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Six Steps to Selling by Email - How to write Email sales messages that get results by Leslie O'Flahavan and Marilynne Rudick |
To discover how email sales messages work (or fail) we read hundreds of messages. We easily sorted them into categories:
| unprofessional | -- | poorly written, poor grammar, a blaze of different fonts and formatting |
| lackluster | -- | messages that left us saying so what |
| winners | -- | messages that compelled us to buy a product or service |
What traits set the winners apart? We analysed the best email sales message and came up with these...
SIX STEPS TO E-WRITING THAT SELLS
1.
Write a compelling and truthful subject line
As with all email, the first hurdle is to write a subject line that says must
open. Great subject lines telegraph the content of the message and promise
a product, service, or outcome of real value.
So many email sales messages have FREE or DISCOUNT in the subject line that those words seem to be a prerequisite. But after the first dozen or so free offers, the reader is wary and wants something more.
Heres a subject line we like: Branding: Learn why the future of your company depends upon it. It instantly telegraphs its subject (branding), tells what youll learn, and hints at what will happen if you dont learn it. Well read that message, for free or at full price!
2.
Deliver a clear message upfront
Your readers are busy they dont have time to figure out what youre
offering. Theyre impatient, too. They dont want a tease, a clever
anecdote leading up to the main point. Be direct and succinct. Start with a
clear statement of what youre offering.
Heres an effective opening. Concise and to the point, it grabs the reader with a question then offers a solution: Are you looking for a unique, inexpensive, and effective way to market your business or site? Try Postcards!
Many email sales messages open with a lengthy reminder to the reader that hes opted in to the mailing and detailed instructions on how to opt out. This statement is an important courtesy, but at the beginning of the message it squanders prime real estate, the first screen. You must give the reader the opt in information, but put it at the end of your message.
3.
Deliver one message
When youve gone to great trouble and expense of compiling an email marketing
list you may be tempted to get your moneys worth by using the list to
tell all potential customers about everything you do: the winter sale, two hot
new products, and free mouse pads. Dont.
Email readers have short attention spans -- long enough to digest one message, no more. The best strategy for delivering multiple email sales messages is to write a separate message for each thing youre trying to sell.
If you do have lots to tell your readers, and would like to communicate with them regularly, consider an email newsletter, a better format for multiple messages.
4.
Provide value
In return for opening and reading your communication, give readers something
of value: useful information or a special offer, and perhaps something free
or discounted.
Heres an example of email sales copy that effectively couples the promise of valuable information with a free offer: Does your Web site have the security you need to conduct business online? To learn what's powering security on all the leading Web sites, request your FREE copy of Securing Your Web Site for Business from VeriSign.
5.
Show readers how they will benefit
Its not enough just to tell readers about what you offer: Try our
free job matching service. Let them know how your product, service or
offer will benefit them: Our free job matching service will help you find
high-paying gigs. Well send you the names of at least two potential clients
each week.
Here's another email sales message that makes the benefit clear: "Sign-up for the Personal Financial Advisory and you'll get powerful, objective, personalized advice each week by email on how to invest your money to enable you to reach your personal financial goals."
6.
Include a call to action
Your compelling subject line and customer-oriented lead have done the trick:
youve gotten the reader to open your message. Youve offered insider
information and showed readers how your product or service will benefit them.
Now go the distance and tell your readers exactly what you want them to do.
Dont just tell them to check out your site. Tell them what action to take. Invite them to sign up for your free newsletter, enter a raffle, buy your product. Here are good examples of a call to action:
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Download the demo software at www.download.com.
Well close our discussion of email sales with a final, heartfelt reminder of the importance of brevity in email sales messages. Media critic Barbara Lippert said it eloquently: "Watching 15 seconds of nasal passages unblocking sure beats watching 30 seconds."
© E-WRITE, 1999, www.ewriteonline.com
Reproduced by kind permission from E-WRITE. E-WRITE teaches writing courses, writes the contents for websites, email marketing letters and newsletters.
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