The most popular usage of our lists is for
email marketing.
Whether it be notifying other agents of
special property listings or recruiting agents to your
brokerage or promoting a seminar or other relevant product or
service to agents, email marketing represents a potentially
cost effective mechanism to get your message out to a large
number of people.
However, many customers have expressed
confusion about how exactly to implement an email marketing
campaign in a manner than maximizes the benefits and minimize
the risks.
The benefits are great, but first let's talk
about the risks, which fall into two categories: legal and
practical.
Legal Risks
The legal risks are real though remote and
easily avoided.
The FTC details the requirements for
commercial emailers
here
There are four basic rules:
1. No misleading headers. This is a technical
issue which generally doesn't apply to most emailers. As long
as you don't "spoof" the originating email address or computer
location, you are fine. You probably don't even know how to do
this so, like I said, this is not an issue.
2. No deceptive subject line. Again, no self-respecting
marketer has a motive to trick the recipient into opening the
email only to have him discover that the email is actually
about something different. Your subject line should clearly
indicate what the body of the email is about.
3. Opt-out mechanism. There must be some mechanism to allow
the recipient to opt-out of future emails. In effect, the law
gives you one free shot at anyone, but you can't continue to
send to someone who has specifically communicated that they do
not wish to receive anymore emails. Ideally, the opt-out
mechanism should be an automated link but a simple "reply"
with the word REMOVE in the subject line will suffice.
4. Physical mailing address. This is probably the one that
most people forget. You must identify your physical mailing
address in the body of your email, usually at the bottom after
your name.
That's it. Really it is very simple to comply
with the law concerning unsolicited bulk email.
Practical Risks
The second risk is practical and this is
really where the pitfalls occur.
While the law allows you to send unsolicited
emails, subject to the rules above, there are organizations
and software designed to reduce the prevalence of "spam."
(Indeed you probably have anti-spam software integrated into
your email program, which captures "spam" and puts it in a
junk or spam folder.) Some people define spam as any
unsolicited broadcast of emails to a large audience. I think
that is too broad a definition. According to
SpamHaus, "An electronic message is 'spam' IF the
recipient's personal identity and context are irrelevant
because the message is equally applicable to many other
potential recipients"
Our lists are not indiscriminate; they are
highly targeted to a specific audiences... real estate agents,
Doctors, or Dentists for example, . Therefore the recipient's
personal identity and context are HIGHLY relevant. People who
buy our lists are interested in marketing products or services
that people in a certain industry, and no one else, might
reasonably be interested in. Therefore, I do not think using
our lists constitutes "spam" in the "I-know-it-when-I-see-it"
sense of the term.
Unfortunately, most internet service
providers, website hosting services, email services, and
domain registrars cannot easily distinguish between relevant,
highly targeted bulk email broadcasts and real spam
(prescription drugs, mortgage loans and credit card offers,
rolex watches, male enhancement, etc). Indeed, they really
don't care about anything but complaints. You could send out 1
million emails and if no one complains, then you will not have
a problem (unless you overwhelm their mail servers or get a
lot of bounces). However, if you send a large email broadcast
and receive complaints, you run the risk of having your
internet connection terminated, website shut down, email
account cancelled, or domain name suspended. None of these are
a good thing. Furthermore, some internet providers have
"throttles" in place which restrict the number of email
messages you can send out in a day so even if you wanted to
"blast" to 10,000 people, you couldn't do it from your
personal computer.
Having said that, I have been sending
approximately 1 million emails a week from my business
internet account (which does not limit the number of emails I
can send) with a large broadband cable internet provider for
almost 2 years and have not been shut down. While there have
been a handful of complaints, they have been small relative to
the number of emails sent. I believe this is due to two
things:
1) my email promotions do not read like
"spam"; they are simple, direct descriptions of a product that
the recipient might reasonably be interested in. The promotion
is big on facts, low on hype. Treat your customer like an
intelligent human being and he won't treat you like a
"spammer."
2) I make it very easy to opt-out of future emails. If your
recipient realizes you are an honest business person like you
are, he is more inclined to simply opt-out of future emails
than go to the trouble of filing a spam complaint.
What it boils down to is use common sense, add
a unsubscribe link at the bottom of your email and be truthful
about what you send people. Here is a good item to add to the
bottom of your email.

Execution Options
So how do you avoid the practical risks
associated with email campaigns and, technically, how do you
actually implement an email broadcast?
You have basically 3, maybe 4, options.
First, the method that eliminates practically
all of the risks and is the easiest to implement utlizes a
web-based email broadcasting service. Unfortunately, most of
these services (e.g. Constant Contact, JangoMail, iContact,
Vertical Response, etc) prohibit the usage of purchased lists.
However, Elite Email, who we have an affiliate relationship
with, DOES allow the use of purchased lists.
You can reach them at the following link:
http://www.eliteemail.com

Once you create your account, simply call
customer support and tell them you are using a list acquired
from us and they can provide a dedicated ip address for a
monthly fee. This protects their other accounts from any
possible spam complaints due to your broadcast. Then, upload
the agent list you purchased from us and utilize their very
easy-to-use web-based email broadcast software to send your
message. There is no setup fee; you simply purchase email
"credits" in advance (see
http://www.eliteemail.com/price/ for pricing). One of the
benefits of Elite Email's service is that it will
automatically handle bounces and opt-out requests so that
subsequent emails are CAN-SPAM compliant. They also include
many valuable reporting tools so you can measure
deliverability, open rates, click-through-rates etc. Finally,
they have a large number of email templates specifically
designed for real estate that will make your campaign look
very professional.
If your email contains links to your website,
there is still a small risk your hosting service might receive
complaints and suspend your website. To eliminate this risk, I
recommend purchasing a new domain name which will host the
"landing page" for your email campaign. For example, if your
website is www.mydomainname.com, you could purchase the domain
name www.my-domain-name.com (domain names with hyphens are
more likely to be available) for less than $10 and Elite Email
will host it for a nominal monthly fee. Then create a single
web page for your new domain name that looks just like your
website and link your email to this site. The landing page
will contain menu options and other links that actually go to
your main website. In other words, your "dummy" domain name
page will look like a page from your real website and all of
the links on that page will actually go to pages on your
website. This inexpensive technique effectively insulates your
real website from the possible consequences of complaints
generated by your email campaign.
Furthermore, you can create a forwarding email
address for this new domain name to send your email "from". In
other words, not only will your email contain links to
www.my-domain-name.com but the email will be sent from
"account@my-domain-name.com". This "dummy" email address can
then be set up to forward to your real email account. By
linking to your "dummy" domain name and sending from your
"dummy" email account, you eliminate almost any possibility of
adverse consequences due to spam complaints.
Second, if this seems like too much work and
you would just like to pay someone to handle everything for
you,
simply Scroll down we will handle the mailing for you
Third, if you are willing to accept the risks
of broadcasting from your own computer (which I have been
doing for years), you can purchase an email program, such as
these
Try & buy
Click
Here or on the box below then Download or purchase the
software you like.
|
Atomic Email Marketing Tools |
Atomic
Mail Sender
Flexible direct mail delivering and newsletter sending
program.
Atomic
List Manager
In-house and independent studies show that using this
mailing list manager increases ROI up to 15-25%... |
The program is relatively easy to use. You
can import one of our lists, create your email, and send one
copy to each email in the list with the press of a button. You
can also easily insert fields from the list to personalize the
message. For example:
Dear <first_name>
As an agent in <city>, <state>, You know what is ......
Such personalization not only improves the
effectiveness of your appeal, it reduces the likelihood of
complaints; the recipient, if not interested in your product,
will simply opt-out of future emails.
Finally, you could just use your email program
(e.g. Outlook) to send the messages. Copy and paste 50 or so
email addresses from the list into the BCC (blind copy) field
and put your own address in the TO field and send the email.
Each of the recipients in the BCC field will receive a copy
(but they won't be able to see each other's email address as
they would if you simply pasted the addresses into the CC
field). Most mail servers have a limit on how many recipients
an email can have (50 is a common limit) so you can't just
paste all 10,000 (for example) email addresses from your list
into the BCC field!!! However if your list is rather small,
and you don't require any personalization (i.e. merged field
values), this manual method is very cheap to implement.
Obviously, if your list is large, it could take quite a while
to paste so many groups of emails and you run into some of the
practical risks described above. However, if your list is
relatively small, it is unlikely you will get enough
complaints to interrupt any of your services (although you may
get a warning!).
So, to summarize, email marketing is a
potentially cost effective means of promoting your products or
services. However, you have to be aware of the risks and plan
accordingly or it could blow up in your face. If you follow
the advice above, you will avoid the most common email
marketing pitfalls and can focus on the actual marketing of
your product. Use common sense don't pound people with your
message every day. Be respectful and responsive to
remove requests, do this and you will have a successful
campaign.
Tips
With respect to actually putting together the
content of an email marketing campaign, I
recommend the following websites for tips on this subject:
Email Strategies Explained-How to use
email marketing to build your entire online business and
pull in a six-figure income every year through your
lists!
Get Your
Messages Read-“Here Are My 24 Closely Guarded
Secrets For Getting Your Prospects to Read and Respond to Every
Mailing You Send To Them!”
As always, if you have any questions, feel
free to contact us
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