Skip to main content

How to use email newsletters to nurture sales

A good email newsletter can be the lifeblood of your business. Many successful businesses prioritize email marketing, and for good reason: Email newsletters yield an astounding 4,300 percent ROI.

The best email newsletters aren’t salesy. Rather, they provide value that helps subscribers solve problems, improve their lives and achieve their goals. If you can do that, sales will follow. Here are four ways to craft a winning email newsletter that nurtures sales, complete with examples.

1. Foster trust and establish expertise

Forget the sales pitch. Instead, craft compelling newsletter content that fosters trust and establishes your expertise. Offer real, actionable advice that helps your audience (whether they make a purchase or not).

Use a conversational tone and relate to your audience to promote a sense of solidarity. You’re one of them, and you’re in this together.

Ideas include:

  • How-to articles
  • Real-world case studies
  • Quick tips and tricks
  • In-depth guides

For example, a catering company might send an email newsletter that details how to plan the perfect holiday party. The caterer’s audience would certainly be interested in party planning. If the company offers useful tips, subscribers will trust their expertise — and some will end up hiring them.

Brainstorm email content ideas your audience will love. Identify their problems and write what you know. Good advice yields trust, and a trusting audience will buy from you.

2. Create excitement

Did you know that 90 percent of consumers prefer to receive updates via email newsletters? It’s a golden marketing opportunity, but too many emails are packed with dry, boring content that no one wants to read. Stand out from competitors and inspire your audience with email copy that creates excitement.

Ideas include:

  • Illustrating the benefits of following your advice: For example, a financial adviser shouldn’t just say it’s wise to invest in an IRA — they should say it’s wise to invest in an IRA so you can retire early
  • Peppering your copy with solutions: This doesn’t mean pitching your products through your email, but it does mean you can mention them as natural solutions to common problems. Plant the idea that there is an easy way for customers to enjoy the benefits of your advice
  • Adding large, intriguing images to your email newsletters: Visually engage your audience with images that create desire and inspire

Excitement motivates action, and there’s no better platform to consistently create excitement than email.

3. Automate your email newsletter

You probably know email is one of the most affordable ways to market your business. Did you know email automation tools make it one of the easiest?

Identify ways to automate your email marketing so you can focus efforts on business optimization and growth. Start with an opt-in subscribe form that automatically triggers a series of pre-set emails — your nurturing campaign.

Design your campaign to earn trust and ultimately sales. Ideas include:

  • Repurposing website and blog content into a series of helpful emails
  • Interviewing customers and publishing case studies subscribers will relate too (show them solutions)
  • Developing a nurture campaign in which you send a series of purely informational emails, capped by a final email that includes a special promotional offer

How often should you send emails? One study found that 48 percent of consumers prefer to hear from companies on a weekly basis, but you can send emails more frequently as long as you’re not spamming subscribers.

No matter how frequently you send emails, take advantage of email automation to consistently place your messaging in front of a receptive audience. That way, the inevitable business problems and priorities that pop up won’t derail your email campaign — it will be on autopilot!

4. Include a call to action

Your emails shouldn’t be overt sales pitches, but you can still design your email newsletter for sales. Most emails you send should include a compelling call to action (CTA).

Ideas include:

  • Placing a CTA at the end of your informational copy
  • Placing a CTA in an email sidebar or in one of your email layout blocks
  • Adding CTA buttons to article teasers, then making your pitch on-site
  • Sending a series of emails and reserving your pitch and CTA for the last in the series

Remember, people subscribe to your email newsletter for the promise of its value. If you’re overly promotional, they’ll unsubscribe. Focus on providing value, then strategically place CTAs to motivate responses. That’s how you create a winning email newsletter for sales.

Email newsletter examples

Find inspiration in the following email newsletter examples.

This email by Real Adventures delivers value with insights into traveling in Cuba. At the end, it features a clear CTA for its app.

real adventures email newsletter

This automated welcome email by Patagonia explains the company’s mission and dedication to environmental and social responsibility — things new subscribers and potential customers are likely to be interested in. Then, it delivers a call to action for its Patagonia Provisions.

patagonia email newsletter

Oscar’s monthly newsletter features informational health and insurance articles. It’s a good example of how you can repurpose blog content into an email newsletter. Each story includes a CTA to read more on the blog, and the email ends with a call to action to follow the company on social media.

oscar email newsletter

The IFTTT email newsletter offers tips and tricks — or “recipes” as they call them — for using its platform to accomplish specific tasks. These tasks offer value to subscribers and encourage engagement with IFTTT.

IFTTT email newsletter

Remember, the most effective email newsletters offer value and limit the sales pitch. Use these tips to craft the compelling content your audience yearns for and create excitement for your products and services. Then, deliver a natural CTA that motivates subscribers to take the next step in the purchasing process.

Join 140,000 small business owners

Get expert tips and email inspiration delivered to your inbox every two weeks.

© 2019, Brian Morris. All rights reserved.

The post How to use email newsletters to nurture sales appeared first on VerticalResponse Blog.



from VerticalResponse Blog https://ift.tt/2HYAeZK
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What is a Local Citation? Local SEO

In simple SEO terms, a local citation refers to any mention of your company online. This could be in a business directory, or on an industry-specific site, a blog or any other local website. Although local citations can help you rank in local search results, they are no longer a major ranking factor . However, they are still worth considering in order to promote your business. Common citations you are likely to already know of include listings on business directory websites such as Yell or Thomson Local . A complete citation should include the name, address and phone number of your business. Local citations do not always include a link to your site although they are more valuable if they do. What do they do? Citations help rank your Google Local Pack listing (this was formerly called Google+ Local map) by providing Google with credible sources of information about your business. Citations tell Google that your business exists, is legitimate and that what you say about it is accur...

The beginner’s guide to semantic search: Examples and tools

Ever since Google’s Hummingbird, the term “semantic search” has been thrown around a lot. Yet, the concept is often misunderstood. What is semantic search and how it helps SEO efforts? When people speak to each other, they understand more than just words. They understand the context, non-verbal cues  (facial expressions, nuances of the voice, etc.) and so much more. It comes naturally, so we don’t really appreciate how difficult it is to explain what is being communicated without the help of all “beyond-words” signals. Factors that make the lives of both Google and SEO so difficult Google is trying (and often struggling) to understand what it is that their users want (without actually seeing or hearing them) SEOs are trying to reverse-engineer what it is that Google managed to understand from their users’ queries and how to build pages that meet those mysterious criteria. As Google’s algorithm is getting more mature, it is becoming even more difficult to decode what...

7 Boring SEO Tasks You Can Automate to Save One Day Per Week

An SEO expert’s day is filled with a plentitude of activities to rank well on Google , starting with taking care of basic content quality to backlinks, site structure, mobile user experience, and other technical features. Not to mention having to squeeze the time spent on each task between meetings, conference calls, emails, and urgent projects, which take up a large portion of the week. Before you can even think about finishing less-important SEO tasks, you are already running out of time. The truth is some tasks are too boring to complete at the end of a tiring day. But you can’t leave it on the table to handle some other day, as it will only overshadow other, more important tasks. So, what’s the way out? The good news is advanced online tools can handle your boring SEO tasks, helping you save at least one day per week for creative activities. Here are some of the boring SEO tasks you can automate now and save yourself from performing these tedious activities. 1. Automate SE...