Tag Archives: marketing

Do’s and Don’ts of Email Marketing

Do's and Don'ts of Email Marketing

 

Email is a great tool for marketing. Email is accessible, low cost and allows you to connect with many people at once. But email does have rules and guidelines you should follow when using it to market. Read on for a few of these very important do’s and don’ts of email marketing.

Do Have an Authentic Subject Line

It can be tempting to send a subject line that is exciting and gets people to click open. Like, “Open to Learn How to Become a Millionaire” but unless you can promise people a path to riches in your email, this should not be your subject line. Use your subject line to give a quick overview of your email and what you want to do. Try, “Learn Tips from a Successful Affiliate” or “ Sign In and Join My Team.” This emails get to the point of the email, but also encourage the receiver to open them.

Do Write Conversationally

Often times in email marketing, you may be sending an email to many people at the same time. While this is efficient, it can quickly trap you in robotic writing style. Trying to accommodate many people with one email is intimidating, but not impossible. Write your emails in a conversational way, like you’re writing to a friend (but beware of grammar and slang!). When in doubt of how to write, look through your own inbox for examples of emails you received that you liked, and others that turned you off their product. Try to imitate the style of those emails that connected with you.

Don’t Share Everyone’s Email Address

You don’t need an email service to send marketing emails to many contacts at once. While you can use GDI’s Inviter tools to send multiple emails, you can also easily use Email.ws. However, when sending emails to multiple people, make sure you’re not sharing all your contacts with strangers. You don’t want to show your recipients the email address of everyone you’re mailing to. This is impersonal and shares emails of people who might not want their email public.

To email multiple people without addresses being shown, use the BCC option in the “To” box. BCC stands for Blind Carbon Copy. This means all the names in that box are getting the same copy of the email, but the recipient line is blind, meaning others can’t see recipient addresses other than their own.

Don’t Email Too Frequently

How often does your email inbox get out of control with emails you don’t want? Daily? Hourly? We all get too many emails, so its important to respect that your recipients probably feel the same way. If someone signs up for email from you, be clear about how frequently you will email them. Try not to email someone more than once a week unless they have given you an OK to do so. Respect when someone asks to stop receiving emails or just get less.

Don’t Send Unsolicited Emails

Due to opt-In laws, you can’t just email anyone marketing emails out of the blue. People must opt in to receive emails. To get people to opt in, set up a simple signup form on your website. When someone signs up, send then one email first asking them to confirm they signed up, ensuring they sent the right email address and they are ready to receive correspondence. Now you’re ready to start sending marketing emails.

 

 

 

Five Reasons to Work From Home

work from home   Working with GDI is a great way to build additional income without having to punch a clock or check into an office. Others around you not convinced of the benefit of this untraditional set up? Read on to discover five reasons to work from home with an organization like GDI.

1. Make Your Own Schedule

Many people who are affiliate marketers have full time jobs, family commitments and many more things taking up their time. Yet they still are able to earn income in affiliate marketing. How? Working from home allows you to make your own schedule and work when you have time. Don’t think that means that you have to put in four hours as an affiliate marketer after your full time job. Making your own schedule often means putting in 20 minutes when you have time or a longer chunk on a rainy Sunday afternoon. As an affiliate marketer you decide when you will work and how much money you want to make.

2. No Time Lost on Commute

A second source of income is great, but it can come with tradeoffs. Say your second job is at a brick and mortar location and you have to drive there after your full eight hour shift. You’re now losing time in your day as you make your way to another place of work. Why not skip the commute all together and still earn income? As an affiliate marketer you can telecommute. All you need is access to a computer and the internet.

3. Work Around the Globe

Working in a brick and mortar location means you are limited to your number of customers. Most will be local and live close to your business. With affiliate marketing you can work with customers around the globe. You have easy access to new prospects with your computer and your unique schedule lets you set up time to connect with people in other time zones.

4. Residual Income

Affiliate marketing gives you a chance to build income even when you’re not working. As you build your downline out, others like you will spread the message of GDI, contributing to your residual income. Build your downline with the right people and you can confidently earn income without logging hours and hours on your computer.

5. Others Like You

Not everyone wants to work from home or work in affiliate marketing, and that’s fine! Working from home allows you to easily connect with and work with others like you. You can build your downline with people just like you who want to earn extra income but on their own terms. Decide what kind of people you want to build your downline and team with and go find them!

7 Marketing Myths

marketing myths

As a GDI affiliate, you are a member of the affiliate marketing world. This means that marketing is often the key to your success as an affiliate. However, marketing, much like sales and advertising can get a bad rap for being pushy or annoying. While marketing can be seen as unfriendly sometimes, the work that goes into marketing is anything but. As you build relationships, that’s marketing. When you share news with others interested in GDI, that’s marketing. When you teach others about GDI’s tools and plugins, that’s marketing. Marketing doesn’t have to be overwhelming to you or to others. Read our list of marketing myths and get comfortable with earning income in the world of marketing!

Expensive

Many people think the only way to market is to pay for ads or to sign up for expensive email services. While those methods can be productive, you don’t have to spend a lot of money to be a successful marketer. Sites like Facebook and Twitter allow you to broadcast your marketing messages to many people at once for free, whether you’re promoting GDI or your own business. Creating videos and emails cost nothing more than your time. This is all marketing and it’s all free.

Time Consuming

Marketing does not have to be time consuming. Lots of marketing of GDI can actually be passive–meaning you don’t have to constantly work at it to see results. This kind of passive marketing can be in the form of helpful videos or informative blog posts. This content will live on your .WS website and can attract visitors without you spending hours promoting the content. Simply use the right keywords to drive traffic and link to your content on social media sites and visitors will see your videos and website without you doing extra work.

Confusing

As you can see from the examples above, marketing doesn’t have to be confusing. You don’t need to worry about audience reach and retention or email timing or anything professional marketing firms worry about. You just need to create great content that is valuable to others. Add the right keywords and share in many places and you’re already doing powerful content marketing.

Need to Pay for Ad Space

Before social networks and easy to build websites, this was true. The only way to get your content in front of people was to pay for it. Now that’s not true. Find out where people are spending most of their time online. Is it Facebook? YouTube? Tumblr? Take advantage of these free networks and promote your content on them. You’re essentially sharing an “ad” for your business, but your visitors actually get something out of the “ad” (like learning how to use a plugin) and you didn’t have to pay for people to see it.

Need a Whole Team

GDI offers many opportunities to work with a team and succeed with others. However, you only need one person to start marketing. Identify your strengths, like web design or video editing, for example, and start creating content that uses those strengths. The information you share about web design or the videos you create are both content marketing and can be done by just one person.

Need to be Everywhere

Marketing is all about being where your intended audience is. So before you decide how you are going to market, find out where potential prospects and customers are. Are these people in your town or business community? Consider flyers or attending local meetings. Are these people online? Use social networking and websites to connect with them. There is no need to be any place that your intended audience isn’t.

Anyone Can Do It

This is a partial myth. Many people will attempt affiliate marketing, but some will fail. Often this is the result of  not putting enough time into marketing or cutting corners. If you produce quality content to market with and work on building relationships success is sure to follow.