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> Get Articles > Email Marketing > Online Marketing: SPAM / Mass-Email Marketing

Online Marketing: SPAM / Mass-Email Marketing


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Aaron Turpen
aaronaaronzwebworkz.com

Aaronz WebWorkz
http://www.AaronzWebWorkz.com


Online Marketing: SPAM / Mass-Email Marketing

By Aaron Turpen of Aaronz WebWorkz



I'm undoubtedly broaching the most controversial subject for

Internet marketing. The title of this article shows the fine line

between a morally criminal way of thinking and a viable and

useful marketing tool. Sending SPAM (officially called UCE

or Unsolicited Commercial Email) is wrong - I will go into

the reasons for this later. However, sending commercial

email for advertising is an effective and low-cost way to

market your business or products.



Email marketing will probably be around for as long as the

Internet is alive and supports email protocols (or any

similar type of communication). Contrary to what some

would say, it also has its place. Advertising is a form of

communication. However, just like any other form of

advertising, there are rules governing this medium as well.



No matter what country you live in, some sort of free

speech law probably governs you. No matter which country

you're in, however, that free speech law does not give you

the right to take over the local newspaper and force them

to print whatever you want printed on the front page

because of your right to free speech. They are under no

obligation to pay for your free speech. The same applies

to the Internet. With email, the people receiving the

email or that person's ISP (and most likely several others

along the way) are flipping the bill for your message.

This is akin to walking into the newspaper and demanding

they print your words for free.



In addition to all of these moral issues, there are legal

ones to consider as well. There are several laws governing

the way that you are allowed to advertise anything anywhere

in the United States and elsewhere. Since government is

just a large committee of people making decisions (in most

places), it is always one step behind when it comes to

technology under the law. However, since the Internet is

really just a large cooperative of commercial and private

networks, it is a little more dynamic in its dealings with

"perpetrators." One network can effectively ban whomever

they deem a miscreant and others will eventually follow

suit as the offender moves through the different networks

to try and bypass the blockage.



With all of the hype and hysteria surrounding the use of

email as a marketing tool, why do people continue to use

it? Well...because it's effective. People wouldn't spend

the money to send junk mail through the post if it wasn't

effective and they wouldn't spend millions on a 30-second

commercial during the Super Bowl if it weren't effective as

well. If you follow some simple guidelines and use the

email marketing tool wisely, you can reap great rewards.



If you are selling a product or service which rarely leads

to residual sales to the same person or entity (i.e. they

buy it once and will probably never ask for it again -

coffins are a good example), then you can use email

marketing effectively. Why? Because you aren't building a

business name (aka "branding" your business) or consumer

trust. You are just making one-time contacts and make more

money by contacting en masse instead of by specifically

targeting customers. You aren't building lasting

relationships through your business.



There is nothing wrong with this business approach. For

some types of businesses, it is just a fact of life.

Customers don't need your product or service more than

once. There are still some rules of etiquette which you

should use when email advertising, however. Your

incentive for following them? Less negative feedback and

possibly higher return on your sales: more respect =

better chances of success.



The first rule to follow is to make sure that yourself or

the company you're paying to send out the emails includes a

short note to the recipient that explains where their email

came from. A hyperlink will suffice for this if you don't

personalize your mails from a database. Make sure that you

include the EXACT location they used to sign up for

whatever list they are on. Not only does this give them a

way to get off of that list, it also serves as a reminder

as to how they signed up to receive your emails in the

first place. If they opt-out of the list, then you're

better off for having an unresponsive customer off of your

list. Win-win.



If you're purchasing your list from someone else, get all

of the information before you buy. Where did the list come

from? How were the addresses culled? How targeted is this

list to your expected market? Has anyone else used this

list before? What is their guarantee as to the validity of

the emails on the list? Some of these questions make sense

from a marketing and business standpoint as well as a moral

one.



The next step is choosing how to convey your message inside

the email. If you visit www.scambusters.org , you'll see a

huge list of Internet scams in all categories of

"business." Everything from buying swampland in Florida to

sending used credit cards to be used as paint scrapers

instead of "filling landfills with environmentally nasty

plastic" - yes this con has actually been used. Why do I

bring up these scams? Because most of them have been

perpetrated using unsolicited email at one time or another.

Make sure your sales letter/email doesn't sound like one of

them. Nothing enrages SPAM-conscious email readers more

than a get-rich-quick scheme or any other senseless hype.



My next piece of advice is for you to get to the point.

Whether you're sending email advertising using text email,

HTML, or even Flash-embedded email to get the user's

attention, KEEP that attention. Don't waste their time

babbling on. Get to the point of your letter. You don't

have to be blunt or unimaginative, but don't write a

treatise on your great product either. People don't want

you to waste their time. Some people pay for their online

time by the minute, others are busy working or running a

business, while still others may be hogging up the family

phone to get to their email.



Everyone on the Internet has received one form of SPAM or

another. The best rule you can follow is: if you received

your email, would you respond to it? Would you really care

about the product? Why not test this theory? Open up a

free web-based email account somewhere and send your email

to a test group - people you know personally and who won't

hang you for using them this way-of five or ten people.

Then wait a couple of days and ask them if they got an

email about such-and-such product. If they remember

getting that email, you're doing a good job. If they

remember it and are mad or have bad things to say about it,

then you need to rethink your strategy. At this point you

can let them in on your scientific prodding. Be prepared

to duck and run at this point.



In closing, I hope that this series of articles has been

useful in some way. Remember that marketing is 80% of your

business. Also remember that proper marketing, using both

imagination and ethics, can carry you further and can help

solidify your business better than anything else ever will.



=====

Aaron Turpen is the proprieter of Aaronz WebWorkz, a full-

service provider of Web needs to small businesses.

www.AaronzWebWorkz.com





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