posted on Thursday, May 01, 2008 4:10 PM
by
PetePrestipino
Building an Opt-In Email List
Once you have managed to create a stream of steady traffic to your
website, you may find that you want to or, more likely, need to contact those
that have purchased from you in the past or even dropped a line to you to
initiate a relationship. There’s no better way to do this than email, but
getting started can be tricky with the infinite number of options available. Add
in the perceived complexity of how to actually begin and most Web professionals
become paralyzed with fear.
There are only a handful of steps necessary to building an opt-in email
list. If you are not using a service that automates the process for you in a
soup-to-nuts manner, look no further than your preferred search engine to find
noteworthy vendors.
But building an opt-in email list is not for the Johnny Come Lately’s of
the Web world. Doing it right takes an immense amount of commitment, not only in
terms of creating content but being creative with your list’s recipients. The
more adventurous you become in building an opt-in email list, the higher chance
you have of success. While it’s not possible to list all of the possible content
ideas for everyone, what we can do is highlight a few of the simple, yet
aggressive ways to generate not just a list, but a large and active list.
Identify Touch Points
It takes work to create an email customized for you readership, but it
should not take any work at all identifying touch points on your website. These
are places to promote subscription to your email.
Whether you have designated a high profile section of your sign-up form or
feature such an area on every page of your website, there are many additional
places to effectively promote your emails. For example, if you find yourself
participating in quite a few social networks (i.e. LinkedIn), consider creating
a custom landing page specifically for the purpose of generating subscriptions
for those in your future network. There are truly a whole host of opportunities
to recruit new members to your list including transactional emails, shipping
forms and even outside or away from your site at trade shows, speaking
engagements, even your business card. Just because you build it doesn’t mean
they’ll come, so get creative in where these signup requests are placed.
Barriers to Acquisition
In today’s Web environment, consumers are inundated with information. When
you have a surplus of sources that can offer virtually the same thing, it’s
important not to knowingly implement barriers to the acquisition of subscribers.
Privacy Policy
While you may not spend time checking out the privacy policies of the
various newsletters you sign up for, many do and take it quite seriously.
Obtaining permission with a double opt-in method to keep track of contacts and
user preferences will provide great value when those same consumers complain
that they are receiving unwanted email. Consider including a brief sentence or
two of your privacy policy located near the submit button on your form, aw well
as a link to the full policy.
Value Proposition
Most of us are willing to share our email address, especially if its means
that we’ll receive something of value in return. Growing an opt-in email list
requires that you carefully determine if you should incentivize subscriptions.
For example, if you are an online retailer, why not consider giving subscribers
a discount on their next purchase. If you’re a blogger, why not give something
away – a free link perhaps if your audience consists of similar bloggers and Web
professionals. Selling electronics? Why not give away one item each time an
issue of your newsletter is sent?
Channel Noise
Some of the more creative uses of this technique/approach include placing
the winner’s name at the end of the email, forcing recipients to scroll down to
the end to see who actually won. While incentives do generate a fair share of
sign-ups, there are some drawbacks. A number of people will sign up only to get
the incentives. You still have a large list to work with, but the response rate
tends to be lower.
It’s imperative to know that one-to-one marketing is an ongoing process.
Marketers need to know that cleaning their lists is equally important. If there
are underperforming segments, separate them. The message has to get out there
that this is a subscriber medium and that you have to respect what the
subscriber
wants.
Analyze Everything
Marketers need to measure performance of everything in tandem. It often
comes down to integrating solutions which help you understand how people are
interacting with the information you are sending out. You need to ask how your
email service provider (ESP) is going to help you measure. You can look at
metrics like open rate or click rate, but they only tell you about the vacuum of
email. It does not tell you email leads to search which leads to conversion. A
lot of the impact is the offline purchase. Email is a direct channel but it’s
also an influence channel.