The Name Game
Get friendly with your prospects by including their names--and personalized content--in your marketing e-mails.
According to a November 2004 Jupitermedia Corp. executive
survey, 42 percent of marketers who did not personalize their
e-mail messages achieved a conversion rate of less than 1 percent,
while 42 percent of marketers who used some form of personalization
received a conversion rate of more than 3 percent. Most likely, you
could improve your conversion rate just by getting personal with
your mailing list.
Your first step in e-mail personalization should be addressing
prospects by their first names. You already collect this
information when customers place orders. What about when prospects
or customers sign up for your newsletter? If you only ask for an
e-mail address, you're missing out. In a comparison of about 59
million e-mails, CoolerEmail, a web-based, HTML e-mail marketing
solution provider, noted that subject-line personalization spiked
open rates by more than 30 percent and click-through rates by more
than 120 percent.
Another simple step is to use recipients' first names in
your message greeting. An e-mail management solution can set a
place-holder in the subject and greeting lines, then dynamically
populate those fields with the matching recipient's name.
Missing names? Play it safe by starting with a generic salutation
such as "Sizzling summer specials for you."
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Customizing your content is another good idea. Perhaps you want
to give a special offer to loyal customers or promote different
products to your male and female customers. You can create entirely
separate e-mail messages for each group or send out one that
dynamically replaces parts of the content. Constant
Contact, CoolerEmail, EmailLabs and VerticalResponse offer various personalization
features.
When gathering information, remember that too many questions can
scare off or annoy people. Ask only for personal information to
help you tailor your e-mails to each recipient.
Speaker and freelance writer Catherine
Seda owns an internet marketing agency and is author of Search
Engine Advertising.