Email Marketing: 3 letters to drive subject line success

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It’s tried and true: Personalization works in marketing.

You know this already – approach your consumers as individuals and reap compelling results. However, tailoring campaigns can call for plenty of pain and patience along the way due to the journey of implementing new technology and complex techniques.

But the attendees in the General Session Room of the Aria Resort & Casino Las Vegas at MarketingSherpa Email Summit 2014 learned that there’s a loophole to this. It’s possible (and realistic) to actually gain the benefit of personalization minus the heavy lifting.

Flint McGlaughlin, Managing Director, MECLABS, kicked off Day 2 of  Summit with his session, “Interactive Quick-Win Clinic: 3 simple email tactics to achieve personalization without the need for complex technology.” He set out to shed light on how to achieve the highest possible yield with the least amount of energy.

Two points of focus in Flint’s session were how to achieve this via subject lines and headlines.

 

Subject lines

Of course, this process begins at the subject line. Plain and simple, you need your recipient to open  your email. Flint boiled the personalization of the subject line down to three letters: R (relevant), I (important) and U (urgent). When examining a subject line, he challenged the audience to ask themselves:

  • Is the email relevant?
  • Is the email important?
  • Is the email urgent?

Flint explained that although something may be considered both relevant and important, the item that is the most urgent gets opened. Thus, establishing urgency in your email is key.

 

Headlines

Flint likens the headline of an email to a pick-up line. The headline begins the conversation with your recipient and, not surprisingly, its wording is essential. Because a headline is part of a conversation, it doesn’t work when it’s not a sentence. In other words (no pun intended), don’t speak in bullet points. After all, would you do that in a real-life conversation?

“[Speaking in bullet points] would leave me playing by myself on the playground,” Flint joked.

He examined the wording of select headlines tested for a survey company. The findings illustrated that headlines with a “point-first” design garnered the highest performance. These were the headlines that focused on what the consumer “got” – they were value-centric.

Here are the higher performing headlines:

  • Get Paid to Take FREE Surveys
  • Get Rewarded for Your Opinion
  • Get Paid to Fill Out Online Surveys

Here are those that were less successful:

  • Set Up Your FREE Account Today and Start Earning Money!
  • You’re Invited to Join the [Company Name] Community and to Earn Rewards for Your Options
  • Take Online Surveys From Home and Win Cash & Prizes

Flint delved even deeper into the headline, touching on its “means of delivery” or its tone. Marketers should ask themselves, “Is the tone of my headlines itself obscuring the message?”

We as marketers, Flint explained, have developed a whole language called, “marketing speak.” However, though marketers use this in their marketing copy, they certainly don’t use it in their conversations in their lives, so to speak.

The headline has a specific duty: to give the recipient a “need to read.” If your headline doesn’t do this, then it’s not doing its job, Flint explained.

 

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