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Market Your Small Business With E-Mail
Article 3: E-Mail Friendly Tips

Although the subject field is all-important, here are other tips and tricks to make your e-mail more effective:

• Tailor to your target. Ask recipients if they prefer HTML format or plain text. HTML is reader friendly, but takes longer to download and view. Plain text is unimpressive, but everyone’s e-mail software can receive and display it. Be customer-wise: Ask them what they want.
  • Speak your recipients’ language. Don’t speak slang to formal audiences or speak down to friends. If your audience has diverse segments, consider tailoring different e-mail messages for each.
     
  • Determine your recipients’ other preferences. Some folks attend to e-mail first thing in the morning. Others put it off. If you make periodic mailings, segregate them by recipients’ preferences. Ask what time of day and day of the week they prefer. It’s a small matter to manually send the same e-mail at different times to different segments. It’s a subtlety worth exploring if you want your e-mail read.
     
  • Watch your manners. Don’t write in all capital letters LIKE THIS. That’s the online equivalent of shouting. It’s also more difficult to read.
     
  • Most e-mail software allows you to reply to a message and contain the original message in your reply in some way that sets it apart from what you have written. Choose one of the conventions, such as indenting the previous message, or using markings such as the greater-than sign “> >” to distinguish the original message. Most e-mail programs have pre-set configurations you can choose from. Doing so enables you and your recipients to retrace your steps in any e-mail and never lose track of the original issue, or what was previously written.
     
  • Promise complete confidentiality. Post on your Web site and in your e-mails a notice that everyone contacting you can be assured their personal information will not be sold or provided to third parties. This removes barriers for those who otherwise may desire to engage you in e-mail dialogue, but are fearful of being placed on a mailing list that deluges them with unwanted e-mail.
     
  • Archive in-coming and out-going e-mail. Just as you would keep copies of other business correspondence or hard copy files on clients and prospects, keep copies of what you send and receive by e-mail. It doesn’t take up much space, and most e-mail software makes it a snap to search by word or phrase through archived e-mails to retrieve something later.
     
  • Archived e-mail can be effective as a reminder of what others have said when returning them a copy of their own words. It’s invaluable in resolving disputes, reconstructing conversations, re-establishing dates and sequences, and countless other customer-service applications.
     
  • Embedded links. Every out-going e-mail should include a hyperlink to your Web site. In the same way it’s great for promoting special offers, even when unrelated to the subject of the e-mail.
     

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