As someone who’s spent virtually his entire career in local search, I’m by no means an early proponent of email. But in my interactions at marketing conferences, studies of industry research, and social media conversations, I get the feeling that many of my peers are even further down the adoption curve than I’ve been.
With this post, I encourage you to take a hard look at email marketing for yourselves, or an even harder look if you’ve already done so. If you’ve focused exclusively on offering SEO and SEM services to clients in the past, I hope I’ll convince you that email should be a natural and profitable complement to those offerings.
And if you’re a local business reading this post, I hope many of these points convince you to take a look at email marketing yourselves!
Making the case for email
High ROI
With a return on investment (ROI) of 44:1, marketers consistently rate email as the top-performing channel. According to Campaign Monitor, that ROI has actually increased since 2015, and it’s particularly true for B2B companies. Despite the supposed unpopularity of email among millennials, it remains far and away the most-preferred channel by which to receive communication from a business.
Just plain cheap
The fact that email’s so cheap helps the denominator of that 44:1 stat a bunch. Mailchimp is free up to 2,000 subscribers, as are MailerLite and SendinBlue, and many other providers offer plans under $10/month depending on your number of subscribers.
It’s also cheap in terms of time cost. Unlike social media where daily or even hourly presence performs best, email allows you to duck in and duck out as you have time.
As far as the numerator, average open rates far exceed social media reach on most platforms. And even if they don’t open, ⅓ of people report purchasing based on an email they received from a brand (!). Search provides better purchase intent, but the top-of-mind awareness and referral potential from email is unmatched.
Makes other channels more effective
Gathering customer email addresses is essential for other critical forms of local business marketing already — you need an email address to ask for a review, build lookalike audiences, and make customer intelligence solutions like FullContact most effective.
Actually offering something of value, whether that’s a discount code, loyalty program, whitepaper, or newsletter subscription, increases the odds of earning that email address for all of those purposes.
Last best option?
Frankly, the number of organic digital channels available to small businesses is shrinking. Facebook’s latest announcement signals a tough road ahead there for businesses without the budget to Boost posts, and Google’s expansion of its Local Service Ad program to verticals and locales across the United States in the next couple of years seems inevitable to me. Now is the time to start building an email program as these monetization pressures intensify.
Why agencies should offer email
Your customers know it works.
Local businesses might be more aware of email’s potency than some of the agencies that are serving them. Email consistently rates among the top three marketing channels in industry surveys by the Local Search Association, StreetFight, Clutch, and more.
At the very least, email requires barely any client education. Unlike the black box of SEO or the complexity of PPC, by and large, small businesses inherently understand email marketing. They know they should be sending emails to their customers, but many of them just aren’t yet doing it, or are doing it poorly.
It’s a concrete deliverable.
Unlike so much of the behind-the-scenes work that leads to success in SEO, clients can actually see an email campaign delivered to their inbox, as well as the results of that campaign: every major Email Service Provider tracks opens and clicks by default.
It leverages existing offerings.
I already mentioned some of the ways that email marketing complements other channels above. But it can tie in even more closely to an agency’s existing content offering: many of you are already developing full content calendars, or at the very least social content.
<pitch>(For those clients whom you’re helping with social media, their newsletter can be built using Tidings with no additional effort on your part.)</pitch>
Building email into your client content strategy can help their content reach a deeper audience, and possibly even a different audience.
It’s predictable.
Though you could argue that the Gmail and Apple Mail interface configurations are algorithms of a kind, generally speaking, email marketing is not subject to wild algorithmic changes or inexplicable ranking fluctuations.
And unlike Google’s unrealistic link building axiom that great content will naturally attract inbound links, great content actually does naturally attract more subscribers and more customers as they receive forwarded emails.
You can expand it over time.
Unlike SEO for local businesses, which generally includes relatively easy wins up front and gets progressively harder to deliver the same value over time, email marketing offers numerous opportunities to expand the scope of your engagement with a client.
Beyond fulfilling the emails themselves, there are plenty of other email-related services to offer, including managing and optimizing list sign-up, welcome emails and drip campaigns, A/B testing subject lines and content, and ongoing customer intelligence.
Tactical ingredients for success with email
Use a reputable Email Service Provider.
Running an email marketing program through Gmail or Outlook is an easy way to get your primary address blacklisted. You also won’t have access to open rate or click rate, nor an easy way to automate signups onto specific lists or segments.
Be consistent.
Setting expectations for your subscribers and then following through on those expectations is a particularly important practice for email newsletters, but also holds true for explicitly commercial emails and automated emails.
You should be generally consistent with the day on which you send weekly specials, appointment reminders, or service follow-ups. Consistency helps form a habit among your subscribers.
Consistency also applies to branding. It’s fine to A/B test subject lines and content types over time, but don’t shoot yourself in the foot from a brand perspective by designing every email you send from scratch. Leave that kind of advanced development to big brands with full in-house email teams.
The other reason to be consistent is that designing for email is really, really difficult — a lesson I learned the hard way last year prior to launching Tidings. Complex email clients like Microsoft Outlook use their own markup languages to render emails, and older email clients can’t interpret a lot of modern HTML or CSS declarations.
Choose a mobile-first template.
Make sure your layout renders well on phones, since that’s where more than 2/3 of email gets opened. Two- or three-column layouts that force pinching and zooming on mobile devices are a no-no, and at this point, most subscribers are used to scrolling a bit to see content.
As long as your template reflects your brand accurately, the content of that layout is far more important than its design. Look no further than the simple email layouts chosen by some of the most successful companies in their respective industries, including Amazon, Kayak, and Fast Company.
Pick a layout that’s proven to work on phones and stick with it.
Include an email signup button or form prominently on your website.
It’s become a best practice to include social icons in the header and/or footer of your website. But there’s an obvious icon missing from so many sites!
An email icon should be the first one in the lineup, since it’s the channel where your audience is most likely to see your content.
Also consider using Privy or Mailmunch to embed a signup banner or popover on your website with minimal code.
The specific place of newsletters
Plenty of people way smarter than me are on the newsletter bandwagon (and joined it much earlier than I did). Moz has been sending a popular “Top 10” newsletter for years, Kick Point sends an excellent weekly synopsis, and StreetFight puts out a great daily roundup, just to name a few. As a subscriber, those companies are always top-of-mind for me as thought leaders with their fingers on the pulse of digital marketing.
But newsletters work far beyond the digital marketing industry, too.
Sam Dolnick, the man in charge of the New York Times’ digital initiatives, puts a lot of stock in newsletters as a cornerstone channel, calling them “a lo-fi way to form a deep relationship with readers.”
I love that description. I think of a newsletter as a more personalized social channel. In the ideal world it’s halfway between a 1:1 email and a broadcast on Facebook or Twitter.
Granted, a newsletter may not be right for every local business, and it’s far from the only kind of email marketing you should be doing. But it’s also one of the easiest ways to get started with email marketing, and as Sam Dolnick said, an easy-to-understand way to start building relationships with customers.
For more newsletter best practices, this ancient (1992!) article actually covers print newsletters but almost all of its advice applies equally well to digital versions!
A great option or a strategic imperative?
Facebook’s ongoing reduction in organic visibility, Google’s ongoing evolution of the local SERP, and the shift to voice search will combine to create an existential threat to agencies that serve smaller-budget local businesses over the next 2–3 years.
Agencies simply can’t charge the margin to place paid ads that they can charge for organic work, particularly as Google and Facebook do a better and better job of optimizing low-budget campaigns. More ads, more Knowledge Panels, and more voice searches mean fewer organic winners at Google than ever before (though because overall search volume won’t decline, the winners will win bigger than ever).
Basic SEO blocking-and-tackling such as site architecture, title tags, and citation building will always be important services, but their impact for local businesses has declined over the past decade, due to algorithmic sophistication, increased competition, and decreased organic real estate.
To grow or even maintain your client base, it’ll be critical for you as an agency to offer additional services that are just as effective and scalable as these techniques were a decade ago.
As a concrete, high-margin, high-ROI deliverable, email should be a centerpiece of those additional services. And if it just doesn’t feel like something you’re ready to take on right now, Tidings is happy to handle your referrals :D!
I am using a lot of email marketing right now and starting with social media advertising.
In my experience when sending the emails from my Gmail, there was a better response because they didn't go to the SPAM folder. On the other hand, when using my domain webmail, a lot of them went to the SPAM folder.
So when you said that using Gmail is an easy way to get your primary address blacklisted, what would be your advice on this?
Thanks David!
Hi Mario,
This article (https://www.gmass.co/blog/gmail-send-mail-as-setti...) does a good job of explaining why your Gmails might be working better than a domain webmail.
If you do send via Gmail (or another service like it), it's important to offer people a way to unsubscribe...not just for legal compliance with CAN-SPAM / similar laws, but if the recipient ends up marking your emails as spam, it's going to hurt deliverability for 1:1 emails to that subscriber. If enough recipients do that, your address may be flagged as a spammer across multiple email providers (https://www.everycloudtech.com/how-email-blacklist...).
My advice would be to use a real ESP for 1-to-many emails and continue to use Gmail for 1-to-1 emails.
Awesome! It makes a lot of sense. I will read both articles now.
Thank you very much for your help David!
I've never even tried to do this with a Gmail based on best practice. I think I may give it a whirl now though after looking through those 2 links.
I have a harder time getting the best content in the email than I do finding addresses to hit. It feels like everybody is hopping on this more seriously now so offering the most amazing content is like 98% of the job now. When I have a client with no eye catching product offerings it's like 50 times more work to get the same results. Bad times now with every outlet out to kill organic and make everything pay to play. It's like "May the best budget win" instead of product when you go outside of emails and SEO.
Yeah, I totally agree with this. This past year, I've been keeping a closer eye on my email subscriptions. I'm really nitpicky about what goes in my inbox, and ALWAYS unsubscribe immediately if I have 0 interest in getting updates from the brand. That being said, the majority of my brand subscriptions ARE product-based - NOT content-based - because I'm interested in hearing about sales, discounts, etc. It's really tough to just rely on promoting blog content or "company news" because more often than not, I don't really care to hear about XYZ's company picnic last week - regardless of whether or not I like or support the brand. Reading about their work events have no bearing on me, all I care about are product discounts and sales. Unsubscribe'd!
Nice post David! E-mail marketing is a really great tool, but in the most of the companies it´s used in a really spammy ways. I´ve seen so many companies that are not offering value to their customers so they are just burning out their mail list. And they still asking why the most clicked link is "unsubscribe"...
Couldn't agree more. It's critical to send content that your subscribers are interested in, in order for email to deliver the ROI I highlighted early in my column.
In fact in my opinion I think it is better not doing email marketing than doing poor email marketing. If a business doesn't have the time to create great content to send to their list, it is better not sending them nothing. Just focus in other strategy.
Great article David! Did not know that E-Mail Marketing is among the top 3 marketing channels...
I feel ike the biggest problem with it though is to get the right email adresses in order to reach your target audience.
Hey Abel, thanks for saying so!
Audience building is always a challenge, for sure. Tools like Privy and Mailmunch can definitely help with that, but this is another area where some agency intelligence and technical know-how can help build more targeted lists and segments based on where on your website (or other locations) subscribers are signing up to hear from a company.
Thanks for your reply David!
Search Agencies should also consider the entire customer journey from search to client. If you can get their name and email as a search goal conversion, you can also create very personalized email campaigns. But, you'll want to use something with a flowchart like Infusionsoft or Drip. Otherwise it's too generic. You can do a great job leading that person down the sales funnel without much effort.
Great post explaining the importance of email marketing. I have actually seen this in practice with a client who is a tour operator. As soon as we send the quarterly newsletter packed with information of various interesting places plus the forthcoming tours we see that there are a large number of bookings in the following week.
I had a similar experience. When I first started doind email marketing I was surprised about the really great number of people who were interested in working with me after reading my emails.
I have never use e-mail marketing, uffff mistakes that some commit
you´re not alone :)
It is something to be cautious in Spain but if you do it properly it could be an awesome tool.
I am surprised with the good result that my email marketing campaigns are giving me. I haven`t used it for a while because I thought people considered it spam, but I have opened a subscription list with mailchimp and I have very good opening ratios among my subscribers.
Email marketing is more alive than ever
Truly said, I agree with your points. I was searching for a similar blog, I read one blog yesterday by Renae Gregoire, they also have great content. I will recommend your website and will share this article as it was really good. Thanks for posting, keep them coming!
Great article, David. Love your point on expansion over time. My agency has found that it does get progressively harder to see continual growth through a Local SEO providing.
We'll definitely be reconsidering how often we suggest email marketing for clients (and might consider Tidings). Thanks for the convincing!
With the amount of SEO spam mail going around... i don't think those 2016 numbers are at all relevant in our industry, especially not in 2017 and 2018. I am not saying ... don't try it, and if you do try it... please be sure to make it exceptional and not spammy. I feel like this post is painting pretty pictures and unicorns ;) Sorry David, you did do a great job putting it all together, so cheers for that.
Hi Brendon,
As I said in response to another comment, it's essential to send quality content to subscribers that have asked to receive it. The SEO industry has its share of bad actors for sure, but I haven't seen evidence to suggest that sentiment about email across all industries has changed dramatically (if at all) over the course of the last year...
Great post David, thanks. I think Brendon has a valid point regarding how accurate those figures are today, however sending valuable resources to those who have subscribed is a no-brainer.
My only input would be try not to overdo the email with call-to-actions or blatant promotions and/or sales offerings.
I work in an industry that sends millions of emails every day (editorial content) and it is quite consistent as a traffic driver. It helps your delivery rates of course if you are considered a trustworthy sender. As a smaller publisher, you should not try to do this on your own infrastructure but use services like Mailchimp or Campaign Montor and the like.
I also used Email Marketing but not my web mail and not from gmail account. I used Mail chimp to send email. I got my email goes to promotion section in gmail account. I talk with my expert he told me that some words that seems like spam in "subject" during sending mail. so in this case my mail will go to either promotion section or spam section in Gmail. But few words that helps to send my emails in Inbox Section. I need your suggestion for this.
Email Marketing has been always our first priority to target mass audience. The best part doing email marketing is the response rate. To generate potential customer and many more. What I believe is that a proper email marketing strategy can give any business the best ROI. Great article davidmihm. Very imformative.
Businesses that skip out on email marketing are definitely missing out. 44:1 is a lot higher click-through rate than I expected.
Agree. I was surprised too. If you're making quality content, not embracing newsletters is just a missed opportunity. I thought this was standard for content marketers but to my surprise there's still websites up to now that have zero email marketing strategies. It's disappointing when I actually am looking to subscribe and it's not even an option!
We offer inclusion in an email newsletter, just targeted to a subset of our network. This way businesses keep adding to the larger network. We grew our list from 3,000 to 360,000 in 2 years. And we send them out from our email client.
Doing piece-meal email marketing for businesses is very time consuming.
However, if you're trying to prove ROI from your work, sometimes it's a quick boost of results.
Great article - the solid ROI you get from email marketing is undeniable.
Additionally, the SEM Rush Ranking factors study 2.0 found that direct traffic itself is an important ranking factor, so using email to promote your next bit of content is a great way to boost the ranking of a new (or existing) page.
thanks!
Great article, David, very useful.
I really enjoyed reading this article. I learned a lot from it and look forward to learning more through my e-mail marketing endeavors. As I was reading, I was reminded of another article: 15 Ways to Increase Your Email Open Rate by Ignitur[.]com/blog I thought it went hand-in-hand with this. I look forward to reading and learning more.
David, I have not found anything about GDPR in your article and how it affects email marketing campaigns.
Obvious disclaimer that this should not be construed as legal advice, but GDPR is a great reason to use a reputable ESP as they're very likely to be in compliance, whereas sending from your own contact list may not be.
Here's a good primer from Mailchimp: https://blog.mailchimp.com/getting-ready-for-the-g...
Great information. I never knew email marketing played such a significant role. I focused mainly on organic traffic through SEO.
Any suggestions on how to use social media properly?
interesting post David! personally, this is the point I find most difficult to work on in my project. I do not generate just subscribers and these do not convert through email. I guess I do not work properly with email marketing.
It is something you learn throught experience. It is key to discover as soon as possible who is your perfect client and what he really wants. If you send information that it is not valuable for your client it will not be a good email marketing. But if you send great value through your email list it will little by little expand and give you great results.
Great stuff! Thanks for sharing!
I agree that email marketing can be a great way to drive traffic and conversions, as long as it's done correctly (as so many other people have already commented). The days of "email blasts" (sending the same exact email to your whole email list) are behind us...or at least should be. Emails now can be targeted, personalized, and geared specifically to a a customer or potential customers needs. It's no wonder why email marketing can be so effective.
Great post David!
Great article, David, very useful.
And by the way, can anyone recommend a cheap or free platform other than MailChimp?
I used few times ToutApp. Hope it helps.
Email marketing is really a knocking stone to open up opportunities for all other marketing strategies your site implements. More important than actual sales, emails will give the audience an awareness that your product exists. Even if the receiver don't need your product, they may in turn recommend to others who might make use of it.