Email marketing has been a staple for consumer marketers since the mid-90s. A few years later, B2B marketers discovered its value, and email campaigns have become an important tool for businesses in all stages and industries.
Yet many marketers just starting in the field are wondering when to use email marketing. Email marketing is a powerful vehicle that enables you to cost-effectively communicate with your market in a way that’s immediate and relevant. With email, you can:
You can usually launch a campaign and measure your results fairly quickly, making email a great option for time-sensitive programs. It’s easy and inexpensive to test different aspects of your campaign on a segment of your list, so you can hone your creative and your offer to generate the best possible results.
Here are three examples of when to use email marketing campaigns:
GENERATE NEW LEADS | DIRECT SALES | BUILD BRAND AWARENESS |
---|---|---|
Buy or rent a list and send a short, compelling message to generate interest in your product.
Drive prospects to a special page on your website to download a white paper, a demo or other offer. Capture basic information and follow up via phone several days later. |
Buy or rent a subscriber list or send the campaign to your current prospects and customers.
Compel them to click to your website to learn and buy. |
Use email to keep in touch with prospects and customers.
Deliver timely, valuable information that makes them want to read your messages. Add news about your company, special offers, etc., but focus on content and information rather than pure sales. |
Email marketing is more editorial than advertising, and it’s powerful because it can support and even drive a sales process. Yet like any medium, it has its challenges. Business people get hundreds of emails (or more) each day, so you’ll need to get your message past spam filters and give them a reason to read. You’ll also need a strong offer, valuable editorial content, appropriate design and a good fulfillment and measurement process.
You can reach a wide audience with email, but that doesn’t mean you should. It’s most effective when you really target so you can speak to specific needs. Think of it as a one-to-one communication – personalized, relevant, timely – not a blast.
If you’ve used email in the past, do you see your company in one of these scenarios?
Best Case | Neutral Case | Worst Case |
---|---|---|
You have a strong email program with very specific goals.
You use technology to deliver your messages effectively. Your campaigns offer strong content and messages; you create custom landing pages to convert clicks to prospects. You continually test your designs, copy, list and offer to improve your response. As a result, you usually meet your ROI and business goals. |
You do some email marketing and are generally satisfied with the results.
You send announcements about products and offers; you occasionally use email to generate leads or keep your name in front of existing ones. You occasionally test a campaign before launch, but it isn’t a major priority. You know your campaigns could be stronger, but you haven’t had time to learn more. |
You use email as a quick-fix – when you’re low on leads, you do a blast message; if you haven’t reached out to customers, you create a quick newsletter.
You generally don’t target your prospects – you blast one message to your entire list. You don’t test your campaigns, and you don’t know how many of your messages are actually delivered. |
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Use email to meet the goals you set in your annual marketing plan; you can also use them as part of a broader marketing campaign. You’ll also need to make sure your website is strong enough to support your campaign.
Take the time to strategize and plan your campaign:
Few people want to read emails that look and feel like ads. Instead, offer information that’s relevant to your recipients. It’s an investment to develop that content, but it’s the content that gets people to open your messages and continue to read them over time.
If you’ve never launched an email campaign, you’ll probably need to use an email service provider (ESP), typically a web-based service. Choose a reputable ESP to help you stay compliant with spam legislation and get your messages to your prospects’ inboxes – a major issue in email marketing. A good ESP can raise your delivery rate, manage your opt-in and opt-out process, keep your email list clean and provide reports that can help you improve your results.
Make sure you’re following accepted industry practices – you’ll improve your probability of success.
It’s always wise to test before launching a campaign. If you’re working with a new ESP or list, evaluate your delivery and response rate before you roll out. Keep testing and improving your subject lines, headlines and copy, design, offer, landing pages, even the delivery timing. You’ll improve all your campaigns in the process.
As email marketing becomes more important in your overall strategy, keep learning about the subject and improving your campaigns. Review what other companies are doing – both B2B and B2C. They’ll give you plenty of examples of when to use email marketing in your business.
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