04/29/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 04/29/2024 11:49
Do you know why email marketing isn't dead?
Because it's where your brand gets attention after getting permission.
While it may seem sexier to imagine your brand as among the first to pin its success on an emerging social platform, email marketing makes up for its lack of novelty with tangible results. According to Klaviyo's marketing mix report, 76.86% of all businesses place email marketing in the top 3 ROI-generating marketing channels.
If you don't have an email list, it means you're leaving a lot of money on the table. But we get it if you're not sure where to start. When you finish reading this article, you'll know exactly what to do.
An email list is a collection of email addresses from people who have opted in to receive email marketing messages from your brand.
That means it's a direct line of communication with an interested audience. And because email as a channel is not subject to algorithm changes or platform policies that could otherwise limit your reach, your email list empowers you to bypass intermediaries like social media platforms or advertising networks.
But not all email lists are alike. Let's look at what makes a good email list.
Maintain compliance with email marketing laws and regulations like CAN-SPAM, GDPR, or CASL to maintain trust and avoid penalties.
Use a double opt-in process to make sure subscribers genuinely want to receive your emails.
To improve deliverability and engagement metrics and reduce bounce rates, regularly clean your list by removing inactive subscribers.
Do not blast your whole list with generic messages-that's one way to decrease engagement and increase unsubscribes. Good email lists are segmented based on audience behavior, demographics, lifestyle preferences, and more. Use segments in Klaviyo--which are dynamic lists that add subscribers in or drop them out based on specific criteria.
Now that you know what to shoot for, here's where you can start with building your list.
The most common way to gather email addresses is through a sign-up form on your website. Here are the main types of forms you can use to build your email list:
Here's an example of a pop-up form from herbal water brand Aura Bora.
Notice how it makes the most of a small space, with:
Your work isn't over once you've launched a sign-up form. It's also important to continually test various sign-up form combinations to see which ones work for your brand.
Footwear brand Bearpaw, for example, launched two types of sign-up forms on their website: a welcome pop-up and an exit pop-up. The brand's hypothesis was that it would take more for someone to convert on an exit pop-up, so they offered a bigger incentive to subscribe from there than the welcome pop-up.
They were right. The submit rate on the exit pop-up was 2.7x the median for Bearpaw's 100 closest peers, according to Klaviyo benchmarks-and it helped them grow their subscriber list.
Similarly, Brava Fabrics was curious to see if they needed a discount code to build their email list, so they came up with an alternative. They tested a 10% discount against a contest that entered people to win €300 in free products for signing up. The incentives performed identically, so they went with the more budget-friendly option.
Brava also tested €300 against €1K and found that increasing the prize didn't increase conversion rate-proof that growing an email list doesn't have to break your budget.
If you want to start running high-volume sign-up form tests, here are a few sign-up form elements to consider experimenting with:
Write several options for adding one personalization field to test.
Consider using AI to auto-test multiple versions of your form and find the highest-converting display time.
Experiment with including a code that's personal to every unique user, so no two people receive the same code.
Target only those who fit a certain criteria, such as targeting email subscribers with SMS-only sign-up forms.
Trigger a sign-up form based on total cart value, total number of items in cart, or specific product criteria.
If you have physical retail locations, leverage integrations with Klaviyo like Lightspeed, Square, or Shopify POS to capture email addresses for receipts-and segment those customers based on their geography.
You can also place QR codes at check-out, or train frontline staff to ask for email addresses when they're processing a purchase.
This is a great way to not only grow a large list, but also build a more omnichannel strategy as you segment customers based on geography and introduce them to your larger digital brand.
For example, luxury apparel brand Jenni Kayne uses geographical data to encourage in-person shopping. If a customer near a store abandons a $5K+ cart, their local store manager gets a Klaviyo notification to send 1:1 outreach.
Whether you're using organic or paid social on Instagram, TikTok, etc., a contest campaign is a great way to grow your list-and turn followers into email subscribers whose data you own.
To run your contest, make an eye-catching post-showcasing your prize-that encourages people to subscribe to your email list as a requirement for entry. To make your campaign go even further, tell people they'll be entered twice for tagging a friend and encouraging them to enter, too.
Here are a few ways to use social media to expand your reach even further:
Invest some budget in boosting your post beyond your immediate audience.
Hire a creator in your niche to promote the contest alongside your brand.
Your brand may perform best on Instagram, for example, but it's worth it to adapt and test your contest campaign on other platforms, too. If you're using this strategy, make sure to turn on double opt-in as a way to ensure good list hygiene.
If you're a brand that caters to a niche audience, you may be able to leverage small or emerging online communities to build your email list.
As more people hang out in messenger apps like Discord, Slack, and Signal, small brands may be missing opportunities to tap into those communities to build their lists.
Tread lightly-this won't be appropriate for every brand. People tend to hang out in these spaces to connect with people, not to be sold to. It's important to begin this strategy early, when your brand's still small-it takes a long time to gain trust, and you'll be more likely to gain that trust before your brand has grown to a larger size.
This list-building tactic requires patience, emotional intelligence, and a collaborative mindset. Your first priority isn't to ask people to subscribe to your list-it's to help your community, over a months-long period of time, and suggest a closer relationship through email after you prove your value.
To build your list, you'll need a marketing platform that can:
Great news-you won't need multiple tools to do it. Try Klaviyo and build your list with customer data that converts.