Email Marketing, A call to action is a Call
by Monte Huebsch
Published on this site: July 27th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

Successful email marketing campaigns are a result of calls
to action that get results. What results are expected from
an email marketing campaign? Usually they are either a click
to a web site or a phone call to a 1-800 or 800 number.
In today's spam controlled environment, many emails just
do not get through, even those that are desired, double opt-in
and legitimate. Estimates are as high as 20% rejection. The
frustration is that the email marketeers do not even know.
These email are not bounced, just caught in nondelivery spam
traps.
Of those that do get through, often only 50 percent get opened.
Things start to get frustrating at this point, and this is
even before a call to action is viewed.
Let's assume that your email is now open on the viewer's
screen. It better be quick and to the point. The call to action
needs to be urgent and relevant.
One call to action is to direct the reader to a web site,
where you hope that another call to action will result in
the desired reader behaviour. This is usually to buy something
as you already have their email address so this is not your
goal.
Your email may also have a call to action that seeks a phone
call. This can be better in that there is not a two-step process
between you and the reader. The downside is many readers will
put off making the call until later. (This often happens with
a click to a web site call to action as well). Additionally,
more and more we are becoming reluctant to call, as we never
know when a machine will answer us. We do not have the time
or desire to press 1, 2 or 3. We don't want to be placed in
a queue and told our call maybe recorded for training purposes.
We want to talk to a live human being.
For the email marketeer the best outcome is a sale. This
can be easily achieved if the company supporting the emails
is willing and prepared to provide real customer service and
transform lookers into bookers. All that is required is a
proactive technology that makes out bound calls and a compelling
call to action.
If you saw a banner or button that said. We will call you
right now. No charge to you. No waiting in a queue. Talk to
a real person. Click here for . (what ever your value proposition
is), do think this would work?
Well it does. Research has shown that closure rates in shopping
carts and on booking engines can go from low single digits
i.e. 1.4% - 3.8% to as high at 29.7%
Its not that we won't use a web site for a transaction or
pick up the phone and make a call. It's just that often there
is one small unanswered question in our self-serve process.
For a hotel booking, it may be if a cot is available if we
have small children. For an airfare, it may be about wheel
chair access. A quick call will seal the sale if it is answered
by a human and dealt with quickly, personally and efficiently.
For the email-marketing program, the option to add push to
talk technology is now a non-decision. The service can be
set up for free. There are no recurring fees or minimum usage
charges. The only cost in the call costs. Which email marketing
campaign would not try this technology when no risk exists?
Worse case is too many buyers!
We found out long ago that the paperless office was a myth
and never occurred. We are now finding out that the people-less
sale is just as elusive. To make sales, especially big ones,
we need personal and immediate contact. It is your phone manner
not your email marketing program that determine your success
when you use push to talk technology.

Monte Huebsch, www.MonteHuebsch.com
is the author of www.InternetProfit.com.au
a Certified Management C and the CEO of www.WeCallYouNow.com
and www.CarHold.com
He employs push to talk technology in all his email marketing
campaigns and web sites

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