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Act cFluent Newsletter, April, 2007 - Subscribe
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Information for independent insurance agents about issues
at the confluence of technology, consumerism, marketing and
agency practices. Subscriber benefits include free trial
evaluation of new products and programs.
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Newsletter Archive
Getting
Your Emails and E-Newsletters Read
Marketers have long understood the challenge of getting
a direct mail piece noticed and read, steps that necessarily
precede any sales activity. The unique challenge of marketing
through email and e-newsletters is less widely understood
but recent case studies and surveys provide some insights
that will make your e-marketing ventures more successful.
Many marketers include html images as part of emails they
send. Using these images provides several advantages. They
make an email look more visually interesting and allow you
to connect with other branding your agency may do. Just as
importantly, when the images are downloaded in the email,
you are able to substantiate that the email was actually
opened. An ‘open' doesn't guarantee that your email was read,
of course, but it's a pretty good surrogate measure.
But there is a downside to using html images in emails.
Many email clients, including the pervasive Outlook, will
block images in emails but allow the user to permit them
on a case by case basis. Unfortunately, spammers will also
use html images in their emails. When a recipient downloads
the image it validates the email address for the spam sender
which results in …even more spam. For this reason, many people
will accept images in emails only reluctantly.
A recent survey and a separate case study conducted by Marketing
Sherpa point out another short coming of html images but
also the path to more effective emails and e-newsletters.
The survey distinguished between business email users and
consumer email users. Business users likely rely on Outlook
for their email client while home users probably get and
send email via a web mail service like Yahoo, Google, AOL
or Microsoft's Live.
Most Outlook users actually never open many emails instead
viewing them through a preview pane as they scan through
their inbox. Depending on whether the preview pane is a horizontal
or vertical (user defined options) some of an email will
be obscured and may never seen. Email real estate set aside
for images not yet downloaded often push text out of the
viewing area. The result: Your message doesn't get through.
The lesson for B to B communications is that you need to
design emails, that's right - design, for both kinds of recipients:
those that preview in horizontal panes and those that preview
in vertical panes. The first few paragraphs need to be compelling
enough to make a reader want to go further or click on links
in the email because your key message will need to fit in
the upper left corner of an email. In fact, just to be on
the safe side and account for preview panes that are sized
on the small side, you should make the first 2 to 4 sentences
count because that's all that may get read.
The lesson in the B to C (business to consumer) e-communication
arena, as it turns out, is the same one. Recent upgrades
to web mail services at Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL make those
free mail services feel and perform much more like a desk
top application. And they include the ability to scan and
preview emails in panes.
The Marketing Sherpa case study provided some results and
tips from a company that achieved open/click through rates
of over 70% for e-mail newsletter mailings to a house list.
Here's some lessons they learned that you can apply right
away:
- Provide a summary of your newsletter or the full email
in 2 to 4 sentences with a link (for newsletters) to the
full content.
- Make sure your content is compelling and concise. You
may get click throughs once but if your content is not
to the point busy recipients may not come back.
- Manage your frequency to once every one to two months.
Respect your reader's time.
-
12 page Word document contains copy examples for email,
post cards, stuffers, on hold script and traditional newsletter
copy for several campaign themes. (Free
download)
Download suggested communication schedule and sample communications
Please select one of the files below to download:
-
44 page Word document contains copy for 27 individual communication
campaigns. (Download is no longer available. Please contact Confluency for your copy today. )
Too
Busy to Keep Up with News? Try RSS or a Newsletter Email
Account
With the explosion of blogs and online publishing it seems
harder than ever to keep up with all the news. If you aren’t
taking advantage of RSS feeds to organize and bring the news
you want to your desktop you may want to look into it.
RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication. Basically, it
allows you to subscribe to multiple news sources (blogs,
online newspapers and magazines and just about anyone providing
an RSS feed). Providers deliver headlines to an RSS reader
on your desktop allowing you to scan and choose which articles
or content you want to read. We were going to provide a more
in-depth explanation of RSS and how to set up a reader but
then we came across this 3:30 video that does a far better
job of explanation than we can (and it’s entertaining
in its humorous spin on PowerPoint): http://www.commoncraft.com/rss_plain_english.
You may also want to set up a separate email account for
those newsletters that don’t provide an RSS feed. Sign
up for a free email account using Yahoo Mail, Gmail or another
free service and let the newsletter emails pile up there.
It will keep your work in box clear of distracting clutter
during the busy work day. Then, on Saturday morning, when
you have poured your coffee and before the rest of the house
wakes up, you can sift through the accumulated reading or
dump it all to the trash bin.
Customers
Who Don't Own Computers Are Often E-enabled
Some of us make the assumption that our customers don’t
have computers at home and therefore don’t use email
or the web. But what about computer and internet access at
work? A 2003 (that’s a long time ago) survey by the
US Department of Labor found 50% of the employed used a computer
at work. For some income and age groups, that number ranges
between 60% and 84%.
And consider this quote from a 2006 court case in New York,
pitting an employer against an employee over personal use
of employer provided internet access: "The internet
has become the modern equivalent of a telephone or a daily
newspaper, providing a combination of communication and information
that most employees use as frequently in their personal lives
as for work." In the case the judge made the observation
that the employer allowed employees to use the work phone
for personal needs, making appointments, checking in at home,
etc. As long as the employee was doing their job, the ruling
found little to no distinction between using work internet
access or phones for personal needs.
This underscores the simple reality that people surf the
net and check personal email at work and will continue to
do so. Assuming that customers that don’t have home
computers or internet don’t use email or the web is
an assumption that just doesn’t hold up.
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About Confluency Solutions
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Confluency Solutions specializes in solutions that generate
growth through high customer satisfaction. Easy to implement
technology combined with traditional independent agency strengths
vault your agency into the ranks of the top performers. Confluency
Solutions provides complete business solutions, not just
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