Email communications are criminally underrated.
I think of email communications instead of email marketing. The email inbox is a two-way communication channel and should be considered that way.
Still, email is far from sexy.
We’re all spammed by marketing emails left and right. The tonality can typically be described as corporate cringe, filled with platitudes. How do we make email work as PR professionals?
Here we go:
No One Loves Getting Marketing Emails
We all struggle with maintaining our inboxes and getting our email addresses abused by spammers. Email marketing can’t be described as the sexiest of spaces to fight for. It’s like no one wants you there in the first place.
And it gets worse:
So many companies are struggling to put out their periodic newsletters. So many marketing departments scramble to write newsletter content that makes sense to the subscribers. Many traditional companies have chosen the insanely boring route of posting headlines and snippets from their latest newsroom or blog updates.
And with all of the hype around various social networks, one might think that email marketing should at least be a thing of the past. However, such a conclusion couldn’t be more wrong. Email marketing is still — and will likely continue to be — the most potent of digital marketing channels.
How can this be?
From a PR perspective, most social networks have a massive disadvantage; the brand doesn’t have proprietary audience ownership. Sure, your business can accumulate followers and fans across many social networks, but when push comes to shove, we’re all at the mercy of just a few third-party algorithms. In email marketing, this isn’t the case.
The Power of Permission Marketing
Both social networks and email marketing have the immense advantage of being opt-in (pull rather than push). As Seth Godin described it, having an opted-in audience could also be labelled permission marketing:
“Permission marketing is the privilege (not the right) of delivering anticipated, personal and relevant messages to people who actually want to get them.”
— Seth Godin
Still, email marketing is prone to abuse. There’s nothing stopping anyone from sending out lots of emails to a lot of people. Organised spammers and malware distributors have taken this the furthest, but many companies are out there doing email marketing all wrong. They’re diminishing a perfect marketing channel for themselves and, more importantly, for others.
10 Best Practices for Email Marketing
When people ask me after seminars or during workshops, I have some essential advice for companies who are interested in doing email marketing right:
Affiliate: I use Mailchimp as my default email list manager.
Affiliate: I use Email List Validation to protect my sender’s reputation by keeping my PR email lists free from bouncing emails.
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