When people talk about email marketing, lots of them forget to mention transactional emails. These are the automated emails you get in your inbox after taking a certain action on a website. This could be anything from filling out a form, to purchasing a product, to updating you on the progress of your order. Often, these are plain text emails that marketers set and forget.
Ad congruence means that your ad looks like the page that it links to. Instead of completely altering one of your website pages to match your ad, create a landing page that looks just like it. You can use the same image, style, colors and content of your ad. It’s important that your ads look similar to their landing pages so that users get the sense that they are in the right place. It also makes the transition from ad to web page smooth. This transition is an indication of what the user might experience as a customer to your business, so you want it to be hassle-free.
You’ll want to capture users’ emails regularly, both when they purchase…and even before they become a customer. You can use lead magnets or discounts to incentivize email sign-ups and using an email management service like MailChimp allows you to create triggered autoresponders that will automatically send out pre-made welcome email campaigns when they subscribe.
In addition to satisfying legal requirements, email service providers (ESPs) began to help customers establish and manage their own email marketing campaigns. The service providers supply email templates and general best practices, as well as methods for handling subscriptions and cancellations automatically. Some ESPs will provide insight and assistance with deliverability issues for major email providers. They also provide statistics pertaining to the number of messages received and opened, and whether the recipients clicked on any links within the messages.
My homepage is the landing page and the blog is on a separate page. It worked for another website I have, but I’m thinking of changing it to a course like Sonia was talking about yesterday instead and having the blog as the main page. I can see the theory of marketing that doesn’t look like marketing behind that. I believe you when you say that it’ll gain trust with the audience. Think I’ll test it out and see what happens. Thank you 🙂
The headline here is “Get access to 85% of my best business hacks.” As you can see it’s the largest text on the page. It leads the reader in to entering their email and then some additional text that explains what information you will have access to once you provide your email. Another excellent component of this landing page is that they have included a testimonial. Not only does this give some insight into what kind of person Noah is but it also gives the potential lead an extra push. The majority of the time a customer makes a decision before they even get to your site by reading reviews and testimonials.
Don’t neglect trust factors. It’s easy to get so caught up in creating your landing page that you forget that every landing page is part of building a relationship with your visitors. Sure, it’d be great to be able to send visitors to a landing page and get an immediate conversion, but that won’t happen unless they trust you. Trust factors to include are:
Promote up-sells/cross-sells. You can even set up an autoresponder sequence for someone after they purchase and get repeat customers. Depending on the products you sell, you could offer an upsell, or cross-sell related products. For example, if someone buys a digital camera, you can offer to add a lens, a tripod, and other accessories to their order before it ships. Or, if you sell products that people buy frequently (like food or disposable items, like diapers), you can automatically send them offers for new items when you know they’re about due for another order.

