Quick Tip: What Fonts to Use

April 30, 2009 No comments »

What font type should be used with HTML emails?

Have you ever received an email that has bright pink cursive font on a dark pink background? Pretty tough to read. This may be an extreme example, but don’t make it a challenge to read the copy in your emails. Your subscribers are already busy and if they afford you the compliment of opening your email, don’t screw it up by trying to get fancy with your font.

Aim for readability which is generally on the basic end for body copy. Stick to text fonts that are 10 or 12 point, in either Verdana, Arial or Times New Roman.

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Other posts you might find of interest:

Best Day to Send Email

Introduction to Email Segmentation

Email List Building Mistakes

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Quick Tip: Maximum Width for HTML Emails

April 28, 2009 No comments »

What should my maximum width be for my HTML email newsletter?

With HTML emails, it’s good to watch your image dimensions. Your subscribers should not have to scroll to the right to see your full email.  To be safe, it is recommended to have a max width of 600-650 pixels. On a more conservative approach, you would have a maximum width of 550-575 pixels.

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Other posts you might find of interest:

Best Day to Send Email

Email List Building Mistakes

Intro to Email Segmentation

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Best Day to Send Email

April 22, 2009 No comments »

A question often asked is “what is the best day to send emails?” And of course the answer… “Well, it depends.”

Too many marketers try to follow ‘day of week’ trends from big stats groups. I recommend against paying too much attention to what national surveys say for two reasons:

A. If a report says ‘Tuesday’ is the best day to send, and everyone in the country starts sending on Tuesday (I know it’s a bit exaggerated), then Tuesday would quickly diminish in quality with everyone being blasted with emails.

B. More importantly — every industry is different, every company is different, and every list has the capability of behaving differently.

So then what is the best day to send email? Let’s look at a few elements:

1. B2B or B2C? If your subscriber persona is a strict 9-5 business employee, then Friday at 4 or over the weekend probably isn’t the best idea.

2. Are Weekends Always Bad? No. In the example above, I wouldn’t recommend weekends. But what about a B2C product that targets mothers age 35-45? Might they be logging in some email checking over the weekend? I vote yes. I had one client that tested a weekday vs. weekend for a similar type of audience and saw a 85% increase in conversion with the weekend groups.

3. What about Monday? Going off of the 1st example, Monday probably isn’t too great either (aren’t you quite busy getting back to work on Monday?). This leaves us with 3-4 days for testing our B2B sends.

4. So Tues/Wed/Thurs for B2B? That looks like a decent starting point, but still does not completely answer our question of what the best day is to send email.

What to Do:

A. Know what you want to accomplish. Is your main goal a quick read for a timely notice, a click through to read more content, a click through and purchase of a product? etc…

B. Understand your recipient’s profile. Create a persona around them and among other things, determine what they are doing at different times and on different days. When will they be most likely to engage in the way that you want them to?

C. Use some common sense to eliminate some possibilities.

D. TEST. We love to throw this around, but it’s true. Do some day of week and time of day testing and you may be very surprised at what you find. If there is a huge difference, then great – you have now identified some valuable information for YOUR email program. If after significant testing you find microscopic difference between day 1, 2, or 3 then you now have some flexibility.

E. Test again.

For those marketers that don’t want to take the time to work through the elements above and must have a quick answer, I vote Wednesday at 3:00pm or Thursday at 9:30am

- Forest Bronzan

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Other posts you might find of interest:

Introduction to Email Segmentation

Email List Building Mistakes

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Good Email Elements from AAdvantage

April 17, 2009 No comments »

In my last post on dynamic email content from American Airlines, I pointed out some cool geographic segmentation they were combining with a dynamic template. Looking again at that same email, there were other elements that AAdvantage did quite well with.

AAdvantage-email-marketing

3 Good Elements from the Screen Grab Above

1. Pre-Header Options: They have two links for ‘view mobile version’ and ‘view as a web page’ . A common used practice is: “Click here if you have having trouble viewing this email” — or something similar. Here they do provide the web version but also mobile — very nice.

2. Ensure Delivery: In the upper right you will see a text link titled, “Ensure delivery” — I don’t see this too often, at least not in this form. Email marketers most often have a line of copy reading: “To ensure delivery of future emails, please add newsletter@xyzcorp.com to your address book.” Here, they provide a link to a landing page with actual instructions for different email providers (pasted below). I don’t know how effective this is, but it’s a nice addition to cover their bases.

3. Personalization: While there are more direct ways to make an email personal and targeted, they do a nice job here of providing options that are useful to me. A link to log in to my account, view my favorite restaurants, or access my account center. These dynamic URLs help integrate my user experience and make the process one step easier.

Landing page from the ‘Ensure Delivery’ link in the email

AAdvantage-Ensure-Delivery

- Forest Bronzan

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