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	<title>DoublePlus &#187; Marketing Sherpa</title>
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	<description>Ecommerce for the Rest of Us</description>
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		<title>40 Things I Learned at the Marketing Sherpa Email Summit</title>
		<link>http://www.doubleplus.com/marketing-sherpa-email-summit.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.doubleplus.com/marketing-sherpa-email-summit.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Feb 2010 04:38:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Petracco</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[conference]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[email marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Email Summit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marketing Sherpa]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.doubleplus.com/?p=368</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>In January I was lucky enough to attend the Marketing Sherpa Email Summit in Miami for absolutely nothing. Quite literally, all I paid for was gas for the drive down, parking, and my hotel room. I was the lucky winner of a free ticket to the summit itself, the pre-workshop the day before, a VIP party, dinner in South Beach, the Gala dinner and party poolside...pretty much everything the event had to offer.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_374" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 216px"><img src="http://www.doubleplus.com/wp-content/susan-jason.jpg" alt="Me and &quot;Big Jason&quot; Henderson" title="susan-jason" width="206" height="276" class="size-full wp-image-374" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Me and Big Jason Henderson</p></div>
<p>In January I was lucky enough to attend the Marketing Sherpa Email Summit in Miami for absolutely nothing. Quite literally, all I paid for was gas for the drive down, parking, and my hotel room. I was the lucky winner of a free ticket to the summit itself, the pre-workshop the day before, a VIP party, dinner in South Beach, the Gala dinner and party poolside&#8230;pretty much everything the event had to offer. And for this wonderful package I have to offer a belated but truly heartfelt thank you to Jason Henderson of <a href="http://www.bigmarketingonline.com">Big Marketing</a>, Erick Mott and the team at <a href="http://www.lyris.com">Lyris</a>, and Todd Lebo and everyone else from <a href="http://www.marketingsherpa.com">Marketing Sherpa</a>. All were tons of fun to hang out with and I learned a lot at the conference that I was able to bring back and put into action. So I wanted to share the top forty takeaways from my two-and-a-half-day jaunt down I-95 to Miami.</p>
<p><span id="more-368"></span></p>
<div id="attachment_375" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><img src="http://www.doubleplus.com/wp-content/susan-lyris-300x180.jpg" alt="Me and the Lyris Team" title="susan-lyris" width="300" height="180" class="size-medium wp-image-375" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Me and the Lyris Team</p></div>
<ol>
<li>&#8220;Adequecy is the enemy of excellence.&#8221; <em>Dr. Flint McGlaughlin of Marketing Experiments</em></li>
<li>On email signup forms, consider the offer &#8211; are you just offering the newsletter? Gee. Wow. What&#8217;s the incentive in signing up for a newsletter? Instead, offer something useful.</li>
<li>Use specific statements of quantity, not vague statements of quality.</li>
<li>Your copy should focus on what the customer gets from your company, not what your company gets from the customer.</li>
<li>Your call-to-action should communicate value.</li>
<li>Don&#8217;t offer a conclusion about your company. Offer hard facts that lead the reader to an inevitable conclusion.</li>
<li>Use images to create value. If the hero shot or smiley-faced girl doesn&#8217;t communicate anything of value, replace it with something that does &#8211; and use it to guide the customer&#8217;s eyes.</li>
<li>Every button should make a promise, should tell you what you&#8217;re going to get.</li>
<li>&quot;Free&quot; is good. &quot;Completely free&quot; is better. &quot;Fully-functioning, completely free&quot; is even better.</li>
<li>Link to your privacy policy on your signup form. (It can open in a popup window.)</li>
<li>There is no one optimal sending frequency &#8211; it differs for everyone. TEST.</li>
<li>Address the consumer&#8217;s needs and how you can fix those needs.</li>
<li>The only goal of your email is a click from the recipient, not a sale. The landing page leads to the sale.</li>
<li>It&#8217;s important to know how few of your repeat customers are responsible for what percentage of your sales. For example, 12% of Coke customers are responsible for 80% of its sales.</li>
<li>Customer retention is both relegated to the back office, and in and of itself fragmented/diluted. <em>Joseph Jaffe, Author of Flip the Funnel</em></li>
<li>When it comes to social media, people don&#8217;t want to talk to shoes, but shoes keep trying to talk to people!</li>
<li>Lead nurturing is a relevant and consistent dialog with viable potential customers regardless of their timing to buy.</li>
<li>In B2B it&#8217;s important to focus on lead nurturing &#8211; 80% of marketing leads wind up lost, ignored, or discarded.</li>
<li>Existing site traffic is full of potential subscribers, so optimize your best entry paths (look at your analytics) and lead them to your subscription forms.</li>
<li>Segment your lists for more effective email marketing &#8211; &#8220;batch and blast&#8221; is the past.</li>
<li>In B2B marketing, the name of the sender affects open rates twice as much as the subject of the email.</li>
<li>In social media, your audience is made up of three groups &#8211; silent majority, vocal minority, social authority. The latter has the highest ability to spread your word.</li>
<li>Connect with subscribers wherever they are &#8211; this is the intersection of social and email.</li>
<li>Enable campaigns with social sharing buttons &#8211; 89% who use it say it effectively extends their reach to new markets. <em>Sergio Balegno of Marketing Sherpa</em></li>
<li>Turn your fans into an outside sales force.</li>
<li>Before you send out your newsletter, send out tweet asking people to subscribe.</li>
<li>Track who is sharing to segment the vocal minority or social authority from the silent majority.</li>
<li>Email is about sending your site to people. <em>Dela Quist of Alchemy Worx</em>.</li>
<li>Traffic is expensive &#8211; eyeballs cost money.</li>
<li>Consider affiliates, co-brand deals, licensing, natural search, paid search, tv press, sponsorships, list rental, and opt in email&#8230;of these, opt-in email is by far the cheapest.</li>
<li>Strike up a co-registration deal with someone in a similar but not competing market. The best co-reg deals are barter/trade and don&#8217;t cost you (or the other company) anything.</li>
<li>For many companies, double opt-in subscriptions are really overkill&#8230;how hard is it, really, to just unsubscribe? (Don&#8217;t take this as advice from me, it&#8217;s a paraphrased quote!) However, double-optin is preferred for co-reg, sweeps, and 3rd-party leads.</li>
<li>Make sure your email has value, not just relevance.</li>
<li>Sources of opt-in names can be newsletter offers, customer service call-ins, trade events, tele-prospecting.</li>
<li>Make emails easy to forward to a friend. Then ask your subscribers to do so!</li>
<li>Best placement for email signup forms is top left or right, &quot;above the fold&quot;, and on every page of your site.</li>
<li>Use benefit-oriented language in your signup form.</li>
<li>Make sure there&#8217;s at least one form field and not just a button, because people are used to seeing form fields and that field is the widget that their eyes are used to associating with signing up for something.</li>
<li>Tell people how often the emails will come when they sign up.</li>
<li><div id="attachment_378" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 114px"><img src="http://www.doubleplus.com/wp-content/cricketlolly.jpg" alt="Cricket Lollipop" title="cricketlolly" width="104" height="170" class="size-full wp-image-378" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Cricket Lollipop</p></div><br />
And finally, even kids don&#8217;t want to eat lollipops with dead crickets in them, even if they are a novel idea. Thanks anyway, <a href="http://www.bamboocricket.com">Bamboo Cricket</a>, at least I can guarantee I won&#8217;t forget your name!</li>
</ol>
<p><em>Note: Cricket lollipop photo courtesy of <a href="http://store.offbeattreats.com">Offbeat Treats</a>.</em></p>
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