Email Subject Lines: 15 Rules to Write Them Right |  | Visited: 2632 |
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| | by Dan Miller September 28, 2010 |
| Dan Miller |
Article written by a staff writer for Lyris. Lyris is
a leading provider of online marketing solutions including Lyris HQ which
integrates email marketing with search, social and mobile channels, enhanced by
embedded delivery and Web analytics. To learn more about Lyris solutions and
services, visit http://www.lyris.com. |
| Dan Miller
has written 6 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Dan Miller... |
Fifty characters could be all that stands between you and success in
your next email campaign. Fifty characters is all the space you have in a
typical email subject line to catch your reader's eye and entice him to
open your email and take the action you want.
How could something so small make or break an email marketing campaign's
success? Because many recipients use the email subject line to decide
whether to open or delete an email.
Email subject lines are tricky devils, however. A good one can get your email opened in a
flash, while a bad one could spell oblivion in the trash or junk file.
Because so much is riding on your email subject line, we came up with 15
rules for crafting a good one. Be sure to review them before you send
your next email marketing campaign.
15 Rules to Write the Email Subject Line Right
Rule 1: Read the newspaper.
If you want to write a better email subject line, pick up your local
paper. The headline usually highlights a story's most important fact in a
limited space. A subject line, in turn, should clearly state what your
reader can expect from your email message, what's in it for them or what
you want them to do as a result of the email. However, there isn't
enough space to do all of them all the time. Look at the newspaper
headline to see how it interplays with the story.
Rule 2: There is no sure-fire formula.
What works in one email campaign might bomb with the next. A discount
offer should be worded differently from an upsell, and both are
different from a breaking-news announcement.
Even if you are sending out email messages to promote similar campaigns,
you shouldn't recycle a email subject line from a past campaign. You
need to stand out each time, yet be familiar to the reader, too. How do
you find out what works best? See Rule 3.
Rule 3: Test, test, test.
Test continually to determine trends and styles that appear to work.
Pretest if you can. Add a day to your campaign-creation schedule to give
you enough time to try out different email subject lines. See Rule 12
for more on testing.
Rule 4: Support the "from" line.
The "from" line tells the recipient who sent the email, and the subject
line sells the recipient on opening. If your "from" line lists your
company name, you don't have to repeat it in the subject line, which
frees up space in the subject line. But do consider branding your
subject line with the name of the email newsletter, for example, so that it will stand out in the junk folder and your recipients’ overflowing inboxes.
Recent research shows readers often look at the "From" line first when
deciding whether to open an email, and then the subject line. See "Help Your 'From' Line Help You" for more information on creating the right "from" line.
Rule 5: List key info first.
Some email clients allow more characters in a subject line than others,
but most give you at least 50, including spaces. So, load your key
information in that first 50. Also, make sure the cut-off doesn't occur
in the middle of a crucial word, such as a price or date.
Rule 6: Open rates don't always measure subject-line success.
Look at the subjects associated with the highest number of conversions,
such as registrations, clicks to view newsletter articles, sales or
downloads. If you drill down into your web analytics,
you might find some anomalies, such as an email with a relatively low
open rate but a high sales-per-order rate. That could mean something in
the subject line strongly appealed to a narrow segment of your email
list and could point the way to a more lucrative segmentation. Remember,
your end goal is not necessarily high open rates, but to have email
subscribers take a specific action. Focus on your end goal.
Rule 7: Personalize.
Personalize email subject lines based on users' product or content
preferences, interests, past purchases, Web visits or links clicked. Be
careful when personalizing on past purchases, however, because the
purchase could have been a gift for someone else and might not relate to
your reader's real interests. Always make it easy for readers to find
and update their data and email preferences.
Rule 8: Urgency drives action.
Set a deadline: "Order by midnight tonight;" "Last day to ensure Xmas
delivery." Use urgency and deadlines as part of a planned series of
emails as well. For example on Monday incorporate “5 Days Left…” and
then on Thursday follow it with “Only 24 Hours….”.
Rule 9: Watch those spam filters.
There's a fine line between "catchy" and "spammy." Run your email copy through a content checker to identify any spamlike words, phrases or construction. The content
checker will tell you which phrases to avoid. Two tricks that could trip
a spam filter: email subject lines with all capital letters, and using
more exclamation points than necessary. (Both look unprofessional, too.)
In fact, we recommend against using exclamation points at all if you
can avoid it.
Rule 10: "Free" is not evil.
Yes, you can use "free" in an email subject line. Just don't make “free”
the first word, use it in conjunction with an exclamation point, or
spell it in all caps (could get your email filtered). People still
respond to "free;" so, the increase in orders or other actions will
almost always outweigh the email messages lost from filtering.
Rule 11. Lead, but don't mislead.
Don't stretch the truth in the subject line or promise more than the
email can deliver, or make grand claims that readers will find hard to
comply with in order to get a special offer or benefit. Readers will
distrust you (and reach for the report-spam button) if your subject line
doesn't reflect the email content.
Rule 12. Write and test early and often.
Writing the subject line is often the last and most hurried step in
email campaign development. It should be the other way around. As you
plan the email marketing campaign, start thinking about what will go
into the subject line. That will help you sharpen your campaign's focus
and may even change or tweak the offer or article focus.
Ideally, you should test subject lines on a segment of your email list,
but if you're pressed for time, run them past an informal focus group
including your marketing team, others in your department and even folks
from outside the department to get a wider view.
Rule 13. Review subject-line performance over your last several campaigns or newsletters.
See which email subject lines delivered the action you wanted – the most
conversions, the highest average sale per order, the highest
click-through rate, etc.
Review your Web analytics reports to see which email newsletter article topics draw the most clicks or forwards, which whitepapers get downloaded most often, which brands or departments get the most
traffic. This analysis should drive content and product selection
strategies, but it can also show you what information is most relevant
or useful.
At Lyris, Inc. (formerly
EmailLabs), we reviewed two years of subject lines and discovered that
action-oriented statements that included numbers and "tips" and similar
phrases pulled the best. For example, the top 3 most popular
EmailLabs/Intevation Report articles from 2005 were: "22 Imperatives for
Email Marketing Success", "11 Email Marketing Trends for 2005", and "15
Tips for Improved Subject Lines".
Rule 14. Continue the conversation.
Sending email more frequently than monthly or quarterly helps you create
a conversation with your readers. Your tracking reports should show you
what their crucial or hot-button issues are, what topics get them
opening and clicking more vigorously. Feature those keywords or issues
prominently in the email subject line where appropriate -- first or
second position -- to capture readers' attention. Additionally, if your email frequency permits it, continue a dialog and
content direction you’ve started in previous emails. For example,
“Google Agrees to China Censorship” followed by “Google to Testify
Before Congress.”
Rule 15. Can you pass the must-open/must-read test?
The days when people opened absolutely everything that landed in their
inboxes are long gone. Now, you have to intrigue them. Appeal to their
need for information, to be an insider "in the know."
Go back to Rule 14. If you have created a conversation with your
readers, a reference to it in your subject will intrigue them into
opening your email to see the next installment.
Run a simple test on yourself and others on your team – does the email subject line pass these two tests?
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The must-read test. If a subscriber doesn’t open the email
they will feel like they are out of the loop and may have missed an
offer that they will regret not taking advantage of.
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The unbulk bulk-folder test. Simply, if for some reason your
email goes into the bulk folder, does the combination of from and
subject line wording inspire trust and intrigue to get the recipient to
move it into their inboxes?
Conclusion: Much to Learn, Much at Stake
Yes, this seems like a lot of fuss over 50 little characters. But those
50 characters may have the greatest impact on your email marketing
campaigns' success. It pays to get them right.
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