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Welcome to Vol.18 of Email Advice in Your Inbox!
Hey, friend!
Email reporting is a deep rabbit hole, isn't it?
The depth of reporting available for email compared to other digital channels is pretty immense.
Who is your audience? Where are they based? What do they enjoy? How do they buy? What resonates with them?
Your email tracking gives all of this and more. That said, you may be missing what these metrics are really trying to tell you.
That's the topic for this week's email knowledge.
Here's what you'll learn this week
What your email metrics are actually telling you
This week's top email resources
Email expert practical tip of the week
Smart email senders we're learning from
The fun stuff: Corporate email anxiety in a nutshell
The launch of the year so far (well, in our opinion anyway)
Here's to more email learning 🚀
Your email metrics hold a little more information than you may think.
We're all familiar with monitoring open rates, click rates, and email metrics around getting to the inbox.
Have you, however, stopped and thought about what else your email metrics may be telling you? There are many ways to use email metrics beyond simply assessing what they tell you at face value.
Today we explore a few key analytics you might be tracking, and how you can learn more about your email strategy and audience using these insights.
Open rates have been part of much controversy over the past few years. Many email marketers have forgone even tracking open rates, for various reasons such as reliability and how accurate open rates actually are. That said, open rates can tell you more than merely who opened your emails (or didn't). Here are three underutilised ways you can use open rates to your advantage in your email
strategy:
- Determine if your emails are reaching the inbox.
If you experience a sudden and major dip in open rates, you may have wound up in the junk folder, which indicates deliverability issues.
Remember, email delivery and deliverability rates determine different things. Your emails may be delivered, but they could be landing in the junk folder.
- Determine if your email frequency is too high or irregular.
If you notice emails are no longer being opened, especially if you're sending at a high frequency, or inversely, irregularly, then you'll need to act on this.
Open rates partly indicate engagement to the inbox providers, so you'll want to monitor your email frequency and cadence over time to get this right.
If you don't, you'll likely begin impacting your ability to reach the inbox in the future, so monitor this carefully.
- Determine if you're getting machine clicks.
In short, Machine opens are the automated opening of emails by email clients such as Apple's Mail Privacy Policy and other software providers.
Emails are essentially "pre-checked" before being served to the reader, which means open rates can be skewed.
The good news is that you can look for spikes in open rates within a minute or two of your campaign landing to determine the level of machine opens you're getting, helping you get a true indication of who is actually opening your emails.
See, open rates can be useful in other ways too!
Email clicks are often seen as one of the truest measures of email success. When you send an email, you want your recipient to take some form of action, don't you? Most often this is determined by the clicks they take in your campaigns. Clicks rates can also tell you a story and are a great way to improve your email strategy. Why? Here are three ways that might help:
- Determine if your emails are possibly too long.
If you receive a bunch of clicks at the beginning of your email and none at the end, your email might be too long.
It's often difficult to determine if a reader has consumed your entire email, so monitoring actions taken toward the end of your campaign is a great way to find out.
Yes, your best content should be at the top, but your supporting calls-to-action placed strategically at the bottom could help guide your email designs in future.
Determine if the link placement is correct.
Should you place your CTA above the fold in your campaigns? Should it be below the fold? Should it be elsewhere?
Here's where using tricks like strategic A/B tests could help. Place your link in various parts of your email (adhering to a solid visual hierarchy, of course), and watch carefully where most of your clicks take place.
This takes time and often needs to be campaign-specific, but acts as a great insight for future emails you'll create.
Determine what readers are NOT interested in.
This can often be forgotten, especially if you're selling products or seeking multiple actions in a single email.
Over time, if you notice certain types of content are losing clicks, it might be time to change or drop that content.
Clicks are great to learn what folks are interested in but don't forget that a lack of action is also a great indicator of interest over time.
Perhaps it's time to track clicks in a few different ways moving forward?
Unsubscribes feel personal, don't they? You put immense time and effort into growing your audience, only to have your reader(s) leave your list. The reality is that you want subscribers who actually want to be part of your audience. That said, unsubscribes can also be a great indicator to determine these three things:
- Determine if there are misaligned expectations
Recipients might have subscribed expecting a different type of content than what they've received.
You want to monitor the content they signed up for and ensure your emails align with those expectations.
No one likes being misled, especially when inbox attention is precious.
- Determine if you're segmenting poorly
Blasting generic emails to a broad audience can lead to high unsubscribe rates. There's a reason that email experts espouse segmentation.
If you get this right, you'll relate to your audience and hold their interest for longer.
Failing to do this does the opposite, so make your audience feel special by catering for their needs and they'll stay on your list.
- Determine if you're using cheap incentives
If you're using incentives that seem great and you don't follow through with ongoing value, folks will inevitably unsubscribe from your emails.
It's pretty obvious, but using an incentive merely to capture subscribers without a plan to offer them ongoing value is a fallacy.
People want immediate value, with continued value over time.
See how unsubscribes can be valuable too?
Bounces are something email senders try to avoid at all costs. They can, however, be a good indicator of your email health. Bounced emails happen. The goal is to mitigate the volume of bounces you get over time, which keeps your email reputation healthy, and your email metrics valuable. Bounces are also a great way to determine a few things, such as these three insights:
- What are soft bounces telling me?
A soft bounce refers to an email that gets as far as your recipient’s mail server but bounces back undelivered before it gets into the inbox.
One common reason may be that your recipient's inbox might be full.
This is a sign that you need to begin separating these subscribers from your regular list and clean those out if you experience soft bounces over and over again (though some ESPs like TouchBasePro do this for you in the background).
- What are hard bounces telling me?
Hard bounces are indicators that your email will no longer be delivered to that recipient. These need careful monitoring due to the impact these can have on your sending reputation.
If you're experiencing hard bounces at increasing rates, you'll need to look at the quality of your email list.
If you're gaining spam sign-ups from your sign-up forms or you're attracting false sign-ups, hard bounces will start happening more consistently, so monitor this over time.
- What do bounced domains tell me?
Beyond looking at your hard and soft bounces, you'll also glean a lot from the domains your emails might be failing to deliver to.
This is a common measure in the B2B email space. Suppose you're experiencing specific business domains that bounce.
In that case, you might need to be white-listed to be able to deliver to such addresses, which is something many email senders neglect to monitor.
Bounces are bad but can be prevented using sound email practices.
Email resources of the weekSome cool tools and tips to help you become a better email marketer
Advanced Email MetricsWaiting for email reports shouldn't be a thing.
The team at SEINō has you covered. If you're a large-scale email sender and want to take your analytics to new heights, check them out. Get the tech here
A FREE Email Marketing WorkshopWant expert email tips? Live in Johannesburg? If you answered yes to these questions, then the team at TouchBasePro have a workshop for you. There are just a few days left to register! Get booking here
IP & Domain Reputation CheckerSpamhaus is the authority on IP and domain reputation for email.
They've just launched their new website, and have a couple of cool tools to try, like this IP and domain reputation checker tool. Get the tools here
Email Expert Practical Tip of the Week
This week's insight is brought to you by marketing extraordinaire and copy expert, Neal O'Grady.
Neal created and shared a brilliant copywriting cheat sheet to apply in your emails and elsewhere in your marketing.
*Click on the image to get the full-resolution cheat sheet from Neal's LinkedIn post.
Smart email senders we're learning from
We believe that learning from some of the greatest in the industry is one of the best ways to improve.
Here are three emails we found that followed sound email principles or used innovative strategies to nail their email goals. Take a look at this week's best 👌
Competition Email by Frescobol CariocaThis is how you lead with a strong competition incentive. The whole section above the fold is the prize, and it sells it so well.
Check it out here
Welcome Email by Perc CoffeePersonalised welcome emails are some of the strongest relationship builders you get. These guys did it super well.
Check it out here
Leap Year Email by MaterialThis is the second Material email we've featured! This is a great example of capitalising on a special event in an awesome way.
Check it out here
Some more (email) fun to make your day better
Corporate email etiquette is a minefield 🙃
The anxiety-inducing considerations that go into writing a simple peer-to-peer email in the corporate world are something many of us share. We say "many" because, well, some folks simply DGAF. This take by S.LIZ is one we relate to in a big way, especially
the exclamation marks and big, smart words.
We're curious...what's your anxiety-inducing, self-imposed email faux pas?
Before you go - A launch you won't want to miss!
ChatGPT was supposed to make your life easier. But the reality couldn’t be more different...
Because AI hasn’t simplified things – it’s become another task to manage.
One that burns more time than it saves. 🔥 But that’s about to change…
On March 22nd, a close friend of Email Expert Africa, Matt Thomas, launches Writing4Robots: Ultimate Prompting Guide.
A deep dive into Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT that covers:
- LLM, prompting, and prompt engineering fundamentals.
- The most effective prompt structures.
- Practical ways to prompt better, faster, with examples.
- Custom prompts across 6 categories (LI,
Writing, Editing, Ideation, Productivity, Prompting).
- And a ton more!
Let's support Matt and learn how to prompt like a pro! Lock in your 30% pre-sale discount + lifetime updates by hitting the button below.
Before we go! Remember, we help businesses and content creators, just like you, win at email. How? Here are three ways we can help: Get the guide! We've spent 200+ hours compiling over 250 pages covering everything you need to launch and win at email. Find out more here. Sponsor this newsletter! Keen to share your business in front of hundreds of email experts? Get in touch to discuss sponsorships here. Contribute your knowledge! We're looking to feature experts in future Volumes. Have an idea to share? Let us know here.
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