Need help building a permission-based email list? Keep reading for more
info.
One thing is certain: as an email marketer, your list is something to
be cherished. But creating a good, permission-based list is not always
easy, and there are many pitfalls. One wrong move and you can find yourself
blacklisted. Here's what to look out for when building or using your list:
When starting from scratch:
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Start with a strategy
Before you build your list, you have to think long and hard
about a few important things. Who will be on that email marketing
list? Will you use opt-in or double opt-in? Where will you get your
email addresses? Map those things out first before you start building
your email marketing list. |
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Come up with a system
The best thing you can do is plan out a multi-pronged way
to get email addresses. Have a brick and mortar store? Ask people
to sign up when they purchase something. Have a Website? Going to
a convention? Gather email addresses there. Just remember one thing.
Wherever you gather your email addresses, make sure you have some
proof of permission from your customers. |
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Use a list builder
If you have a Website, you must have a list
builder on every single page if you want to grab all the email
addresses you can. You can set up this list builder to take more
than email addresses, including names, birth dates, types of items
the customer is interested in and more. With Benchmark, you can
build a customized list builder. Once you place the list builder
code on your site, every single person that signs up gets automatically
added to your email list. |
Working with an older list:
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Re-validate older
email addresses
Suppose you have a list, but you haven't used it in a while.
What to do? Well, first off, you must re-validate the email addresses
on that list because up to 30% of email addresses change every year.
You can do this by sending a plain, text-based email with a confirmation
link. Tell your customers you're reviving your email marketing newsletter
and you need to know if they still want to be on your list. If they
do, they can click on the link and they'll automatically be added
to your email list. |
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Be dubious of inherited
lists
If an old co-worker hands you a list and says you have permission
to email everyone on that list, be skeptical. The main reason? It's
quite possible that those email addresses were gathered through
non opt-in methods. If you must use that list, try our Permission
Pass System. It'll help you get confirmation from all the people
on that list. |
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Never use a purchased
or rented list
It seems so tempting. For some cash, you can have an entire
list of email addresses without having to build the list yourself.
However, remember one thing: good email marketing is about explicit
permission. The people on that list have not given you explicit
permission to email them. To complicate things further, many email
service providers set up “honeypot” addresses to weed
out spammers. A honeypot is an address posted online somewhere,
but since it doesn't belong to a real person, the people who send
to it are most likely “harvesting” email addresses from
Websites. Once your email arrives in the inbox of the honeypot,
the email or Internet service provider that set it up will see it.
And then it's all over. |
So here's our info in nutshell form. Build your own list
and if you must use an inherited list, be cautious about doing so. Follow
opt-in practices as well as these
tips and you'll safeguard your email marketing campaigns against spam
complaints and blacklists.
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