Thursday, March 31, 2016

Try These Tactics to Cut E-mail Unsubscribe Rate

Reducing the unsubscribe rate is key to a growing, high-ROI e-mail marketing database, so digital marketers will want to check their strategies against a recent Econsultancy.com post listing 10 ways to cut costly e-mail drop-outs. Here's a quick overview of some of the suggestions: The process of avoiding e-mail defection begins at sign-up, as the post points out. Without creating barriers to easy sign-up, such as a multitude of tick boxes, make it clear to potential subscribers what they are opting to receive in terms of content and frequency. Especially avoid a confusing mix of opt-in and opt-out, advises Econsultancy. Test e-mail frequency, a major factor in unsubscribe rates. The optimum strategy may surprise; Econsultancy notes how one e-mailer found that re-sending the same content to non-openers was more effective than reactivation, for example. Automate to craft content and timing for relevancy and engagement when it comes to communications such as welcome e-mails, inventory updates, incentivized reviews, cart abandonment, loyalty rewards, etc. Automation doesn't strengthen customer engagement at all points, however; also segment the database to match promotions to demographics and customer interest. Don't assume you know what is behind e-mail attrition; get feedback from unsubscribes to diagnose--for example, with a list of opt-out reasons before or after the unsubscribe option. Another tactic to combat e-mail loss is to allow for a change of heart by e-mail defectors with an unsubscribe retraction pop-up. Marketers have also had luck retaining e-mail addresses by offering alternatives to unsubscribing, such as a temporary break or frequency change. For details on all 10 tactics, with examples, go to https://econsultancy.com/blog/67644-10-ways-to-reduce-email-unsubscribes/

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