
6 Reasons Why You Have a Low Email Open Rate


December 03, 2018
Email marketing may not be the trendiest marketing tactic right now, but it still works. Email is where you warm your leads up for a potential sale. If you’re using social media for lead generation, completing the nurturing process through email can be very effective. If you want to generate leads, convert leads, and develop a relationship with your customers, you must use email marketing effectively.
Want to be successful with your email marketing campaign?
1. Clean your database
Get rid of the emails that bounce
Make sure to remove people who opt out
2. Write better subject lines
An email campaign can die at the headline, so it better be good
35% of email recipients open email based on the subject line alone
People are busy and incessantly inundated–break through the clutter or be ignored
Give them a reason to open it – pique interest and say what you’re going to deliver
Be intriguing: 56% of brands using emoji in their email lines had a higher open rate (Experian)
For B2B companies, 86% of professionals prefer to use email when communicating for business purposes (HubSpot)
News-related terms in subject lines perform fair but better than discount-related terms. “News” (16.2%), “update” (4.9%), “breaking” (33.5%), “alert” (25.9%), and “bulletin” (12.5%) all saw better than average click-to-open rates (as well as clicks and opens), with “newsletter” being the only term to perform below average in each metric. “Alert” saw the best differential for clicks (78.3%), while “news” did best for opens (30.9%). (Adestra July 2012 Report)
3. Break up content into manageable pieces People are more likely to consume information that is an easy to digest format.
Use bullets
Be as clear and concise as possible
4. Write for your audience
Know your audience and how they like to consume information
Know the
language
of your audience
Know how much information they are willing to consume in email
5. Test for best time and frequency According to HubSpot,11:00 a.m. ET has the highest clickthrough rate for email sends. However, every audience is different so you may have to do some trial and error.
You’re going through all of this effort to reach your audience, you can’t afford to waste time or money, so make sure you’re sending emails at optimal times to increase email open rates and click throughs. If you know your audience is particularly busy during certain times, don’t send it then.
Use testing or simply study when you get the best open rates and click throughs
You can also test a specific subset of your audience
6. Optimize for mobile More and more people access email through mobile devices. If your email doesn’t format well for mobile and tablets, you will lose out on a lot of opportunity and risk having people unsubscribe.
35% of business professionals check email on a mobile device – (Convince&Convert)
7. Write like a journalist: use the inverted pyramid Use the journalistic method of writing using the inverted pyramid; put the most important content first. Chances are people won’t read the entire email and they’re likely to skim, so make sure that if you have something you really want your audience to hear you put it at the top.
8. Commit to consistency People are more likely to read your emails if you are consistent because they know when to look out for them and when to expect them. It may be difficult and require discipline, but consistency is huge. Your audience needs to be able to depend on you and consistency is required in order to establish a relationship.
Be consistent with your language
Be consistent with your layout
Be consistent with delivery days and times
Be consistent with the frequency
9. Always deliver value Don’t ever send emails that aren’t worth your audience’s time. They’re busy and are likely to unsubscribe if you send content that’s not high quality, relevant, and useful.
People already get too many emails; they don’t have time to sift through junk
People aren’t very forgiving
Not sending quality content tells your audience that you haven’t taken the time to get to know them
21% of email recipients report email as Spam, even if they know it isn’t – (Convince&Convert)
25% of people complain they dislike all the marketing clutter they get, yet 40% claimed to enjoy getting lots of marketing emails from favorite brands and deal services each week. (2012 Blue Kangaroo Survey on Marketing Emails)
What are the email marketing rules that you think are most important to stick to? Let us know!
Editor’s Note: This post was originally published in July 2013 and has been updated for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
