11 Tips for Sending HTML Email to Your Subscribers
By Nick James
People view their emails through many different programs that treat each email differently -
Outlook, Lotus Notes, Gmail - and there are also many different screen sizes, from desktops to mobiles. Although we are all able to dictate our
own personal settings, people generally use the preview panes to view emails and have an email account that requires them to right click to download the images.
Busier inboxes mean marketers can no longer rely on pictures of fancy cars or pretty ladies to get the interactions they want, as all we see
is a box with a little red cross and the words "Right click here to download pictures. To protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic
download of this picture from the internet". What does this mean from a marketing perspective?
What it doesn't mean is that we
should stop being creative with our emails. It just means we need to test what our audiences like and make sure we include a good ratio of
text to imagery. Remember, people expect email to be interactive. We can use it to drive recipients to the web where we have a much more
flexible and live environment; your videos can play and people can submit forms and interact. The internet is much more standardized from
desktop to desktop so it is easier for you to test your campaigns on different web browsers, such as Explorer, Mozilla or Firefox, and
therefore have confidence that most people will get the same interactive experience.
Here are a few tips for optimizing your
emails for image blocking:
1. Design for the inbox
Do not just re-purpose an offline piece or webpage and dump it
into an email. You need to optimize what you are sending for the inbox while making sure the brand journey remains consistent from
email to web.
2. Use text before imagery and include your company name
Even with image blocking on, the recipient can still read
an introduction and know who the email is from before having to right click.
3. Host images online
Avoid embedding
images in your email as most firewalls will strip these out and people won't even be able to right click to see them.
4. Use headlines
People scan emails when they receive them so make sure you have meaningful headlines that your recipients
can pick out quickly to get an understanding of the content.
5. Do not use images for headings
Make sure
that relevant content is in text format. This will ensure recipients quickly know what you are trying to say without having to
right click to download designer titles.
6. Front load your sentences
Use keywords and hot topics early in
your paragraphs as people will not always read to the end of the line.
7. Repeat your calls to action
People are more likely to click on text than images, so write your actions out
and repeat them within your email.
8. Keep the design simple
Do not have too many color or competing pieces
of content, as there will be too much noise. Your recipients will delete your email rather than try to work out which elements are
important.
9. Make sure there is brand consistency from email to web
Create landing pages if necessary, but
ensure that when a recipient clicks on a link to the web they feel like they are on the same message journey.
10. Consider
your subject line and from address
These are the first pieces of information people will see when they get your email. If
they are not intriguing, the time you have spent on your creative and content will be wasted as people will delete the email without
even opening it.
11. Be a safe sender
Get people to add you as a safe sender as this will mean your images will
be downloaded automatically in the future.
Article Source: http://www.articlecity.com/articles/online_business/article_6822.shtml
Return
to Articles |