Does Your Subject Line Do the Job - Glambition Radio

Does Your Subject Line Do the Job

It’s proven that the FROM field of your emails is the MOST important factor in getting your messages opened. But after that, it’s surely the subject line.

Many ezine (email newsletter) publishers seem to consider their subject lines as afterthoughts, which is a bad idea.

Example: Suppose you get an e-mail with the subject line, “Get Rid of Your Debt Today.”

I don’t know about you, but my right pinkie is already poised over the delete key!

However, this could be an ezine I’ve subscribed to that just isn’t announcing itself properly.

Now, what if the subject line instead read:

“[Frank’s Financial Tips] Get Rid of Your Debt Today”

See the difference? By listing the title of your ezine, it reinforces your brand, it allows your readers to filter your ezine into a separate folder in their e-mail inbox, and most important, it lets your recipient know your message is NOT spam.

Now I do see some ezines that ONLY list the ezine name. For the example above it could just say, “Frank’s Financial Tips.” That’s okay, but it doesn’t tell me what’s in the issue or why I should open it. Remember you’re competing with dozens of other e-mail subject lines in your readers’ inboxes, so give them a reason to open yours.

Studies show that also using the reader’s NAME in the subject line can dramatically increase open rates, but I reserve this tactic for special promotions I send out that are time-sensitive and I want great response to (such as announcing an upcoming teleseminar). Example: “Jennifer, join me next Tuesday?”

This helps get the reader’s attention and builds curiosity so she opens it right away. If you want to use this tactic, you’ll need a list service that supports “personalization.”

No matter what subject line you write, keep it short and sweet, because many e-mail programs cut off long subject lines. Here are the maximum subject line lengths (including spaces) in some popular e-mail programs (last time I checked):

AOL: 52 characters
Hotmail: 45 characters
Outlook Express: 64 characters
Yahoo: 80 characters

Don’t go crazy counting spaces, but just keep in mind that shorter is better. (This sentence here contains 60 characters, including spaces.)

[EDITOR’S NOTE: For my list of 87 proven subject lines that you’re welcome to outright COPY and use for yourself, see my program, “Email Promotions That Really Rack up Sales” — it’s only available as a bonus with my Boost Business With Your Own Ezine system.]

© 2003-2009 Alexandria Brown International Inc.

Self-made multimillionaire entrepreneur Ali Brown is devoted to creating financial freedom for women globally through the power of entrepreneurship. To learn how to create wealth and live an extraordinary life now, register for her free weekly articles at www.AliBrown.com

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