The Advisor
Proven, Effective Direct Email Marketing
by Declan Dunn
Copyright 1998, 1999 Michael Declan Dunn and ADNet International. All
Rights Reserved.
Remember that crazy
story people told you as a kid? "If you squirrel away one penny today,
two tomorrow, and keep on doubling that every day, you'll be a millionaire
in no time flat!" Sure, if you just had the time. Or the pennies. But
the moral of the story is simple: save your pennies while you have them.
Instead of pennies,
let's talk about customers. The ones who visit your Web site and/or send
you emails. Do you answer them? Do you try to make them into customers?
Most businesses
online don't. They treat their Web sites as places for people to look
at their products. And they throw away their inquiries-their customers-in
search of new ones. They go to banner ads, try to fool the search engines,
and run around like crazy trying to find new customers, ignoring the incredible
value right in front of their eyes.
The moral of this
story is...save your customers while you have them. Answer their questions
and follow up with them immediately. If you don't, someone else will.
Can you say, with
total confidence, that your Web business is generating all the money it
can now? It should be. In three years, you won't have it so easy. The
big businesses are just starting to come online. Do you think a million
total sites is bad now? Imagine a million more are coming. Customers will
be harder to find as the marketing lists settle down. Until then, survival
revolves around a simple philosophy:
"You are trying
to win customers...Don't ask them to pay for your efforts to sell them."
-Claude Hopkins,
My Life in Advertising
The early models
of Web advertising all made the customer work. Banner ads forced customers
to wait for a silly picture. Push media came and went with the ridiculous
promise (and price) of software that doesn't really work yet. Misguided
Web sites splashed a pretty message on the cover, while inside they were
vacant lots. Just empty promises, vague claims, and product-driven Web
catalogs lying around. Picking up the old Sears catalog was a more personal
experience than most Web sites. All of these made customers pay by wasting
their time.
The skills outlined
here don't make your customers pay for your efforts to sell them. They
benefit your customers whether they buy or not. The key is in your marketing-not
in Web sites, banner ads, or technology.
Set your goals:
By December 1999, I would like to have a list of ____ qualified, excellent
customers who help my business survive.
The Two-Step Web
Sales Process
Step 1: Find out
where your customers are meeting. Target your first contact and make
an offer that he/she wants to read.
Step 2: Get them
to your Web site or autoresponder once, show them you know what you're
talking about, register them, and offer them more.
Email marketing
is the most misunderstood term on the Internet. I'm not talking about
bulk email or spam, where you cold-call a bunch of customers by stripping
addresses and sending them a message they never requested. This is the
myth of volume-that more email is better.
Bulk email is volatile;
more companies will sink than swim.
You want the customer
to initiate the first contact; then you can safely and securely follow
up with them.
I'm also not talking
about push media, where you focus on a piece of software, hoping it becomes
a standard. The idea is to continually send your customers all the information
and advertising you can, automatically. You spend all of your time and
money developing a product, and forget to whom you should market. This
is the myth of technology, that hooking onto the latest techie trick is
the way to get more customers.
Push media is volatile;
more companies will sink than swim.
Push media focused
on the way to deliver the message; bulk email, on the address gathering.
Between the two extremes is a lesson rooted in traditional direct marketing.
Instead of sending out volumes of email, you want to develop specific,
targeted lists. What you want to find is a targeted group of customers
and integrate them into your business. Keeping in touch with them is the
goal. Email is the best way to do this because it's easy, simple, and
everyone checks email.
First Contact: How
Do I Find My Customers?
Establishing first
contact is the toughest goal of any email marketer. Where do you find
your customers? How do you reach them?
Before you begin,
be sure you have something free, like a special report or newsletter,
to give them. Don't make them pay for working with you. Build an offer
that is so appealing that people send you email. You can then safely follow
up with them and test out the process.
Millions of people
are online, but they are forced to organize the Internet for themselves.
Sifting through search engines and Web sites is a daunting task. The goal
of email marketing is to find the places where they are meeting and give
them the opportunity to contact you.
The most obvious
place to find prospects is at other Web sites, newsgroups, and mailing
lists. This method of marketing still works, but many mailing lists and
newsgroups have settled into their own series of experts. It's harder
to penetrate market share this way. Customers have a tough time figuring
out who is who.
It would be great
to just buy a list of interested customers, as you can in direct mail.
Email marketing is still in its infancy online and many of the so-called
lists are not tested or even targeted. Be wary when buying access to a
list; you may be buying a big spam without a target. Before buying a list,
you'll want to know the following:
To whom the email
was sent. A sample of the message that was sent, to see if your offer
makes sense. Some idea of results generated. Is this just a list of people
or of qualified prospects?
The best means of
survival is still the endorsed mailing to a group of interested customers.
Find a Web site with many customers, or a product/service to which you
can easily provide back-end products. Create a scenario in which you bring
value to the person owning the list, and that person allows you access
to his/her customers. This is one of the best ways to target your prospective
customers safely. It will also add value to a list of email addresses
that many businesses have, but never take advantage of.
HINT: You can
also buy lists, but be careful. I've seen random (i.e., spam) lists
of customers at about five cents a name. Highly qualified lists can
get up to 20-30 cents a name. It's still cheaper than direct mail, and
the savings of time and headaches (for you and the customer) is considerable
if you take the time to find out if this is a good list.
You need to determine
how to qualify your prospects, to narrow down whom you want to reach.
Print media is perhaps the best way still to generate significant email
marketing, because you can find targeted groups of customers via trade
journals, newsletters, and magazines. Then use email marketing as your
follow-up to their contacting you. Always mix email marketing with another
form of marketing, such as direct mail, telemarketing, or faxing. Let
them hear from you outside the Web.
HINT: One way
to qualify online prospects is by asking for an email address and ZIP
code. I run my ZIP codes through Response Doubler, a software program
that pinpoints the top two percentiles of discretionary income in the
U.S. by ZIP code. I follow up all inquiries via email, and direct mail
those people in the top two percentiles income-wise with my costly,
direct-mail message.
Email marketing
really means following up with your customer. Often the fourth or fifth
contact will lead to a sale. But allow people to remove themselves from
your list with the following in every marketing email you send:
"If you would like
to be removed from this list, please hit the reply button and respond
with any message."
Don't ever send
email to someone who asks to be removed. This is part of your qualifying
process. Weed out those who are uninterested and try to build up your
list to include qualified prospects only.
What you'll end
up developing are lead lists (for new inquiries), and your customer list
(for loyal, paying customers). The third key element is to build your
remove list, all those addresses that do not want to hear from you. Many
database programs exist which can compare your new inquiries to your remove
list. That way you avoid sending a message to someone who doesn't want
to receive it, and protect yourself from flames or possible shutdown by
your ISP for sending inappropriate email.
Email marketing
is a consistent and cost-effective way to follow up with your customers.
You need to treat every contact as a significant lead and follow up via
email. Here's how to put email marketing into profitable action:
- Build your email
mailing list as your primary business asset. Separate those new inquiries,
your lead list, from your steady customer list. Finally, keep a detailed
remove list of all those people who don't want your messages. Many of
these are available online and can help protect you from customers who
would be incensed by your email marketing.
- The goal is to
have your customer make first contact, and for you to follow up. Respect
the wishes of your visitor; don't market to someone who doesn't want
to hear from you.
- Give them something
of real value, such as a good special report or newsletter, to encourage
them to contact you. If you don't give them something, you won't get
responses. Most online businesses fail to give them anything at all.
- Use email newsletters
and dispatches to contact your customers. Give them enough information
but not too much. How do you figure that out? Ask them and test. Don't
forget to include your ads in these, as well.
- Don't feel up
to writing? Sit down with yourself, someone who sells the product or
service (could be you), and an interviewer. Sell the interviewer your
product or service. Record it. Transcribe it. Save it as a text-only
file in a word processor. Separate the interview into smaller sections.
Email it in parts. You then can email an ongoing, valuable document
that includes advertising, rather than another sales letter.
- Create several
follow-up letters. First contact is a free report or newsletter. Second
contact means checking in to see if they have any questions, and making
them a special offer. Third contact should qualify them to see if they
want to explore working with you. Don't give up with one or two messages
unless they ask you to.
- Send out surveys
or contests; test out questionnaires. Set up interviews. The real goal
is to get them to respond to your message. This is how you qualify people.
Those who respond are potential customers, but keep emailing those who
don't immediately respond as well.
- Explore ways
to mix faxing, telemarketing, direct mail, and email to provide a diverse
approach to your customer. Find the one that works best, but use email
and at least one of the other approaches to truly set you apart from
the rest.
Be careful when establishing
first contact with email autoresponders; some people may not understand
that this email address will always send them a message. Be creative; use
several steps. Follow up with a combination of autoresponders, targeted
email messages, sales letters, invitations, surveys, contests, and much,
much more.
EXAMPLE: A visitor
to your Web site requests your free newsletter. You email it to the
visitor via an autoresponder. You receive a reply. Then, using Eudora
Pro or another good email program, you follow up the request with another
message thanking the visitor for requesting your materials. Use this
to focus your sales message outside of the initial free report or newsletter.
Every two weeks you send the customer another message. Test out the
best approach for you and your customers.
Contact Declan Dunn
at 6960 Ridgeway, Magalia, CA. 95954 Phone: (800) 280-9807 or (530) 873-3637
Fax: (530) 873-0192. E-mail.
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