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| | #1 |
| Banned Join Date: Dec 2011
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Just wondering,how much time do you'll take? Another thing, what should I keep in mind to ensure that my subscribers are actually ones who'd buy from me and not just ones who'd just keep reading forever and thats it? That would be really a waste of time IMO I guess.. |
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| | #2 |
| Veteran Copywriter War Room Member Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: Sarasota, FL, USA.
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The answer to your question is very wide indeed. This depends on the relationship you have already established with your subscribers and just WHAT you want to relate to them. So it may be just one line inviting them to read a blog post or it may be 100 lines selling a new product you just launched. So there are too many factors involved to even give a ball-park answer. -Ray Edwards |
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| | #3 |
| HyperActive Warrior Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 470
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Get on some good email lists and review the length of their emails. You will get a good idea from good examples how long it will take to write these emails. |
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| | #4 |
| Under The Radar Warrior Join Date: Sep 2008 Location: southern Utah, USA
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The email depends on the list (different ones for different niche markets) AND the email message. It can be mid-length if I am providing some relevant help or information. If it is a promotion, these vary depending on the product offer and calls to action. For fitness and self-help type niches, I write some follow up encouragement emails to keep people engaged and working forward. I encourage feedback that way. So for your question, it will vary depending on what you are targeting with your email. |
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| | #5 |
| Warrior Member Join Date: Aug 2012
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It's depend on the content for your subscribers, are you following them all the time?
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I'm working on Cheap smartphones | |
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| | #6 |
| Staceythewriter Join Date: May 2011 Location: NYC
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[. . .what should I keep in mind to ensure that my subscribers are actually ones who'd buy from me and not just ones who'd just keep reading forever and thats it?] -Have regularly scheduled emails; however, don't inundate them with emails. -Don't have an offer every time you email them. -Don't send them any content that is not related to their reason for subscribing. -Send only quality emails; don't send them crap just so you can meet your scheduling requirement. -Put yourself in their shoes. What would you like to receive in your email that would make you glad you signed up? Send them that stuff. -When you do offer them something to buy, make sure it's awesome. People get offers 24-7. Don't let yours be eh' just another mundane offer. Stacey |
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Stacey Mathis Stacey Mathis Copywriting The Copywriter's Highway to Success http://www.staceythewriter.com Twitter: @staceythewriter | |
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| | #7 |
| Active Warrior Join Date: May 2012
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Spend enough time to make it a good email. At the end of the day, you want to be putting out good and useful information. The more you do, the more reliable and trustworthy you will be, and that will help develop your following When the people who follow you TRUST you and the information you give, then they will be more willing to help you out if you ask them for help, or better yet, genuinely check out a product you recommend. In a nutshell, it will take a while and it will seem like people are just sticking around for free information. But if you give enough good information to gain their trust, they won't mind buying the rest of it. |
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| | #8 |
| Warrior Member Join Date: Jun 2012
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It depends what you're emailing them about. If you're directing them straight to a sales page then I would put a lot more effort into your email than if you're just sending them to a blog post or something less sales. Because if you're wanting them to buy from you then you're going to want them well qualified before they hit the sales page.
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| | #9 |
| Warrior Member Join Date: Jun 2012
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Oh, and to give you an exact answer; I would take 3-4 hours to write a solid email that directs to a sales page.
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| | #10 |
| Active Warrior Join Date: Aug 2012 Location: Toronto, Ontario
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You should take as long as it requires to get your email to where you want it to be. Even if you have to come back to it later. If you're not happy with it, chances are the customer won't be either. Think of it this way: All of your subscribers have the potential to buy from you if you provide them with the right content. People are different, and have different "buy" triggers. Some will want you to be an authority on your product/industry (blog post). Others respond to out-and-out sales pitches (promos and sales letters). Yet others will want to see what other people think of your product (case studies and testimonials). Mix it up. Don't rely on just one tactic to drive sales. |
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Write. Edit. Rinse. Repeat. http://patrickicasas.com | |
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| | #11 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Aug 2008
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20 minutes. But I need to write it more often |
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