Sunday, November 4, 2007

Emails And Network Security

Emails And Network Security

Writen by Andrew C.

With the number of small, home-based businesses at present, computers and the internet are fast establishing themselves as essential tools for business management. But the active use of computers in business as means of banking and other financial transactions has attracted unscrupulous individuals. These individuals come up with programs and viruses that are threats to network security in hopes of intercepting important files from home computers. The Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) at Carnegie Mellon University says that there are several ways how internet criminals threaten network security through emails. These methods seem harmless and are virtually undetectable until it is too late.

These threats include: email spoofing and email viruses. All these are classified as intentional computer misuses but are unwittingly spread by people who are not aware of their possible effects on network security. CERT explains that the writers of the viruses and malicious programs usually exploit the ignorance of most computer users to spread their viruses.

Email spoofing happens when emails display sources other than the original source. The virus writer or the original source manipulates the virus program to make it appear that the source written on the "From" box is the actual sender of the message. Most cases involve "messages" from network system administrators asking the users to modify and send them new passwords or other important information. Others report receiving strange emails from banks or telephone companies. The recipient opens the email, thinking that it is an urgent reminder. The virus then starts spreading in the computer system. The usual function of viruses like this is to weaken network security in order for the virus writer to infiltrate the system.

Viruses can also infiltrate systems by email attachments. This happens when a virus writer programs a virus and sends it to people disguised as a harmless email or attachment. The criminal usually attaches a funny picture or story in the email to entice recipients to open it. The recipient, thinking that the message is harmless and funny, sends it to other people. The virus spreads and disables network security with minimum effort from the writer. Email viruses usually come as attachments with hidden or concealed file extensions. Most victims open attachments thinking that these are harmless text documents or images taking note only of the ".txt" or ".jpg" in the filename. CERT advises that the first file extensions are not important in an attachment or file. The important attachment is the last because it indicates how the attachment functions. Extensions like ".exe" or ".vbs" means that the attachment will run as a program once the recipient opens it.

There are no foolproof ways on how to prevent the spread of malicious programs and viruses. To maintain network security, CERT recommends ignoring strange emails even if these are sent by an authority. Verify the messages' origin by calling the agency that "sent" them. For best protection, CERT advises email users to avoid downloading and saving attachments in their computers unless they have verified its source. Installing firewalls and other anti-virus software also strengthens network security.

For more valuable information on Network Security, please visit http://www.datascp.com

E-mail Protocol - 12 Simple Rules to Stay Connected

E-mail Protocol - 12 Simple Rules to Stay Connected

Writen by Joy Fisher-Sykes

Electronic mail is a quick, easy, and convenient way to
instantly link up with people around the globe. To ensure
our messages don’t confuse or alienate others, it’s important
to practice basic e-mail etiquette. Here are twelve simple e-
mail rules to keep you connected and make sure every
communiqu้ is clear, polished, and professional.

Rule #1 – Be concise. Follow the KISS rule (keep it short
and sweet). Get to the point in a clear manner. Keep
paragraphs short - three or four sentences at most. If you
find you need to send an e-mail that is longer than a few
short paragraphs, revise the message or consider picking up
the phone or paying a personal visit instead.

Rule #2 – Watch your words. Before sending any e-mail,
check your message. Ask yourself, “What is my purpose for
sending this e-mail?” Anger, enthusiasm, and anxiousness
are all emotions that can trigger an itch only an immediate
heated reply can scratch. Always consciously choose your
words and be sure every communiqu้ accurately and clearly
conveys your message. Be careful about what you say and
how you say it because your words can come back to haunt
you. Words, especially the written word, can live and be
remembered forever. Don’t say something in the heat of the
moment that you can’t take back.

Rule #3 – Follow a format. Every correspondence you send
is a reflection of you and your organization. Therefore, at a
minimum, each e-mail needs to have these elements – a
greeting, a skipped line before and after each paragraph, a
closing or call for action, and a signature (which identifies
you and provides alternate ways to contact you).

Rule #4 – Spell check. While spell check can accurately
check for misspellings, it won’t recognize all errors. Before
you hit the send button, check every e-mail for spelling,
punctuation, and grammar. An e-mail filled with multiple
errors is not only difficult to read and understand; it tests the
patience of the recipient, who may decide your message has
no value and simply is not worth reading.

Rule #5 – Send messages to your outbox first. Disable the
“auto send” feature in your e-mail software and, instead,
have messages sent to the “outbox” first. This gives you a
second chance to review your e-mail for content and intent.
If your e-mail is a reply, you will now be able to reread the
original message to be sure you didn’t misunderstand the
message. When in doubt, seek clarification before
responding.

As a rule, always wait at least 24 hours before responding to
a heated e-mail. This is often enough time to cool off and
think clearly. Reread the message and ask yourself if you
misinterpreted the e-mail. If so, at least now you can hit
“delete” instead of “send.” Remember to always
communicate with integrity and respect.

Rule #6 – Avoid writing in all caps. Text written in all caps is
hard on the eyes and is difficult to read. More importantly,
all caps in an e-mail SCREAMS at the reader. Better to write
in upper and lower case. If you need to draw attention to a
word, consider using bold or italics for the emphasis.

Rule #7 – Reply to all sparingly. When you respond to a
mass e-mail (a message sent to multiple recipients), determine
whether everyone listed needs to receive your reply. If a
reply to the sender only is sufficient and appropriate, hit the
“reply” vs. the “reply to all” button to cut down on multiple
and unnecessary mail.

Rule #8 – Stay current. Just like voice mail, be sure to keep
your auto-reply message up-to-date. An outdated auto-
reply is as bad as dated voice mail – information that serves
no purpose.

Rule #9– Office e-mail is never personal. Unless you own
the company, any e-mail sent via your office computer is the
property of the employer and is subject to their purview.
There is no such thing as personal e-mail at work. Be aware
and watch what you say because every message represents
you and the organization.

Rule #10 – Stay organized. Attempting to save every e-mail
creates clutter. Get in the habit of saving only necessary e-
mails and discarding the rest. Be sure to delete messages
from your inbox, deleted, and sent message boxes. This will
cut down on the clutter and free up much needed computer
space. Review periodically so you don’t feel overwhelmed at
the sight of months’ or years’ worth of messages. If your
box is full right now, commit to reviewing at least 15
messages from each box daily until you are all caught up.
Also, be sure to regularly back up all mail boxes, just in case.

Rule #11 – Answer e-mail. I can’t tell you how many times
I’ve sent an e-mail requesting specific information only to
receive a reply with half, if any, of my questions answered.
This now requires sending a second message to get the
necessary answers. When responding to an e-mail with
multiple questions, type your response right next to the
questions in a different color font than the original message.
This clearly shows your reply and enables the reader to
easily match the response to a question and ensures you
have answered all of the sender’s questions.

Rule #12 – Be patient. With the proliferation of text
messaging, PDAs, and Blackberrys, many people send an e-
mail and expect an on the spot response within moments of a
message being sent. It’s unreasonable to expect others to
drop everything to instantly cater to your every whim.
When sending e-mail, be patient and allow a reasonable
amount of time to pass before you expect a reply.

Electronic mail can open up doors to you from around the
world. Apply these twelve simple e-mail rules and your
messages will be clear, concise, and always connected.

Joy Fisher-Sykes is a professional speaker, author, and
success coach in the areas of communication, leadership,
motivation, stress management, customer service, and team
building. You can e-mail her at
mailto:jfsykes@thesykesgrp.com, or call her at (757)
427-7032. Go to her web site, http://www.thesykesgrp.com,
and signup for the newsletter, OnPoint, and receive the free
ebook, "Secrets, Stories, and Tips for Marvelous Customer
Service."

Email Online Business Opportunity That Will Make You Thousands Of Dollars

Email Online Business Opportunity That Will Make You Thousands Of Dollars

Writen by Christopher Kyalo

Many affiliates hardly ever take a serious look at the numerous and very viable options to be found in an email online business opportunity.

It probably has a lot to do with the fact that that the moment you mention the word "email" in connection to any marketing initiative most people just think about spam and illegal email marketing. The truth is that email is still the most effective form of online marketing and it will tend to play a huge role in the success of many a business opportunity.

Every affiliate online business opportunity should have a way of harvesting email addresses and building up an opt-in email list. In fact having an aggressive strategy is important. This will ensure that as you continue to build up your online business opportunity, your opt-in email list will be at the same time growing. Ultimately when this email list reaches even 500 names, it will start generating sizeable profits and extra revenue for you and your online business opportunity.

Your email list can be for instance used to direct traffic to your online business opportunity site every time you have a special offer or even a new article or post. 500 names arriving at your site with Adsense ads can translate into a lot of page views and lots of clicks on your Adsense ads.

When you build up your online business opportunity opt-in email list into more names, it will also be possible to make an impact on the sales of various affiliate program products you may be representing.

It is a big mistake to leave email marketing out of your online business opportunity marketing.

Learn more about the best home business opportunity from a blogger who rakes in thousands of dollars... and growing from their home business.

E-mail Newsletters: The Good and The Bad

E-mail Newsletters: The Good and The Bad

Writen by D. Denay Davis

There are a number of rules to follow when it comes to designing an e-mail newsletter and many creators of electronic newsletters could care less about providing their subscribers with real information. Some newsletters are all about using a product, buying this or that or joining “us” in being part of this event or that event. If you want to build subscriber trust, if you want to build a solid customer base, stop selling.

When your e-mail newsletter appears in a subscriber’s mailbox it should be anticipated and filled with useful information, recommendations, resources, real life experiences and a move to action.

Writing and publishing a newsletter by yourself or with a core group of committed comrades should not provide a stage for ranting and ragging about your competitors, or how unfair it is that your PPC campaign has lost its velocity.

The purpose for writing an e-mail newsletter is to build a relationship with the subscriber. E-mail newsletters reinforce your brand and increase the likelihood that readers will not only turn to you in a time of need, but return time and time again because you are a reliable source of information and support.

If you currently have an e-mail newsletter, take a look at the content for the following elements. These are all things that turn your e-mail newsletter into a worthless piece of junk filled with “spam.” Honestly, subscribers don’t want to read your sales pitch every month.

You need to re-think your e-mail newsletter if you:

- Fill the pages with advertisements

- Include only one 300 word paragraph on industry information

- Fill your pages with bulleted phrases and “so called” resource links

- Repurpose old press releases

- Fail to address controversial issues of interest to your subscribers

- Fail to take a stand on legislation critical to your industry

- Allow bad grammar and typos to take up residency all over the newsletter

- Refuse to allow subscribers to unsubscribe

Do you really know what your subscribers want to read? Most e-mail newsletters are unsuccessful because the publisher does not take the time to study and understand the needs of his target market. How do you find out what subscribers want? It’s simple, talk to them.

- Attend small business or target industry meet-ups and ask folks, “What’s on your mind?”

- Volunteer to be a mediator at the next association meeting addressing a hot issue

- Put a survey up on your website

- Subscribe to the e-mail newsletter of a competitor

- Have a candid conversation with your customers and find out what really keeps them awake at night

- Dare to tackle the tough issues

Do not use your e-mail newsletter to solicit business. The e-mail newsletter is about building relationships and giving the subscriber what they want exactly the way they want it. The e-mail newsletter is like really good Cajun food, comfortable, reliable, providing you with a familiar sensation, that every once and a while packs a serious punch.

Get buy-in from your subscribers. Do not send out an unsolicited e-mail newsletter to your customers. Set up a letter of anticipation about two or three months before the publication of your first e-mail newsletter. It should be simple and read something like “Coming Soon: Equestrian News for the Committed Horseman. Encourage customers and potential subscribers to email you with ideas about the kind of information they would like to read in the newsletter.

No one wants to dredge through ads, useless bullet points of information printed two years ago or a dried up sales pitch. If you really want a great e-mail newsletter, get your subscribers involved in the process. Feature the real life story of a subscriber, talk about how they persevered or dodged bankruptcy court. If there is one thing everyone loves, it’s other people’s stories and believe it or not, everybody’s got a story.

Website Usability Analyst and Lead Writer - Detra D. Davis
The Site Therapist
http://www.thesitetherapist.com

Detra Davis is a Website Usability Analyst and Lead Writer for The Site Therapist and strongly believes in helping clients succeed and prosper by addressing website usability concerns; a graduate of the University of Maryland, and a United States Navy Veteran, Davis insist “writing is my passion. The goal of The Site Therapist is to help ecommerce and lead generation site owners create functional and prosperous websites. The writing staff of The Site Therapist also specializes in writing articles, manual article directory submissions and ghost blog writing services.

Email Newsletter Software

Email Newsletter Software

Writen by Kevin Stith

An email newsletter is a fabulous way to maintain contact with your customers. An email is sent by you on a semi-regular basis; if your customers have time to spend they read it later or delete it. You have given them the liberty to automatically unsubscribe at any time, so they don't bother to inform you when they are no longer interested in receiving it. Various business establishments like banks, airlines, insurance and telecommunications companies are now using email newsletters to stay in touch with their customers. There is no reason you can’t do so too.

In spite of following different ways, all email newsletters have to automate the list management and find an easy method to administer it. If you surf the Internet, you can find a number of free newsletters or mailing list providers. They normally use a web-based administration area and include Your MailingList Provider, ListPower, NotifyList.com and ListApp. You may prefer a solution where the list is hosted and managed by a small business specialist like Constant Contact. Monthly rates go up with the number of subscribers, though lists of contacts not exceeding 50 are free.

If you are happy with web page design you should be able to install and run a PHP script. You can try MyMail, a free PHP script that works very well. You can find plenty of other scripts in PHP and other languages at HotScripts.

Commercial programs such as eNewsletter Pro, PostCast and MailWorksPro can also do the job for you. They either run on the web server or on your desktop. You should not just keep adding people to your list without their permission. This is called spam, which is a big taboo capable of driving your customers away.

As there are some problems with sending HTML newsletters as email, it is better to provide your readers with the ability to choose what format they prefer. This needs a more powerful program to manage the list, and you might need to format a plain text and HTML version.

Email Software provides detailed information on Email Software, Email Marketing Software, Bulk Email Software, Email Newsletter Software and more. Email Software is affiliated with Fax Broadcasting Software.

EMail Newsletter Marketing Essentials

EMail Newsletter Marketing Essentials

Writen by Lee Traupel

If Gutenberg were alive today he would be in publishing heaven! Forget the printing press, the web has fast-forwarded self-publishing in ways that are evolving so rapidly it's becoming difficult to integrate technology and process to leverage the opportunities. Any company, regardless of their size and marketing resources should be publishing an opt-in e-mail newsletter - it's a very low cost way to build community with customers, keep suppliers/partners/other informed and generate new business.

How do you get started? You must decide up front if you have the marketing expertise to develop your "newsletter creative" in-house and how you want to manage the distribution of your newsletters. Many companies turn to agencies/marketing services firms to help them develop the actual newsletter creative and also outsource part of the process to ASP (Application Service Providers), who handle all facets of the list distribution, signup and ongoing management.

Content format can be critical to the effectiveness of your newsletter - we typically don't recommend HTML (text with images/graphics embedded) format unless our client's product or service is very consumer-focused Plain old text is not as glamorous as HTML but it's a lot more effective in most cases - people want information, not fancy eye candy that's appealing to marketing geeks - keep your message, simple, to the point and with customer success stories or references when/where you can to drive credibility.

It's relatively simple to use a Word processor with a mail merge program to integrate the addresses (depending on the volume) with your message and then send out via your ISP. But, doing it in house can be very time consuming - you have to deal with inbound requests for people who want to be added to your list, "unsubscribes" (people who want to be deleted) and integrate your web site into the process, so people can automatically sign up with a back end auto-responder (automatic message) that confirms their sign up.

Most companies utilize an Application Service Provider ("ASP") to outsource the list hosting, signup and unsubscribe management processes and web site integration - typical costs are under $50. per month based upon your number of subscribers (on average up to 10-30K), frequency of your newsletter mailing (rule of thumb would be 2-4 times per month) and other specialized features, such as bounce back deletions (deleting any e-mails that have a "bad address") and making the HTML code available with a graphic to sign up people directly from your web site. Be forewarned, most list hosting providers tell you up front they reserve the right to delete your account if they catch you spamming thousands of people whose e-mail addresses were not "opted in" (given to you with permission to market to them).

What do you want to look for in an ASP List Hosting Provider? You want great customer service, an online interface that enables you to easily manage the process, the ability to easily to cut and paste your text (newsletter copy), instant distribution of your newsletter and the ability to know at a glance how many subscribers you have on an ongoing basis and the number of new subscribers and unsubscribers.

There are lots of list hosting companies out there - I'd recommend including two on your short list. One of the oldest, most well established companies that has consistently won rave reviews for excellence in customer service is Sling Shot Media, LLC www.listhost.net - they've been hosting since 1998 (ancient in web time) and offer a wide range of consulting services related to all aspects of newsletter marketing. The other company to check out would be Microsoft's bCentral Services www.bcentral.com which offers list hosting as one of its services. I can't give them rave reviews for customer service, as they make you pay extra for anything more than e-mail support which can be a hassle at times. But, their list hosting interface is easy to use, works well most of the time and they are price competitive.

Finally, one of the biggest marketing challenges facing many small to medium sized companies is generating a newsletter subscriber list. I don't have sufficient space in this column to address this challenge - but, it's a classic go/no go situation; the longer you put it off the harder it becomes, so get started, the upside rewards are too significant to delay!

About The Author

Lee Traupel has 20 plus years of business development and marketing experience - he is the founder of Intelective Communications, Inc., http://www.intelective.com a results-driven marketing services company providing proprietary services to clients encompassing startups to public companies.
Lee@intelective.com

Email Microtargeting

Email Microtargeting

Writen by David Moceri

Email marketing is undergoing rapid changes. Now, more than ever, both the creative and demographic selection and targeting of a message must be highly relevant and qualified.

Microtargeting has become a valued strategy. At VIBEdirect, we have seen the industry withstand incredible changes based on bandwidth, creative, message perception and the fickle marketing factors that affect both open and click through rates with today's campaigns.

Consumers received an average of 3 marketing related emails per month in 1999. This number is expected to jump to over 130 marketing related emails per month by 2005 due to the success rate of email marketing and the number of companies sending optin email. The problem is that this trend has caused email open rates to drop.

In the past, our success had been built on wholesaling opt-in email campaigns to brokers and agencies. But as business conditions changed, we evolved by providing our clients with a microtargeted approach for cost effective results and a positive return on investment. As a result, we have maintained a sustained, strong period of growth.

Our opt-in lists offer marketers a "politically correct" way to reach their target audience on the net. While using bulk e-mail lists is cheaper, the practice in itself is extremely controversial. You must be very careful when considering using bulk e-mail to market your wares on the Internet. This can lead to some unexpected and unwanted results. For example, some of your recipients may decide to "flame" you by clogging up your e-mail system with angry responses to your marketing message. Other recipients will complain to your Internet Service Provider, who may decide to discontinue your account.

We have more than 2,000 opt-in lists with more than 40 million unique names to choose from. All of our email addresses are ALL opt-in from a variety of quality web sites, banner ads, e-surveys & e-zine lists.

The Power of Microtargeting

Email microtargeting is really a distinct form of "niche" marketing, differentiating consumers by segmenting them into identifiable, targeted groups. It's the depth of relationships that counts, not the quantity. Studies show that closer relationships increase the likelihood that email advertising will make an impact.

For the higher quality (more targeted and uniform) audience, advertisers have traditionally paid a higher cost per impression, although the overall cost for advertisers is lower with email campaigns since the number of impressions is lower. In addition, the ability to modify and adapt the creative to confront rapidly changing marketing conditions makes this medium especially attractive and cost effective.

Our microtargeting approach has been very powerful. This strategy focuses on increasing market share--that is, on selling a product to as much of the market as possible. Once a product succeeds on a microtargeting level, we can eventually modify it to appeal to a larger group. When properly and effectively executed, microtargeting leads back to the masses.

Instead of trying to reach the greatest number of people, microtargeting focuses on earning more of an individual customer's business. This strategy doesn't target groups of customers, it targets units of one.

The foundation of our microtargeting approach lies in the idea that 80% of a company's business comes from 20% of its customers. The most active frequent fliers account for the bulk of the airline profit. So, rather than aiming to reach all possible fliers, airlines realize they can more efficiently market themselves by trying to win over the top level, and by encouraging those frequent fliers to fly as frequently with them as possible.

Our microtargeting email practices help businesses provide better, more personal services. It is an equally effective strategy for both business acquisition and retention.

About The Author

David Moceri is President and CEO of VIBE Direct Media, a full service online marketing agency. A complete description of VIBE Direct Media services can be viewed at www.vibedirect.com.

Email Marketing - Your Route to Success

Email Marketing - Your Route to Success

Writen by Anna Hinds

Sending emails to existing and potential customers is said to have a response rate of 3-5%, which towers over direct mail or press advertising. Why is it so successful and how can you maximise your chances of success?

Questions to consider before starting an email campaign

Who makes up your customer base?
What are their interests? Are they Sunday Times readers or Big Brother viewers? Would it be worth segmenting your database and sending out variants to improve the chances of a response?

What are your objectives?
What are you aiming to achieve by sending this email?
Web sales? Catalogue requests? More visits to your site? Brand recognition? Improved customer relations? Data gathering?

Should you outsource the work?
Who will create, produce and distribute your email marketing? If you don’t have in-house expertise, and if your budget allows, outsourcing is worth considering – as emails can take upwards of a day for one person to compile and produce. Many ecommerce companies offer e-marketing – try E-in Business.

How will the emails be distributed?
Email distribution software can do much of the work for you – check out ConstantContact.com – and is a cheap option if your database is reasonably small. It’s not a good idea to send out emails ‘from’ the MD’s email address – think of all the returns and unsubscribe requests.

Creating the campaign – routes to success

Relevancy

Taking into account your typical customer is standard practice through all of your marketing activities, and emails are no different. Segmentation is a good idea – it won’t cost a huge amount to produce two or three variations on your email campaign, according to factors such as order value, geographic location and response to incentives. Figleaves, for instance, know which customers respond to sales and which buy at full price – this would be a useful way to divide your database, if you have that kind of information available. As with all copywriting though, the lifestyle of your target customer should define your style. Buzzwords, used sparingly and appropriately, can demonstrate your knowledge of the customer base – but be careful; there’s nothing more cringeworthy than using out-of-date slang!

Incentives & Click-through links

This is a great opportunity to test special offers and incentives – you can send one offer to half the database and one to the other, or send different deals to different geographical areas; the options are endless. If you can create special landing sites to make the click traceable, so much the better. A time-limited offer is a good idea, as it encourages an immediate or fast response.

Written Style

• Clarity. Edit, edit, edit; avoid jargon and multiple adjectives. Like web copy, email copy should be snappy and easy on the brain.

• Humour. A dash of personality can only improve your chances of identifying with the reader.

• Scannable. Subheadings are good; bold or highlighted keywords are great for a reader with little time and patience.

• Short. There is some debate on the desirable length of email copy; some people like to read, but others just want a short message. The safest bet is to put the key messages at the top for the impatient, and then develop them further down for those who like to read details.

• Conversational. Think about the emails we are used to receiving from friends and family – written in an informal style. If you write the way you speak, there will be less jargon and less formality.

• Demonstrate a knowledge of the customer and market. As discussed above, some buzzwords can be effective. Lastminute’s style is satirical, with a finger firmly on the pulse of its readership. Achieving this is difficult, but it pays to understand your customer culture – and will improve all of your communication output.

• Active verbs. Get rid of ‘visit’ and ‘view’ in favour of ‘go’ and ‘look at’ – make your copy compelling and it will send customers straight to the site.

• ‘You’ not ‘We’. As with any written material, count the ‘you’s and the ‘we’s, prioritising the former. The customer doesn’t care about you.

Call to Action

Consider what reaction you want to your campaign. Put yourself in your customer’s shoes and ask yourself whether the email inspires you to take that action. Put the ‘call’ at the top AND bottom of your email, to catch the skimmers as well as the long-readers.

Text-only option

If you’re sending HTML emails (with graphics and fonts), offer a text-only option or direct readers to the site (place this link at the top of your email so that if the pictures aren’t showing they can click immediately).

Subject line

Give some thought to the subject line before firing off the campaign. It should be meaningful, and interesting but not too clever – and avoid words like Free and Offers, as these emails sometimes get blocked by spam filters.

The law

It’s now illegal to send individuals unsolicited emails, unless they have signed up to your list or you have paid for an opt-in list from elsewhere. It’s also a requirement to include your company info (and the more you include, the more credibility you will get). And need we mention an unsubscribe link?

More questions? Get in touch.

Author: Anna Hinds, freelance copywriter

Contact: anna@copyqueen.co.uk

Website: www.copyqueen.co.uk

* This article first appeared in Catalogues Today magazine, 2005.

Anna Hinds is a UK-based freelance copywriter, specialising in copy for websites, catalogues and emails. Find out more at her website, http://www.copyqueen.co.uk

Email Marketing - Your Internet Business Lifeline

Email Marketing - Your Internet Business Lifeline

Writen by Gerrick W

It is not unusual to have high ranking at the Search engines yet see low conversion rates. In fact, someone else whose ranking is lower than yours may be making a killing online with his products. How could that happen? With all other things being almost equal, good web design, good sales copy, quality products, it is highly probable the other person has an effective email marketing campaign set in place.

It is a so-called ‘known secret’ of successful online marketers that the lifeline of any Internet business is email marketing. It brings longevity to your internet business. If you hope to make a long term living off your Internet business, you need to give serious thought to email marketing if you haven’t done so.

I started off my Internet business without seeing the need for email marketing. I spent a lot of time on SEO. Then one day this question dawned upon me. What am I to do with the traffic that would show up at my door?

It is a known fact that not many people will buy your product or service on their first visit to your website. Yes, some may buy the products that you are promoting but the majority won’t. The vast majority may never come this way again. You stand to lose substantial traffic in this way. Then what about those who bought something? How can they become your lifelong customers?

No wonder, successful online marketers have an effective follow-up system that allows them to touch base with their visitors. What better cost effective way to do so than through email.

4 Benefits of Email Marketing:

1. Gives visitors a personal touch to your online business.

Email communication is the most cost effective way at present to touch base with your website visitors. In a highly impersonalized world of Internet marketing, simple personalized email communiqu้s can do wonders for your Internet business.

2. Allows you to build credibility and trust with your visitors.

You can achieve this by offering short courses in the area of your expertise through email. The courses you offer must be relevant to the products or services you are promoting on your website.

For example, if you are promoting weight loss products, you may offer a short course like 30 days to lose weight. People are more disposed to buy your product or service if they gain confidence through the information you have provided.

3. Exposes visitors to your product or service.

Sales statistics reveal that most people need to be exposed to an offer 7 times or more before they buy. You have no way of exposing your products or services before your website visitors except through Email marketing.

4. Turns first time buyers into lifelong customers.

Email marketing is an effective way to update your customers of your latest products and services, and keep them posted of the latest developments in the business. This builds long term relationships with your visitors.

Follow-up with your customers immediately after they made a purchase with an offer of a free gift or special discounts on products that are related to what they have bought. This is good marketing practice. You will endear first time buyers to you, and turn them into lifelong customers.

After all been said, how to get visitors to leave behind their email address? Nobody will give something in exchange for nothing. Offer a free e-book, or software, or email course, or newsletter in exchange for your visitors’ names and email addresses. This is by no means tricking people into giving their email address. In the first place, your visitors have some expressed interest when they came by your website. Your job is to continue to arouse their interest that they want to know more about what you have to offer them.

The list of names and email addresses you collect is called an opt-in list. With it you can touch base with your visitors without being accused of spamming.

Follow-up with personalized email communiqu้, offer relevant information and leads. Don’t turn your email communiqu้ into one big sales letter. It puts people off. If they unsubscribe from your mailing list, it’s your loss. Say goodbye to your potential customers.

You cannot maintain the number one spot at the Search engines all the time. Other webmasters will overtake you sooner or later. However, this does not diminish the importance of Search Engine Optimization. For long-term success, SEO and an effective email marketing campaign are needful.

Gerrick W – mailto:gw@1stinternetmarketingsolution.com
Information and Software Tools You Need
to Effectively Promote Your Online Business.
Visit: http://www.1stinternetmarketingsolution.com

Email Marketing - What's the Situation in April 2005?

Email Marketing - What's the Situation in April 2005?

Writen by Piotr Obminski

Email is still the King in Internet marketing. Many people consider it the most powerful promoting tool ever devised, and if this still hasn't really changed.

Why is it so? The main reason must be the wide use of email. One study published by the US Department of Commerce established that using email made 84% of all Internet users' activity online, and that nearly half (45%) of the US population now uses email.

Another reason must be that email ads produce by far the highest response rates among all the means of promotion available today. 2004 reports from advertising agencies show that average response rates on the Internet today are the following:

  • banner advertising - 0.025%
  • IP messaging - 0.1%
  • popUp advertising - 0.25 - 0.30%
  • mail advertising - 2%

  • Mind it, these click-thrus are for email more than six times greater for email ads than for the next best method! As one eloquent marketer aptly put it:


    [Email marketing is] immediate, inexpensive and in-your-face. It sells, promotes, brands, informs, reminds, creates buzz and best of all, it's cost effective.

If it's so good then why is it so bad? Marlon Sanders in his recent report speaks about "The Black Hole". His report is devoting to the improbably low percentage of his own emails reaching their intended receivers. Mind you, Marlon not only doesn't send any SPAM, his mails are also being metuculously checked for "spam-words", and he simply does everything he can to have his mails and ezines delivered. That's the large part of his job and he's very good in it. And what are the results of his efforts? The percentages he published for those most popular free email accounts are simply hair-rising. One well-known provider simply trashes 100% of Marlon mailings, others evidently are making their best to reach equally impressing result.

Of course, SPAM is a nuisance and causes technical problems, viruses, phishing and other malicious activities are even more harmful. Those email provider are protecting people... But it is nevertheless a paranoia, where you are practically guaranteed that none of your emails sent to a free US account will reach the person, if you happened to use in its header one of the many words that those over-powerful Well-Doers Protecting People (Mostly From Themselves) don't particularly like. Such a word is for example "friend"...

Of course I know it's hard to live without any friends, and it may cause irrational and aggressive behaviour... It's simply a little sad that not verybody is allowed to play their complexes as easilly as Netscape or Microsoft, and that people having friends can't call them that. Or that Marlon Sanders isn't allowed to send out his ezines as both he and their readers intend.

So now, after SPAM, or whatever some powerful and friend-less bureaucrat is considering to be SPAM, is not less aboundant, those anti-spam measures are evidently responsible for most of the problems with email -- generally and specifically as a marketing tool.

But don't despair! There's no problem in this world that a smart marketer couldn't use to his/her advantage. We are concentrating on the email so we won't discuss all those technical devices, trying to substitute email in some degree, that crop around. Some of them are new and others are just existing devices, like messengers, applied to marketing. There are however other ways to profit from The Big Brothers' powerful (in more than one way) complexes.

Knowing what day should you send ads to those precious leads of yours will not make you rich as quickly as creating an new tools that would supplant the email and would become generally accepted would. To outsmart Netscape and the others you would need more. But you can, nevertheless, outsmart most other marketers.

So what is that perfect day for sending ads? Still some time ago the common knowledge had it that it's Wednesday. And common knowledge was pitiully wrong: Wednesday is in fact the worse day for sending ads. It has been revealed by Mark Joyner in his famous "Secret Report", which only revealed that the best days are Friday and Sunday. With Friday offering more than twice as high results.

If only marketing was so simple! Recently one young wolf has announced that it could have been that way, but now the best day is Tuesday. Still, no ad-tracking guru seems to have anything good to say for Wednesday, and we are at least left with three GOOD days, and one awfully BAD day. Knowing those facts should no doubt help you a lot.

But wait, there's now even more interesting data on this particular issue! I recently met a study where they divided their mailing list in two parts: one were people with those free accounts that generously treat you like a mentally handicapped child, the other were people with paid or company-provided accounts. Then they compared the click-thrus for both groups for all days of the week. The result? Those free accounts gave the best results on weekends, while those better ones on working days. Pretty logical but nobody seems to have made it before.
Or at least has not told us about it.

Now, the great trader Victor Sperandeo recommended that you always should try to understand the reasons and principles behind particular phenomena. (I guess he took it from Ayn Rand, but it's him who earned money on stocks every month for 30 years or so, so for me he's the bigger authority of those two.) If you succeed, you will be able to predict in some degree the future. Future in stock market, or future in email marketing. Or in anything for that matter.

In my humble opinion one doesn't need to seek any other factors to explain the phenomenon we were just talking about. We only need two factors:

  1. people with company-provied email accounts read their mails during their work hours (or at least on working days);
  2. people with free accounts from those well-willing Big Brothers read their mails during weekend.

A much more sophisticated study would of course be needed to establish WHY those people behave so, but my private hypotesis would be that they read emails -- ads included -- where they are bored. And those with company accounts are bored most during their work hours, and those with free accouts (but at the cost of their own freedom to send and receive whatever they want) are bored on weekends, they probably are not very popular socially and have no hobbies (another potential gold mine for smart marketers, please offer me a JV if you are to build an Empire on this invaluable discovery!). One thing is worth noting here: today, if you are allowed to legally send ads to paid or at least company-provided email accounts, you must be quite a marketer! Those people must be on your legal mailing list, so it's about back-selling and similar hyper-advanced stuff. The normal struggling marketer is simpy stuck with those Big Broder hand-out emails for a long, long time. But there ARE in fact some prctical ways to be allowed sendig to people's "real" i.e. better than those wretched free accounts.

For instance, if you're an opt-in list admin you will have the right to send such ads to your members. And there are some services that explicitly allow that, usually not for free but it's not that expensive either. At least so far isn't. This may well be another useful thought you get from those ramblings. If it's not, at least you read a longish, almost-philosiphical marketing text... If you reached down to here you can't possibly say it wasn't at all interesting, can you?

I was planning to say in this article something about list submmitters and blasters, but it will need to wait to some other time. Those devices must have quite an impact on the email marketing, and it would be worth some studying. Let me just say two things about blasters:

  • they are not totally useless as many people would make us believe -- my own tracking showed quite nice click-thru ratios from them;
  • you would not have time to read this article if you were still stuck with manually sending your ads to all those opt-in lists.

Well, that's the situation in email marketing for today. Soon it may be radically different. Still, applying priciples, looking for deep causes, reading reports and articles while trying to figure out where the Guru is sincere and where he's just after your money. You can never go wrong with those things! In fact, you've got about 93% that they will always keep you one step
ahead of the greedy crowd. Which is what the marketing is all about, isn't it?

========================================

Piotr Obminski is an Internet marketer living in Poland.

He's open for interesting JV proposals. His sites include:

softpromo.com

new-shakira-posters.com

========================================

Email Marketing: What's the Ideal Length for a Sales Email?

Email Marketing: What's the Ideal Length for a Sales Email?

Writen by Ronald A Murphy

A new client recently asked a question about the best length for a marketing email.

I think many of us assume that emails should be brief. It’s probably a carry-over from the early days online when connection speeds were so slow. Longer messages took forever to retrieve so we avoided them.

Yet, there’s no rule that says an email MUST be brief. So far as I know, there hasn’t been much research done to validate an ideal length one way or the other.

I did a little informal checking in my own mail archives and discovered some surprising results. I found in a recent month that email lengths fell in the following ranges:

16% ----- Under 300 words

43% ----- 301 – 1000 words

25% ----- 1001 – 2000 words

11% ----- 2001 – 4000 words

05% ----- Over 4000 words

I was surprised the most by the upper and lower range size. I thought the biggest percentage of email would be under 300 words. You can see that wasn’t the case.

And I was shocked to see how many mails were monsters! As a group, mails selling financial information products and services were the largest. Those folks send out full blown sales letters just like you receive in street mail with trend graphs, candlestick charts and all.

Newsletters fell mostly in the group starting at 1001 words but often ran over 2000. E-Courses also hovered in this range.

Even the short emails under 300 words didn’t really reflect total message length. Many encouraged the reader to click through one or more links to landing pages on the sender’s website. And these landing pages were often several-thousand-word sales letters.

Although there were still some purely text based emails, there was also no shortage of elaborate graphics. Many of the emails look like web pages these days, especially newsletters.

The point I took away from the exercise is a simple one. These days there no longer exist any practical constraints on length or graphic content of emails. We’ve reached the point where the technology supports whatever it takes to get our message across.

And like Martha says, that’s a good thing. We’re free to do the best possible job of communicating without having to worry about fitting the message to a certain predetermined length or format.

All we really need to do now is just make sure what we write is worth reading…

Ronald A Murphy is a Copywriter and Graphic Designer specializing in Direct Response, Internet and Multichannel Marketing. Murphy writes and designs sales letters, direct mail packages, inserts, web sales pages, direct email, newsletters for marketing, Internet articles, white papers, and other sales focused materials. He provides expertise to clients serving financial, business, technology, health, opportunity and fundraising markets.

For more information on copywriting and marketing, visit his site at RAMurphy.com. There you can subscribe to his newsletter, R A Murphy's Copywriting and Design Tips. You can also read Murphy's Blog on Copywriting and Design for Internet and Direct marketing at RonaldAMurphy.com.

Email Marketing Tools

Email Marketing Tools

Writen by Damian Sofsian

Email marketing tools are web-based marketing tools used to promote business through emails. There are various tools used in e-marketing that help to improve the performance of your email-marketing program. Common email marketing tools include newsletters and e-guides. These tools allow you to run permission-based e-mail marketing campaigns effectively and affordably.

Eudora is a standalone email program that works with any ISP. SpamCheck is another tool that runs your email piece through its software. After the process is completed, it delivers a ‘spam score’ and recommendations that tell you how to decrease the odds of your email being filtered.

There are certain benefits in using email marketing tools. Higher profit margins over traditional marketing techniques can be obtained when sellers offer something for nothing to the customers. This can be achieved by providing free information via newsletters. Another email marketing technique is giving customers special offers such as discounts. This helps increase customer responses, which means more business and more profit. E-guides are effective tools that detail comprehensive information to the customer via e-mail.

Presently, email newsletters are the most powerful and cost effective business marketing tools available on the market. The content must be so well thought out so that it makes people read it over and over. The language must be simple, pleasant and at the same compelling. A good newsletter should sound personal. It also has a social aspect, as users often forward them to colleagues and friends. A well planned and wisely created newsletter can work wonders.

Email Marketing provides detailed information on Email Marketing, Email Marketing Software, Email Marketing Tools, Bulk Email Marketing and more. Email Marketing is affiliated with Email Advertising Ideas.

Email Marketing Tips - How To Start Your Own Opt In List

Email Marketing Tips - How To Start Your Own Opt In List

Writen by Simon Akers

Having your own opt in list is essential if you want to succeed on the internet. Its common knowledge that email marketing is one of the most reliable ways of generating consistent free targeted traffic for your website.

Once you have your own responsive opt in list it can open up a variety of different opportunities, such as selling advertising space and setting up joint ventures with other list owners.

The first thing you need to do is collect email addresses from your visitors and you can do this by offering a free report or starting a newsletter using an auto responder, allowing you to set up a series of messages that will be sent out automatically on your behalf on a timeframe you specify.

Its important to choose the most reliable auto responder at the start because it can be very stressful and time consuming to transfer your opt in list from one place to another.

For best results you should not use a free auto responder service because advertisements will be added to all your outgoing emails. You will have no control over which ads are shown and this will distract your subscribers and dramatically reduce the response rates to your emails.

You can either pay a monthly fee and use a third party hosted auto responder service like Aweber or Get Response, or you can pay a one time fee and install an auto responder script like Auto Response Plus on your domain.

The problem with auto responder scripts is that the number of subscribers you can store will be limited depending on how much disk space you have with your hosting plan, and you will also need to backup your list on a regular basis in case a problem occurs and all of the information is lost.

It's much easier and safer to use a third party hosted auto responder service because you will not have to worry about installing a script and your subscribers will be stored securely on a dedicated server with no limits.

It's essential that you focus on one specific topic for your opt in list as this will dramatically increase your response rates. You need to create a landing page consisting of a short sales letter that encourages visitors to subscribe, and a subscription form that allows visitors to enter their name and email address. You should also offer some quality bonus gifts to increase your conversion rates.

Double opt in lists are becoming more popular because they provide extra security as subscribers must confirm their email address, but many people will forget to complete this confirmation which results in fewer active subscribers so you may prefer to use the single opt in feature.

Once you have set up your landing page and follow up messages you will need to start sending visitors to your website. Submitting content to article directories and writing press releases are the most effective ways of generating unlimited free targeted traffic.

This article was written by Simon Akers who is the editor of the Marketing Oasis newsletter, a free internet marketing ezine packed with tips to help you succeed and increase your profits: http://www.MarketingOasis.com

EMail Marketing Tips for Small Businesses

EMail Marketing Tips for Small Businesses

Writen by Jo Ann Joy

You must give the readers the ongoing opportunity to “opt out” or “unsubscribe” and stop receiving your emails. This requires you to have an auto-responder so that you can automatically "unsubscribe" anyone that requests it. If you convince people to accept your emails and give you their email addresses, you have to think of ways to hold their interest.

I receive emails every day from coaches, experts, and others who claim to have the secrets to one thing or another. After the first few emails, I noticed that they were long and redundant and stopped being interesting. They did not provide me with any benefit, and I “unsubscribed.” You need a short email that packs a punch by offering discounts or some other benefit that they can only obtain from you.

If you cannot offer a discount, then provide original, helpful information that will give them a reason to read your emails. Give them information or advice about their business that will be useful and convince them that they will benefit from a visit your website. Keep the information concise, and use numbers of bullet-points.

Your email must capture attention with its headline and entice the reader to open the email. In the email be sure you include multiple links to your website, and tell readers who you are and why they can rely on your information. For example, provide a very short bio with an informational email. However, spend very little time talking about yourself and your business. Email marketing concentrates on customer benefits.

Your email will be more attention-grabbing if you include photos and graphics. The links on your email should direct the reader to a landing page that describes your product or service. Directing the reader to a landing page is more effective than directing them to your home page. Be sure that your website contains a Privacy Policy that assures people that you will not sell or misuse any personal information.

Jo Ann Joy, Esq., MBA, CEO
The future of your business starts here!

Discover the secrets to success and grow.

About the author:

Jo Ann Joy is the CEO and owner of Indigo Business Solutions, a legal and business consulting firm that is a “one stop shop” for small businesses. We provide legal and business services and all professional services for businesses, and they will not be "referred out" to other professionals.

Jo Ann has a law degree, an MBA, and an Economics degree. She is a strategic business attorney who works closely with businesses to improve their performance and their chance of success. Her background includes commercial, corporate, contracts, real estate, accounting, financial planning, mortgages, marketing, product development, banking, and business planning and strategies. She ran a successful business for 10 years and writes and gives presentations on many different legal, tax, and business subjects.

Please visit our website at http://www.IndigoBusinessSolutions.net for more information on business, legal, and tax topics and for free copies of articles.


Email Marketing Tips for Reaching an International Audience

Email Marketing Tips for Reaching an International Audience

Writen by Paul Crabtree

Targeted, cheap, fast, trackable and with more reporting than traditional offline direct mail techniques, email marketing is used extensively by international marketers.

But although why is an easy question to answer, how is one that causes more headaches.

By rushing into email and not using recognised email marketing service providers, many appear to be successfully conducting successful strategies. Dig deeper and it is a different story:

Building a database for the future

Marketers have adopted recent EU legislation that ensure individuals “opt-in” to your messages and respect data privacy. The flaw is in how much data people are collecting. By not integrating data capture techniques for mailing address, telephone and fax number, a company becomes hostage to always using email marketing.

Industry unsubscribe rates are reported as between 0.2% and 5% (MarketingSherpa). Over time, without investment in an acquisition programme, your database will dwindle. Integrating data capture (often after first contact) of additional contact details provides an alternative communication channel when the email route is ended.

The appropriate message

The fundamental question is whether to begin an email newsletter programme or to adopt promotional adhoc messages. Most favour the newsletter route, committing to:

  • Reaching critical mass: Get enough volume and the list will self-breed through recommendations. Not get enough and your list will degenerate meaning expensive list acquisition programmes.
  • Content: you are locked into providing regular, high quality content that people value. Although good content is expensive, it has a clear association with your brand.
  • Timing: you commit to providing a regular communications. Having a newsletter of only two issues suggests you have nothing to say.


These factors come down to resource. Managing an email newsletter programme is not the low cost, low risk activity that many marketers believe it to be.

So does this mean that ad hoc promotional messages are key? Industry research conducted by Marketing Sherpa shows that email newsletters have a 10 times lower unsubscribe rate (0.20.7% for newsletters and 25% on adhoc/alerts) meaning email databases will last longer with email newsletters. This is particularly relevant in industries with high email address acquisition.

For a time sensitive product such as an event or a topical report, getting an immediate response is key. Consider EasyJet. Their entire business model is uniquely disposed to tactical promotional pushes and not a longer term CRM process. Indeed, SpeedFerries recently recorded a 400% leap in sales off the back of a promotional email marketing programme.

Dan Murphy, eBusiness Director for Informa Telecoms & Media, an international publisher has launched a daily newsletter to keep in contact with prospects that its small sales team can’t reach. “there is no other way we can communicate so quickly and effectively across the world. Indeed, although the editorial investment was considerable, awareness is up and prospects now contact us with their research problems”.

Considering objectives and available resource is key before committing to an email newsletter programme.

Sent in the right way

Broadcasting email communications appears simple, but unfortunately it is not.

Spam filters, black lists, white lists, ISP blocking (international and individual counties) sender certificates and improvements within email clients like Outlook constantly hit the headlines. Indeed, email marketing agency, Digital Impact reported the average European deliverability rate is only 91.5%. Without relationships with each ISP and an appropriate tracking mechanism, knowing whether your communications are getting through is impossible.

You can undo investments in your brand very quickly with email marketing. A person’s perception of your brand is reinforced by every message you send them. Delivering non-optimised messages with mixed up ‘broken’ html means your brand integrity is being compromised.

Marketing to people in their own language is common practice amongst international marketers. Using the correct language character-set when sending emails avoids your messages being delivered as question-marks.

Using email marketing fulfilment agencies to broadcast optimised messages to your database allows you to be confident that your recipient receives what you intend them to see.

Refinement and tracking

Integrating the email reporting into your management information systems is key. From better profiling in CRM systems for account management to closed loop ROI tools, understanding the real impact of your email marketing programme should be in the context of your entire marketing objectives.

Many international marketers are at different stages of using email marketing. Almost all are using it, but how they’re using it is in need of further thought. The international marketers’ journey into email marketing has only just begun.

More information about our email marketing broadcast services

Adestra provide welcome tactical advice and input on our clients email marketing program. For more information about how we can work together with you to improve your email marketing, please contact us and ask us about our email marketing services. Our web address is www.adestra.co.uk/email_marketing

Paul Crabtree is presently Marketing Director of Adestra (http://www.adestra.com), a UK based digital marketing agency that specialise in inbound and outbound email, fax and SMS broadcast solutions. Adestra's client portfolio includes many UK based publishers including Janes Information Group, Informa, Lexis Nexis, OUP, Blackwells and others.

Previous to this role, Paul was responsible for heading-up online marketing for Informa Telecoms' publishing division working on a portfolio of reports, newsletters, ad-led vehicles and the industry portal telecoms.com.

Paul will draw on his 5 years of focused experience in working in online marketing for publishers.

Email Marketing Tips For Affiliates

Email Marketing Tips For Affiliates

Writen by Christopher Kyalo

Affiliates who make colossal amounts of money online are usually experts at marketing and many are constantly searching for tips via email newsletters and from marketing sites that will dramatically impact on their traffic and affiliate revenues.

If you want to be a successful affiliate, it is not too difficult to pick up email marketing tips and become an expert in this important and effective form of online marketing.

The first of many email marketing tips that you must be aware of is the fact that you must constantly look for ways to trap the email addresses of visitors to your site. It does not matter how few they are, the most important email marketing tips demand that you constantly grow your opt-in email list daily as you are involved with other campaigns. You could offer some valuable information through a special report to all who subscribe to your newsletter and thus leave you with their email addresses.

The way people actively seek clients to buy online is the same way that each site owner should aggressively be harvesting email addresses. It is a email marketing tip worth taking careful note of that a large opt-in email list is better than money in the bank. There are many online entrepreneurs who make a good regular income with nothing else other than their opt-in email lists. Of all email marketing tips you will ever come across, constantly building your opt in email list is the most valuable and powerful.

You will have to combine these tips here with the ultimate bulk email marketing secrets to get explosive results.

Email Marketing - The End Is Nigh!

Email Marketing - The End Is Nigh!

Writen by Robert Palmer

Consider if you will the resources, the time and the financial investment given to attracting new web traffic. Banner advertising, link exchanges, search engine ratings, affiliate schemes and the list goes on. Yet when it comes to retaining a customer’s future business or even a return visit, we simply hope that they will opt-in to a newsletter mailing list and everything will be okay.

Of course the truth of opt-in email marketing is far from okay. For a start, people, especially private individuals, frequently change their email address. For many people, email addresses are a disposable accessory, which should be replaced every few weeks when the Spam starts rolling in. I don’t know about you, but I have enough trouble keeping up with the email changes of my friends and family, let alone a list of a few thousand customers and potential customers.

Typing “email marketing” into Google will return literally thousands of software products and services all promising to make your email campaign more successful and slick. Of course it doesn’t matter how much or how little you expend on your email newsletter, it will still be one subject line of possibly hundreds, all screaming for attention.

 Average email click through rates fell from 5.4% in 1999 to just 1.8% in 2003 (Source eMarketer)

 27% of emails never get opened and of those that are opened only 23% are read thoroughly (Source: J Neilsen)

 Average open rate for B2B emails has fallen by 42% since 2001 (Source eMarketer)

Although such statistics make grim reading, worse is yet to come. Some industry experts are predicting a total collapse of the email infrastructure within the next five years due to the shear volume of traffic. A technology dating back to the 1960’s, email was developed as a means for geeks to communicate with other geeks, about something they had seen in the alt.freakygeek newsgroup. It was never designed to cope with the demands of mass marketing which have been inflicted upon it since the arrival of the WWW. So with that in mind, it is something of a miracle and a credit to the technology of yesteryear that it continues to work at all.

Recent research commissioned by Yahoo revealed that the average British PC has nine “sick days” a year, two more than the average for human workers. Six of these days are lost battling against Spam, while a further three are taken up combating viruses.

The Yahoo findings went on to reveal that nearly half of British computer users find dealing with junk e-mails more stressful than traffic jams and the majority want service providers to act.

But I’m no Spammer, I hear you cry! No, but your legitimate email is going to have to share the same inbox as the volumes of Spam and with only a Subject Line to stand out from the crowd, is it any wonder that email is becoming so ineffective as a marketing tool?

Clearly, alternatives to email marketing need to be developed. One emerging technology being pioneered by three software houses in the UK is that of One-2-Many Broadcasting. Already employed by the BBC, Visa, and many other blue-chip Net companies, One-2-Many Broadcasting offers a far-improved method of communicating with customers than opt-in email marketing or newsletters and already being hailed as the THE next big marketing tool.

One-2-Many Broadcasting involves the customer downloading a small client onto their PC. The customer can filter and influence what information they receive from within the software client. Once installed the website can then communicate directly with that customer by broadcasting information in a wide range of formats, all of which is attractively presented directly onto the customer’s screen. Sounds frighteningly, intrusive doesn’t it? Well, not according to the millions of people who are already receiving information from the latest news through to film clips of the latest movie releases. One London based soccer club, Arsenal, has reported a phenomenal take-up of their One-2-Many Broadcasting Service, with over 100,000 subscribers in the first 12 months of operating.

So will One-2-Many replace email marketing? Who knows, I suspect that over the coming years a variety of marketing alternatives will appear, of which One-2-Many will hold a share of the market. In developing alternatives to email marketing one of the major factors will and is that of price; emails are extremely cheap. Any alternative therefore, if it is to be successful, needs to be competitively priced and rich in unique features.

To date, One-2-Many Broadcasting has been relatively expensive and financially not an option for most small to medium sized businesses. As the concept of One-2-Many marketing is developed, more and different software is likely to emerge, which will in itself introduce competition and hopefully lower prices.

For more information and reading on One-2-Many Broadcasting:

www.skinkers.com

www.edesktop.co.uk

www.desknet.co.uk

To experience One-2-Many Broadcasting:
http://www.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,70061-1109118,00.html - Sky News Alerts

http://www.arsenal.com/Userincludes/desktopwenger/InstallDesktopWengerNT.exe – Arsenal FC

About The Author

Robert Palmer is CEO of deskNET Communications www.desknet.co.uk and is a leading architect in the development of One-2-Many Broadcasting software.

Email Marketing the Easy Way

Email Marketing the Easy Way

Writen by Andrei Smith

What is email marketing?

Basically, in plain English, email marketing is a targeted mass mailing done via email. The purpose of email marketing could be advertising in order to recruit new clients, introducing a new set of products or services to an existing client base, keeping your clients informed by means of a newsletter, etc. All of the before mentioned activities are very legitimate business efforts, as long as you respect some unwritten rules and as long as the list of emails you use is what is called 'targeted', in other words the names came from a database generated by your marketing division and represents your existing client base, a carefully selected list of potential prospects or a list of people who opted in to receive your messages.

If instead of the above you use a list that you bought (you know, "25 million guaranteed AOL email addresses for only 19.95 - plus shipping"), or are doing it without warning the people on your list, or using other shady methods, then you are considered a spammer and what you are sending is spam, bulk mail, unsolicited email, basically, the main enemy of all things virtue and life in general. Yes folks, it is that easy to be labeled as a spammer, and very hard to get out of it.

Once your message is considered unsolicited, you will immediately be put on zillions of black lists, side by side with those who promise inches and inches of extra extremities and hours and hours of ecstatic pleasures (for only 3 easy payments and some handling fees).

Sound pretty risky, so why bother?

Obviously, opt-in email advertising is far more cost effective than direct marketing via regular mail, door-to-door sales, or telemarketing. Paper, printing, envelopes, and postage can add up quickly. Door to door sales require paying out commissions. Telemarketing results in high long distance bills, often without great results, as people become more and more blood thirsty toward the people on the other end of the so called cold call.

So why not just use my personal email or my company's mail server and some mailing software?

In the early days of email marketing (that is, before the art of penile enlargement was crafted), that's exactly what people did. They would gather all their emails into some primitive version of a spreadsheet, fire up some mail merging program, hook it up to their corporate mail system and voila, thousands of emails were flying away.

Today, the scenario is certainly possible, but let me tell you in a simple set of scenarios what can happen:

One of the many not-for-profit groups that decided to police the internet will intercept that a large number of emails were generated and sent by a server near you (yep, they can do that). In order to protect the civilized world from those who spread spam, viruses and other vermin, they will put you on a list of threats to humanity. Those other nice corporate folks who were your indented recipients, have an IT department that gets constantly yelled at by angry users who get emails with naked people. Well - Mel, their IT guy decides to put up an anti-spam system that links to that not-for-profit's database of known spammers (oh yeah, did I mention you are now a 'known spammer'?) and block your emails. Your emails might actually be blocked so well that your company will have a real trouble communicating via email and your IT folks will all go nuts and/or get fired.

Basically, not so good. Other things that can happen are: you'll have to build some opt-in / opt-out system, in some states there are laws that require that you make it very easy for your audience to unsubscribe, you'll have a hard time formatting your emails in a decent, eye pleasing way, etc.

Lastly, the process of sending thousands of emails and managing lists, subscribing and unsubscribing people is tedious and just plain annoying. The only way to do it is with a maximum degree of automation, or, the better solution - to outsource to a company that does it professionally.

Folks, I am known for promoting the "do it in house" concept, and am not that big on outsourcing. But when it comes to mass mailing... I say stay away from it and let the professionals do what they do.

If you are worried about cost, know that the fee you pay for email marketing services, will still cost less than the continued overhead and expenses of the traditional options, not to mention the great possibilities of reaching a much larger audience, much faster (practically instantly).

What to look for in an email marketing company?

1. Automating Your Subscribe and Unsubscribe Requests

Many email marketing companies will provide you with exact HTML code you need to paste to your site to have a subscription form on your web site. The better services also provide a link at the bottom of each email that enables subscribers to update their information or unsubscribe from a list, automating everything for you.

2. Personalization of Emails

Another powerful feature of many email marketing services is the ability to use mail merge capabilities to personalize each email that you send. The better services allow to have custom fields, additional to the standard first name and last name.

3. Bounceback email handling

Bouncebacks are emails that are sent to email accounts that no longer exist or are full, blocked, etc. Essentially, you'll get a response stating that your message did not make it. All email list management software programs are able to manage subscribe and unsubscribe requests and send out messages, however without integrated bounceback email handling all the non-deliverable emails will be sent back to you, a rather big nuisance if your list is large. Ideally, the email software you use will be able to manage your bouncebacks for you. Whenever a bounceback is received, the software makes a note of the address and if another bounceback is received the email address will be sent to a list of dead addresses.

This remove capability is extremely important since if you continuously send out emails with many bouncebacks you may be blacklisted as a spammer. This is something you really want to avoid at all cost.

4. HTML email

The ability to send out HTML emails has been around for quite some time. Most email marketing companies support the ability to send out messages that include graphics and formatted text. This is surely something you'll want to look for.

However, not all of your users have the ability to view email messages in HTML format. This percentage is usually between 10-20%. Instead of seeing your aesthetically pleasing email they might see a string of meaningless code. Using most email list management programs, these 10-20% of users will open up emails from you and be very inclined to call you a spammer.

To avoid this, look for companies that use multi-part MIME to send out messages. When you send an HTML email in multi-part MIME, users who do not have the ability to view HTML messages will receive the email in the usual text format.

So who should you use?

Do your homework, read reviews, eventually, make use of a trial account and see if it fits your needs. I currently use Intellicontact (Owned by Broadwick Corporation, a company specialized in software that improves communication efficiency for businesses) - check them out at http://www.bsleek.com/emailmarketing/ - they do everything I told you about in this article, plus more.

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Andrei co-owns Bsleek - a company that specializes in web design, hosting, promotional items, printing, tradeshow displays, logos, CD presentations, SEO and more. Andrei has amassed an extensive technical knowledge and experience through his career as the CIO for a major travel management company and through his past careers in military research, data acquisition and airspace engineering. He also consults for Trinity Investigations, a New York based PI firm.



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Bsleek - Intelligent permission based email marketing

Email Marketing: The B.S. Email Marketer - Are You One Of Them?

Email Marketing: The B.S. Email Marketer - Are You One Of Them?

Writen by Donesia Muhammad

As a publisher and an avid reader of many online ezines, you
start to gain a keen eye for what appeals to you and what
doesn't. There are different ezines for many different
purposes:

Information Ezines,

Ezines For Products and Services,

Tutorial Ezines., etc, etc, etc

After a while you start to realize why some of the ezines, you
always end up leaving and the ones you don't even bother to
open them up. Has nothing to do with a bad subject line, or
filters, it has to do with the business morals of the
publishers.

They are full of it. Plain and simple. Their whole ezine shouts
B.S. and you wonder how they can even write this stuff with a
straight face and dare to add their name to the email.

You know what I am talking about, the ones who sound worse than
bad used car dealers. Every word out of their mouth sounds like
a scam, they read online that they need a list to sell their
products, so they put no effort into their ezines, if you even
want to call it that. Trying to make a profit is one thing, but
just trying to hustle by any scam method out there just to make
that almighty dollar is another.

You know the kind...Does this remind you of a few:

  • They only sent you an email today because there must be a new
    product launching that they received a free copy in exchange
    for promotion and they in turn tell you how affordable it is
    for them and how much you will make by buying this product.
    They forget that this is the same email you have already
    received ten copies of from various other publishers who are
    telling you the same crap the owner of the product told them.

  • Once their 75% commission drops (and that is the ONLY reason
    they are promoting the product in the first place), you wont
    hear them ever mention the product again, in fact they will
    talk so much trash about the product, you begin to think the
    publisher has a multiple personality disorder since they have
    no recollection that last week they made the product sound
    better than the invention of Color TV.

  • On Their websites, are pictures of their families on yachts,
    luxury cars, and huge mansions, Amazing what Photoshop can do
    with pictures these days. Image cropping at it's best. Do you
    know how they really made their money? Chances are it wasn't
    from what they are trying to sell to you but you see this image
    of wealth and think it's going to rub off on you automatically.

  • They know the sites they are sending you to are scams, they
    know you will lose money, but they don't care, they just want
    to grab a slice of the money share and don't care that you
    spent money that you didn't have in the first place.

  • Every month they recommend a new product that can't possibly
    be lower than 100.00 so they can grab a great commission.

  • In their spare time, they are on every discussion board,
    trashing everyone else are creating so much controversy all
    just to get people to look at their site.
  • You know the kind, the ones who go on the boards complaining
    how a big company scammed them and conveniently that company is
    a competitor and they just use a different name like no one
    will figure it out.

  • These are also the same people who claim that they started
    their business with less than $50.00 and how they are paying
    all their bills now, and living it up.

    They forgot to mention that $50,000 grant they received as well
    to start their business but I guess that doesn't count, huh??

  • Guess What...
    B.S. is B.S. no matter how you wrap it up. Offline or Online,
    Email, Or Phone. It serves no purpose except to ruin your
    reputation and to make you look ridiculous in the long run.

    Remember when you talked a lot of B.S. in your neighborhood,
    you were the local fool, but now that you are online, you are
    the global idiot.

    Do you really think people don't talk when someone smells B.S.

    It's just not worth it, because trust me it will come back to
    haunt you in the worse way.

    Save your drama for the soap operas. Put your morals and ethics
    (if you have any, if not then its time to find a new set of
    business mentors) into your business and these are the ones who
    survive, whether you become a millionaire or not.

    I would rather see an informative article in an ezine, than a
    hyped up email full of why I should buy a product that I don't
    need just to line up your paypal account.

    Yes we all buy things that are a luxury not a necessity but
    come on, one more ebook on how to make a million in ten minutes
    is something we can all do without.

    One more site with a 15 by 20 Ultra forced 8 tier matrix with a
    $100.00 opening deposit that will build the downline for me,
    but after scrolling through the site for 20 minutes, you still
    have no idea what they are selling is something we can all do
    without.

    Oh and remember, just because they offered you a couple of
    crappy free ebooks and a free meta tag creator software doesn't
    make them any more legit than the next scam site.

    They think they are fooling the FTC, but they are just
    insulting your intelligence.

    Remember that the next time you pull out your credit card to
    spend money you don't have to lost it before the week is over,
    and as soon as you complain, numbers are disconnected and
    emails are bounced back to you.

    Be Smart, just because you are struggling online doesn't mean
    to get desperate and jump into everything that looks good.

    Unwrap it and you will see the real deal.

    Wise up and save your money for products and services that can
    really help you, not the ones that will make you go broke.

    Copyright (c) KDM Publishing

    Donesia Muhammad has been doing business online since 2001. Sign up For her Newsletter My IBiz Weekly ==>http://myibizweekly.com The Business
    Ezine For All Netpreneurs. Learn how to start and maintain your
    internet business and ezine, and stay sane while doing it. Read
    Our Archives and Learn with Valuable Resources. Helping Readers
    Online Since 2001... And Counting.

    http://EzineAdHelper.com

    http://KDMPublishing.com

    Email Marketing Success or Failure?

    Email Marketing Success or Failure?

    Writen by Nick Stamoulis

    When you think of email marketing, what comes to mind?

    Spam or Customer Loyalty?

    The common misconception of email marketing by many business owners is that if I send out an email “blast” then sales, leads and website traffic will instantly increase. In many cases this is incorrect. FYI, I absolutely, detest the words “email blast” this makes me think of the traditional spammers (the blue pill or online gamming emails).

    Today there are so many negative associations surrounding email marketing:

    #1 Spam

    #2 Opt-Out Rate

    #3 TOO MUCH EMAIL!!!!

    Your prospects and customers don’t have time to read emails from you only when you want to only make a sale. I have seen some of the best products; offers and promotions fail in an email marketing campaign because the company is trying too hard to make the sale.

    Developing an effective email marketing campaign should be more than just a “blast” to your opt-in in house email list (NO I don’t recommend renting lists, unless of course the are from a GOOD and TRUSTWORTHLY SOURCE). I will write more about the topic of selecting the right list in a future article.

    Think of your email marketing campaign just like any type of offline marketing or advertising campaign. Before you launch any type of email campaign I strongly recommend you plan the following:

    1. Goal(s) – What is the goal of the campaign? Sales, Awareness or Communication?

    2. Approach – You know your customers and prospects better than anyone (hopefully you do, if not try sending out survey’s to them to learn more about their needs and wants, this will ultimately help better position all forms of online marketing). There are several type of emails: Promotion, Informational to name a few.

    3. Timing – Try to develop a campaign or series of appropriately timed emails that are sent out over a period of time, rather than a one time email. I do not recommend sending out email campaigns more than 2 times a week. This will help keep you opt-out rate low.

    4. Offer or Promotion – If you are sending a promotion or offer, try to think of something that will have a good approach to your audience. Percent off, dollars off, buy one get one free, etc.

    5. Implementation – IF you don’t have an Online Marketing Manager to do this for you, I recommend purchasing some type of an Email Marketing software. This will help you manage your list receive statistics from each email campaign and more importantly protect you from any possible spam complaints.

    Nick Stamoulis is an online marketing expert that has helped businesses achieve web marketing goals for the past 9 years. He is currently the Online Marketing Manager at Smart Destinations and has worked with companies such as: United Way, Computerworld, Vision Music USA and more. Nick is a member of SEMPO, EMA, AMA and is Google Adwords certified. Nick is the editor of WebMarketingResource.org which is a free web marketing resource site for business owners and marketers.

    Email Marketing Success

    Email Marketing Success

    Writen by Mike Hill

    With all of the different marketing concepts that have become available throughout the internet, email marketing is often overlooked or simply dismissed, for the simple reason of not understanding how the process works.

    They may also believe, like many people, that generating money with email marketing is a myth and does not work.

    Well, I am here to tell you that this is simply not true, ask any one of the many real people who have successfully used email marketing techniques to generate an enormous amount of profit.

    You do not have to take my word for it; let us meet some of these successful email marketers now.

    Meet Ewen Chia

    Ewen Chia is an extremely successful email marketer who has been going strong for the last 9 years and shows no sign of slowing down.

    This Singapore native has been dubbed a “Super Affiliate” and has successfully marketed thousands of products using email marketing as his number one source of income.

    Ewen Chia has created a large variety of products such as “Mini Ebook Secrets”, “Web Army Knife” and “Secret Affiliate Weapon”; all geared towards helping others learn how to become a successful email marketer.

    He is successful because he has implemented the strategies from each and every product he promotes, knows how good they are, and how useful each one is in the marketing world.

    Ewen Chia has been able to produce an enormous amount of profit in a very short span of time, for example 72 hours.

    In just a few days, he has seen massive growth of what amounts to a five figure income. This is more than most people see in a few months.

    Meet Keith Wellman

    Keith Wellman grew up a poor man, slaving away in his career for 70+ hours per week. He had spent a good deal of time trying to generate money from different internet ventures, just when he was ready to give up, he had the opportunity to learn just what email marketing can do for a person.

    Once Keith learned how to become a successful internet marketer, he began seeing huge profit growth.

    In a short time, Keith had the ability to quit his full time career, “fire his boss”, and in less than a year earn an actual profit of $25,000 per month.

    All of this, by simply learning and becoming a successful email marketer.

    Meet Russell Brunson

    Russell Brunson is perhaps one of the younger of the successful email marketers listed in this article. He has had the distinct opportunity to experience how email marketing can truly equal success.

    He has discovered how advertising without spending money, can earn a great deal of money. He has been dubbed as one of the most successful affiliates in this internet age.

    He has the ability to generate sales and earn solid profits and he is now showing others how to do the same thing.

    All of the people you have just met are real life people, using real life marketing techniques, and making larger than life profits, that they only dreamed of prior to stumbling across email marketing.

    Email marketing success is an absolute reality if you follow the right strategies.

    Mike Hill's Email List Profits private site will show you exactly how to get started in the email marketing business and go from zero to thousands of hungry prospects, regardless of experience. http://www.emaillistprofits.com

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