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Tips for email marketing campaigns

Email marketing is ‘easy’ and ‘inexpensive’, meaning that anyone can create a strategy, an online business resource has told.

However, to make the campaign successful it needs to engage readers and build trust, a representative from Emma told Ecommerce Guide.

When sending out emails they should be relevant to the interests of the subscribers and strike the right balance between content and image Emma’s Suzanne Norman told the resource.

Her eight tips included letting the design and message ‘flow’ from the original message a business wanted its campaign to communicate.

The marketing campaign should also be consistent with the business brand and ultimate message, she added.

As with all campaigns, it is important the reader is engaged straight away by using a well-crafted and intriguing subject line in the subscription email.

Ms Norman added that it was also important to make the correspondence personal.

‘Try segmenting your list so you can personalise the content based on the audience group to which you’re sending,’ she advised.

In a blog that offers advice to businesses, Ecommerce Guide contributor Jennifer Shiff advised businesses designing online campaigns to ‘never offer a product or service or make a commitment you cannot fulfil’.


Manchester Free Software: ‘Free Software in Ethics and Practice’ - speaker: Richard Stallman

Manchester Free Software: ‘Free Software in Ethics and Practice’ - speaker: Richard Stallman

Thursday 1st May, 2008 - Talk starts at 6:45pm (ends approx. 8:30pm) with refreshments from 6:15pm.

Venue: Room D1, Renold Building, University of Manchester, Sackville Street, Manchester M1 3BB

There is no need to book a place - just turn up on the night.

Abstract

Richard Stallman will speak about the Free Software Movement, which campaigns for freedom so that computer users can cooperate to control their own computing activities. The Free Software Movement developed the GNU operating system, often erroneously referred to as Linux, specifically to establish these freedoms.
About the speaker

Richard Stallman launched the development of the GNU operating system (see www.gnu.org) in 1984. GNU is free software: everyone has the freedom to copy it and redistribute it, as well as to make changes either large or small. The GNU/Linux system, basically the GNU operating system with Linux added, is used on tens of millions of computers today. Stallman has received the ACM Grace Hopper Award, a MacArthur Foundation fellowship, the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Pioneer award, and the the Takeda Award for Social/Economic Betterment, as well as several honorary doctorates.