Take this quiz developed by Lyris' strategic account manager to see how well you're nurturing your relationship with email subscribers.
The relationship you have with your email subscribers is just like dating: You meet, get together a few times, and before you know it, you're going together. You'd like nothing better than to make it permanent, but the decision isn't entirely up to you. How can you tell if your relationship is altar-bound or heading for the Big Break-up? Take my quiz, and find out!
Give yourself one point for every statement that describes you. A low score means you need to overhaul your program; a high one means you can look forward to a long and happy email relationship.
- You're easy to get to know, but you don't come on too strong. You give browsers the opportunity to subscribe everywhere they come in contact with you: a link to your registration page on every page of your website; an invitation in any emailed correspondence; offline registrations at trade shows, point of purchase or even personal contact. At the same time, you never try to force the relationship by using a checked box on the registration page or buying a list and emailing to anyone that didn't ask to meet you. And, you don't force them to fill out a detailed demographic profile before getting to the opt-in. That's like asking too many personal questions before they agree to the first date.
- What they see is what they'll get. You describe your email program in depth at your site, offering to show a sample mailing and giving them the opportunity to tell you what they want with options for content, format and frequency. You also tell potential dates exactly how you will use the information they give you and link to a privacy policy written in plain language, not legalese.
- You show your new friends how glad you are to get to know them. You acknowledge all subscription requests immediately by confirming opt-ins and then sending out a welcome message that recaps what they signed up for, introduces them to your program, and invites them to deepen the relationship by telling you more about themselves on a detailed preference page. You even sweeten the deal with a special email-only offer, like a discount coupon, a collection of "best-of" articles or other thoughtful touches that make you stand out in the crowd(ed inbox). You also show them you remain interested throughout the relationship by contacting them if you see they haven't been opening your messages and asking what's wrong.
- You respect them and their preferences. If they said they want to see you only once a week, you don't call them every day to see if they want to go out. If they want to receive only site updates, you don't send sale flyers. You never pass their names on to your buddies if they just want to be alone with you.
- You pay attention to them all the way through the relationship. You notice when they begin to withdraw from you, when they stop opening or responding to your messages. Instead of drifting apart, you create targeted mailings just for them, with special offers or invitations so they know you are thinking of them.
- If they want to break up, you exit gracefully and try to stay friends. No matter how hard you try, not every subscriber relationship lasts forever. Often, it's not you, it's them. Their needs or lives change, and you don't have a place anymore. Instead of trying to cling to them and hope they stay, you make it easy for them to walk away by honoring their unsubscribes immediately and not begging them to come back in follow-up emails. It might just be a temporary thing after all; if you part on good terms, they'll find it easier to come back to you.
Scoring
0-1: With that kind of spam breath, how did you get anyone to go out with you in the first place? You have a lot of work to do, buddy; better hop to it.
2-3: You might start out strong but you risk losing your hard-earned friendships through inattention or carelessness.
4-5: Nice job! But you can always do better. If you missed one or two, see how you can change to increase your chances of having a long and productive life with your subscribers.
6: You really know how to treat a subscriber right. Congratulations! (That's assuming you were honest; remember, subscribers can spot a phony a mile off and will report you as a spammer they think you're trying to pull a fast one.)
Wendy Roth is the strategic account manager for Lyris Technologies. Read full bio.