Email marketing campaigns are a great way to get
more eyes on your small business newsletter or website since you can reach thousands of people
at once. However, your campaign won’t be successful if nobody opens your
message. According to Madison Logic, over 122 billion emails are sent an hour,
so knowing how to stand out from the crowd is important.
Your email’s headline is arguably the most important part of
the message since it’s the part readers will see first and make a split-second
decision whether opening the message is worth their time. Headlines that aren’t
interesting will quickly be marked as read or deleted. In fact, copywriter
coach Chris Marlow claims that studies have proven that headlines are responsible
for 50-75% of an ad’s success.
Grab our free Social Media checklist and free online marketing and email marketing training here
Grab our free Social Media checklist and free online marketing and email marketing training here
Knowing just how much of your campaign’s success rests on
the headline alone, it’s important that you really take the time to examine how
effective your headlines are. Here are a few great tips to craft better
headlines:
A study by MailChimp examined about 24 billion emails and
found that subject lines with the recipient’s first and/or last name were
opened more often than those without. The most effective emails had both the
first and last name, though those which only used the last name were strangely
more effective than emails that only used the first name.
The power of first name personification varied based on
industries. Personalised emails sent to those in the government were opened 92%
more often than usual while there was 45% difference for the creative
services/agency industry. There were positive effects in all sorts of
industries such as software, art, retail, and entertainment, but proved to be
ineffective in the legal industry with a -31% open rate.
Create a sense of urgency.
A headline that compels the user to read right away will
surely be opened. Such a headline tells the reader that there is some important
information within the email that needs to be read right away and can’t be put
off until later.
The aforementioned MailChimp study found that the following
words results in a higher open rate:
- Urgent:
79%
- Breaking:
68%
- Important:
55%
- Alert:
31%
Note that Adestra similarly found that “alert” lead to a
61.8% increase in open rates.
You could also give a deadline with phrases like “today
only” or “last chance” to make sure that they know they must act now.
Make them feel special.
Much like how adding a first and last name to a subject line
makes the email feel more personal, so too does adding phrases that make the
email sound like it’s exclusively for the reader. Headlines such as “An
exclusive offer just for you,” “For your eyes only,” or “A message for our dear
customers only” makes the reader know that this message is just for them or
their group of people.
Keep it short and simple.
Your subject line should ideally be 6-10 words, under 50
characters, and provide a description of what the reader can expect in the
message. People are used to receiving an overabundance of emails and won’t want
to waste any time on something that doesn’t immediately meet their needs.
Subject lines that are too vague or too detailed won’t be opened very often.
Short headlines are especially important when considering
that 40% of emails are opened on mobile and that longer headlines will get cut
off. You can shorten your headline by using contractions and not spelling out
numbers. (i.e. “don’t” instead of “do not” and “45” instead of “forty-five”)
Capitalise each word.
MailChimp found that capitalising each word in the subject
line lead to a 7% increase in open rate while only capitalising at least one
word lead to a -1% open rate. These numbers are small, but they shouldn’t be
overlooked. If you have a very large mailing list, the small percentage points
can translate to hundreds or thousands of consumers.
Use an A/B test.
You will likely reach a situation where you have multiple
headlines you would like to use, but can’t decide which one is best. You should
A/B test them by sending them to segments of your mailing list. Collect some
data and then send out the winning headline to the rest of your list.
Grab our free Social Media checklist and free online marketing and email marketing training here
Grab our free Social Media checklist and free online marketing and email marketing training here
Make sure to keep as many factors as consistent as possible.
For example, if you sent Headline A at 2:00 AM and Headline B at 9:00 AM, you
shouldn’t be surprised if there’s a stark difference in open rates.
Using the right headline hacks can exponentially improve
your marketing success. I would recommend that you use Convert Kit to send out your emails, track statistics, and watch your
numbers grow.
By Martin Goldthorpe - www.businessmarketingmastery.com
By Martin Goldthorpe - www.businessmarketingmastery.com
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