Direct Email Marketing
Analysts Say Advertisers Must Build a Cost-Effective, Permission-Based E-Mail Campaign
Segment, target, and fire!
Use the STP process: Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning. This is, in essence, a
simple concept.
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Divide and conquer: Divide the people you can reach into segments based on
various criteria (say, employed women between 25 and 35 who live in your city's
suburbs).
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Segment and Target: Decide which segments are likely to be interested in
buying your product. Target your promotions to these segments, concentrating
your efforts on them.
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Make your pitch attractive: Position your product so it is attractive to these
segments. This means you have to customize your presentation to make sure it
will appeal to the target audience. For details, read the brilliant book
Positioning by Al Ries and Jack Trout, the originators of this concept.
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Trade links and ads: Find other Web sites and opt-in e-mail newsletters and
see if you can trade links or e-mail newsletter ads. This can be the single most
effective thing you can do if you find sites and lists that are focused to people
who will be interested in your products or services.
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Talk back: Maintain a feedback form and a "tell a friend" form on your site,
encouraging visitors to send in comments and tell friends about your site.
Include some freebies to attract your user (say a mouse pad or a 10% discount
for the best comment you receive).
Make sure you it's clear to people that they're signing p for your list. Make sure
to include a clear privacy policy, even something as short as, "We never share
your name or e-mail address with anyone." If you do share or sell your lists,
include a checkbox that allows visitors to say they don't want any promotional
mail from anyone else.
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT=letters, russel thornton artville"}
Don't send e-mail to people who haven't asked for it. That's
called Spam, and it can do you more harm than good. Ignore the
Spam you get offering to sell you a million e-mail names for $20—just take a
$20 bill and light it with a match. That will probably do you less harm.
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Get on the Liszt: Now, start identifying the various mailing lists and
newsgroups that are relevant to your site and are usually read by your target
audience.
{HYPERLINK "http://www.wolfbayne.com/lists/lol.html "}
Liszt
is a great search engine for mailing lists and
{HYPERLINK "http://www.deja.com/"}
DejaNews
for
newsgroups. Subscribe to the most popular ones, sit tight, and read them for a
while, till you understand what's going on. Don't post anything as yet.
Once you get the drift of what's going on, post a short note to these lists (one at a
time, don't cc your mail to half a dozen lists and newsgroups).
Be very tactful about this, or you'll be flamed so bad hell will seem like an air-conditioned hotel
room with a tray of chilled martinis by comparison. You might want
to check with the list administrator about whether your post is legit or not.
For example, it's not a good idea to say: "Great new site!!! 10% Discount!!! Buy
Now!!! http://www.mysite.com ... blah blah."
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT=letters, russel thornton artville"}
At the same time, it's perfectly legitimate for you to reply to a query
posted on the list, answering the question in brief and adding, "See my
Web page at http://www.mysite.com/stuff.html for more details."
In fact, this is more likely to attract people to your site because people then realize
that you know what you're talking about and that you are not just some idiot of a
marketroid—the sort who rings you up when you're having dinner.
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Getting Siggy with it. Include your Web site address and a note about your site
in a short signature on each post (most mail clients allow you to set your
signature). If you can, keep your signature to under four lines.
For example, my e-mail signature reads something like:
Suresh Ramasubramanian President, CAUCE India
{HYPERLINK "mailto:webmaster@kcircle.com"}
webmaster@kcircle.com
{HYPERLINK "mailto:suresh@india.cauce.org"}
suresh@india.cauce.org
{HYPERLINK "http://www.india.cauce.org"}
http://www.india.cauce.org
Stopping Spam In India
Speech isn't free when it comes postage due
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{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT=letters, russel thornton artville"}
Press release me: Get the public contact e-mail addresses of the
newspapers and journals that your target audience is likely to read.
As you should know your target audience rather well by now, this won't be too
hard (you'll probably read them yourself). These addresses will be listed on the
newspaper's Web site and/or mentioned in the newspapers. (
{HYPERLINK "../Grow/press_releases.html"}
Learn more about
creating an effective press release
)
Mail them a press release and place an ad in one or two of the most popular ones, as
some of them are likely to mention your site somewhere after the obituaries or even
ignore it.
Remember that reporters already get dozens of these notifications every day, and are
likely to trash your mail if you don't grab their attention in the first few lines. Use
AIDA and customize your write-up as much as possible, keeping in mind the paper's
target audience.
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Start your search engine: Submit your site to the various search engines and
"Free Ads" sites, and make sure your Web pages have sufficient meta tags to
ensure the search engines will pick it up and index it properly. The best ones
are
{HYPERLINK "http://www.yahoo.com "}
Yahoo
,
{HYPERLINK "http://www.altavista.com"}
Alta Vista
,
{HYPERLINK "http://www.google.com"}
Google
,
{HYPERLINK "http://www.lycos.com/addasite.html"}
Lycos
,
{HYPERLINK "http://www.ussc.alltheweb.com/"}
Fast
, and the Netscape Open Directory
<
{HYPERLINK "http://directory.netscape.com"}
http://directory.netscape.com
>. If there is a speciality portal (one that
exclusively lists sites such as yours), then definitely submit your site to it.
This should start things moving. If it doesn't, don't take the easy route and buy a
"marketing set" (a bulk mail program and a CD full of addresses). Spammers use
these and quite often sell it to gullible marketers.
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT=letters, russel thornton artville"}
It's not Spamtastic
OK, I mentioned Spam, and I'll go a bit deeper on this one. At every stage of your
marketing career, you are likely to be faced with a Hamletian question--"To Spam or
not to Spam, that's the question.''
What's Spam? Spam is unsolicited e-mail, the on-line equivalent of the junk mail that
keeps arriving in your postal mailbox. Sadly, it is much more damaging than postal
mail--and can be the end of your career as a marketer.
Unsolicited e-mail? That is, mail I have not asked for? But that means my long, lost
girlfriend cannot mail me out of the blue, asking me to marry her!!!
Oh, OK, let me clarify. Spam is unsolicited, unwanted e-mail, frequently sent in bulk
quantities and advertising some commercial proposition. A major part of the Spam
you probably get, and what this article deals with, is BUCE (Bulk Unsolicited
Commercial E-Mail).
So, your girlfriend is welcome to mail you, asking you to marry her. What she cannot
do is mail you (and hundreds of others who don't know her from Adam) advertising
her Web site/product/get rich scheme.
Spam is illegal in several American states, including Washington and Virginia. In fact,
you can be sued in small claims court by residents of these states who have received
unsolicited mail from you. See
{HYPERLINK "http://www.suespammers.org"}
http://www.suespammers.org
for more.
Others will complain to your ISP and Web host, who will delete your Web site,
disconnect your dial-up line, and delete any mailbox you might have mentioned in the
Spam. They might even fine you anywhere from $20 to $2,000 for Spamming. To learn
more, just visit your ISP's Web site and look for a page that says "Terms of Service"
or "Acceptable Use Policy."
Of course, you might, by now, be putting on an injured expression and saying "I'm
not a Spammer. I'm a legitimate marketer promoting a legitimate product." Put
yourself in the shoes of whomever is receiving your mail and paying his ISP for the
privilege of doing so.
By now, you must have gotten dozens of offers from "marketing companies" that offer
to promote your site by sending bulk e-mail or try to sell you do-it-yourself promotion
kits (a CD full of addresses and a bulk mailing program).
Don't ever respond to them, and complain to their ISPs if you can (see
{HYPERLINK "http://www.spamcop.net"}
http://www.spamcop.net
for a cool automated tool for reporting Spammers).
In particular, watch out for programs such as "Desktop Server,'' "Atomic Harvester,''
"Cybercreek Avalanche," and "Diffondi Cool," or anything similar, an ad for which
arrives in a Spam/junk mail and claims instant, fantastic results.
It will all sound too good to be true--and generally is not true. A rather
comprehensive list can be found at
{HYPERLINK "http://spamhaus.uxn.com"}
http://spamhaus.uxn.com
.
Using these programs will get you a torrent of complaints, accusing you of Spamming
and perhaps someone with more technical skills than ethics may hack into your Web
site and redirect it to a smut site, or just crash it.
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