Category: Email Marketing

  • 20 Things to Know When Choosing Your Email Marketing Software

    20 Things to Know When Choosing Your Email Marketing Software

    20 Things to Know About When Choosing Email Marketing Software for Your Small or Solopreneur Business

    Email is THE TOOL to set you up for a laptop lifestyle, work-from-anywhere, business.  And yes, your business, no matter how small or large, physical retail or online only, needs its own email list. But getting started with email marketing can seem daunting for a lot of small businesses, especially solopreneurs doing everything themselves. There are many options in email marketing software. So let’s sort through 20 things you should know about email marketing: facts on email, how to go about choosing software for your business, and what some top software options are.

    Get the Facts on Email Marketing

    Yes your business needs email, yes it’s still effective, yes all businesses can benefit.

    Did you know …

    By any set of numbers, email marketing is FAR from dead and should be cornerstone of the marketing plans of any business.

    Email Marketing Facts Infographic

    Yeah, email is all that and more!

    But what if you’re in the smaller percent of businesses that haven’t dove into email marketing – yet?

    Tap Into the Enduring Power of Email to Grow Your Business

    List building activities and email marketing are some of the most valuable and most profitable strategies for any business with an online presence – that’s all businesses! But it’s hard to focus on strategies and tactics to build our email lists if we don’t HAVE an email list. Just because email has been around for many years doesn’t mean it no longer works or that newer marketing tactics automatically work better.

    But we don’t want just any list! We know it’s a no-no to ever buy a list or buy leads (that violates all kinds of rules plus it’s bad business). We don’t want to ‘churn-n-burn’ through a list either. It’s not just about building a list to get to a certain number (though, yeah numbers kinda matter!), it’s about building an engaged list that wants our emails, opens them, and takes action on them. We want a high-quality, targeted list. And to make the most of a targeted list + email marketing (personalization, segmentation, timing, automation), we need email marketing software.

    But HOW do you go about email marketing and sending emails?

    First things first – use software that lets you stay safe and legally compliant

    To properly, legally, send marketing emails out to a list who has chosen (opted in) to receiving your emails, you must use email marketing software/service (EMS).

    Just a reminder, you can’t send marketing emails through your domain email, Outlook or Gmail (sending one-to-one to a contact, friend, or prospect is ok – not mass emails). You’ve heard of email regulations such as the CAN SPAM Act in the US, CASL in Canada or the GDPR rules in Europe.  As a business owner (or ANY organization – this applies to nonprofits and educational orgs too), you need an email marketing service to stay safe, legal, and to make your marketing more efficient.

    While this sounds intimidating, if you’re a legit business using a known, reputable email marketing service, you should have few problems. Choosing and using a reputable EMS should be one of the first steps, and maybe first purchase, when creating your independent, online,  laptop lifestyle business. Ok, it should be one of the first decisions for ANY type of business! Email is for every business.

    Next to choosing a reputable software option, the best way to ensure you stay safe, legal, and ethical with your email marketing is to get clear, explicit permission to email people.

    Give folks a way to choose to receive your emails – and in some locations, this means even asking your paying customers if they want to receive marketing emails. People choosing to join your list can be current or new customers, prospective customers who signed up via a blog post, a webinar, a social media post, or who heard you speak at an event. No, merely exchanging business cards doesn’t count – send them a personal follow-up email and ask them to join your list.

    But which email marketing software do you choose? How do you go about choosing?

    Before you jump in to looking at trials or signing up for one of the email marketing services I will go over below – you should think about what you and your business need.  These steps apply not just to choosing email software, but any software, purchases, or investments for your business. Your business is going to be slightly different than mine, your audience different, your comfort with software and tech will be different. Go through my recommended questions to sort the software options into what fits you right now.

     

    Ask These Questions for the  Business or Marketing Services/Software You Are Considering

    What stage of development is your business?

    There are differences between what you might choose if you have a hobby or a side gig and this is not a full-time business. Consider whether you mostly sell crafts on Etsy, or journals through Kindle Direct Publishing, or you are a consultant to nonprofits, or you are creating online courses for other business owners, or you sell classes to busy moms of toddlers. It can make a difference if you have prior business experience, or this is your first exciting adventure.

    Also consider how tech savvy do you feel – or how well do you handle pressure or learning new software? Or do you only want to learn the basics and then hand things over to a VA (virtual assistant) or OBM (Online Business Manager) to run daily operations?

    Will this software grow with you, your business, and your list?

    Does the tool have the features you need right now and features you think your business will grow into in the next 12-18 months? 

    If the software is missing a key feature (like email automation/autoresponders), it doesn’t matter how cheap it might be. Likewise, if the features are too hard to learn, will the tool hold you back when you are just starting out?

    I’ve seen both sides to this with solopreneurs I’ve worked with – they paid big bucks they didn’t have for tools like InfusionSoft or LeadPages before they had products or services to sell, before they had a list. The tools confused them and were holding them back, not helping. On the flip side is a coach who went with the free MailChimp account because they didn’t have much of a budget, but back then the free plan didn’t have the tools (autoresponders) they needed to sell their services and new courses. They limped along for too long.

    How much do the next tiers of subscriber numbers cost and when do you likely think you will reach those levels? Are you able to budget for the next levels of service/number of subscribers that your business will need?

    You don’t want a tool that is too limiting and you will outgrow quickly, nor a tool that has so many advanced bells + whistles that you don’t have time to learn or will not use for years to come (if ever). You are not marrying your tools or software for life, you will change! It’s ok. (Psst – I’m on my 3rd email marketing software in just less than 10 years of business – it happens!)

    What plans and price points does the software offer?

    If you work steadily on list-building or participate in events, will the tool accommodate you? Will you outgrow the basic plan too quickly? Can you afford the next tier of pricing? What kind of business goals and growth will you need to set in order to comfortably afford the next tier?

    Email Marketing Setup Checklist Cover photo

    12 Steps to Setting Up Email Marketing for Success

    Sign up below to get our FREE guide and get started today

     

    How proven is this software?

    Is it a brand new startup with little track record yet? Is the tool still in beta or testing phases of any kind? Is it a more mature tool?

    There are marketplaces that specialize in showcasing newer software and getting apps/software to their first big audiences and sets of users (especially AppSumo + ProductHunt, also StackSocial). There can be some great deals there! BUT … beware that many of those deals are on new, unproven software, or software that may still be in a limited form. Do your homework, read the reviews, know exactly what features you are getting (or not) if you see deals from these types of third-party marketplaces. Friends and I have been burned with deals on software that had too many bugs or the version on deal at AppSumo didn’t include all the features.

    Does it have lots of testimonials, reviews, a substantial knowledge base with support and feedback from its users?

    Has the tool aged well and kept up with changes in marketing technology? Alternately, has the tool been around a while but is no longer a leader nor has the most current features?

     

    What is the reputation of the software you are considering?

    What do reviews say?

    What do your colleagues or friends with a business similar to yours use and what do they like about it? It’s very helpful to know other friends who have a business model similar to yours and what tools they use and why (it’s why you’re reading my blog post and my emails, right?!). Ask around in groups or among your business friends and get honest assessments. And take their recommendations with a grain of salt. 😉

     

    What is customer support like for this tool?

    How responsive do they seem to be?

    What methods do they offer for contacting them? Do their business hours match yours

    For example, a key piece of business software I use is from a European-based company, they only reply via email or chat, and it’s necessary to take time differences into account when seeking support. It’s not great when a problem pops up on a Friday afternoon!

    Do they offer timely training? Does the training look easy to understand and not time-consuming?

    For example, in addition to all their videos, tutorials, customer forum, and blog post – my email service Active Campaign runs a live, in-person training program that travels the country. I attended their Study Hall in Philadelphia not long after I made the switch. They’re doing virtual Study Halls now too.

    Sign outside the ActiveCampaign Study Hall in Philadelphia
    ActiveCampaign offered an all day training in Philadelphia – very timely!

     

    How easy is it to operate?

    How easy is it for you to navigate through the tool and its user interfaces?

    How easy is it to get started and take your first actions in the app? For example, how quickly and easily can you create your first form, create your first email, create a segment for a list, or create an automation?

    Your EMS should make it easy to manage your contacts, send automated emails, have a way to tag or segment subscribers, easily create campaigns, and track performance.

    The tool that lets you easily, consistently send engaging emails, that reach your audience, and lets you work smarter not harder is the system that’s right for you.

     

    How easy is it to send different types of emails?

    Is it clear how to set up an automated email vs. a one-time or broadcast email?

    What do the emails look like?

    Are the included templates modern and follow current best practices? Or do they look stale and years old?  [hint: overly styled, graphics heavy, multi-column ‘newsletters’ are a thing of the past]

     

    But I’m on budget, bootstrapping, no money for marketing – can I go free?

    It’s often true what they say, “you get what you pay for” – so free is not always better. And I stand by the assertion that email is so vital to growing your online business that you just can NOT skip out here.

    If it’s a ‘free’ email software – what’s NOT included?

    What are the limitations – and not just in numbers of contacts or emails sent per month?

    Do you have access to automation/autoresponders?

    Can you segment your list?

    Will it integrate with 3rd party tools?

    What level of support or service is offered to customers of the email marketing software?

    Often customer service is severely limited for those on free plans -e.g. you may only be able to send them emails and wait for a reply.

    Compared to so many other tools and tactics out there, email marketing is still very inexpensive, especially given the high return on your investment. It’s much better to invest and spend for a solid email marketing service that serves you well and has the features you need instead of cheapening out and needing to move services in a few months or a year as  your business grows.

     

    Questions to ask in evaluating business software options choices

    Ok, But What Are the Common Email Marketing Software Options for Solopreneur Online Businesses

     

    ActiveCampaign (my preferred software)

    I’ve tested and used multiple services over the years, researched to move to a new system, and am delighted that I’m now with ActiveCampaign. AC has made my marketing better, my email more efficient and effective. This is the tool I demonstrate in additional courses on email, tech, and marketing. I love how easy it is to tag, segment, and run multiple automated series, all with people on just one list. Lite plan for up to 500 subscribers is $15/mo and goes to $29/mo for 1,000 subscribers. [Note: I pay one-time, annually, which makes my per month cost just $17/mo, less than some other companies]

    Mighty Marketing Active Campaign Dashboard email marketing software
    Dashboard of my ActiveCampaign account

    AWeber (I used this one for years before moving in 2019)

    AWeber is a favorite among many online business owners I know because they offer a free/low-cost trial, have relatively low monthly rates, ($19/mo) and offer very good customer service (one of the few that has phone-support). Their tool is pretty easy to learn and use.

    They were also one of those tools that qualifies as proven, but also dated technology. They just didn’t seem to be keeping up with changes in design, interfaces or features. I’m glad to see they’ve finally added features and improved things (e.g. added built-in landing pages), I’m still also glad I left. NEWS: As of spring/summer 2020 AWeber has launched a totally free tier for up to 500 list contacts and they have added features like a landing page builder. This makes them competitive and worth checking out.

    [NOTE: Warning … many of my solopreneur pals and client who participate in list-building events such as bundles or giveaways have run into major problems with AWeber in 2020 for disallowing or unsubscribing the new opt-ins who joined during these events. The company’s responses have been unsatisfactory and turned a lot of business owners off. If you are planning to build your list through strategies like giveaways or bundles, at this time I recommend you stay away from AWeber until they stop this behavior toward legitimate opt-ins.]

    ConvertKit

    CK has gained a lot of fans among online solopreneurs, especially pro bloggers, authors and marketing geeks for its strong tagging and automation features, as well as built-in landing pages. When I was doing my research to move in 2019 it was a serious contender – and I followed my own tech advice and asked other business others for their thoughts, plus poked around inside. For me, it had too many quirks, odd naming of structures/systems, was not intuitive for me to setup or use, had poor designs, and cost more than ActiveCampaign. But it has many fans in my circle of business pals! Free 14-day trial, rates start at $29/mo

    MailChimp (like many, I started here on their free plan, but moved quickly)

    Known for its totally free plan for up to 2,000 subscribers. But it has limitations, quirks, not always intuitive or user-friendly. While they’ve added ‘advanced ‘features and say they’re built-in, they aren’t truly advanced and some require paid plans. MailChimp has significant restrictions on affiliate marketing that can scare off certain business owners (do read all the fine print). Support is very limited for free plans. Paid plans start at $10/mo for up to 500 subscribers.

    GetResponse

    Small business friendly with automation tools built-in and easy drag-n-drop email builder. Their built-in forms and landing pages are attractive and easy. But some clients I’ve worked with complain about GR not being so easy, not connecting well to other tools, or being hard to learn. Those are possible pitfalls with most of the email systems. GR has a 30-day free trial; Basic plan $15/mo up to 1,000 subscribers.

    ConstantContact

    A frequent TV advertiser, this tool is popular among many offline, retail, or e-commerce businesses and claims to be very user-friendly. $20/mo up to 500 subscribers, $90/mo for 5,000. 60 day free trial.

     

    MailerLite

    A newer player in email marketing, like its name suggests, it’s a bit stripped down. It’s missing many of the advanced features of other EMS, including some key automation features. But it’s simple and affordable, with a free plan , a $10/mo unlimited emails to 1,000 subscribers, and a $15/mo plan for up to 2,500 subscribers.  Note: a few biz owners I’ve worked with have had problems setting up automations or scheduled emails – a toss-up as to system issues or user error.

    There are many others, but these are most common among online, solopreneur businesses- ones that my colleagues, friends, and clients are using or have used.  Some of the newer, start-up options could be a good fit for you, IF you can go through the questions  I gave you earlier for evaluating software AND that new tool meets those requirements.

     

    Choose the email marketing software that lets you get started building your list and sending emails quickly

    It’s so much better to just get started then to worry about finding the perfect tool. Done is better than perfect!

    And while changing systems can be a pain, it’s often necessary as our businesses change, our needs change, and the tools change. Don’t be afraid to switch if a tool doesn’t match you, your needs, your business, or if the tool is holding you back instead of helping you move forward with ease.

    It helps to choose an email marketing service this is known among your peers and other online business owners, that VAs know, so you can get community support.

    If you are still struggling with the pains of setting up your email marketing software or getting started so that you CAN go build a list and write awesome emails, check out the course I created just for business owners like you – Hell Yeah You CAN Start Your List – Even If You Aren’t Techie.

  • Email Is Smart Solopreneur Marketing

    Email Is Smart Solopreneur Marketing

    Why Email Is Still Smart Marketing for Solopreneurs

    Email has always been one of the most powerful tools in a business’s marketing toolkit. Yes, it’s been around for what seems like forever (I got my first email address in 1992) and there are newer, shinier marketing tools. But it’s still going strong. Email marketing can be personal, direct and one-to-one, cost effective, has a high ROI, and your email list is an actual business asset. If you only build your online community via social media, it’s like you’re building your house on shifting sand. Email is a more stable platform – even today when our inboxes are indeed getting more crowded. Let me show you the objective numbers behind why email is still smart marketing and also why I’ve personally embraced it as part of my marketing mojo.

    The Stats Behind the Continued Power of Email Marketing

    But what about chatbots, Instagram, influencer marketing, live video and all those other shiny neat marketing tactics we hear about all the time? They have their place. And let’s face it, some of that advice to grab shiny new things is by people selling you … shiny new things!

    But did you know …

    Email is alive and kicking. Stop believing the myths of its death (which seem to show up every year)!

    Sure, there are more digital marketing tools than ever before and they are in the reach of small business and solopreneurs in all niches. I love that we have so many affordable tools! But not all tools are necessarily equal or easy or great at building relationships.

    Don’t discount email as a key tool in your marketing toolkit. Far from disappearing, recent statistics show email is evolving and even growing. According to one of my fave sources of  research and stats, Statista, email usage is predicted to grow by 2-3% each year from 2018 to 2023. Businesses are spending more money, not less, on email marketing.

    email marketing key statistics

    Even given that email is still a reliable, proven, winning marketing tactic for all sizes of business – online + offline, solopreneur + big brands – it’s not so easy to have email marketing that is consistent or brings steady results. But it’s possible!  And consistency is indeed a key to email success.

    I’ve put together some templates to help you get started with targeted email follow-up –
    get them for free here

    Why am I enthusiastic about email?

    I’ve seen it work!

    I’ve bought loads of things personally and professionally via email marketing.

    I’ve grown my own business and community via email.

    I can share more stories, more tips, more links via email than I can a social media post. It’s more targeted than a blog post.

    I see it’s power to share the right messages to the right folks, easily, quickly, and cost-effectively.

    Businesses Sell Things – Email Marketing Helps Sell the Right Things to Right People at the Right Time

    Let’s start with an assumption. You are a smart, savvy solopreneur who is in business to be profitable, not run a charity. To make money and be profitable you need two basic ‘things’. First, a product or service to sell. Could be a course, monthly coaching, writing services, low-content journals and planners, homemade Christmas cookies, or amazing social media graphics. Second, you need an audience, a niche market of interested people who want and need what you offer, who will benefit from your expertise and knowledge. And who will pay you for your knowledge, services, and goodies.

    There’s a lot of ways today to find potential buyers and to sell your awesome stuff. In some way or another, you’re going to make use of digital or online marketing tools, even if your business lives mostly offline. But you can’t treat your business like Field of Dreams – if you merely build it, they won’t just come. You need promotion, traffic, offers, targeted marketing and getting in front of the right people with your stuff. And even then your conversions and sales not be so high. People need to know, like and trust you before they pull out their wallet.

    Email gets you in front of the cookie buyers at holiday time, the parents of a toddler who need some new bedtime tips, the folks starting up new exercise routines in January (and again in March after they fell off the wagon), and those who need your service, but maybe not right now. Email helps you stay in touch so they remember you, and trust you, when all of a sudden they DO need you.

    The power of email is in the follow-up and nurture

    I’ve written about the power of a planned, consistent follow-up with prospects, current and past customers. Don’t wing it or leave it to chance. You need a consistent way to stay in touch with the targeted audience who needs you, but is still getting to know and trust you. Enter email marketing.

    From this eMarketer study, 80% of professionals say email marketing drives customer acquisition and retention. Email is what helps them get known and to stay liked and trusted.

    The newer, more powerful, more personalized email of today allows businesses – even us solopreneurs – to personalize and to offer targeted nurturing and follow up via email.  The yearly studies done by the Content Marketing Institute show that 87% of marketers are using email campaigns to nurture their audiences.

    These businesses use email to build and boost that Know-Like-Trust factor that’s key to business success. Yes, it takes more strategy and work than it used to – but email nurture campaigns are vital, practical, and do-able.

    happy woman laptop sending followup solopreneur email marketing

    Be Useful, Be Helpful and Be Proud of What You Send

    Don’t apologize for sending emails and making offers! You’re in business, remember?

    You’re out there helping people – whether as a wellness coach, a career coach, a parenting coach, a resume writer, a technical writer, a content marketing ghost writer, a website builder, or a graphic designer (whew – just some of my biz pals and clients). You can’t help more people with your coaching or writing if they don’t know you, trust you, and see the value in what you do. And you can’t keep helping people if you do all that work for free!

    Please don’t treat your emails, tips, and offers like something you need to apologize for sending. You are sending valuable info as well as ways to work with you get even more valuable results. Go share your mighty self! Give tons of value but don’t de-value any of what you sell in the process.

    I hope you see that keeping email marketing in your toolkit will lead to some marketing mojo for you. There’s lots to learn and work on – and we can work on it together! If you’re stuck at any stage of the email process, let’s get you unstuck and list building and sending those nurturing follow-up emails. Build your Know-Like-Trust factors with prospects with smart and mighty email marketing.

    Naturally, this is where I ask if you’d like to get my stories and marketing tips via email. 😉 I’ll send you a pack of templates for faster email follow-up if you join my Mighty Marketing Mojo community here.

     

    Need to see even more email marketing stats? ‘Research’ is my middle name and I got you covered:

  • Marketing Success Is In the Follow Up

    Marketing Success Is In the Follow Up

    If You Aren’t Consistently Following Up, What to Do About It

    Marketing isn’t ‘one and done’ – you can’t create a single blog post, a webinar, or a single email to promote something and be done for good. Big brands don’t even stop at running a Super Bowl ad just during the big game – nope, you see that ad through the year now to make the most of all that money spent! Your marketing and communications need to be consistent and repeated to see success. A frequent marketing quote is ‘the money’s in the follow-up.’

    I had a chance to have brunch and chat life and business some super smart solopreneur pals and one thing we questioned, nudged, brainstormed and supported each other on was about if, and how, we were following up with clients, customers, and our community members. Each of us had recently offered a training, a webinar, a course, some live coaching, or a challenge. And each of us had had less than 100% enthusiastic participation and worried we had left some of our awesome clients stuck or even just unaware of what had gone on during the challenges and training.

    We hadn’t done a good enough job at following up. 🙁

    We needed more follow-up.

    Following up and checking in was the answer and all of us needed to do more of it! We had all fallen in the trap of assuming our people had seen and read all our emails or social posts about what was happening and when. Or we assumed the dates and times we picked would be ok with the majority of our people. We just plain assumed stuff … and you know what happens when we assume! 😁  D’oh!

    We whipped out our notebooks (ok I grabbed the Trello app on my phone – I’m a techie geek, you know that’s how I roll!) and made notes about how and when to do more follow-up, including one-to-one, with our folks. [Psst – I know we’re taking action as I got two follow-up emails from these same fine ladies 24 hours after our meetup!]

    Time for you to pay attention too – because the marketing success (and the money) is in the following up.

    Why is Follow-Up So Crucial for ALL Solopreneurs?

    • Building relationships with customers gets them returning to your business over and again.
    • Building relationships gives you unlimited opportunities to deliver content and opportunities to serve.
    • Building relationships gives you the go-ahead to sell to them.
    • Building relationships gives you access to your customers any time.
    • It’s 7x harder/mores costly to acquire a new customer vs. retain an existing, happy customer.

    In today’s digital world there are plenty of ways to connect and build relationships – but the only way we ‘own’ and control is email. You’re only renting that space on social and your followers don’t belong to you, they belong to the platform (and of course to themselves). Here’s one more admonition from me to not build your business on the shifting sands of social media – have a solid website, a blog, and your own email email list where people have clearly opted in to receive good stuff from you.

    If you want the one solid way to keep in touch, to nurture and build that long-term customer and client relationship – it’s all in the email. Sending one-to-one emails to prospects, colleagues, connections, past clients, and referrals sources. Building a list and sending emails from one-to-many, to nurture prospective customers, talk directly to all past customers, and generally give great service to the community you are building.

    And email is still a powerful, money-making follow-up tool of choice among small businesses, solopreneurs, and yeah big brands too. (there’s a reason my personal email account fills daily with emails from Wayfair, Penzey’s, Southwest, BookRiot, and plenty of charitable causes – because it WORKS!) Email is also a way to follow-up with your blog post readers and subscribers – letting them know you have great new content.

    But this isn’t wholly a post about email marketing – it’s about following up- and email is a great tool for that!

    Consistency is Crucial to Successful Follow-up

    People who read your blog, who follow you on social media, and especially those who have subscribed to your email list and have purchased something from you (products, courses or services) love you want to hear from you. Yes, really! We have to remind ourselves of that. And remember they want the advice, knowledge and expertise we each have and that we promised them when we asked for their email or they purchased from us. Deliver the great stuff they asked for and want! When they give you permission to reach out to them, it is vital that you consistently connect with them.

    Want some help doing your email follow-ups? Click here!

     

    Consistent follow-up is important for a few more reasons. 

    One – we are busy, distracted, squirrel-brained folks. Shiny objects and information are everywhere, and we dart here, there, everywhere in our lives. We forget. A lot. So following up reminds people of the good stuff they want, that they signed up for, that they purchased, and then got distracted from completing, attending, or using.

    Two – building those customer relationships is a lot like dating. No one realistically gets married on the first date! You may get a nice hug but it’s not a jump to commitment right when you meet. Sometimes things click instantly, and you can’t get enough of each other. You anxiously wait for the phone to ring or the inbox to alert you that a new message is waiting.

    Other times, it takes a while for things to click. Sometimes a customer may not seem interested at all and then boom, they are all-in with everything you have to offer. Or they seem uninterested, but really they’re just distracted by all the other shiny new things and relationships and they forgot for a bit. But when we put something awesome in front of them, boom, they remember why they were attracted and ‘in’ to us! And they want – and NEED – what we are offering them.

    No matter when you get a ‘yes!’ from someone, it’s oh so important to keep following up. Don’t drop that person because you got a hot date with someone new! 😁  Back in the days when I worked retail management, we always trained staff to ignore the phone if they had a customer right in front of them at the register. Ask a co-worker, or the manager, to answer the phone, but don’t ditch the person standing right in front of you with a question or holding their credit card.

    Follow-up with folks before, during, and after any webinar, course, coaching program, product sale, or project. In the same way other relationships grow and flourish, your relationship with your community, subscribers, clients and customers must be nourished and cultivated.

    Ways to Easily Follow Up

    Stay In Touch it’s easier to follow-up if your messages don’t come out of the clear blue. Whether your readers are leaving comments or sending you private messages, it is important to answer and connect with them. The more personalized you can be, the deeper the connection and the bond for your business or product. Don’t let those easy opportunities to follow up go by the wayside.

    Asking for feedback- End emails with a call to action to connect or engage. Give invites to connect with you on other platforms Be ready when people do. Answer their emails and comments on your content.

    Engagement- Offering opportunities to engage is a playground for customers who feel connected.  You might consider hosting a social media group where your customers can have exclusive attention or special access to you. Group members will have a sense of insider knowledge and this is a great way to increase engagement and make your customers feel valued.

    Making offers- Yes, asking for the sale is a follow up! And we can’t assume, we need to ask. It is important to know when and how. Following up with subscribers routinely with free information opens the door for making an offer from time to time. Don’t just give away for free – it’s an unbalanced relationship, your audience is missing out on ways to be helped further by working with you, and you want active buyers in you community. While it’s not best to only ask for sales, it is completely normal to ask for sales. You ARE in business after all! 😁

    Being timely- Whether it is being timely with your email frequency or timely with what is current in the world, sharing content that is timely makes a difference. Customers who feel like you have your fingers on the pulse of what’s going on will likely trust you, which translates to sales when the time is right. Sharing tips and trends in your niche is a great way to follow up and stay top of mind with your prospective clients and your customers.

    Add Value – A good follow-up is not only timely and consistent but it offers something of value to the recipient too. Don’t send generic, vague follow-up emails, especially after events. Give value that shows you listened and are thinking of their needs (a timely news article for their niche, a post with resources related to what you discussed, an introduction to a mutual connection, etc). [Some more tips on adding value from Ian Brodie – an excellent consultant and small biz marketing pro in the UK – I’ve been on his list for years and he always gives value!]

    Tips for Customer Focused Easy Follow up in Marketing

    How much follow up is enough for success?

    Like a lot of marketing – the answer is ‘it depends!’ 😄

    But there are some tips from a variety of pros on how often your community should hear from you:

    • Weekly – at least once per week with general info and a check-in from you. No, they won’t ready every one but you need these frequent check-ins to just stay on their radar.
    • Monthly or so – for your older material and info if it’s still evergreen content.
    • Before, during, and after every event (including webinars – paid or free, events you host or where you speak) – follow up the day after an event, several days later, a week later, and of course wrap it in with your other communications after that.
    • Time-sensitive during promotions/sales – frequent updates may mean daily, even up to twice-daily on the last day of a big sale. Don’t forget multiple emails before your sale/promotion or launch.
    • Right away – when someone comments, reaches out, or otherwise significantly impacts your community.
    • Yearly or so – on anniversaries, important dates, birthdays, milestones for your business or relationship with a client

    If you have a good offer – for an ebook, a free webinar, a course, a coaching call, your skills on a project – you share it! And if it was good enough to share once, it’s certainly good enough to share multiple times. Remember, your audience of potential clients, happy fans, and past customers are all busy, distracted, going a mile-a-minute and they need your reminders. Follow up before, during, and after your events, projects, and promotions.

    Sustained success will depend on consistent follow-up so create a process that works for you and your business’s marketing.

     

    Not sure where to start or need some shortcuts on your email follow-up routines?

    Get this FREE pack of 10+ email templates you can use in a variety of instances to follow up after calls, meetings, live events, a webinar, and more.

    Mighty Marketing Mojo Email Templates ebook cover

     

    Click to Get Your Free Email Templates

     

  • Lessons Learned in Changing Email Marketing Services – AWeber to ActiveCampaign

    Lessons Learned in Changing Email Marketing Services – AWeber to ActiveCampaign

    What You Can Learn From My Decision to Finally Change Email Marketing Providers and My Migration to ActiveCampaign

    After hemming and hawing for more than a year, researching, and wondering whether I should switch email marketing systems … I finally migrated to ActiveCampaign, am up + running, and am loving what it offers me.

    Learn from my email marketing change!

    It is a PROCESS with ups and downs. Fair point to note: it was much less a process or headache for me and my small email communities. It’s a bigger decision and process for small business owners and solopreneurs who have larger or more complex email lists.

    However, there are plenty of resources available from ActiveCampaign and online communities of helpful solopreneurs who can help make the transition smoother.

     

    Why Did I Want to Change Email Marketing Services?

    I wanted better automations, tagging that works, the ability to personalize emails and send you more things you DO want and less of what you’re not so interested in. I also wanted a nice visual interface and modern tech and modern designs.

    I was using AWeber for 5 years and while it does offer tags and tag-based campaigns, those have never worked correctly for me and many other solopreneurs I know. The interface isn’t very intuitive and involves a lot of clicking and toggling to move between lists.

    One huge problem with AWeber was that I had to have multiple lists in order to assuredly segment — which means names get counted twice or more and thus, count against my account limits and increase the price. The designs and forms are also outdated. Recently (mid 2020) may of my business pals still with AWeber experience another huge problem – AWeber was unsubscribing people who had opted in to their lists via events like bundles or giveaways. AWeber didn’t give satisfactory answers and that overly protective practice is a big red flag for many online business owners and how they build their lists.

    Although AWeber has made some improvements (including landing pages + new free plan in 2020), those weren’t enough to make up for the things it wasn’t doing well or easily. I do still think Aweber can be a solid choice for some solopreneurs.

    For the automation and customization of messaging I wanted, at a really affordable price, the answer for me was ActiveCampaign.

    What does advanced tagging or segmentation mean?

    The point of niched, segmented, or personalized email – via automations – is to make our marketing easier and faster. We don’t have IT departments here!

    Maybe you wanted a checklist on social media management that was connected to a post about social media, but you don’t care about an e-book offered on a post about referral marketing. Why should the social media folks have to read emails about referrals and vice versa?

    Or what if you’re already a member of my email community? What if you opted in for the referral marketing e-book at first, but later got really interested in social media marketing and wanted that checklist too? Or what if someone was interested in one training I offered but not another?

    The only reliable way for me to make AWeber send emails about social media to social media lovers and not also to the referral folks was to use multiple, separate lists and legacy follow-ups. That’s clunky and cludgy.

    The power of tagging and segmentation is that I can simply give you a new tag in my email system (e.g. “social media checklist”) and that tag would trigger the system to send you your goodie and a few emails on how best to use that goodie.

    Not all email marketing systems do this well or do it at all.

     

    Active Campaign Nurture Tag Automation
    Part of the tagging and segmentation in my Nurture automation in AC

    What email service am I leaving and what else did I consider

    As I researched, my choice came down to ActiveCampaign and ConvertKit.

    Along the way, I seriously considered returning to a MailChimp account — I had used their free plan when starting out as a budget-minded solo —  because it has one of the cleanest interfaces and simple email editors out there, it has added other features, and its paid account has competitive pricing.

    But MailChimp isn’t so friendly if you’re going to use affiliate links in any of your emails. I’ve seen a few solo biz owners in my communities lose their lists when MC decided it didn’t like something. MailChimp wasn’t highly recommended by other biz owners doing the type of online course-building and product selling I was beginning to think more about here at MMM.

    I also looked into ConvertKit, which some solos recommended. Some say CK best understands bloggers, internet marketers, and those doing plenty of affiliate promotions.

    I wound up crossing CK off my list because of a number of reasons:

    • it won’t let you manually unsubscribe someone, only delete them
    • my list is too small to qualify for their Concierge service to help with migration
    • it pushes users to focus on text-only emails, as it believes those convert better
    • there’s a lack of integration with third-party tools
    • slow support response
    • no autosave (?? what even what??)
    • they have weird names for things (no, an autoresponder series is not a ‘course’)
    • I didn’t like the interface
    • and the price was higher per month ($24-$29/month at the lowest plan) than what I paid for AWeber and more than ActiveCampaign.

     

    Other email marketing providers I researched include:

    • Drip: I trialed and researched it and found it to be too expensive, overly complex, and complicated.
    • MailerLite, GetResponse, SendinBlue (big in Europe), and CampaignMonitor
    • GetResponse: I decided against it years ago but haven’t checked it for significant changes lately.
    • Mailerlite: some solo pals in my circles sing its praises but it didn’t seem like the right fit for me. It’s pretty budget-friendly and could work for you, though!
    • ConstantContact, Emma, MadMimi: seem ok for e-commerce, bricks-n-mortar stores, some service providers – but not for many of the online biz owners I was talking to who mostly sell digital products, coaching, courses, etc.
    • SendGrid, SES, SendLane, and Mandrill: these are transactional, behavior-based email services, which have a place … but they aren’t for marketing.

    [thrive_highlight highlight=’default’ text=’light’] There are pluses and minuses of nearly every email marketing service out there – and I encourage all solopreneurs and small business owners to evaluate their own needs and preferences. If you’re new to email marketing and need help with the steps in making a decision and getting set up for success – check out my free Email Setup Guide. [/thrive_highlight]

    ActiveCampaign: the right combination of features and price

    After hearing some of the concerns about CK from someone who thinks a lot like me, plus finding that AC was a cheaper price – it was a pretty quick decision for me (unusual!). I stopped researching!

    AC offers free migration services for all customers. Note– I did NOT use this service because I didn’t want to move all my data, as it was, from AWeber. I knew I’d be changing what lists people were on and what tags I might need, among other changes, which meant it was better for me to do the move manually. We’ll see if I regret that …

    The other pluses I found:

    • AC has a really nice visual editor for emails.
    • AC visual workflow or map for creating automations
    • Lots of information on the dashboard – wow, maybe too much?!
    • All those advanced tagging, segmentation, automation features I was looking for – but in a package that people said was easy to get started with.
    • Friendly, competitive price – considerably lower than ConvertKit for the same number of contacts. [AC = $9-15/month at lowest plan; $17-29/month at next tier]

     

     

    The Switch and Migration to ActiveCampaign – Ups and Downs

    I was excited, I had made a decision, and decided I’d move over in February. After all of those pros and pluses, it was not reassuring when I had to email ActiveCampaign’s support desk within the same hour of signing up.

    Something didn’t happen correctly at signup – although it recognized my email to send me the happy welcome email with start-up guide, it wouldn’t recognize that same email and the password I set when I tried to login the first time. Not a great start.

    So, off to find the help-desk and open a support ticket and get an early look at AC’s customer service.

     

    ActiveCampaign Contact edit screen
    Each contact in AC has this area to show info, edit, add tags, send single emails

    It was odd to be receiving emails from AC, to the very email that they said wasn’t connected to my account. I got the first welcome email, their start up guide with a list of suggested resources to check out next – all best practices for welcoming a new subscriber or customer.

    After sending the first request to the help desk (at 6pm), I continued to receive welcome emails. I headed to the gym and when I returned, I had an email from a new person at the support desk. Although no one was sure what happened, the setup process had clearly hit a glitch midstream.

    All credit to the support staff, as my reply emails were answered quickly and she acknowledged that the issue was on their end and that this was not an optimal start for a new customer (as I had pointed out). She reset the login and password and we tried again ….

    And finally I was in! About 3 hours after first creating the account and immediately encountering the problems. Not bad really, especially since we were outside of normal US business hours (and I noticed in the signature, my email support person was from Australia).

    It was time for me to make sense of a dashboard that is infinitely more modern and complex than what I was leaving behind at AWeber.

    Side Note -Advice I Did Not Follow on Migration

    AC encouraged me to set up a form for a new or improved freebie/lead-magnet, and get as many from my current list on the old platform to click and grab that new/improved freebie. It proves to the new system that I have active users willing to engage.

    I did not follow the advice on list migration deliverability as given by AC. I did not create a new gift and make my list re-opt-in.  I also only sent one more email from AWeber after starting the migration process.

    I listed to my my biz pals with ActiveCampaign experience, who said NOT to follow all of AC’s advice, particularly on list hygiene related to deliverability improvements after migration.

    If I followed all of AC’s advice, I could see a large drop off or loss in my list if I was basically asking people to resubscribe via a new form. Why make people jump through a new hoop?! Nope, not doing that.

    Instead, I moved the lists, started doing the tagging and segmenting in AC like I wanted, but mostly just started emailing. Sending good info and more free bonus goodies. Tag the folks who click on those links or take other actions, and roll from there.

    All in all, the actual move of my lists went ok and felt like only minor hiccups. It’s tech, stuff happens.

    The things you wish you knew before starting some projects

    While I was testing out AC and uploading contacts, I did hit a few walls. Some (maybe most) were completely my doing.

    I didn’t realize, or forgot, the limits of the free trial I was still operating under: 100 contacts and 100 emails sent. So chunks of my imports of contacts got cut off since I was over the limit – and I’m not sure who exactly got left off of the import. D’oh!

     

    ActiveCampaign email marketing service dashboard 100 contacts free limit
    My ActiveCampaign dashboard as I hit the 100 contact limit at start of my trial

    I made some mistakes on the initial upload of contacts – with a .csv file from a list in AWeber that was mixed. AND I belatedly discovered that while I had applied tags back in AWeber (and even used them in sending emails to segments of my email community), those tags were NOT saved in the master subscriber .csv file that you can export and save.

    WTH AWeber?! %&*@  🤬

    I got to try out AC’s chat support when I had a question on billing. Very quick responses. Cool. Good to know. So far their support is getting all pluses in my book.

    I made a rookie mistake in using a new tool – I did NOT send an actual test email to myself too. IF I had, I would have seen that the image I put of me into my signature area showed up MONSTER HUGE in my own inbox.

    Oh man, that’s a bit embarrassing. I really should’ve read more of the getting started help guides I guess. So unlike me to just jump right in!

    [update: I spoke with the ActiveCampaign team about this in Philly – the huge image thing wasn’t my fault. They were stumped why it was doing that or how to fix. Beyond hand coding some CSS for the emails (uh NO!) the solution was to turn the image off for mobile. ]

    I had to manually clean up some contact fields for first and last names because they didn’t import correctly – not a big deal if you don’t have a huge list. Something to double check if you are migrating thousands – and why you want concierge move-in service if that’s your situation!

    ActiveCampaign email service name fields contact page

    It’s a learning process even for a techie geek like me to learn new software. I like the tutorials, videos and help I’ve gotten from Active Campaign. Plus, it helps when your other small business pals use the same tools and can shorten your learning curve!

    Updates + Lessons – what I’ve seen in ActiveCampaign since migrating

    Good news – that first email is doing ok. Good open rates, decent clicks, no one is running away in droves, no one has emailed to laugh at me for the picture or greetings snafus. And I’m going back to doing what I do best – research. I’m spending time with the AC tutorials and mini ‘getting started’ course.

    Lesson – Improvement in campaign performance reports vs AWeber

    I can see which emails bounced!

    I know, seems basic, but AW only shows the number of bounces, not who (you have to dig into the ‘manage subscribers’ page – separate from your email performance data. Click contact details, look around, and even then, it’s not clear)
    Easy to see which links in an email were clicked – and the running total of ‘campaign activity’ on the right side of the dashboard shows me when someone clicked.

    Lesson – You must set up at least one form

    Even if you won’t use ActiveCampaign’s native submission forms on your site (I prefer ThriveLeads) you DO need to create at least one form inside of the ActiveCampaign account.  AC won’t let you finish the setup for the AC plugin, site tracking, and connection back to your AC account unless you have at least 1 AC form created in your account.

    Ok.

    I created a super simple form (took less than 2 minutes I think), activated it, and voila, the missing buttons appeared in the settings on my website and off we go again.

    WordPress ActiveCampaign form active on website
    I created basic form in ActiveCampaign, as required it’s enabled here in WordPress even though I will use ThriveLeads instead.

    Do the tutorials and read the instructions – normally that’s my M.O. – as a kid I read every rule book before we could start a board game. But I skipped some stuff since I thought I knew my way around email marketing. Advice – don’t skip the set-up help!

    Double Opt-in On by Default – You have to edit that required form to turn off double opt-in, which is the default for forms built inside ActiveCampaign.  Without this help page, I might not have found the option or setting to do this on my own.

    Sign outside the ActiveCampaign Study Hall in Philadelphia
    Good timing – ActiveCampaign had an all day training in Philadelphia – during my switch over!

     

    Lesson – ActiveCampaign Doesn’t Play with PayPal for Free

    ActiveCampaign does NOT directly integrate with PayPal. *$^% 🤬

    ConvertKit requires Zapier for integration with 3rd-party tools and the same is true for AC – but that information was missing from the ActiveCampaign sales info available to non-users.

    If you use a simple PayPal button on your site for someone to buy something, like a BorrowMyBrain session – because, hello, setting up a PayPal button is simple, easy, and fast – you can NOT simply add that customer to a list in ActiveCampaign.

    Nope. You have to use Zapier.

    And the Zapier automation between PayPal and AC is a PREMIUM, aka PAID, integration only. %&*$@ I don’t want to pay a minimum of $20/month to have PayPal and AC talk to each other. That was actually something that AWeber did for FREE. Score a point back for AW.

    So, the change in email marketing software has pushed forward my decision to move to new shopping cart software (the kind that handles multiple items or let you choose an item vs. separate PayPal BUY buttons for each service/course/product). It’s either that or the paid, complicated Zaps.

     

    Lesson – what happens when someone subscribes before an automation is set or active

    Another accidental lesson because I sped through some steps …  make sure you have an automation created and turned to active before you connect up forms, pop-ups or tools on your website. ‘

    What went wrong …

    I connected my main opt-in forms in Thrive Leads to the API connection for ActiveCampaign, having moved them away from AWeber.

    But ….

    I hadn’t created or activated an autoresponder or automation sequence in ActiveCampaign to send out the free gift, the welcome email, and subsequent ‘get to know me’, nurturing emails to new list members.

    And sure enough, right in the middle of my software switch, I had 3 new subscribers opt-in and claim my  free gift. YAY! New people!

    Yay! They’re in the right list in AC, they got tagged.

    Booo, ohcrap. They didn’t get any emails, including the links to the free gift, because there were no automations built and turned on yet.

    I had gotten my steps out of order. I really needed to have built the automations, added in the revised emails, and THEN turned the integrations from AWeber to ActiveCampaign in all my ThriveLeads forms.

    How to get the missed contacts into the new automated email series?

    Each individual has a contact page and on that page after most form fields, you can select option for Add to Automation.

    Clicked the +, chose the automation , told it to ‘force’ add the contact to that automation.

    Went back to the automation dashboard, and voila! The third contact has now been added to the automation. And she messaged me the next morning to say that she had gotten an email from me. (we’re online pals and in the same coaching group so I had reached out personally when we realized she fell in to the email void and she promised she’d let me know if/when any emails showed up)

    [NOTE: I learned during the Philly AC Study Hall this is the preferred way to add someone to an automation if they missed the initial trigger. Since then, for example, I’ve added my own test email accounts to various automations for testing purposes, to check the email deliverability – without needing to re-subscribe.]

    ActiveCampaign email automation workflow goals email course example
    A simple automation workflow for my free e-course on SMART goal setting

    I now have automations running and people getting specific follow-up emails! AC Works!

    Despite the hiccups – mostly from user error and poor planning – I’m thrilled that I now have automation series built and running.

    I’m happy that I will be able to send a targeted, on-topic set of emails to anyone who is interested in say, social media, and a DIFFERENT on-topic set of emails to someone who is interested in setting SMART marketing goals, or wants swipe files, or is interested in coaching.

    My solo pals joining me won’t have to receive or read stuff they’re less interested in and should get more of what they are most interested in. My emails will be more targeted and personalized. And not take forever to set all that in motion and keep it going. The ENTIRE point of moving to ActiveCampaign.

    This isn’t the end the of the learning and migration process, but I’m finally feeling confident I made the right decision and that ActiveCampaign can work for growing my business more quickly.

    UPDATE 2020: I can say making the move to ActiveCampaign has been one of the best business decisions I’ve made – ever – and is a big factor in my business growth.

    I have multiple automations running, with different free gifts, webinars, courses, and coaching, because it’s easy now. Ive sent more newsletters, more updates, more promotional emails since I moved to AC than in the 6 years prior – combined. The software does what I want and makes customizing, segmenting, sending the ‘right message to the right people at the right time’ a lot easier.

    In fact, I love ActiveCampaign so much, I featured it in the demos, videos, and course modules of my Hell Yeah You CAN Start Your Email List course. If you want to get started with email marketing, I recommend both my course and getting AC.

     

    [Orig June 2019; Updated Sept 2020]

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