name any four actions you can perform with email account
Answers
Answer:
i don't know can you tell plz
Step 1: The Subject Line
The subject line of your email is the one chance you have to grab someone’s attention. And when you’re writing to an audience that isn’t obligated to read your messages, you need to follow some best practices. For example:
Be specific. What exactly can the recipient expect to find inside the email? Give your audience clues so they can quickly and accurately assess whether to open your email, save it for later, or delete it. If your email is communicating a change in HR benefits at your company, it should clearly state as much. If your email to customers is about a new feature you’re deploying, that should be obvious.
Be honest. Although we live in a world full of click-bait, you don’t want to do the bait and switch. Catchy, engaging, fun headlines are fantastic, but if they promise something that your email doesn’t actually deliver, you’ll just turn off your audience.
Be creative. While being specific and honest is paramount, you also need to do what you can to pique people’s interest and give them a reason to open your email. While a subject line of “Updates to Our HR Policies” may be specific and honest, it’s also boring. Would an alternative like “Five Ways We’re Making [company name] a Better Place to Work” get more people engaged in what you’re communicating?
A/B Test. If you’re able to, come up with a number of different headlines and A/B test them to see which one gets the best result. That process could be as simple as circulating your top picks among a small group of co-workers to see which ones they like best. Or, you could do a more official A/B test via your marketing automation platform