Email marketing is a fine art. Too many and you come across as a spambot, too few and you leave your leads dangling.
There are around 2.6 billion email users across the globe, set to reach 2.9 billion by 2019, so the audience just keeps growing. And yet, in 2014, the average open rate for UK small to medium-sized businesses' email campaigns was just 22.87 percent, and the click-through rate a paltry 3.26 percent.
Automated email workflows are an excellent way of tapping into this rich resource but, clearly, you need more than just the software to make a success of your email campaigns.
This is all the more true now given that purchase paths are no longer linear; leads haphazardly jump from stage to stage and back again, rarely following the traditional 'funnel' model.
But what exactly is an email workflow, and how do they work?
Email workflows are sequence of emails that are automatically sent to leads when they fulfil certain conditions, like downloading a white paper or purchasing a product.
They're easy to set up; you just need one of the many marketing automation platforms, like HubSpot or Marketo, and a collection of conditions that you want your leads to fulfil.
Automated email campaigns help to nurture your leads at different stages of the purchasing funnel or the 'Customer Decision Journey'. Rather than just indiscriminately spamming your leads with irrelevant emails, the emails only send when the lead has completed a certain action so they should always be relevant and useful.
You can even craft workflows that break free of the linear purchasing process, reengaging indecisive and inactive leads, such as those that haven't visited your website for a month or leads who've abandoned their shopping cart.
But even if your emails are hitting your leads at the right moment, they can still sound formulaic, robotic and trite. How do you profit from the efficiency of automation while still sounding human?
Easy: write extraordinary emails.
Compelling emails are the beating heart of automated email campaigns.
Crafting an email for every individual is, of course, out of the question, but how do you write emails that share a common aim – nurturing leads – which are also carefully targeted?
Think of each of your email workflows as a unique story, each email another chapter encouraging the lead onwards. That's not to say that the journey is so linear, but the emails should have a logical flow. And bear in mind that every lead is likely to enter various workflows, so try to avoid too much repetition between them.
We've written before about how to write better emails, but as the world now sends over 205 billion emails every day – of which about 80 percent is spam – it bears repeating.
Think about the sort of promotional emails you receive. Which ones do you open and which get sent straight to the bin? Answering these questions and seeing what others get wrong will help you steer clear of unsubscribe lists and get you crafting emails that entice and convert.
Hat tips, in order of appearance, to nist6dh, Vinoth Chandar, Peyri Herrera for the photos.