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25 Quick Tips to Boost Email Marketing UsabilityMake yourself valuable through email marketingA surefire way to attract new subscribers and retain present ones is to make yourself as valuable as you can to them. You can increase your value by making your email program as user-friendly as possible. How to do that? By improving its usability, meaning how easily prospects learn about, sign up, participate in and remove themselves from your email program. Here's a real-world example showing how a lack of usability can block a desired outcome: While waiting for a flight recently, I filled out an airport market-research survey using a tablet PC. At the end, the survey invited me to sign up for email updates. First, the survey asked me to sign up for updates without giving me a compelling reason or explaining the benefit. I was feeling a little reckless, though, so I decided to sign up anyway. Second, once I started to type in my email address, I couldn't find the "@" key on the keyboard. The survey-giver walked past just then and showed me where the "shift" and "@" keys were (located in a different spot than in a regular PC keyboard). These two examples violated a key tenet of usability: Don't make it hard for the user. The whole experience got me thinking: How can online marketers boost their subscription and performance rates by improving the usability of their email programs? Also, how do sites actually make it hard for users to sign up? The Basics of Usability Some online experts say content is king. Actually, content is a function of usability. Without usability, you won't get many people to read your great content. Think of usability as ways to make life easier for your prospects and subscribers. It breaks down into three categories: I. The subscription process Michael Gold, a principal in the consulting firm of West Gold Editorial, sees a lot of what he calls "lunkhead" thinking on Web sites and in email programs, especially in the subscription phase of the email relationship. "I see an awful lot of lonely, nondescript boxes on homepages that say 'subscribe to our newsletter' and that's it," said Gold, whose firm works with clients to launch or renovate publications and Web sites. "The thing we tell people over and over is at least to include a brief promo line giving a concrete, specific benefit that would drive a visitor to sign up, using the kinds of language and words they need to use in all of their promotional copy all over the Web site and links." Gold also sees these three common problems: "A big dead silence" after someone subscribes. "I want
something to happen right away in my email inbox," he said. Send
your latest newsletter or offer in a return email instead of waiting for
the next publication date. Want to find out quickly how usable your Web site and email program are? Try these two free methods: 1. Seek out a usability rating tool and rate your program by answering
some key questions. It scores your email program using a basic set of
usability factors. This means giving prospects every opportunity to sign up and making the sign-up process quick and uncomplicated. A 2002 study of email-newsletter usability by the Nielson-Norman group recommended having no more than a two-step sign-up process: one step to collect the email address and another to confirm it. The more steps in the process, and the more information required, the more likely prospects would abandon the effort. If you want more detailed information, such as what you might need to qualify leads, you can go back and ask for it later after you have established a relationship with the reader. Promote your email program at every customer touchpoint: online on each
page of your Web site, in order or registration confirmations and white-paper
downloads, and offline at call centers, on point-of-sale cards in retail
outlets, at trade-show booths, in print ads, etc. Keep registration/subscription to one page. Don't force people to click more than twice at your site (not including an email confirmation if you use it.) Limit how much personal information you request, but give prospects many opportunities to customize their subscriptions. Provide blank checkboxes to let users indicate preferences for frequency, format (text vs. HTML), content and personalization. Test Web links periodically and newsletter links before each send to make sure they work. For offline registrations, tailor the message to the medium. Keep text explanations short and sweet in POS cards (just a one-sentence benefit explanation, the field for an email address and a short privacy statement). Similarly, a brief but compelling pitch from a customer-service rep can help a prospect say yes on the phone, after the initial business has concluded. Note: Although you want to simplify your sign-up process, there are two shortcuts to avoid. You should still use a double opt-in process to avoid data-entry errors and prank sign-ups. Also, don't precheck boxes on the registration page. Usability Principle Two: Make Messages Meaningful First, you have to get the recipient to open your message. Then, you must make the content relevant to your audience. If you haven't revisited your basic message design in the last year or so, it's time to take another look. This principle covers both "outside" of your message (the from and subject lines) and the inside (the content). Use your company or brand name in the "from" line, which tells
recipients who sent the email. A highly usable email program makes it easy for subscribers to update their preferences or exit the program. Design a standard box (in HTML) or copy block (in text) that includes
all important subscription data: the email address used to subscribe,
your company name and contact data, instructions on how to change preferences,
an unsub link (separate from the reader-preference page), a link to your
privacy policy or an abbreviated statement of it and any other relevant
information. Now, review your web site and email messages and see where you can make
them even more useful to your customers and prospects.
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