Email Marketing
Where it started for me… and what I wish I knew back then!
I remember when I first started using email marketing – it was a long time ago, and I was dabbling with two platforms, Aweber and OfficeAutoPilot (which no longer exists!).
I had no idea what I was doing (literally!), other than trying to emulate what I saw a few people doing in other industries.
I was a big advocate of self-improvement, and along the way, I came across a ton of new ideas and examples of how others were making them work in their businesses.
Back then, the marketing names being flaunted as ‘the go-to guys’ (at least in my circles) included Dan Kennedy, Joe Polish, Dean Jackson, Gary Halbert, Dan Sullivan, Chris Cardell, Jay Abraham... the list goes on, mostly all USA-based.
In those days, “squeeze pages” were all the rage (now referred to as ‘landing pages’) – the ‘best-practice’ tactic was to create them and drive traffic using paid ads (content marketing wasn’t even a ‘thing’ back then).
I remember being taught that on a squeeze page, you must NOT give visitors a chance to do anything other than subscribe to your list – no links to a privacy policy, no menu options, no links to T&Cs, don’t even let them navigate away – and once on your list, “sell until they buy or die“!! 😳
Fast forward to today and thankfully the approach to email marketing has completely changed – which is a good thing as it’s now a much richer digital channel, one that’s nuanced and more powerful than ever before.
Today, to be effective, you need to acknowledge;
- Email marketing is just one component of a client attraction system
- People demand privacy and control of their data
- Subscribers don’t allow you into their inboxes as easily as before
- Your email marketing system is an ever-evolving layer of your biz
- You need to add value or your subscribers will reach for the unsubscribe link
The one thing that hasn’t changed over the years is the effectiveness and high ROI email marketing brings – quoted at 42:1 way back when (in other words, for every $1 you invest, you can expect $42 in return), and today being widely accepted as at least 36:1 (data source: Statista).