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Need Help With My Email Subject Line!
Hi All,
I need some feedback regarding my email subject line. Would you be compelled to open this email with the following subject line? "Billy, Permission to Mention Your Site On Good Morning America?" Thanks, Jim |
I'd delete it without opening it (DNO)
DNO means Do Not Open because the subject contains the entire message
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Good Morning America - an invitation to feature on the show/website/radio
Would you open this one, then? I'm having a limited amount of success using a similar approach when writing to prospective contributors for the site at http://www.pabizz.com - and could do with some additional pizzazz!!!!!!!!
Thanks! Maggie 2checkout - recurring billing option! ![]() |
Re: Good Morning America - an invitation to feature on the show/website/radio
Absolutely not!
Unfortunately, since spam has become such a huge problem, if you're sending the message to me and I have not explicitly given you my email address or permission to send me email, I'd trash it. In fact, I'd bounce it back as undeliverable. I have even gone to the trouble of establishing throwaway addresses to use in signing up for newsletters on the net. Once the publishers have proven themselves trustworthy in safeguarding my email address, and have shown they have something worthwhile to send to me (ads included), I unsubscribe the throwaway and subscribe with a good address. Of the 35 messages I received today, only 7 were from people/newslists I wanted to receive. And while some had interesting Subject lines, it is my rule of thumb to ignore any message to me that I didn't invite. Of course, if someone references a post of mine, or states his own name (From Dien at SOWPUB, From Boyd:, e.g.) then I download it and read it. Anything else just gets dumped. Marye |
Re: Need Help With My Email Subject Line!
Jim -
> I need some feedback regarding my email > subject line. > Would you be compelled to open this email > with the following subject line? > "Billy, Permission to Mention Your Site > On Good Morning America?" I see you got pretty much the same response here as what I replied to you on my board. The relationship is the key. Rick Smith, "The Net Guerrilla" |
Re: Good Morning America - an invitation to feature on the show/website/radio
Marye - I guess I'm like you in that 99% of my mail gets deleted unread, because it's obviously not connected with me, my web business or my web interests; which does mean that occasionally I miss something which might have been useful to me. But you know, when researching topics of interest, surfing through web sites, there are a few gems which are worth contacting with a genuine invitation to joint venture. Using a contact form on a web site and sending a email using that, I don't want to waste time sending something which might be construed as spam when it is a real offer to do ethical business.
I don't build mailing lists of any old address; I don't send out multitudes of offers to the same address; if I have taken the time to write to someone with an invitation, I say on it that it will only be one contact unless they reply they want to deal with me. I have a contact form on most of my web sites and if someone uses it to contact me, I try to reply. I'm not saying that I catch them all, because sometimes I have a mass delete of mails and I guess some good mail goes with the bad stuff. But that's why I have a contact form; to let people who are interested in my web site/business/ethics get in touch and introduce themselves. Cheers Maggie |
Have you tried Mailwasher?
It will automatically mark some messages as spam, probably spam, or as having a virus attached.
I recommend it because you can set it to flag messages, but give you the final option as to whether to delete it or let it through. With what you must be receiving with your business email addresses, this might help keep you from deleting legitimate messages to you, while allowing wholesale spam to be bounced back and deleted. Shame that what was a fine method of personally communicating has been usurped by unscrupulous sorts so that legitimate business people can't use it effectively. Good luck. Marye |
I would also delete it because
It is still spam-like.
You are invited; you have been chosen; you've been selected, etc. Delete delete delete. Quick draw McGraw. Speedy Gonzaleze. Blue Racer. Road Runner. That's how fast I delete spam. IF you have been to my website you would KNOW what kind of business it revolves around. I would expect a mention of that PLUS my name in any email header... Margaret, regarding your Widget business Requires TWO forms of personalization/identification that shows it was written by a real person. Michael Ross Great Ideas Here |
Re: I would also delete it because
Michael - thanks for your response; (I've been thinking about what you say and have indeed been to your web site on more than one occasion. It turns out I have previously downloaded the MIS report - and since I had a look this evening, I remember clicking the download link on your web page.)
Here are three headers from emails I received this evening Margaret You can order Anti-depressants, weight loss meds,and pain relief meds online with NO PRESCRIPTIONN xcmlrq?pius.wfs:i?sdrduq.pbwjnsk? 5/30/2003 Margaret Viagraa, Soma, Fioricet, Prescribed Online for Free, Shipped Overnight ojvey:fw;omopiwg:cnwim;hwre?ycyy?es:cps. 5/30/2003 Hello Margaret, Rare Movie Site - Rare & Unique High Quality Hardcore Movies!!! These were all addressed to [email protected] - and my name is indeed Margaret. However, I find it spooky and very offensive to be correctly mentioned by name in these email subjects; that's an absolute automatic delete for me. So, while I get the general ethos of personalising emails, as a woman it gives me a great sense of insecurity to be correctly addressed like this. I feel I'm being stalked. I took a quick look at the other emails in my inbox this evening, and rather than delete everything out of hand, took the time to select a couple I felt didn't intrude into my "personal space" but were from total strangers. I can honestly say that I felt far more comfortable opening the one whose title is "Advertising Resources", which doesn't address me by name. However, the person who wrote it had been to one of my web sites and was requesting a link exchange. I guess that person might be glad this discussion provoked me into looking at the email at all, 'coz now I'm going to go and check out the link to the other website. Like I said previously, I'm not in the market to mass mail millions of people. If I choose to contact anyone, it's with a genuine invitation and the email contact HAS been obtained directly from his/her website. In total, I probably have approached less than 25 individuals in this way; and a gratifying number of them have been able to help me in some way or another. Thanks Michael Margaret |
Re: Have you tried Mailwasher?
Marye,
Thanks for the recommendation - I'll check it out. I'm with you in wishing that emails weren't being used as a blanket marketing exercise to millions of potential clients. It makes genuine contact extremely difficult. Cheers! Margaret |
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