English, asked by akshaygoud20, 5 months ago

Pointing a girl Bobby said , "she is the daughter of only sister of my father " how is the Bobby related to girl

Answers

Answered by ns8585527
0

answer

Downtown Tempe

The Power of the Inbox -- 5 Rules to Follow

Tag: Blog • Business

It's 2016 -- our inbox is saturated, our spam filters are cranked up and we just don't have the time to open every single email that pops up in the never ending list. So how do we leverage the power of our inbox in order to make our email marketing irresistible? The Marketing Symposium series continued last week, as Eric Olsen of Fasturtle, was so gracious to spend some time with Tempe area businesses to share his expertise on just that -- The Power of the Inbox.

If you want an audience that's eagerly anticipating your next email to drop in their inbox, then you'll want to follow the 5 rules below, but first...you might be asking yourself, "Why is email marketing so important?" In a nutshll, here's what you need to know:

Email is the #1 app used on smartphones -- more than half of all emails are opened on a mobile device

People read it -- 91% of people check their email daily and 88% check it on their smartphone

It's reliable -- email gets delivered 90+% of the time

It works everywhere -- email has 3x the conversion rate as social media and an average ROI of $44.25 for every $1 spent

Now...for the rules to follow:

Rule #1: Grow a Healthy List

There are 2 parts to this, the how and the where. The most important thing to remember is permission. You always want to get express consent, be straightforward, offer an option to opt-out and respect the privacy of others. While it's important to keep everything buttoned up for the how, you kinda wanna let loose for the where and take advantage of every opportunity to gather email sign ups. This might include events, QR codes (does anyone still use these?), sidewalk signs, fish bowls and text-to-join campaigns (we can't wait to jump on this).

*This is important -- don't forget to give people a reason to join your email list and establish proper expectations. Will you be educating them, providing them with insider updates or giving them access to exclusive deals? What you don't want to give them, is a reason to unsubscribe from your email list ; )

Rule #2: Create Great Content

Where does great content begin? By putting your audiences' needs and wants ahead of your own. Afterall, the content in your emails is for your audience, right? You don't want to be that email marketer that 38% of people unsubscribe from because your content is boring, or join the emails that 32% of people send to their spam filter because the content is not relevant to them. In addition to putting your audience first and being relevant, great email content should be enough but not too much, contain great images (90% of information processed by the brain is visual content) and turn some of your audiences' questions into content. For instance, we get a lot of questions about event venues in Downtown Tempe. That would be great email content for the audience who might be looking for this type of information -- "8 Event Spaces in Downtown Tempe".

Rule #3: Beautifully Branded Mobile-Friendly Template

You want people to recognize your brand in their inbox, and since we said that 88% of email users check their inboxes on mobile devices, it's extremely imporant to make sure your email marketing is optimized for mobile in addition to delivering a consistent look and feel.

Eric gave us a simple recipe in this particular area:

1 column template

3 images or less

20 lines of text or less

3-5 links

Call to Action above the scroll line

Sounds like a recipe for success to me!

Rule #4: Get Your Email Opened

But how will they see your amazing content if you can't even get them to open the email? Baby steps. There's nothing that says "open me" more than the combination of these four elements -- recognized sender, compelling subject line, good timing and easy social options. Did you know that more than 1/3 of people open an email based on the subject line? Remember...size matters, so keep it short!

Similar questions