Sales Management Training: How to
Boost Your E-Mail Marketing Performance
Okay; so your sales team is an enthusiastic
group of self-starters with a great line of products and services to offer to
a well-qualified customer base. Does this mean you will automatically exceed
your target for this quarter? No, not unless you have provided them with the
sales training they need to turn these advantages into closed deals. Our Sales
Management Training courses are designed to give sales managers the sales training
skills to build an effective sales force. From communication to motivation to
conducting meetings to planning to problem solving, our sales management training
coaches will personally guide you as you design your winning strategy.
7 steps that'll guarantee
your e-mail promotions generate the clicks, hits and sales you need
Thanks to e-mail, online business owners have the option of instant and repeated
communication with an audience of potential clients and previous customers.
Not that this is news to you: You're already well-aware that e-mail gives you
the power to contact people again and again, promoting your products, your service,
your Web site, whatever you like...for free!
Unfortunately, too often this power goes to the heads of newbie marketers. And
this is where the trouble begins. A poorly designed e-mail campaign is a dangerous
thing. You can enrage 90 percent of your e-mail list . . . you can be accused
of spamming . . . your ISP can cancel your account . . . the list goes on.
If you have any pride in your business whatsoever, then I suggest you consider
the information I'm about to present to you very carefully. I'm about to share
the key steps you'll need to follow to guarantee the success of any e-mail marketing
promotions you send.
Step 1. E-mail a targeted list of people who will be interested in your offer.
Perhaps the most critical step in guaranteeing the success of your e-mail promotions
is to e-mail a targeted list of opt-in subscribers who have specifically requested
to receive information on a particular topic from you. You'll be wasting your
time and energy if you don't.
Remember that your job is not to sell your product to everyone--not everyone
wants your product. So focus your energy on the people who do. Those who have
opted-in to your mailing list, your customers and leads, and individuals who
have requested information from your autoresponder are all excellent prospects.
Step 2. Personalize each and every e-mail. People are more likely to read (as
opposed to delete) e-mail that addresses them personally. For example, by sending
your subscriber "Bob Smith" an e-mail that presents his e-mail address
directly in the "To:" field instead of the BCC (blind carbon copy)
field, Bob will know that he's given you his e-mail address. He'll be less likely
to assume you're some spammer or scam artist trying to sell him another widget
he doesn't need.
And by addressing the e-mail "Dear Bob" as opposed to "Dear
Everyone" in the salutation, Bob automatically assumes you know him, making
him even more likely to read your e-mail. In various tests we've done, we've
discovered that personalized e-mail increases the response we receive by 64
percent. So I'd advise you not to underestimate the power of this seemingly
simple technique!
Step 3. Write benefit-oriented subject lines. When doing e-mail promotions,
your subject line can literally make or break your success--a critical point
the majority of marketers miss. Think about all those e-mails you're probably
getting on a daily basis with subjects like:
"MAKE $75,000 EVERY WEEK GUARANTEED!"
"EXPLOSIVE STOCK PICK AT $0.45!!!!"
"newsletter"
"THIS IS NOT SPAM!"
Do you open these e-mails? Because I know I sure don't! The subject line makes
it obvious the e-mail is spam, that it's from someone you don't know or that
it doesn't offer a clear benefit that makes you want to read it.
Now let me ask you a question: How many of your legitimate newsletters and
e-mails are mistakenly deleted by your subscribers who read your subject lines
and assume it must be spam! How many potential sales could you have saved simply
by rewriting your subject lines? Obviously I can't answer these questions for
you. However, I can teach you how to write subject lines that will compel your
subscribers to open and read any e-mail you send them.
When you write your subject lines, you basically have three choices:
You can make an announcement or give news (for example, "IMC shows subscribers
how to write killer subject lines")
You can make the reader curious (for instance, "IMC gives subscribers this
secret marketing strategy...")
You can emphasize how the reader will benefit from opening your e-mail (such
as, "Discover tips for writing subject lines that will increase your sales")
Out of these three techniques, you'll always be most successful if you write
subject lines that state a clear benefit and tell the reader exactly how they're
going to save money, save time, make their life easier and so on by opening
and reading your e-mail. If you can state a benefit and create curiosity (for
instance, "Discover this proven marketing strategy that will increase your
sales!"), so much the better.
But again, the key when writing subject lines is to emphasize benefits by considering
your product or service from your customers' point of view...
How will they benefit from taking the time to read your e-mail?
What will they learn?
Is your product or service going to save them time?
Is it going to save them money?
Or is it going to improve their lives in some way?
Write subject lines that emphasize these benefits and I guarantee you'll dramatically
increase the number of subscribers who open and read your e-mail.
By Corey Rudl

Sales Management Training - Know How To Close the Deal
Sales
Management Quote
"Success demands singleness of purpose."
Vincent Lombardi
Suggested Reading:
The Management of Sales
Training
by National Society of Sales Training Executives.
Proactive Sales
Management:
How to Lead, Motivate, and Stay Ahead of the Game
by William Skip Miller
A case study of sales management
training programs
by David A Erickson
The Fun Factor: Games, Sales
Contests and Activities that Make Work Fun and Get Results
by Carolyn Greenwich
Sales Training Handbook
by Jeff Magee
The Greatest Sales Training
In The World
by Robert Nelson
High-Powered Sales Training
Activities
by Garry Lennon
Training for Retail Sales
and Profit
by Judith J. Howe