Small Business: How to avoid spamming clients
No one likes getting spam, yet about 200 billion spam e-mails are sent daily worldwide.
This poses a particular challenge to e-mail marketers, who are trying to get their message out to a highly skeptical audience.
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No one likes getting spam, yet about 200 billion spam e-mails are sent daily worldwide.
This poses a particular challenge to e-mail marketers, who are trying to get their message out to a highly skeptical audience.
The best way to avoid being labeled a spammer is to send your e-mails to recipients who actually want to receive them. This means having a highly targeted opt-in list, experts say.
"People want e-mails from businesses they know and trust," explains John Arnold, author of "E-mail Marketing For Dummies" (Wiley, $21.99) and director of training and certification for Constant Contact, an e-mail marketing services provider in Loveland, Colo.
Simply blasting out e-mails to random recipients isn't going to win you fans.
"Hate is not a buying emotion," Arnold says. "You don't want people to hate your communications and think of you as a spammer."
1. Grow your list
So how do you grow your opt-in list without being a nuisance?
Well, you can start by tapping into relationships you already have, suggests Ron Wood of Ron Wood Public Relations in Port Jefferson Station.
Look for opportunities to collect customer e-mail addresses at points of contact and purchase, he says. For instance, his client, Panama Hatties restaurant in Huntington Station, includes a comment card along with the check, asking customers whether they'd like to be included on their list.
Make sure customers understand you won't be sharing their e-mail address with anyone, and let them know they can opt out at any point, he notes.
If you have existing customers' e-mail addresses that you haven't used in at least six months, you should ask their permission to start e-mailing them regularly, Arnold says. Set clear expectations (i.e. frequency, etc.)
2. Keep list updated
Also, take the opportunity to update their e-mail addresses.
"Maintenance is key," notes Cindy Smith, president of ImageQuest Communications, a Stony Brook marketing firm.
One of its clients, Love My Shoes, was sending out e-mails to a list of 120,000 names, but it was questionable how many were actually delivered due to poor list maintenance and the retailer ending up on the spam "blacklist" of major e-mail service providers as a result of a former employee not fully complying with CAN-SPAM requirements (see ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/business/ ecommerce/bus61.shtm for guide lines), Smith says.
"We sent e-mails out, but half were lost in cyberspace and the other half were blacklisted," notes Robert Yeganeh, owner of the Farmingdale-based shoe seller, which has five stores.
ImageQuest implemented several fixes, including using a reliable third party e-mail provider, iContact, to send out e-mails and maintain the company's list, as well as adding a double opt-in to ensure recipients actually wanted to be on the list.
3. Target audience
As a result, Love My Shoes got off the "blacklist," and complaints/reports that had exceeded 11 percent are now less than 0.01 percent, Smith says. Click-throughs (clicking on an e-mail offer and being driven to the advertiser's website) also increased 10 percent to 12 percent.
"It's really endless what you can do with a well-managed e-mail campaign," says Yeganeh, who sends customers deals and incentives via e-mail, including discounts with a coupon code.
Try testing different offers and calls to action to see what customers respond to best, suggests Chris Baggott, author of "Email Marketing by the Numbers" (Wiley, $24.95) and chief executive of Indianapolis-based Compendium Software, a social media publishing platform.
For some customers it may be a coupon, and for others it might be a free white paper, he notes. He had a hardware store client that encouraged e-mail opt-ins by offering 12 offers/deals within a 12-day period during the holiday season.
"If my goal is to build my e-mail list, I should be doing something every single week," Baggott says. "Never stop testing."
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