1. The desire for instant
gratification
Launching an email campaign is like trying get your
car rolling from a dead stop. You think you're going to manage it all in
one push? Nope. It takes time to work up some momentum. And before you
achieve a decent speed, you're gonna start wondering if you are even up
to the task. Be patient!
Studies have proved the only variable that influences
the success of any campaign is the power of your message. So make sure
you are saying the right thing. "Uncover the story that is uniquely
yours; focus your campaign; commit to your message."i And be
prepared to give it time.
Once you get your momentum, it will be hard to stop
it! Sure, along the way you're gonna have to give the occasional push,
but with the momentum established, the job becomes much easier.
2. Attempting to reach more people than the budget will allow
This is the reach versus frequency issue. Let's say
you are going to buy inventory or place an ad in an email newsletter.
You can afford to make 100,000 impressions. Do you go for 10 placements
in one newsletter that goes out to 10,000 people, or do you opt for one
placement that goes out to 100,000 people? Same number of impressions,
but the first option exposes fewer viewers to multiple impressions.
Think about it this way: Would you rather reach 100%
of the people and convince them 10% of the way of them, or reach 10% of
the people and convince all of them all the way? When it comes to
maximizing your email marketing efforts, this is a useful analogy: Your
message is the nail, repetition is the hammer, and a block of wood is
the customer. If the nail is sharp and you hammer effectively, you will
pierce through the wood and clinch the customer.
For more information on this topic, check out "Email
As Advertising," written by my colleague Bryan Eisenberg in ClickZ.
And it doesn't hurt to remember this: "Retention fades
with sleep." Repetition has its rewards.
3. Assuming the business owner knows best
When it comes to stuff in which you have a huge
personal investment (your kids, your homes, your businesses), you risk
losing your objectivity. Hey, it's a human thing. Too much knowledge
about your company and what you offer leads you to answer questions
nobody is asking. When you're inside the bottle, it's hard to read the
label. But that's also when you risk pushing your own interests at the
expense of your customers' interests. Sometimes it helps to bring in an
objective outsider to give you some perspective.
4. Unsubstantiated claims
Folks make claims all the time that miss targeting
their customers' needs and simply wind up turning them off. Specifics
about yourself, your way of doing business and your products are far
more persuasive and cut to the chase far more effectively than
generalities. So get credibly specific!!
5. Improper use of passive media
Passive media are sight-based media - newspapers,
magazines, billboards, direct mail, and yes, even email - that require
the user to sustain focused attention in order to process the message.
Intrusive media are sound-based - radio and television. Sound is heads
above sight in its ability to get your message lodged into your
customers' brains. The best use of passive media is as a follow-up to
intrusive media.
This is a toughie, and there's not much you can do
about it at this stage of the technological game. It is largely one of
those obstacles you have to factor into your marketing equation. Trust
me, now is not the time to go lining your emails with .wav files - and
that misses the point anyway. The huge advantage of email marketing,
passive though it may be, is its relative low cost. It's worth the
effort, but be aware of the limitations.
Passive media is an effective way to reach those
customers who are actively in the market for your product or service.
You'll improve the effectiveness of your emails if you can use this to
your advantage. Exactness is the key attribute of passive media - you
can give a lot of specifics that your potential customers can check as
many times as they want, simply by revisiting their online mail boxes.