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Is Email Marketing Dead? Not if You Keep Up With These Best Practices

The digital marketing landscape is constantly shifting, so it’s easy to see why some people are asking, “Is email marketing dead?”

Well, Statista predicts that the number of global email users will grow from 3.9 billion in 2019 to 4.48 billion in 2024. That means over half of the world’s population will be using email, so it’s clearly not a channel that can be ignored in 2021 and beyond.

The question becomes, “How do you make the best of using email marketing in your strategy?”

Keep reading to learn:

  • What not to do with your email marketing strategy.
  • Best email marketing practices for 2021 and beyond.

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Start With Your Own Email Marketing Calendar Template

A great way to begin your new email marketing strategy journey is with a calendar template that will help you perfect your planning. Download yours today, so you start off on the right foot.

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Email Marketing is Still Relevant

Although email marketing is one of the older channels in the digital marketing space, it’s still alive and well.

With 3.9 billion users worldwide, email is one of the best ways to reach potential customers. Not to mention that 58% of U.S. consumers check email first thing in the morning. That’s a significant number of people you can reach.

Email vs. Social Media
OptinMonster

More people check their email than social media first thing in the morning. Furthermore, despite the rise of new social media platforms, 73% of millennials prefer to receive business communications via email. That being said, giving up on email marketing would be missing a significant business opportunity.

Email Marketing ROI

Email marketing statistics show that email generates $38 for every $1 spent (a 3800% return on investment).

Although it is a paid marketing channel, it’s one of the most cost-effective options. Email marketing campaigns are especially effective when compared to social media marketing.

A whopping 60% of consumers have purchased a product after receiving a promotional email. Compare this to the 12.5% of consumers that would consider making a purchase based on a promotional social media message.

Why is the email marketing ROI so much higher?

It all boils down to consumer expectations. Consumers expect promotional emails, so they go to their email to find discounts and deals.

On social media platforms, customers expect more content and entertainment. They’re not there for brand promotion, so it’s no surprise that B2B and B2C marketers plan to increase their investment in email marketing.

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What Poor Email Marketing Practices Really Need to Go?

Email marketing isn’t dead, but spammy email marketing practices are. Using poor email etiquette results in losing customers and being flagged as a spam sender.

Make sure you avoid the following ineffective (and potentially ill-mannered) email marketing tactics:

Email marketing tactics to avoid

1. Failing to Follow GDPR Guidelines

The EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) guidelines are the strictest privacy protection rules around. The GDPR aims to protect consumer privacy and data online.

If you sell to consumers in EU countries, the rules apply to you — even if your business is located in the United States.

The GDPR has two primary regulations for email marketing:

  1. The individual you are emailing must provide consent to receive your emails.
  2. The individual is an existing customer who has made a purchase, OR the individual has been provided an easy way to opt-out of your email communications.

Best practices state that you should use double opt-in email forms and make sure all your email templates contain an easy to find the unsubscribe button.

Double opt-in simply means that your email subscribers submit an opt-in form and receive a confirmation email where they confirm their consent to receive your communications.

If you’re using an email marketing tool, like MailChimp or HubSpot, you should be able to find the option to create a double opt-in email already built-in:

Opt-in request email

Following these best practices not only helps you avoid large fines but also helps you build trust and goodwill with your subscribers.

Ultimately, you want to demonstrate that you respect your customers’ privacy.

2. Impersonal Subject Lines and Content

Personalization in an email is nothing new, and since it is widely used by most businesses, customers have come to expect it.

Your customers want to feel they are known, understood, and appreciated. Failing to do so will result in poor results from your email campaigns.

Adding the first name to your email subject line can boost open rates by up to 20%. Personalization also reduces unsubscribe rates and the number of spam reports.

If you’re not personalizing emails, you’re not getting the most out of this marketing channel.

3. Not Mobile-Friendly

Mobile opens make up 46% of all email opens. If your emails aren’t formatted for mobile devices, you’ll turn off a significant portion of your subscribers.

Graph showing email opens

In June 2018, Litmus reported 46% of all email opens were accounted for by mobile users.

You only have a few seconds to capture your readers’ attention, if your email takes longer than that to load, you’ve lost an opportunity.

Consumers are constantly on the go, and they expect businesses to provide fast and pleasant mobile experiences — including websites and email.

4. Unappealing Visual Design

As consumers, we are highly influenced by visuals and design. As an illustration, 94% of consumers will leave a website that has a poor graphic design.

Imagine how many will ignore an email that isn’t visually appealing.

Content marketing consists of more than written content. Low-resolution graphics and haphazard layouts quickly confuse and even turn off customers.

Unfortunately, there are many other companies out there sending visually appealing emails, so you can’t afford to skimp on design and imagery if you’re going to invest in email.

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5. Not Acting on Email Performance Metrics

Like any marketing channel, email has certain benchmarks and best practices, but at the end of the day, your customers and subscribers are your final judge.

Every time you send an email campaign, you have an opportunity to learn about your customers’ preferences.

Your email performance metrics allow you to monitor customer engagement and retention. However, your data can’t benefit you if you don’t use it. Study your metrics to find out what works for you and what doesn’t. As you make changes, you can continue to pinpoint the finer details of your best tactics.

A/B testing is an essential part of your email strategy. You can use it to test subject lines, email content, imagery, and calls-to-action.

CoSchedule Subject Line Tester
CoSchedule

Without studying your data or performing comparative tests, your email marketing results will hit a ceiling, and you won’t be able to grow with your customers.

Email Marketing Best Practices You Need to Master

Since we’re talking about what NOT to do with email marketing, let’s also walk through what you SHOULD be doing with your email marketing strategy.

Best email marketing practices

1. Personalize Your Email and Greetings

When compared to non-personalized emails, personalized messages result in 29% higher unique open rates and 41% higher unique click-through rates.

Personalization is not a nice-to-have; it’s a customer expectation.

There are several ways to add personalization to an email. You can start by simply personalizing subject lines and greetings to include your customer’s name.

If you want to go further, softwares, like MailChimp and HubSpot, offer smart personalization features to further tailor your email content. Smart content allows you to personalize greetings, calls-to-action, and text based on the customer lifecycle stage, referral source, and more.

For example, imagine you’re promoting a webinar, and you want to share it with your email list — which includes both people who have attended one of your webinars in the past and those who haven’t. A good email marketing software will let you create two different subject lines that are tailored to each group:

Webinar email example

When it comes to email, the more personal your communication, the better your conversion rate.

2. Optimize Email Preview Text

In an email inbox, your customer can see the subject of your email and a preview of its content. The preview, also known as preview text, is pulled from your email content by default.

Email preview
HubSpot

However, if you want to increase open rates, we recommend that you customize this text. The default text can look messy, and it may not get your message across effectively. Ideally, your preview should be short and to the point (50 characters or less).

Summarize the content of your email and make sure to put your best foot forward. If you’re offering a discount, mention it in your preview. Your preview text should stand out in a crowded inbox and entice readers to open your email.

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3. Segment Your Lists to Provide Relevant Content to Readers

Your customers are not all the same, so why would you send them all the same emails?

Learning to segment your email lists can result in a 760% increase in email-driven revenue. It may take some time and experimentation to find meaningful segments, but it’s worth it.

Popular email segmentation ideas

It turns out your buyer persona is made up of several segments.

Using a combination of demographic and behavioral cues to create your segments allows you to tailor your content for better reader engagement and click rates.

Most email marketing tools will let you create tags that you can assign to specific contacts in your database, which will allow you to create such segments within your email list.

If you’re using HubSpot for your email marketing, you can use personas and lists to create segments and assign them to different workflows. Creating workflow automation for each segment ensures that each reader gets the right content at the right time.

Assigning personas

Create persona profiles to segment your email list and automation workflows with HubSpot.

4. Keep Main Message and Call-to-Action Above the Fold

Readers spend an average of 11 seconds focusing on email content. That’s not a lot of time to get your message across.

If you want your email newsletter to have a high ROI, then keep the good stuff above the fold.

CTA placement
Campaign Master

Above the fold content refers to everything that’s seen when the email first loads.

In other words, don’t make your readers scroll for discounts. Give them the best value at the top of your message.

If your goal is to convert, put your call-to-action at the top. Otherwise, you can use high-quality images or videos to hook your audience and keep them reading.

5. Use Autoresponders

Email marketers often use autoresponders to automate their transactional emails, and with good reason. Transactional emails have an average open rate of 50%, whereas newsletter open rates hover around 20%.

Unlike email newsletters, transactional emails are sent from your business to a single recipient. Examples include order notifications, abandoned cart emails, password reminders, and personalized product notifications.

While sending one-on-one emails manually isn’t a viable option for most businesses, setting up autoresponders allows you to send personalized transactional emails using behavioral triggers.

Autoresponders help you build trust with customers and take your personalization to the next level.

Email marketing in CoScheduleConnect your email marketing tool to CoSchedule, so you can easily schedule your automated emails and gain visibility on your entire email strategy.

Final Thoughts: Best Practices for Email Marketing

Life as a digital marketer is full of change. You must be able to adapt to new platforms quickly, but just because there are new platforms, doesn’t mean that old methods are dead.

Email marketing continues to be one of the most effective marketing channels for B2B and B2C businesses. As long as you pay attention to customer preferences and adhere to best practices, you can turn email into a profitable marketing strategy.

The post Is Email Marketing Dead? Not if You Keep Up With These Best Practices appeared first on CoSchedule Blog.