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Actual for You - Using Internet Direct Mail To Increase Your Company's Profits
VOIP Technology Saves Money and Increases Flexibility ient to fill in their name, address, company, e-mail, phone number and any other information in the blank field and then hit a send button.Computer technology- and the Internet in particular- is changing the way we conduct out lives in some pretty dramatic ways. One of the most dramatic changes that the Internet has brought us is the ability to take more control over how we communicate with each other by telephone and how we spend our money on phone service.The specific technology that allows this is called Voice Over Internet Protocol, or VOIP for short. Voice Over Internet Protocol takes advantage the fact that data moves across the Internet without any of the constraints of conventional telephone calls when it comes to geography and distance. Just like you can send an email to anyone, anywhere in the world and download a web page fro The Body. Keep the body text short and conversational. Short paragraphs and wide margins make your email easier to read. At the close of the e-mail provide another link and repeat your offer again. Include a Call to Action. Make sure your email tells your reader about the benefits of your product or service and gives him enough information to make a decision. Then tell him clearly and simply what you want him to do: visit your web site, sign up for a newsletter, renew a subscription. Finally, get him to act NOW! Because if he doesn’t click on your link right away, he probably never will. Opt in, Opt Out. The two rules of email marketing are to always mail only to opt-in lists (a database of e-mail addresses t Minor Sponsorships for Major Returns “I want to sell my company’s products on the Web, but how do I get potential clients to visit my site,” a client asked recently. The answer is a strategy that has proven extremely effective for many different businesses…Internet Direct Mail.Sponsorship certainly conjures up an image of enormous market reach but at a mighty high price. Some of the biggest events in the world reach a market of many, many millions of people. But that's at a level where only major players are able to participate.If you are looking for effective sponsorship at a price you can afford to pay, there are numerous opportunities. For instance, take a music store selling CDs and DVDs. With so much music pirating and free downloading available from the internet, it's not so easy to compete. But there are many music stores and chains around the world competing in this market and winning.Recently, I came across a small music store who are sponsoring their loca One of the most common mistakes many businesses make is putting up a website and then sitting around biting their nails waiting for people to come. This approach isn’t going to work. If you want people to visit your site, you’ve got to make it happen. And sending an e-mail invitation is one of the best ways to build website traffic and boost your company’s profits. Of course, sending an e-mail to a random group of people asking them to “please come and visit our site,” isn’t going to work very well either. You need to get your e-mail to the right people and then give those people a reason to visit, or they won’t bother. The most effective way to achieve a high response to an e-mail marketing campaign is to follow these guidelines: Identify Your Customers. Many companies make the mistake of creating an impressive e-mail marketing campaign and only think about exactly to whom they’re going to send it to at the last minute. Yet, choosing the right customers accounts for approximately 40 percent of the success of any marketing strategy. Get your message into the right hands by using a mailing list. You can begin with your own in-house list—made up of people who have bought or shown an interest in buying from you in the past, and have specifically requested to receive information. Once you’ve compiled your list the success of your campaign will then depend on how you format your email. The From Line. Think carefully about how people will react to the e-mail address that will appear in the from line. This address acts as a filtering devise for recipients and many will instantly delete your email if they don’t recognize the person who sent it, or feel that it isn’t legitimate. The Subject Line. Avoid using the word free or save in the subject line. Many Internet users have spam filter software, which they set to instantly delete any message with these words included. Use short statements that tease the reader similar to those used in traditional printed direct mail. The Headline. Begin your message with a powerful headline or lead sentence and identify the benefit to recipients right up front. Offer Incentives. To boost your e-mail’s response rate present a free offer that can only be accepted if the prospect visits your site. Other options include offering the recipient $10 off or a 20% discount, free information such as newsletters and articles, or free shipping. If you can’t think of a free offer (you can) still stress the benefits of your site: money saving ideas, tips or news, links to useful resources etc. Don’t make these offers exclusive to the reader. Instead encourage them to forward the email to friends and colleagues. Try something like this: “Give this special offer to your friends by forwarding them this e-mail now. They’ll be glad you did!” The Hook. State your offer in the first paragraph and provide an immediate response mechanism. Clicking on a link connected to a web page appeals to Internet users with short attention spans. Another option that works well is to encourage the recipient to pick up the phone and dial a toll-free number. Some companies are now building an online response form into their e-mail messages. These encourage the recipient to fill in their name, address, company, e-mail, phone number and any other information in the blank field and then hit a send button. The Body. Keep the body text short and conversational. Short paragraphs and wide margins make your email easier to read. At the close of the e-mail provide another link and repeat your offer again. Include a Call to Action. Make sure your email tells your reader about the benefits of your product or service and gives him enough information to make a decision. Then tell him clearly and simply what you want him to do: visit your web site, sign up for a newsletter, renew a subscription. Finally, get him to act NOW! Because if he doesn’t click on your link right away, he probably never will. Opt in, Opt Out. The two rules of email marketing are to always mail only to opt-in lists (a database of e-mail addresses th Business Plans - The Rules of Financial Analysis ther. The most effective way to achieve a high response to an e-mail marketing campaign is to follow these guidelines:We have developed a set of rules regarding financial analysis that we apply in writing business plans. We share them with you in this article in the hope that you will find these rules worthy of adopting in your efforts to write business plans as well.Rule 1: Financial analysis techniques are tools to uncover facts, not define them.People use a number of financial analysis techniques, such as ratio analysis, bankruptcy analysis, sensitivity analysis, etc. The purpose of these exercises is not to arrive at some final result that looks good. Rather, the analyses are performed in order to find how the business can be improved. Never be lulled into thinking everything i Identify Your Customers. Many companies make the mistake of creating an impressive e-mail marketing campaign and only think about exactly to whom they’re going to send it to at the last minute. Yet, choosing the right customers accounts for approximately 40 percent of the success of any marketing strategy. Get your message into the right hands by using a mailing list. You can begin with your own in-house list—made up of people who have bought or shown an interest in buying from you in the past, and have specifically requested to receive information. Once you’ve compiled your list the success of your campaign will then depend on how you format your email. The From Line. Think carefully about how people will react to the e-mail address that will appear in the from line. This address acts as a filtering devise for recipients and many will instantly delete your email if they don’t recognize the person who sent it, or feel that it isn’t legitimate. The Subject Line. Avoid using the word free or save in the subject line. Many Internet users have spam filter software, which they set to instantly delete any message with these words included. Use short statements that tease the reader similar to those used in traditional printed direct mail. The Headline. Begin your message with a powerful headline or lead sentence and identify the benefit to recipients right up front. Offer Incentives. To boost your e-mail’s response rate present a free offer that can only be accepted if the prospect visits your site. Other options include offering the recipient $10 off or a 20% discount, free information such as newsletters and articles, or free shipping. If you can’t think of a free offer (you can) still stress the benefits of your site: money saving ideas, tips or news, links to useful resources etc. Don’t make these offers exclusive to the reader. Instead encourage them to forward the email to friends and colleagues. Try something like this: “Give this special offer to your friends by forwarding them this e-mail now. They’ll be glad you did!” The Hook. State your offer in the first paragraph and provide an immediate response mechanism. Clicking on a link connected to a web page appeals to Internet users with short attention spans. Another option that works well is to encourage the recipient to pick up the phone and dial a toll-free number. Some companies are now building an online response form into their e-mail messages. These encourage the recipient to fill in their name, address, company, e-mail, phone number and any other information in the blank field and then hit a send button. The Body. Keep the body text short and conversational. Short paragraphs and wide margins make your email easier to read. At the close of the e-mail provide another link and repeat your offer again. Include a Call to Action. Make sure your email tells your reader about the benefits of your product or service and gives him enough information to make a decision. Then tell him clearly and simply what you want him to do: visit your web site, sign up for a newsletter, renew a subscription. Finally, get him to act NOW! Because if he doesn’t click on your link right away, he probably never will. Opt in, Opt Out. The two rules of email marketing are to always mail only to opt-in lists (a database of e-mail addresses t Freight Shipping Industry Review ess that will appear in the from line. This address acts as a filtering devise for recipients and many will instantly delete your email if they don’t recognize the person who sent it, or feel that it isn’t legitimate.The freight shipping industry in the UK could see some changes taking place over the next few years if the government has its way. These changes will be borne out of a desire to ensure that the UK’s freight shipping industry remains profitable and competitive.According to Stephen Ladyman, who is the minister responsible for freight shipping in the UK, global developments are making changes necessary. As world trading patterns alter he and the government believe that the British freight shipping industry needs to evolve to meet new demands.As a result, all companies operating in the freight shipping sector have been given the opportunity to feed into a review of the industr The Subject Line. Avoid using the word free or save in the subject line. Many Internet users have spam filter software, which they set to instantly delete any message with these words included. Use short statements that tease the reader similar to those used in traditional printed direct mail. The Headline. Begin your message with a powerful headline or lead sentence and identify the benefit to recipients right up front. Offer Incentives. To boost your e-mail’s response rate present a free offer that can only be accepted if the prospect visits your site. Other options include offering the recipient $10 off or a 20% discount, free information such as newsletters and articles, or free shipping. If you can’t think of a free offer (you can) still stress the benefits of your site: money saving ideas, tips or news, links to useful resources etc. Don’t make these offers exclusive to the reader. Instead encourage them to forward the email to friends and colleagues. Try something like this: “Give this special offer to your friends by forwarding them this e-mail now. They’ll be glad you did!” The Hook. State your offer in the first paragraph and provide an immediate response mechanism. Clicking on a link connected to a web page appeals to Internet users with short attention spans. Another option that works well is to encourage the recipient to pick up the phone and dial a toll-free number. Some companies are now building an online response form into their e-mail messages. These encourage the recipient to fill in their name, address, company, e-mail, phone number and any other information in the blank field and then hit a send button. The Body. Keep the body text short and conversational. Short paragraphs and wide margins make your email easier to read. At the close of the e-mail provide another link and repeat your offer again. Include a Call to Action. Make sure your email tells your reader about the benefits of your product or service and gives him enough information to make a decision. Then tell him clearly and simply what you want him to do: visit your web site, sign up for a newsletter, renew a subscription. Finally, get him to act NOW! Because if he doesn’t click on your link right away, he probably never will. Opt in, Opt Out. The two rules of email marketing are to always mail only to opt-in lists (a database of e-mail addresses t Competition in Franchising; It Gets Ugly ormation such as newsletters and articles, or free shipping. If you can’t think of a free offer (you can) still stress the benefits of your site: money saving ideas, tips or news, links to useful resources etc. Don’t make these offers exclusive to the reader. Instead encourage them to forward the email to friends and colleagues. Try something like this: “Give this special offer to your friends by forwarding them this e-mail now. They’ll be glad you did!”It is amazing the amount of competition and modern franchising today in the United States and starting in the rest of the world also. Competition in the marketplace is good for consumer prices and for customers, but when it gets ugly it serves no freeman. And it is amazing how quickly the competition can get very ugly.Franchising companies try to expand their brand name through out the regional area in order to compete in the marketplace for the largest percentage of the market here. The franchising is a method of rapid expansion with out huge amounts of capital outlay. A company like Starbucks has all company-owned stores and a company like McDonald's has mostly franchisees or independent busine The Hook. State your offer in the first paragraph and provide an immediate response mechanism. Clicking on a link connected to a web page appeals to Internet users with short attention spans. Another option that works well is to encourage the recipient to pick up the phone and dial a toll-free number. Some companies are now building an online response form into their e-mail messages. These encourage the recipient to fill in their name, address, company, e-mail, phone number and any other information in the blank field and then hit a send button. The Body. Keep the body text short and conversational. Short paragraphs and wide margins make your email easier to read. At the close of the e-mail provide another link and repeat your offer again. Include a Call to Action. Make sure your email tells your reader about the benefits of your product or service and gives him enough information to make a decision. Then tell him clearly and simply what you want him to do: visit your web site, sign up for a newsletter, renew a subscription. Finally, get him to act NOW! Because if he doesn’t click on your link right away, he probably never will. Opt in, Opt Out. The two rules of email marketing are to always mail only to opt-in lists (a database of e-mail addresses t Literacy In The United States Is Declining - Is That Good Or Bad? ient to fill in their name, address, company, e-mail, phone number and any other information in the blank field and then hit a send button.In an illiterate world, who will want to buy books, e-books, magazines and newspapers?Reading is indisputably in decline, which upsets or pleases people, depending upon one's viewpoint. In the USA, we’ve suffered a 10% decline in literacy from 1982 to 2002.The data are clear—-people are becoming less literate, preferring not to learn at all or to learn in other ways--hearing, visual, and touch.Brian Tracy reports that half of all high school graduates and one-quarter of all college graduates in the USA never read another book after graduation.Moreover, 70% of adults have not been in a bookstore in at least five years.“Text,” some sneer, is an “ancient learn The Body. Keep the body text short and conversational. Short paragraphs and wide margins make your email easier to read. At the close of the e-mail provide another link and repeat your offer again. Include a Call to Action. Make sure your email tells your reader about the benefits of your product or service and gives him enough information to make a decision. Then tell him clearly and simply what you want him to do: visit your web site, sign up for a newsletter, renew a subscription. Finally, get him to act NOW! Because if he doesn’t click on your link right away, he probably never will. Opt in, Opt Out. The two rules of email marketing are to always mail only to opt-in lists (a database of e-mail addresses that have been willingly submitted as a request to receive information). And to make sure you provide a mechanism for recipients to opt-out. The former is easy—only e-mail to genuine opt-in lists. For the latter include a paragraph at the end of your email that tells the recipient how to opt-out. Never send an e-mail without including an opt-out option. In addition new Can-Spam legislation requires that a physical postal address be included in your mailing. Follow these simple rules because you do not, I repeat, do not want to be labeled a spammer. HTML versus Plain Text. Deciding whether to use plain text or HTML primarily depends on what you’re selling. For example, if you’re selling clothing or CDs, the graphic format of HTML allows recipients to see pictures of the product and tend to be more captivating. If in doubt offer two lists: one in plain text and the other in HTML. That way you can let your subscribers decide. What Response Can You Expect. A recent survey of advertisers conducted by the Direct Marketing Association found that e-mail marketing was the strongest (compared to several other forms of advertising) in customer retention, and generated the most online traffic. In addition, research suggests that email marketing typically delivers twice the response rate of paper direct mail at about half the cost.
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