Each advertiser has different strategies and ways of approach, regardless of the marketing channel used, but there is also a small set of rules that each of them has to respect if they want to get good results.
So we have for you 25 essential rules for email marketing:
- Send emails people want to receive, to people who want to receive them.
- Clicks and opens are not an appropriate primary goal for an email send.
- There is no excuse for sending emails that aren’t mobile optimized.
- If you don’t have permission, get out of their inbox.
- It might not really matter when you send your email: Experiment with different times.
- Every unopened email has an opportunity cost.
- Aim to create emails that get forwarded, not just opened and clicked.
- Check your email replies carefully and consistently.
- Beware of the number of links in your email. it may pop you into the Gmail promotions tab.
- When writing an email, two beers max. An intoxicated marketer is a sloppy marketer.
- Don’t over email – less is more, and sended blindness is real.
- Personalization goes a long way. Experiment with custom fieleds, do more than just “Dear *|FNAME|*”
- Consider an email’s attention ration – every email should have one goal.
- Create a text-only version, make sure it’s readable.
- Have fun with your unsubscribe page.
- The average attention span of an adult is 8 seconds. Time is ticking.
- Always send email from a real person, not an alias.
- Send your audience content that’s relevant to them, not just your latest creation.
- If you’re not sure what people want – ASK. Would you prefer your emails in Spanish? Click this link, etc..
- A/B test your email subject line and email body. make sure the sample size used is large enough for statistical signifigance.
- An email should never be an end point of communication. Always give people somewhere to go, and reason to do so.
- Don’t be afraid to tell people that you will remove them from your email list if they are unengaged. A healthy email list is a happy list.
- Try training your audience by sending at regular intervals.
- Every email is an opportunity to test and experiment.
- Test, test and test again.