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As email marketers, we are fundamentally interested in finding ways to increase:
- The numbers who click links in an e-mail
- Sales revenue that is generated as a direct result of an e-mail campaign.
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Even though social network usage has surpassed email, this chart suggests that email still rules the roost. 9/10 US consumers receive promotional email, only 4/10 are followers of a brand on Facebook and only 5% follow on Twitter. However, the results are overly simplistic for 2 reasons:
1. Once customers are given the choice to hear from a business via social media in addition to or in place of email, the gap will narrow. Greater freedom in contact choice is also linked to greater loyalty.
2. Furthermore, the comparison fails to take into account the increased viral potential offered by Facebook. The average Facebook user has 130 friends who could potentially see your brand endorsement and continue to exponentially spread your message. This fact alone is compelling enough to make your social network page the hub of a promotion using WildfireApp, run an e-commerce store using Payvment or do a product launch like SPCA Petfood or Dentyne have successfully done. With 500 million users worldwide, Facebook is a safe bet, but for data to back up a channel decision, try using Flowtown to build a social profile for each customer.
Adding social network links and cross-promoting your social media activities are two easy ways to increase your email-clickthrough rate and also boost sales.
1. The most elementary of steps is to include social sharing links in your email
It's time to go beyond the default 'email to a friend' option. Here's why:
A Getresponse poll that analysed 500 million emails that included links for Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, and Digg found found that:
- Overall, social media links improve CTR by 30% (7.2% to 9.4%)
- A Twitter link drives the best CTR: (10.2%) than email without one. An increase of 40%
- The more links, the more clickthrough (11.2%)
- Interestingly, the social bookmarking service that started it all, Digg, offers the lowest CTR (5.3%)
2. The next step is to create hybrid email that drives traffic to both your website and social media.
More people use social networks than email. It's prudent for us to position ourselves to adapt to changing contact preferences. So in your email communications, you can demonstrate a compelling reason to connect with you on a social network including samples of the unique content available and remember the entertainment and social-interaction elements that people are looking for. Balance the email with your regular product offers that customers have come to expect. Remember, either/or options are better than yes/no options.
Your marketing team should be able to copy/paste the needed HTML code, or you could try using a hosted email marketing provider like iContact, Netsuite or GetResponse that have built-in social media features (including tracking.)