About Jodi Kaplan

My Google Profile+

Why People Unsubscribe From Your Email List

unsubscribe button

image via Pixabay

A few weeks ago, a famous internet marketer had a problem.  The subscribers to his newsletter were complaining.  He didn’t say so explicitly, but I’m guessing from the tone of his email that his open rates, clicks, and sales were going down.

His readers were also likely unsubscribing from his email list.  Since he makes quite a bit of money from email marketing, this must have caused a significant reduction in his cash flow.

But why do people unsubscribe from email lists?

Too many pitches

When I signed up for this newsletter, I expected a monthly newsletter,  with an occasional pitch or an ad for something.   I got the newsletter, with some excellent content.  I also got six or seven sales pitches (at random intervals on random days, it seemed).  And, I couldn’t tell which was which.  It got to the point where I saw his name and immediately hit the delete button.

A megaphone, not a conversation

He got  caught up in all his new products, and didn’t realize that he was overdoing the sales pitches. As Dave Navarro says, “Free, free, free, sell.”  Not everything can or should be free, but too much selling will send people to the exits.

Not relevant or personal

He was talking at people (caught up in his new products) rather than to them.  The email promising news for people over 50 went straight to the trash folder.

I’m also signed up for newsletters from Sonia Simone and Copyblogger.  Their emails are personal, unique, and sometimes make me laugh.  I feel I know them, and like them, even though we’ve never met.  Most importantly, I look forward to reading them.  I bet other people do too.

To his credit, our guru has changed his approach.  His newsletters now spell out exactly what to expect, how often he will email, and take a softer tone.  He’s also offering more free material.

How often do you send your newsletter?  What’s your mix of free and sales content?

The Upside of a Website Crash

espadrilles missoni

Yesterday, demand for Missoni’s new line at Target caused the site to crash.  The traffic was higher than Black Friday (the day after Thanksgiving in the US, and the unofficial start of Xmas shopping season).

Twitter exploded.  But this is not about that.

There’s a recession.  People are hurting.  Does anybody really need a zig-zag $400 Missoni bicycle?  No.  But they want it.

It’s cool. It’s fun. It’s different. And, people don’t buy what they need. They buy what the want (recession or no).

Something that stands out. That doesn’t look ordinary. That they can brag about. Or show off. Or be delighted with.

Purple cows, even.

What do you think?

Tuesday Travels: How to Get Testimonials

The Panmure Testimonial. The Panmure Testimoni...

Image via Wikipedia

Creative ways to get testimonials – Testimonials are important for showing prospects that you know your stuff.  Here are some creative ways to get them.

You’re great (sez who)? – Just some words aren’t enough.

Building crediiblity online – Testimonials are one way to do this, here are some more.

The secret life of testimonials – A two-part series from Copyblogger.

 

Of course, if you can manage it, getting your own statue is good too.

Friday Fun: Cool Tools – The End of Boring Lorem Ipsum

Tool rack

Image by L. Marie via Flickr

Most of the time, when I post cool tools, they’re useful business tools that help you save time or money or effort.  Not this time.  Today, they’re just plain silly (but fun).

Tired of boring filler text?  Forget “lorem ipsum” and use one of these instead.

Bacon ipsum  – pure pork, ham, and kielbasa.

Vegan ipsum – all vegetarian, meat- and egg-free

Samuel L. Ipsum – mimics his role in Pulp Fiction (warning: NSFW)

Fillerati – literary filler from truly great writers