Building a contact list is like building a house.
There are endless ways to do it, but shoddy and careless workmanship –
in a matter of seconds -- will obliterate the work you’ve done.
As a business, you can’t afford to blow your reputation through
careless email practices. And as an email marketing
service, we want you to build a list that’s air-tight, legitimate
and filled with your best customers.
List building: red flags
You finally have your list together,
but do you know if it’s legitimate? Read more to avoid the common
pitfalls of contact lists.
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The
list is old or outdated
This is a wide time window that ranges from a just a few months
to a few years, depending on the nature of your business. According
to Return Path, more than 30% of people change email addresses in
a single year. This makes it critical to keep your list fresh. Benchmark
suggests that you: |
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Contact customers frequently so
they don’t forget you |
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Send customers
a “remember me?” email to re-confirm their sign up
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The
list is a hand-me-down
Suppose you receive a list from a colleague who swears it’s
filled with customers waiting for emails from you specifically.
You can a) take this person at their word or b) make absolutely
certain that the list is legitimate. Benchmark Email suggests that
you:
Send
a double opt-in email for customers to re-confirm their sign up |
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The list was
created through email harvesting
Email harvesting (trolling Websites and newsgroups for email addresses
to create your list) is not only highly unethical, it violates the
federal CAN-SPAM Act: government-set rules and guidelines for email
practices. It’s also extraordinarily easy to get caught.
Email harvesters should proceed at their own peril – the
axe is dropping fast. A $1
billion lawsuit has been filed against email harvesters and
experts say it will definitely make its way into court. If your
list was created through email harvesting, Benchmark strongly suggests
that you:
Start
over and build your own list |
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The list was created through opt-outs
The problem with opt-outs, the practice of “piggybacking”
on email subscriptions to other publications (quite often using pre-checked
boxes), is not illegal and not considered to be entirely unethical.
But it’s a terrible way to build a list. Imagine
running a Website that sells antique boat oars. You hammer out an
agreement with a very popular sporting site. When the sporting site’s
customers sign up to receive emails, they also have the option of
checking a box that says they’d like to receive emails on
boating. Once that box is checked, you have permission to send those
customers emails as well.
Here’s the big problem. What are the chances
that the customer who checked that box will connect the dots, even
hours later, that you – specifically – should be sending
them emails? Probably not very good. This is how abuse complaints
are made. In Benchmark’s opinion, the opt-out method is far
too vague to truly build a good permission list. Benchmark suggests
that you:
Send
a double opt-in email asking them to re-confirm their sign up |
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The list was
bought rather than cultivated
There are thousands of businesses that sell or “rent”
lists, but we strongly suggest that you pass this up. Why? Many reasons.
The list can be outdated. It could have been harvested. It could contain
“honey trap” email addresses that are specifically created
to trap spammers. If you buy or rent a list, you can never be sure
how it was created. Benchmark suggests that you never buy or rent
a list. If you do, Benchmark suggests that you: Start
over and create your own list |
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Overall, Benchmark strongly suggests that you only
use ethical practices and double opt-in methods to build your list.
It may take a bit longer than you’d like, but in the end it
saves time, money and the reputation of your business. |
Single
opt-in vs. double opt-in
Single opt-in means your customers signed up or
verbally agreed to receive your emails or newsletters. It means what it
says – they opted in once. Double opt-in means that customers not
only agreed to hear from you, but they also confirmed that in an email.
While it’s far easier to build a single opt-in list, the results
are often less-than-stellar. Read on to find out why.
Single opt-in headaches
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Customer
doesn’t remember signing up
Many people receive hundreds of emails a day, both legit
and not legit. Even though your customer shook your hand or passed
along a business card, thus granting you permission to send them
email, there’s no guarantee that the customer will connect
those few pleasant moments with the email you’re sending.
They may simply delete your email or worse – hit the dreaded
Spam Button.
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Someone
else (other than the customer) signed up
Remember those boxes that ask you to sign up five
of your friends to receive emails? This is a sure way to get abuse
complaints, even if the person who signed up their friends/family
meant well.
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Customers signed
up for list via Opt-out
This is particularly insidious. This is when you
sign up for an email list only
to see various (sometimes pre-checked) boxes asking you if you want
to also receive emails on various subjects (fly fishing, electronics,
you name it). The biggest problem? Many times the customer does
not remember signing up for a specific email from you, even if it
falls under the category that happily check marked in the not-so-distant
past.
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Why double opt-in is king
Think of double opt-in as your get out of jail free card. It’s an
easy way to protect the reputation of your business.
Double opt-in is a two-step
process:
Step 1: A
customer signs up or agrees to receive your emails.
Step 2: Customer
confirms their sign up in a second (autoresponder) email.
While some customers may not take that second
step, the ones that do are telling you (and ISPs) that they are certain
that your mail is not spam. Hence, if you later send an email to a double
opt-in customer and they shout “Abuse!” or hit the Spam Button,
you have air tight, solid proof that you’re in the right.
Cleaning your lists
List hygiene is the practice of keeping your list clean of email addresses
that go nowhere. By keeping these emails on your list, you’re wasting
your own time and resources. But if you trim your list often, you’ll
end up with a list of the best kind: lean, focused and full of your best
customers. Here’s a guide to the different kinds of bounced emails
and how often you should clean your list.
Soft bounces
Soft bounces are emails that are returned to you, unopened, for various
reasons. They may get through later, but they’re not getting through
now. These may include:
• Person has changed email accounts (and no longer
opens this email)
• Email box is full
• Server is busy
Hard bounces
Hard bounces are emails that come back to you for more final reasons.
You can remove these hard bounces in our system by clicking on the CLEAN
LISTS tab. The reason some emails “hard bounce” include
• Email account is no longer valid
• Domain no longer exists
• Email address is misspelled
• Email address has syntax errors (for example: joeschmo@msncom
or joe.schmoe@msn.com)
No responses (a gray area)
No responses are emails you send that are never opened, but never deleted.
They don’t bounce, but they do nothing for your business. There
may be many reasons for the lack of response, but as a general rule of
thumb you should seriously consider removing these email addresses if
you’ve gone through four or five cycles with no response.
Cleaning your list
Benchmark Email gives you the option of cleaning your list. You can do
this in the campaign stage, or simply by clicking on the CLEAN LISTS tab.
So, how often should you clean your list? It depends on the following
factors:
• How big your list is
• What your response rate is
• The number of hard and soft bounces your list generates
Benchmark believes you should clean your list after every
campaign you send. Your list may become smaller, but your remaining emails
will target the customers that truly want to hear from you.
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