| How to Beat Spam Filters and
Get Your E-mails Read
I heard an amazing statistic last week.
As many as 75% of e-mails currently do not make it to the intended
recipient's in-box. This goes for legitimate e-mail as well as for
spam.
This recently got me into trouble with my wife. Friday night has
been date night for us for the last 20 years. She sent me a short
email a few Fridays ago asking where I'd like to go for dinner that
night. She offered a few suggestions and mentioned a number of restaurants
that she knew I liked. When I didn't respond and she was about to
leave work, she called me asking why I hadn't responded to her e-mail.
I didn't know what she was talking about as I hadn't seen the e-mail,
so I had to defend myself.
I checked, and there it was among about 500 other emails for Viagra,
penis enlargement, sure fire stock picks, get rich quick schemes
and an assortment of other topics. I have my wife on my safe senders
list, but somehow my spam filter decided this e-mail was spam.
There's a few things you can do to reduce the risk of your e-mails
going into people's spam folders:
- Use a spam checker to see if your message contains
spam triggers
- Ask your recipients to add you to their safe senders
list
- Avoid sending large numbers of e-mails using the
BCC category
Once you've done all of these, there's probably not a lot you can
do to ensure your e-mails don't get relegated to spam folders. But
there is something you can do to minimize the chances your e-mails
won't get deleted before being read when the junk mail folder is
emptied.
There are two factors which have great impact on the likelihood
of any e-mail being read.
- The first is who sends it. There's not much more
to say about that, but the better known you are to your audience,
the more likely it is your e-mil will be read.
- The second is the subject line. If this is compelling
and promises some kind of benefit or offers useful information
it has a greater likelihood of being read. Just like any advertising
or direct mail piece, changing the headline can double or triple
response.
I subscribe to a number of newsletters and many of them end up
in my junk mail folder. Once there, most don't get read. Its easier
to delete them than it is to interrupt what you are doing to read
them. So yesterday I was emptying my junk mail folder, happily deleting
almost everything in there, when suddenly one of them stopped me
in my tracks. The subject line read "Why Your Sales Staff Shouldn't
Market." It was from Dan Kennedy who I think a lot of. But what
really attracted me was the topic. It was relevant because I have
been looking at ways to help sales people market and I happen to
disagree with what the subject line implied.
Did I delete like the rest or did I read it? Of course I moved
it to my in-box and read it right away. Do your subject lines make
people do this, or do they sound like all the rest?
So, if you are sending an e-mail how much time do you spend on
the subject line? If it's only a few moments, what impact would
it have on your success if you took the time to create a powerful
subject line that would stop your intended audience in their tracks.
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