I usually don’t get an answer, or someone starts rambling on about social media, private communication networks like Slack, or they claim organic (or paid) search is the only viable strategy. They say if people want what you do then they’ll find you, and a marketer’s (or salesperson’s) job is to ensure that the right people can find you.
While there is certainly truth to the statement that people will find you (and no one can question the growing importance of social media, search and the challenge that communication networks like Slack represent) the fact is that email is still the number one tool in the toolbox for managing and developing business relationships. Consider (sources: Content Marketing Institute & Optinmonster):
The problem is that email is a “push” communication tactic, in a “pull” world. Additionally, when you’re sending an email to someone, you are competing for attention in what is probably the noisiest and toughest place to compete - the inbox. This means that your email strategy must rise to a higher standard. Good email marketing simply isn’t good enough.
If you were to spend, say, 20 hours consuming research (I have) on what makes an email work, you could boil the key ingredients to this:
While subject lines, email designs, and content get virtually all of the attention when discussing strong sales and marketing email strategies, there is something far more important that is often missed.
It doesn’t matter how good your email is if two things don’t happen first:
A strong deliverability strategy is crucial to ensuring that your emails are noticed and that your prospects engage with your content. In this video, I share the full strategy we provided our clients when designing their email approach.