Beware of Spaminator – Tips for Improving eMail Campaigns

robot-typingThe best email offer in the world won’t accomplish much if it never reaches your intended recipient. Beware:  there are strong forces at work these days trying their best to block your messages! In a recent MarketingProfs article, Debra Ellis discusses three distinct deliverability hurdles faced by today’s email marketers. Meet the spaminators:

Internet Service Providers (ISPs) that err on the side of caution when determining whether an email looks like spam or not. “[A]void all spam triggers,” she advises. “They include specific words and characters in the subject line, low text-to-graphic ratios, and repetition of target words within the body of the email.”

Junk Box Filters (JBFs) with settings that are likely left by recipients in a “suspicious” default mode; the most effective way to evade this snare is to get recipients to whitelist your email address. “If you want this  … you have to ask for it, and provide quality content,” Ellis says.

Much-Needed Individuals (MNIs), aka your subscribers. “This is your toughest spaminator,” she admits. They can terminate you with a couple of clicks. “Your survival depends on your ability to entertain, engage, and enlighten.”

How can you heighten the chances that recipients will open your email, click through and—most importantly—close the sale? With good ol’ engagement. “If your emails are engaging,” says Ellis, “your customers will look forward to them and even pass them along to their friends.”

The Po!nt: Be a hero: take steps to stop the spaminators. “A small investment in time can result in astronomical growth in loyalty, branding, and sales,” Ellis concludes.

Source: MarketingProfs. Click to read the article.

Published by MarketingProf: Vol. 2, No. 44    April 15, 2009

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Bejarana

Ed Bejarana is a former professional musician turned process engineer turned business entrepreneur. Helping small business people over come difficult marketing and business growth issues is a passion. In 2004, Ed created the business model that, in 2007, become Zenith Exhibits, Inc. Providing affordable marketing services required a FREE support website where small business people could continue to use as a reference guide to all things related to internet marketing. So was born, BusinessBlogging.net. See our companion sites Zenith Exhibits, Inc. and PortlandBusinessCommunity.com

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