+ All Categories
Home > Technology > Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Date post: 19-May-2015
Category:
Upload: techsoup-canada
View: 364 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Presentation & speaking notes by Eric Squair. Presented at Toronto Net Tuesday, May 7 2013. See https://www.techsoupcanada.ca/en/community/blog/engaging-your-email-list-and-measuring-results for more information.
Popular Tags:
30
Improving your email broadcasts Eric Squair | [email protected] Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact Wednesday, May 8, 2013 Hello everyone!
Transcript
Page 1: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Improving your email broadcasts

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Hello everyone!

Page 2: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Eric SquairEmail Newsletters | May 2013

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Here’s what I am about. Most recently I have begun consulting and training in helping organizations make decisions based on their web data instead of best guesses or faith-based initiatives.

rs of Parliament, provincial legislature and even city councillor easily, and subscribes people automatically to your email list.

Page 3: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Assumptions:

Write emails, don’t send press releases

Use an EMS: MailChimp, VerticalResponse, etc.

Pay attention to results

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

I am making a few assumptions about you, from the course description

The first is that you actually spend some time writing a ‘custom’ email newsletter - you don’t just send out press releases

You can’t get stats from a BCC: get a good email service provider! Don’t be embarassed, a lot of people still do this. But MailChimp is free for up to 500 email addresses, and really cheap thereafter - you can’t afford not to use a real EMS.

Finally, I am assuming you at least glance at the stats provided by your EMS - open rates, click rates, unsubs - on a regular basis. The advanced among you may be using something like Google Analytics to track how your email list interacts with your site. Good for you!

Page 4: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

How to grow your list

<break>

How to keep people engaged and measure the

impact of your email

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

This is tonight’s agenda. Before the break, we are going to look at some ways to grow your list.After the short break, we’ll be looking at ways to keep people engaged with what you are creating.

Page 5: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

How to grow your list

The secret...

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

We all want to grow our lists, to get more signups, and I am about to reveal the secret to doing this.

It’s very simple. Can anyone guess what it might be?

Page 6: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

How to grow your list

Offer people something they value.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Sounds simple, and it is. Offer people something of value.

But what the heck does that mean, and how do I do it?

Page 7: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

What’s Your Superpower?

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

What can your organization do that no one else can? What can you tell people, teach people, connect people with that no one else can offer them?

If you can hone in on this, you have the basis for a pretty unique email newsletter.

Here are some examples:

Page 8: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

What can you offer?

Event invitationsInformation your supporters wantHumourWays to improve their lives

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

You have something to say that people want to hear: put it out there!

Page 9: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

What’s Your Superpower?

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

LeadNow: opportunities to get involved

Page 10: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Freshbooks

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Freshbooks: tips for their audience. NOTE: they only subtly mention their product, Freshbooks, and they’re offering workshops in how to use it better.Otherwise it’s all about how to do better at what you do: news you can use.This is probably my favourite email newsletter right now. What do you notice about it?

Page 11: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Worksheet

What’s your superpower?

What can you ‘trade’ for an email?

What’s amazing about your email?

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

You have something to say that people want to hear: put it out there!

Page 12: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Landing pages

“Anatomy Of A Perfect Landing Page” - Kissmetrics

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

This is the first of two quick tips before we break : the first is think in terms of landing pages.There is a really well-developed science of landing pages, mainly from the E-commerce world, on how to persuade people to give you their money, or in this case, their email address.

Here’s a great graphic example from KISSMetrics, Google it.

All this to say, that simply asking people to sign up for your list may not work: you need to sell them on it! Establish credibility and trust, give them a sense of what they will be getting.

Page 13: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Google grants

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Finally, before we break, one quick way for charities to grow their email lists: apply for a Google Grant, which allows you to advertise free of charge online. Send people to your landing pages and you should see significant email list growth.

Page 14: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

After the break

Engaging with your audience

Measuring the impact of your emails

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

You have something to say that people want to hear: put it out there!

Page 15: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Benchmarks:

www.e-benchmarksstudy.com/Wednesday, May 8, 2013

If you haven’t checked out this year’s non-profit benchmarks study, take a look. It’s from 44 different orgs in the US, and gives a reasonable benchmarks on email, social media, advocacy and fundraising benchmarks, so you know what is relatively ‘normal’.

Page 16: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Open rates depend on:

Subject line

Previous experience with the sender

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

The first one is pretty easy: use good subject lines! Shorter, descriptive or not.

The second is much harder: it means you have to keep the trust, that you will send people info they actually want to read.

If you don’t, you often don’t get many second and third chances.

How many of you have email list subscriptions you don’t read?

Page 17: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Don’t send crap!

Offer people something they value.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

It bears repeating: Don’t send crap!

And PLEASE don’t ever call it a blast. That sounds like something I don’t want to be anywhere near!

Page 18: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Good email is:

By, for and about people (not robots)

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

The best e-mails have the right tone: conversational.E-mails come FROM someone, and speaks TO someone, this is not an impersonal medium.It's person to person even though it's going out to thousands of people.

It's always a good practice to read emails out loud, to make sure they make sense.

Include pictures of real people, wherever possible.

Page 19: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Email by, for and about people

Read your email aloud to check tone/language

Include pictures of real people

‘Sign’ your email with name(s) and a picture

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

The best e-mails have the right tone: conversational.E-mails come FROM someone, and speaks TO someone, this is not an impersonal medium.It's person to person even though it's going out to thousands of people.

It's always a good practice to read emails out loud, to make sure they make sense.

Include pictures of real people, wherever possible.

Page 20: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Good email is:

All about them (not you)

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

I first want to thank the person who put themselves up for this by sending in their email - it takes a lot of guts!

What do we notice about this?It is about offering value, asking for opinions, and does have photos of people.But it’s a bit busy: we need to remember that people scan email, they really don’t read them!

Page 21: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Good email is:

Based on what you know about the recipient (segment your list)

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

What does a segmented list mean? It means the list is divided into useful categories based on the audience.

You can segment by location, language, how the email was acquired, or previous action taken (link clicked etc.) Segment by whatever makes your emails more valuable to the recipient.

Page 22: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Ask for:

email*first name*

postal code*

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

There are three things you want to ask people: email, first name and postal code.

Email is obvious.First name allows you to personalize the emailsAnd postal code allows you to segment based on geography

Page 23: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Measuring Impact

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

How many people recognize this pie chart?I love it. IF you have seen a presentation of mine in the past 18 months, you have seen this pie chart. It sums up the traffic to every single site on the internet. Traffic comes from one of three sources: referrals from other sites, direct visits, and search. That’s it. You want more people on your site? They will come one of these three ways.

Page 24: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Avoid Drowning in Data!

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

But I get it: Google Analytics is really really confusing.The documentation is pretty opaque, there’s a ton of jargon, and no real way to quickly discover what’s important and what you can safely ignore.

This is a word cloud of a typical Google Analytics screen. It’s a lot.

So I am going to give you two quick tips to get started, something that will crack the nut of Google Analytics and make it all click into place. Hopefully.

Page 25: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Avoid Drowning in Data!

Tag the links you send out via email and social media as ‘campaigns’

Set up goals in Google Analytics

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

These are two simple things you can do to make Google Analytics make sense.

Track your outreach efforts. Every time you send out a link in social media or by email, tag it with a few simple codes that Google Analytics provides and you will be able to track the behaviour of visitors from those outreach efforts.

Page 26: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Track your outreach

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

This is the same pie chart once you start tagging the links you send out through email, social media, advertising, etc. Google Analytics calls any outreach you do a ‘campaign’

Page 27: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Once you have set up goals

you can focus on your

highest value visits

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Note that this is one (not atypical) website, it’s not ALL websites!

But this is the kind of thing that happens once you are using Google Analytics properly: you have set up goals and you are tracking your outreach - aka ‘campaigns’

Page 28: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

A more social media based

campaign

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

This is another example of a campaign that’s more focused on young people and petition signups.

I am showing you these because you can easily get this report - called a ‘Multi Channel Conversion Visualizer’ IF, and only if, you set up goals in Google Analytics and then tag your links you send out via email, social media and advertising.

Page 29: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Recap1. What do superpower do you have to offer?

2. Email is by, for and about people

3. Track your results

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Here’s what we covered.

Page 30: Growing and Engaging Your Email List & Measuring Impact

Eric Squair | [email protected]

Email Newsletters | May 2013

Questions?

[email protected]

Wednesday, May 8, 2013


Recommended