Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Customer Acquisition Marketing through email: Avoid the Spam Folder





Customer acquisition marketing is the process of identifying, approaching and fostering new customer relationships. Whether you are the Coca-Cola Company or simply selling your handcrafted garden gnomes, you need leads in order to gain profit. Lead generation can use many different customer acquisition strategies; the newest is the World Wide Web. 



The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) states that online lead generation is the fastest growing category in online ad spending. The internet is a vast universe full of opportunities for marketers—blogs, forums, social bookmarking sites, directories and the trickiest one: email. Email is, in theory, a great way to reach your target audience. However, there is a one huge concept to fear…the e-marketing graveyard…the spam folder. 


What is spam?
We’ve all seen them, and possibly cursed them under our breaths; they are spam emails. Spam refers to any unwanted, unproductive and unethical activity done over the internet. 13 billion spam emails are sent everyday and any email user will receive approximately 3000 spam emails per year, how annoying! Email carriers have cleverly learned to create spam folders where users can mark messages as spam or sometimes the folder will even auto-detect messages that appear to be spam. This is a great tool… for actual spam at least. But when you’re using email as a customer acquisition strategy, it’s your worst nightmare! Not all unfamiliar emails are from future African princes that need money wired to them now or a stay-at-home mom that made $70,000 from home last year, and I can teach you how to distinguish yourself from the spammers. 


Why use email marketing?
If there’s a big chance of being marked as spam and ignored, why use email marketing? Well, because it can be worth it. Some of the top marketers have gained 40% conversion rates using opt-in (which I will discuss later) email customer acquisition marketing. Also, close to four million people have an email account and 47% check it daily. That’s a huge number of inboxes your company’s information could end up in, now you just have to make sure not to end up marked as spam. 


Why you should avoid the spam folder
63% of email users have never checked their spam folders. If your genuine newsletter or promotion ends up in there, you might as well consider it dead and buried. Not only will no one really see it, but once a single email from your company is marked as spam, it could cause your company’s email addresses to be blocked by a lot email service providers. Your site can be blocked by the search engines too, making it impossible for leads to see not just your e-mail, but your site completely! 


Now, no one will see your e-mail, your company’s reputation is bruised, and no one can search for your site. You may think that’s the worst that can happen, but even the government can get involved. The CAN-SPAM law (Federal Senate Bill 877) was signed by George Bush in December 2003. Although this law has done little to minimize spam, any company using email marketing solutions that receives a 0.5% or more of their total sent messages as spam complaints will suffer serious deliverability penalties, and you don’t want that. 


How to not be a spammer
First of all, you need to learn the difference between unsolicited email and solicited email (also known as opt-in email). Any message where the recipient has not agreed to receive the message is considered an unsolicited email, aka spam. To be a solicited email, make sure to have a registration form, email/mailing list, or something along those lines and send out your message soon after the user registers, so they won’t forget who your company is. Once you have a solicited emailing list, the law makes you do a few things: 



--Make sure there is a way to opt-out permanently from the emailing list.  



--Only contact people who requested information by signing up, logging in, etc.
 



--Include your physical street address so they know who your company is and can contact you.




--Your message needs to be marked as an advertisement or ad in the subject line or the first few lines of body (I would recommend putting it in the body).
 



--Sexually orientated emails need to be clearly marked in the subject line.



    Always send emails to affiliates, or members, only. Make newsletters, offer free-trials, and use text only messages, not html. Text messages are half as likely to get reported as spam than html messages, so keep it simple. When writing your messages, choose your language carefully. Avoid talking about medication, mortgages, making money, and pornography, those are the most common spam messages. If you want to use these words, do not try to obfuscate them with extra letters or characters, this is quite spam-y. Never use attachments, and don’t over-do your images. Try joining a reputation service (there are tons out there) or get on the whitelists. Whitelists are a list of e-mail addresses/domain names that an e-mail blocking program will allow. 



    Good luck!
    I hope you enjoyed these tips on how to do customer acquisition marketing through email without ending up in the dreaded spam folder. Email marketing is a great customer acquisition strategy and good luck to everyone who tries it! 
    Special Thanks... a special thanks to Abby Barsky for today's guest blog post, and expert in customer acquisition strategy.
     



    Tuesday, June 7, 2011

    Surf Locally Without Being Local: The Future of Search





    The world clearly isn’t flat. I’d also argue that it’s not all that large either. In fact, when thinking about the internet, there are few international barriers. This is especially true when thinking about Internet marketing. Not only do I work with international partners on a regular basis, but often advertising on international websites as well.


    One of the biggest problems that internet marketing professionals have is managing geo-targeted advertising and affiliate marketers globally. How do you know if your partner in the U.K. is following your advertising guidelines? What competitive ads are appearing for users in India? How does your ad render for someone sitting in the UK or Australia? These questions, and dozens like them, are important to consider when selling online. Getting the local perspective from a user in a particular country can dramatically improve your online advertising strategy and results.


    How can you get a local view?


    The problem of getting a local perspective is relatively new. It used to be that you would limit your ads to say, the United States or the U.S. and Canada. Now that we’re advertising in a global marketplace, limiting your ads to only the country you’re from is simply leaving money on the table. Personally I want to expose my products and services to as many people as possible, regardless of what country they’re from.


    Enter products like GeoSurf. This tool is a heavily used browser toolbar that enables users to get a local perspective from more than 80 locations around the world. This tool shows you how your online advertising campaigns (especially with display advertising) renders for a browser in Spain, Israel, or London, England – all at the click of a button.

     
    Users can get a free trial of GeoSurf on the website – you can try it for yourself for 5 days free and see how helpful it is for your own online marketing activities.


    Who can benefit from a local view?


    Seeing how web page and online ads render for local browsers can improve the effectiveness of your online marketing campaigns. Tools like the GeoSurf toolbar are used by online media professionals (buyers, campaign managers, sales, marketers, affiliates, and compliance teams) to view geo-targeted ads and web content. This way, they can easily validate and monitor campaigns, seeing precisely who is bidding on local ad placements. Having a local perspective also helps them to generate new sources of business and enhance current marketing activities.


    The interface is a straight-forward toolbar which allows users to select the location they want to surf from and with a click of a button, they are surfing the internet in real-time as if they were actually located in that area. This creates a customized browsing experience that is truly local.


    I know as a marketer, I’m often asked, “what do you see on your screen?” This is because the advertiser or partner is not able to view a geo-targeted ad for my region from his place of origin. GeoSurf takes this one step further by working globally, letting website browsers to view the same sites (or different ones) form more than 80 different locations.


    How it Works


    GeoSurf is basically a provider of proxy servers from around the world. What’s great about proxy servers is if you have a server in Rome, Italy, I could use that server to check local rankings for a search term there, or see how a certain site geo-targets to that area. The trouble with trying to manage this type of process on your own is that you’d need to collect dozens of your own proxy servers strategically located across the globe. Not an easy task! GeoSurf owns all the servers on their network and can therefore offer a simple, fast, reliable, and safe service.



    In addition to the security of working with an entity that owns it's own servers, privately owned proxy servers are much faster.  The free/hacked proxies you find out on the Internet are usually are very slow.  And the more people use them, the slower they get.  When a lot of people use  a particular proxy server, their IP can get blocked by certain sites.

    Whether you’re advertising internationally, tracking search engine results in various countries, or keeping an eye on your international affiliate partners, using a toolbar or proxy servers is the best way to get a local perspective. 

    Take advantage of the free trial of GeoSurf – I think you can try it for 5 days free to see just how useful it is for your own online marketing activities.



    Wednesday, June 1, 2011

    Improving Your Amazon.com Rankings



    Rankings... they are either a marketer's greatest friend or worst enemy. Despite what you may believe, having a blend of positive and negative reviews can work in your favor.


    Upon releasing the second edition of my book, SEO Made Simple (second edition), I received some significant insight into how books are ranked on Amazon.com. Based on vendor feedback and viewing actual results, I was better able to determine why my book's ranking changed on a regular basis. If you ever wondered how books are ranked on Amazon.com, you may want to follow along.


    As you know, Amazon provides a Sales Rank for each item in its catalog to show how it is selling. The lower the Sales Rank number, the higher the sales are for that particular item in a specified period.


    I have seem Sales Ranks updated on an hourly basis to reflect recent and historical sales of every item sold on Amazon.com, and many factors must be taken into account when monitoring your book’s Amazon.com Sales Rank, including what time of day it is and how many people have purchased books during that time. This makes the algorithm a bit challenging to decode but makes sense when trying to evaluate a books popularity.


    Because of this, a particular item’s Sales Rank does not absolutely reflect its sales. While monitoring your book’s Amazon.com Sales Rank may be helpful in gaining insight into the effectiveness of your marketing campaigns and other initiatives to drive book sales, it is not an accurate way to track your book’s sales.


    At the end of the day, getting a top sales rank on Amazon is relative to your book's sales compared to others in your category. If there was an easy way to get a top ranking, no one would be able to hold onto the top spot. The best advice I can give you is to promote your book using a launch date - driving as many people as you can to buy the book on a single day - and then managing a sustained marketing campaign over time. From my perspective, that's really the only way you'll ever generate online sales over the long term.