Editor’s note: This blog was originally published in 2016 and has been edited to maintain accuracy and adherence to modern email marketing practices.
It’s no secret that email marketing is the driving force behind crucial recurring customer sales. But, by focusing your email efforts only on those who have already purchased, your brand is losing out on thousands of dollars in revenue (and the first-time customers who will help you get there).
To get the most out of your email marketing strategy, you need to focus on building your subscriber list first.
Today, we’ll show you exactly how to get more email subscribers quickly and efficiently, based on our decades of experience in email content and growth marketing. Let’s dive right in.
Table of Contents
- Why Focus on Email List Growth?
- How to Grow Your Email List
- 15 Email Marketing Ideas
- Final Thoughts
Why Focus on Email List Growth in Your Marketing Strategy?
We often preach quality over quantity, and email marketing is no different.
However, if you don’t start with a high quantity of email subscribers, you simply can’t get the quality leads you need to generate sales and revenue in your email marketing campaigns.
Depending on which study you look at, the average conversion rate for websites (disregarding industry) is 2.9%. This means that at least 97% of site viewers leave without taking any action on your site.
By integrating email list growth strategies into your website, you can capture some of those website visitors before they disappear forever — and bring them back with promotions and offers sent straight to their inboxes.
How to Grow Your Email List
Your business, products, and brands are unique, so what works to attract (and retain) your customers will be unique, too.
So, before you start growing your email list, you’ll need a strategy that identifies what works (and what doesn’t).
Here’s what we recommend:
Step 1: Brainstorm offers and ideas.
There are countless ways to motivate customers to opt into your email newsletters. Promo codes are a tried-and-true method, but other offers may speak better to your target audience.
We recommend speaking with your sales and customer service departments. What feedback do satisfied (and unsatisfied) customers provide? Which historical campaigns had the highest conversion rates?
Other factors to consider:
- Average order value
- Length of buying cycle
- How many new contacts convert to customers
- And how their lifetime value compares with averages from all customers
We’ve also gathered a list of 15 proven ideas below to help you get started.
Step 2: Run your tests.
Even the best offers and promos can fall flat if you’re not maximizing placement, timing, and copy. Bring in your web developer (or, better yet, a conversion rate optimization expert) to deploy the offers on your site in an attractive and pleasing way.
Run a variety of tests for a set amount of time (don’t test them all at once!) for the most reliable results.
Make sure your tests are accurate and efficient by having our experienced conversion rate optimization team manage them for you.
Step 3: Evaluate results — and expand upon what works.
If you run your tests correctly, you’ll have a solid set of email list growth strategies to lean upon. Implement them into your marketing plan, but continue experimenting and brainstorming additional ideas to keep up with your customers’ changing behaviors and industry trends.
Don’t forget to optimize your welcome email flow to prevent the dreaded customer unsubscribe, too. It could be the key to hundreds of thousands in new sales!
The video below is hosted on YouTube. If you need assistance with viewing the video, please contact info@goinflow.com.
15 Marketing Ideas to Help You Get More Email Subscribers
We’ve worked with hundreds of online businesses in our 16+ years as a digital marketing agency, which means we’ve put in the work to test and identify the email marketing strategies that work best.
And today we’re sharing some of our favorites.
Below, you’ll find a few of our team’s proven tactics for successful list growth. Use them as a starting point for your efforts, but remember to keep two important ideas in mind:
- Choose offers that resonate with your customers’ needs and wants.
- Prime your delivery methods to meet them when they’re most ready for purchase.
Types of Offers
There’s no single “best” approach to pre-checkout email acquisition — just what’s best for your business.
You’ll need to consider your customer purchase cycle, as well as the prices of your products, when choosing an offer to test.
For example, if your average order value is less than $300, transaction offers like 10% off can work very well. For larger order values, your customer may need more education through content-based offers instead.
Our recommendation: Do your research and test your options to discover the best email list growth strategies for your brand.
(And don’t forget to talk with your search engine optimization team to see how any offers affect your site’s SEO strategy!)
1. Free Samples & Demos
Everyone loves freebies, including your customers. Consider giving away free samples of your products (or free demos showing off your services) in return for an email, with the customer paying for the shipping.
Evaluate your cost per acquisition (CPA) before taking this path, especially if the giveaways come out of your bottom line, rather than a free sample pack provided to you by manufacturers. (That said, in our experience, CPA for giveaways can oftentimes be lower than PPC, paid social, and other marketing channels.)
Don’t forget to use customer lifetime value in your calculations, too. For some brands, a one-time order won’t always show a good ROI and isn’t representative of the average customer’s behavior.
Here’s an example of this email growth tactic in action:
Like many home decor sites, Sofa.com provides free fabric samples to customers. Shipping is provided free of cost, as long as customers provide valuable information such as their shipping address, email address, name, and more.
It’s a win-win technique: Sofa.com obtains potential customer information, and customers get a better idea of what the product might look like in their homes.
2. Discounted Order
It’s the most common form of email acquisition — offering an exclusive discount on a customer’s first purchase, often shown to new customers as an exit pop-up. This can include a percentage, a set dollar number, or another offer like free shipping.
A word of caution here: This strategy assumes a transaction will occur and may not be as effective as others in gathering new subscribers who aren’t quite yet ready for purchase.
Our client Mountain House creates and sells portable meals that do not require refrigeration. Exit pop-ups can be found all over their site, offering percentage discounts off the viewer’s next purchase if they submit their email.
3. Content Offers
When customers aren’t ready to make a purchase, exclusive content offers — webinars, courses, buying guides, white papers, etc. — can educate them about your brand and how your products/services can solve their problems.
We’ve got the proof in a test we ran for Mountain House. In testing three different lead magnets — a 10% discount exit offer, a camping/prepping checklist download, and a control with no offer — the checklist offer won by a wide margin. (Your mileage may vary, based on your target audience and their buying cycle.)
In addition to stand-alone content offers, we recommend designing a great landing page for your email list subscription that outlines the benefits and rewards of signing up (alerts on new offerings, content upgrades, discounts, and VIP access). This can be a valuable content offer in and of itself.
Bulletproof excels at email-list-building content marketing. We recommend offering free downloads as part of your blogging strategy (like their Complete Bulletproof Diet Roadmap) to obtain email addresses early on in the buying journey.
4. Back-In-Stock Notifications
If you run an eCommerce site, back-in-stock notifications are a great way to automatically segment your email subscribers.
Make it clear that customers are only signing up for one email and not added to the marketing list at large — but don’t be afraid to include a “sign up and save” offer to get them on the larger list, as well.
Here’s an example template from Magento:
5. Loyalty Programs
A loyalty program typically touts special email offers, early-release products, discounts, swag, and more for your VIP customers. You can build a loyalty list in many ways; we recommend building a flow in your marketing automation platform that sends to customers who have reached a certain spend threshold.
On the other hand, you can open up your loyalty program to all interested customers, as Ikea does with their Ikea Family offer. Subscribing customers receive discounted member prices, workshops, ideas, and a free, hot in-drink store during the week.
6. Personalized Offers
Most of the time, personalized offers will require that you already have a customer’s email address.
But you can also provide personalized experiences using cookies or the referring website — as seen in the example below, in which a phone accessory retailer shows a personalized offer to visitors from Pinterest.
7. Survey Participation
You can also offer a short survey on your site (such as a personalized product recommendation), at the end of which you request the customer’s email before they get their results or their incentive.
MomAgenda.com offers a great example in their two-minute Planner Match quiz. A quick four-question quiz is followed by an “Almost There” page, in which the customer is prompted to enter the email for their results (or hit the “No Thanks” option, instead).
8. Shopping Cart Abandonment Offers
You can’t send shopping cart abandonment emails to customers without knowing their email address — but this can be remedied in a few ways:
- Exit intent pop-up, reminding customers to “Create an Account to Save Your Cart!”
- Exit intent pop-up, with a compelling offer (ex: discount coupon) to save on their purchase
- Moving the email address field further up in the purchase process, so it’s one of the first pieces of information acquired in checkout (as demonstrated below)
9. Contests/Enter to Win
Contests are a proven way to enhance your email list growth through blogs, social, and other content marketing avenues. Customers are used to providing their emails for giveaways and contests, as long as the price is attractive enough for their demographics.
Take plus-sized European fashion retailer Navabi. They originally tested this contest email opt-in form on the second page view. It worked so well that they promoted it to the primary offer on all first-time page visits.
New contacts are enrolled in an automated “lead to first purchase” program once they sign up for the newsletter in addition to being enrolled in the contest.
Read our eCommerce giveaway case study now.
10. Social Media Logins
If a customer is close to purchase, you can gather a great deal of contact information (including email address) through a one-click social integration. Doing so essentially “logs” a customer into your site, providing the Holy Grail for personalizing their future shopping experience.
We also recommend leveraging your existing social networks (organically and through paid options like Facebook Ads) to present email acquisition offers on your own accounts. That way, you can target your existing fans and grow your email lists exponentially.
Delivery Methods
Once you’ve decided on a few email list-growth ideas to test, let’s consider the ways you can format and deliver them.
1. Standard In-Line Offers
An in-line offer could be nestled amongst the content of a blog post, shown in the sidebar, or as the featured content block on the homepage. It doesn’t pop up, slide out, or follow the customer on the page.
This in-line offer by Nordstrom links to an offer landing page, which describes the many benefits of their rewards program.
2. Pop-Ups (and Other Interstitials)
Pop-up forms are standard for modern websites. They can be displayed upon site arrival, when a visitor moves toward the navigation bar, at a certain time trigger (ex: five seconds after page load), or at a certain web page location.
In addition to testing your pop-up location and timing, A/B test your ad copy, as well.
Consider the pop-up below, where a button to decline the offer says, “No thanks, I’ll pay full price.” This is much more effective than a simple “No, thanks,” because it highlights the advantages being missed when refusing the email signup form.
3. Lead Generation on Other Sites and Events
You don’t have to solely grow your email list through your own site and social media accounts.
Participating in webinars, online courses, and other referral programs can grant you access to the email addresses of event participants, who often have to provide their personal information to join the event.
4. Chiclets/Tabs/Bars
Tabs and bars are a user-friendly way to display your content without invading the viewer’s personal space. In comparison to full-page pop-ups, chiclets/tabs/bars provide a much better mobile experience. Of course, they should all include an “X” allowing users to remove them anytime they want.
See the “Free Website Grader” example below:
Ideally, this tab will follow the user down the page, but they could click the X to make it disappear at any time.
5. Offer Landing Pages
Offer landing pages are great for PPC, social, and affiliate channels. They’re also necessary when the important values of your offer can’t be communicated in a CTA (call-to-action button). Landing pages provide the space necessary to convincingly sell the offer by describing its many benefits to the visitor.
Here’s an example from our own website, detailing the benefits of downloading our Persona Topic Matrix gated content offer:
Final Thoughts
There is no one-size-fits-all strategy for acquiring a potential customer’s email address. To find the one that fits your business, you’ll need to invest some time, energy, and creative brain power.
Above all, make sure to properly test your assumptions before setting them in stone.
As you develop your list-building strategy, keep these things in mind:
- Don’t buy a list. The contacts will be worthless, and you’ll end up lowering your deliverability and open rates.
- Don’t overdo it. Don’t show potential customers multiple offers at the same time and scare them away from your site.
- Don’t forget to test on mobile. User experience and conversion rates could be vastly different on a mobile device.
If you struggle to find the content ideas and delivery methods that work for your brand, our expert email marketers are always available to help. Contact us anytime for answers to your questions and a personalized email strategy to meet your business goals.
Prefer a PDF version of this article? Check out our Email Acquisition Tips for even more examples and email list growth strategies.
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