addresses in the context of a sale or a vist to an
office or store.
There are two ways to use email for business, either as one-off
coupons and announcements or as newsletters sent out on a regular
basis. For businesses starting out with the internet, one-off emails
are probably the best place to start. They require little preparation
and you can send them at will instead of being tied to a regular
publishing schedule. This column will focus on one-off emails.
Creating email capability for your business requires three steps:
writing your emails, finding a provider to deliver your emails, and
collecting legitimate email addresses. I'll discuss each step in some
detail.
The first step is to create a process to collect email addresses in
person from your customers and prospects. If you have a store or
office, the simplest way is to create a small form that captures their
full name, email address, and 2-4 areas of interest with a line to
express an interest outside of your pre-defined choices. The areas of
interest should be products and services your customers value. The form
should state a clear benefit (e.g., Sign up to receive x, y, and z!)
and state that you will never sell, trade, or rent their email address.
You might create this form in Microsoft Word with four forms per page,
print a hundred copies, then cut up the pages to make four hundred
forms.
Once you have a small form to hand to customers and prospects, train
yourself and your staff to incorporate a request for an email address
in the context of a sale. For example, if a person likes your shop but
cannot find what they want, offer the email address form as a way to
let them know when you have what they want in stock. You also can leave
a small stack of forms by the cash registers and by the front door.
There are other ways, through trial and error, that you can collect
email addresses in helpful, unobtrusive ways.
Remember, the best way to get and use a customer or prospect email
address is in the context of a stated customer need that you can meet
today or in the future. The worst way is to steal their address, either
nefariously or through purchase of an email address list. That's why
people hate spam: it's not based on permission, it's impersonal, and
the offers are not relevant. Do what you can to emphasize permission,
be personal, and be relevant. When each customer or prospect fills out
your email address form, for example, you might send them a short
personal email to thank them and perhaps offer a benefit.
Finding a vendor to deliver your email addresses is your second
step. The fastest way to get started is with a vendor called Ezine
Director. The first 999 emails a month you send through their service
is free (although the number may change over time based on any free
offers from their competitors). Beyond the first thousand emails their
prices are competitive. Other providers to look at include ListChannel
and Cooler Email.
Certainly there is a significant research to be done to find a good
email delivery service. However, a service like Ezine Director (or any
service under $30/month) is a good place to start sending one-off
emails. If the service provider lets you export your email address list
(as Ezine Director, List Channel, and others do), there is little to
stop you from moving from one service to another. That's why email
delivery services focus on reporting tools and other services to keep
their customers.
The key factors to consider with email delivery services are
reporting and an active program to place their customers on email white
lists and off email spam blacklists. On the reporting side, look for
bounce reporting (not just numbers but also the reasons for the bounce,
for example, email box full or no such address), open rates (only works
if you send html email), and clickthroughs. Basically, you want to know
what interests recipients of your emails (not necessarily who looked at
what but what people looked at) to help refine what you send in your
email offers.
Of course, you can write your emails so that you will know when your
reader has responded. Just include an offer code or a requirement that
the person mention your email. It is far better to hear ten people buy
from you mentioning your email than seeing a hundred people read your
email and wondering how many of them actually bought.
As with picking an email delivery service, writing an email can be extremely complex. I will focus on the basics here.
When you configure your email delivery service, you will need to
configure the From address, the To address (when a reader clicks Reply,
who does their email go to?), and Subject lines for each email you
send. These three elements are key to your success with email. The From
and To should be the same with every email. The From address, in
particular, should be descriptive (Jane's Exotic Flowers not Jane) and
even provide a tone and/or benefit. Your readers will use your From
address and Subject line to determine whether or not to open your
emails. These details are worthy of obsession.
You will also need to write messages for readers who subscribe and
unsubscribe to your emails. These messages typically are one paragraph
in length. They describe what your emails offer, how you use their
email addresses, and who to contact in the real world if they have
questions or problems. Phone numbers and an address are very helpful.
So is a personal tone. You also should mention that you will not sell,
trade, or rent their email address.
For each email you send out, be sure to limit your email to one
topic. Do not offer seven different things and hope that one of them
will stick with your readers. Instead, if you are a florist, send an
email about fresh cut flowers (your single topic) with 3-5 examples of
what you currently offer. Be sure your topic is mentioned in the first
three words of your email subject line, too, as well as the benefit
that you're offering (e.g., low price, broad variety, new styles).
Each email you send should be no more than three paragraphs with 1-3
sentences in each paragraph. You should follow the AIDA principle (use
attention, interest, desire, and action in your copy) and include a
direct call to action (e.g., Call us today and mention this email to
receive x). The key is to convey quickly what you offer in your email
and tell your reader how to take advantage of your offer. Certainly you
can provide jazzy, attention-getting words but they're probably wasted.
Most people have short attention spans. Only offer enough detail to
help them make a decision to act on your offer.
Bottomline, write your emails as if you're visiting a stranger's
home and they have opened the door wearing a bath robe: be polite yet
friendly, thank them for their time, state your business clearly and
quickly, and tell them how you can help them. Don't waste their time.
If your list of email addresses exceeds fifty, over time you might
experiment with different combinations of words, phrases, and offers in
your email subject lines and messages. To do this, divide your list of
email addresses into equal parts, at least two groups with at least
twenty-five addresses. Then email different versions of your offer to
each subset of your email list. While not every business has to test
this way, it can be helpful if you want to understand what words and
offers resonate with your readers or you simply don't know what
approach works best.
The last step to consider is putting an email signup box on your one
page website. Ezine Director and other email delivery services provide
the html code that you can provide to your graphic designer to include
on your website. At the least, you should have a process to collect
email addresses from customers and prospects who visit your store or
office. Those addresses should be more valuable than addresses
collected from a website.
In conclusion, a one page website and active email campaigns are not
the only way to use the internet to find, keep, and support customers.
But it is a cost-effective way for businesses to get started with
internet tools. This strategy makes it easy to control costs while also
experimenting to find what works for your customers. You can prove the
internet has value before you spend additional money on a multi-page
website or a design for html email.
The article is reprinted solely with the permission of Tim Slavin, ReachCustomersOnline, and any further use or reprinting is not allowed.
Our credits to the source/author of this article:
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Author: Tim Slavin
Tim Slavin is the Publisher of ReachCustomersOnline.com, an online magazine that offers
free how-to internet knowledge for budget-minded businesses and the
designers, programmers, and others who support them. Tim and his wife run Red Horse
Communications, a writing and internet consultancy. Online since 1988,
Tim has done websites, email marketing, SEO, programming, and other internet
projects since 1995.
This article is taken from the ReachCustomersOnline.com website.
Further reprinting prohibited
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