Posts Tagged ‘email marketing’

New Australian SaaS shopping cart product – BigCommerce

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

big-commerce

I am a big fan of Interspire’s Email Marketer software.  This Australian-based company has just released a new subscription-based Software-as-a-Service shopping cart system called BigCommerce.  SaaS is the future of the web and the guys at Interspire have done a great job converting their existing product, Interspire Shopping Cart, into a SaaS offering.  I think that the product will be very successful because the product fills a bit of a niche in the market.  Here’s some more info…

BigCommerce is a hosted, fully managed ecommerce platform which includes everything you need to sell your products online. Interspire takes care of all the “tech stuff” so you can focus on growing your business. They make sure your online store is always up and running, they push new features to your store as soon as they’re ready to go and they’re just a phone call away if you have any questions.

There’s nothing to install, no hosting to buy, no servers to setup, no backups to worry about and no upgrades to install. Interspire takes care of everything so you can focus on growing your business with  BigCommerce.

Start by signing up for a 15 day free trial (no credit card required) so you can experience everything BigCommerce has to offer. The free trial is fully functional and the BigCommerce support portal includes a user guide and step-by-step training videos if you get stuck.

Sounds like a great way for small businesses to dip their toes into the world of e-commerce.

Action List: Give them something for free

Monday, February 9th, 2009

free-stuff

One thing that will attract customers to your website is free stuff.  Everybody likes to get something for nix. 

You should consider offering something on your site for free – for example, a white paper, an electronic book, free reports, forms or templates.  This will help to attract prospective customers to your website and to help build your mailing list.

Here’s some free stuff that I provide on my company website: http://www.bluetrainenterprises.com.au/goodies-useful-docs-templates.html.  I am getting some good traffic to this page, as people go in search of CV templates, interview proformas and small business templates.

Here are some tips for providing free content:

- Make sure that the free stuff is good stuff – there’s no point providing something that is not good quality.  The free stuff needs to be representative of the quality of your business and help build your credibility in the eyes of  prospective customers.

- It is important that the free stuff is good, but you shouldn’t give away your entire suite of intellectual property for free!  Your free stuff should be a taster, prompting the recipient to engage in further business with your organisation.  For example, you might offer a free PDF containing a single chapter of a book you have written - if the recipient enjoys reading the free chapter, then it is likely that they will want to purchase the entire book.

- Ensure that your free stuff contains appropriate copyright notices and links back to your business, so that readers who have been forwarded your document know where it emanates from and can get in contact with you.  It should also be in an uneditable format – ie. PDF instead of MS Word – so that the content is not easily stolen and rebranded (this is a real problem on the web today).

- You should try and capture the prospect’s contact details prior to giving them access to the free stuff – for example, you might only give a person access to a free report once they have filled out an online form that provides you with their email address details.  This interaction enables you to market to the prospect at a later time via an email newsletter or a follow up phone call  (it’s a good idea to expressly state what you intend to do with the contact details on the subscription page, in accordance with privacy guidelines)

- Do a follow up with all recipients, preferably by telephone.  The fact that the prospect has downloaded a free document or tool from your website ensures that your call is not ‘cold’ – you have a context in which your phone conversation can take place, making it easier to determine whether the prospect is interested in further engagement with your organisation.  At the very least, you can ask the prospect whether they enjoyed the free product and whether they have any suggestions for improving it.

- Many people use the search term ‘free’ in their search engine queries – make sure that your pages and documents are search engine optimised for this work.  For example, if you are offering a ‘free CV template’, then consider having a separate HTML page optimised for this search term combination.  That way, you are likely to attract many more people to your site.

Action List: Start a Footy Tipping Comp

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

footy-tipping

Now this strategy won’t work for every website, but I think that starting a football tipping competition could work wonders for some online businesses.

I thought it was appropriate to raise this as a possibility, given that the AFL and NRL football season is not too far away…and I was prompted to do so by an email this week from FootyTips.com.au - here’s the text:

The Footy season is almost here – use footy tipping as a powerful marketing tool

Drive traffic to your website and build client relationships in a fun interactive way, with your own branded footy tipping competition.

The footy season is almost here – and now is the time to start planning your footy tipping marketing solution to promote your products and/or services.

How can footy tipping help your business?

  • Drive regular traffic to your website
  • Provides opportunities to promote your products
  • Establish and build an email database
  • Interact and build strong client relationships

Now, you can administer your own tipping competition manually, if you wish.  But, in my book,  that’s far too onerous.  It’s best to use an existing online tipping system, like FootyTips.com.au.

FootyTips.com.au offers branded solutions from around $6,000, but if you’re a small business that can’t afford this amount, you can simply set up an unbranded competition on the FootyTips.com.au website for free. 

So, who would benefit from a football tipping competition?  Localised and community websites, distinctly Australian websites, and sites that sell products to a demographic that aligns or overlaps with a football demographic (eg sports books, beer mugs)

A printing house, The Printing Hub,  here in Adelaide runs a footy tipping comp each year.  The face of their business is Brownlow Medallist and ex-Hawthorn player John Platten, so they create a good deal of interest in their tipping comp by having him involved.  As a customer, I receive a short, weekly email from John with information about the tipping comp – who’s leading the charge, who tipped poorly, etc. – a good little marketing strategy that keeps The Printing Hub at top of mind.

Some tips for your tipping comp:

  • Don’t leave it too late – you need to be recruiting people now for your tipping comp.  One or two weeks before the season starts is not enough lead time to recruit a decent pool of tippers.
  • Offer a worthwhile prize – a $1000 prize will attract lots of new prospects to your website as word of mouth spreads.
  • Consider offering weekly prizes as this gives you a reason to keep in contact with the tippers throughout the season, and an excuse to send out a regular email newsletter.  It also encourages those who do poorly in the first few rounds of the football season to continue tipping each week, because they still have a chance of winning something.  Offering a prize for last place will also help.
  • Actively promote your competition on your website’s home page, in email newsletters and via social networking websites.
  • Make sure that you put some metrics in place  so that you can get some idea of the value of the competition to your business – eg. measure the clickthroughs from the footy tipping site to your own site using a unique URL.  Be aware that there are many ‘compers’ out there who join hundreds of competitions and rarely transact with the host business.  If you use the unbranded version of FootyTips.com.au, then you will attract these people, as it is possible to enter multiple tipping competitions simultaneously via the FootyTips.com.au website.

Happy tipping!

Useful Link: Feedburner

Monday, January 19th, 2009

feedburner

Feedburner, now owned by Google, is a service that enables you to syndicate your blog or website content via RSS, website widgets and email. 

Sign up for a Feedburner account here:  http://www.feedburner.com/fb/a/home

Action List: Send out a regular email newsletter

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

email-marketing

One of the best ways that you can spread the word about your business is to send out a regular email newsletter containing compelling information for your target audience.

Whilst it is OK to use your email client to send out newsletters when you are very, very small (make sure that you use the BCC field for email addresses, otherwise you may have a privacy complaint on your hands), you will soon find it imperative to invest in a more permanent solution – you will need to get your hands on an email marketing software package to handle your campaigns.

Email marketing software is fairly inexpensive and it is well worth the investment. I currently use Interspire Email Marketer (good Australian product) and have found it to be an excellent piece of software. It handles just about everything – online subscription forms, autoresponders, list management, email templates, bulk sending, bounce management, personalisation, click tracking, statistics, etc. There are plenty of other packages on the market and you can access these by Googling ‘email marketing’.

Once you have set up your software, it’s time to start thinking about the substance of your newsletters…

The following tips apply to email newsletters:

* Always use double opt-in subscription – that is, the subscriber needs to confirm their subscription by clicking on a link in a confirmation email sent to them automatically after signing up. This verifies that the email owner was, in fact, the person that opted to subscribe. Single opt-in is open to abuse.

* Write a catchy subject line – this will often determine whether a subscriber opens your email or not – remember, what’s in it for them?

* Personalise your emails by using the subscriber’s first name – most email marketing packages are able to capture these details for use in your email campaigns. Apparently you can increase your readership by up to 650% if you personalise your emails.

* Publish a subscription form in a prominent place on the home page of your website – explain why your site visitors should sign up

* For hyperlink text, always use bold, underline and blue colour – this is commonly recognised as a link and research suggests that these types of links are more frequently clicked than links with non-standard formatting.

* Make sure that the content is good – don’t just try and sell stuff – give advice and provide rich, original content that is readable and newsworthy.

* Avoid spam filters by avoiding spammy words and character combinations, such as FREE, $$$, Save, Discount etc in your subject line and email text.

* Keep the look and feel consistent from issue to issue. By keeping the look and feel consistent, you help to maintain and strengthen your brand with your subscribers. Use a template.

* Ask your customers to sign up for your newsletter in your shopping cart process.

* Use autoresponders to communicate with subscribers and build trust – for example, you could send an autoresponder one hour after a subscriber signs up to welcome them to the newsletter; and you could send an autoresponder 3 weeks after a subscriber signs up to garner feedback or to encourage contact.

* Studies show that there are increased responses from email campaigns sent on Tuesday or Wednesday

* For best results when sending recurring email campaigns, always send it on the same day at the same time. For example, every 2nd Wednesday at 3pm.

* Include a signature at the bottom of your email newsletter for that personal touch

* Include a one-click unsubscribe link in every email that you send out. In some countries it is illegal not to provide this function.

* Consider setting up an online course using multiple autoresponders that are scheduled to be sent on daily/weekly basis to your subscribers

* Test and adjust your campaigns by using different wording, positioning of images, heading effects to see which combination results in the most click-throughs

* Publish interesting information right at the top of your email, as this is the part that is visible when the email is first opened in the subscriber’s email client

* To attract subscribers, offer something free (like an ebook, a free gift voucher) in return for signing up

Action List: Get back to your prospects straight away

Friday, January 9th, 2009

speedPeople expect immediacy on the web.  They want things NOW, not tomorrow, not in a week’s time.  That’s why it’s absolutely imperative that you get back to prospective customers as fast as you possibly can.

Today’s web surfers are impatient people.  They expect the world, and they won’t wait for it.  If they are made to wait, then an alternative solution is but a click away.

If you delay responding to your prospects, then it is highly likely that they will take their business elsewhere.  But if you impress them with instantaneous (or close to instantaneous) responses, then you’ve gone a long way towards sealing the deal.

I often try to respond to a customer email within seconds of receiving it – customers are often taken aback by the speed of the response.  It makes a fantastic impression on the customer.

You should consider using a variety of contact means as part of your web strategy:

  • a 1300 telephone number – looks professional, cheap to call, one number nationally and you can route the number to any fixed or mobile telephone
  • a contact form or contact email address – make sure you respond quickly and consider using an automated help desk or, at the very least, an autoresponder to notify the customer that their query has been received; your response should thank the customer for their query, should be well written, with correct spelling and grammar and in full sentences, and tailored for the specific questions posed by the customer – don’t make it obvious that your email is templated!
  • Live help – this contact method is becoming more popular and it constitutes an immediate, yet non-confrontational method of getting answers quickly.

Whatever your method, it will do your business the world of good if you respond to prospective customers as fast as possible.

Michael Bloch: Email Subject Line Tips

Friday, August 1st, 2008

taming-the-beastGrabbing the attention of the average person via email is quite a challenge these days. We’re all bombarded with marketing messages – not just via email, but television, radio and even when we walk down the street. This has somewhat of a numbing effect. Effective email subject lines play an crucial role in having your communication jump out at the user in amongst a crowded inbox.

Different sorts of email campaigns need a different approach to subject lines. The two main types of list communications are sales based (general email offers) and information based (newsletters).

Newsletter subject lines should be informational than hypey and general campaign subject lines should be to the point without overselling.

The following are some tried and tested tips based on my own experience and from other research; however, there’s no hard and fast rules and each list has its own culture – so experiment to find what suits your target group the best!

General guidelines

  • Subject lines should 51 characters long at the most to take into account the varying subject line display lengths of different email software and services. If your subject line needs to be longer, ensure the important information is at the beginning.
  • Be wary of words that may trigger spam filters such as free and “special offer” – words that infer selling tend to score higher during spam filtering processes and in conjunction with other scores applied to the email’s body content, may put the message over the threshold. Even punctuation and symbols in a subject line such as ! and $ can result in your email being filtered. Before sending out a campaign or newsletter, try sending a test message to different services to see if it gets through.
  • SHOUTING (caps lock) should be avoided. It’s another spammer/scammer trick and isn’t considered to be good email etiquette.

Email marketing subject lines

The use of a company name as the first word in a subject line is said to help achieve high open rates. If you don’t want to take up space by doing so, put the company name in the from line, along with a human name.

Example:
Clayton [Netrepreneur.com]

Use the person’s first name in a subject line if you have that information, followed by a question.

Example:
Fred, looking for email software?

Try to arouse curiosity.

Example:
Fred, something I need your feedback on.

Describe the email’s contents and an incentive for the reader to open it.

Example:
Discount tennis shoes – details inside

Create a sense of urgency without going overboard.

Example:
Fred, bbq markdown – today only

Newsletter subject lines

I’ve trialled various subject line formats for newsletters:

- Newsletter name followed by the date
- A nonsensical subject line made up of terms in the newsletter
- Highlighting an article in the newsletter
- Several highlights from the newsletter

Based on open rates, I’ve found the last variation to prove the most successful. Only having a newsletter title and date is rather ho-hum, using creative subject lines forces folks to do mental gymnastics and a single item mentioned may only appeal to small segment.

It can be rather challenging quoting multiple newsletter highlights due to the small amount of space, but I feel there’s a better chance of grabbing more people’s attention by doing so.

A newsletter I get uses the single item approach – and it’s stopped me from opening many of their newsletters, purely because I didn’t think the contents would be of interest to me. I kept a series of these emails and found out of 20 newsletters I received, I only opened only 5 of them shortly after receipt. After reviewing them all, I found that over a dozen had content not mentioned in the subject line that was of interest to me.

I suggest mentioning at least two items in an email newsletter subject line. In the case of my newsletter, a from and subject line might read something like:

From: Clayton [Netrepreneur.com]
Subject: PCI compliance, title tag tips, boosting rankings & more

The from line format helps with recognition and adds a touch of humanity. The subject line covers different different topics to appeal to different groups and alerts the person  to the fact there’s additional items in the newsletter.

Honing a subject line format takes time and patience, but without some way of tracking how many times an email was viewed, you’re working blind. If you’re in the market for email marketing/list management software, make sure it’s able to track unique opens.