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Email Marketing, Business & Monkeys

Getting Added to Subscribers’ Address Books

December 8th, 2008 | by Amanda

Last week, email expert Stefan Pollard at ClickZ posted an informative article about getting into your subscribers’ address books or on their contact lists.  This is one of the most simple and often overlooked tactics for improving email deliverability.

When your subscribers add you to their address book, they are essentially telling their ISP that they want to receive email from you, and in some cases it can even get your correspondence to show up with images turned ‘on’ by default and rendering correctly.  As Stefan notes,

“ISPs want to deliver only the e-mail their customers say they want to receive, so they check those personal whitelists when deciding whether to deliver, block, or direct to the spam folder your e-mail.”

Stefan outlines some simple steps you can take to improve your chances of getting added to your subscribers’ address books, and I’ll show you how to implement them using MailChimp.

First, be sure to modify both your subscription and thank you pages with a request to be added to a subscriber’s address book. Ideally, this should help reduce the number of welcome or opt-in confirmation messages being blocked by spam filters.  Also, be sure to remind people to keep an eye out for the subscription confirmation request so that if it does end up in the spam folder, it can be retrieved (and the opt-in process completed).

One cool thing MailChimp does (just in case) is we attach vCards to your thank you pages and welcome emails, so that your subscribers can simply click to add you. But you should still take some time to signup for your own list, and tweak things a little.

You should also create “add to address book” reminders for both your confirmation and welcome emails. Stefan recommends making this the first line of both the confirmation and welcome emails, which ensures greater visibility.  (In other words, don’t hide the request in your email header or footer).

It is simple and highly recommended that you modify the default emails within MailChimp. Here’s how!

When you select a particular list under the “Lists” tab in the MailChimp dashboard, a panel with a number of options will appear.  In order to tweak your signup forms and response emails to include an “add to address book” request, first click the link for “design signup forms & response emails”.

When you get to the Form Designer, simply select from the options at the right to tweak your Signup Form, Signup “Thank You” Page, Opt-In Confirmation Email, etc.

Stefan also suggests including an “add to address book” request in the footer section of your regular message template as a consistent friendly reminder to your subscribers.

Related:

You can add customized incentives to your welcome process to get more people to signup

How RealTrucks adds an e-coupon to their welcome emails

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4 Comments

    • Paul says:

      Is there a universal link for the “add us to you address book”? Or is that what the vcard link is that is automatically on our mailchimp emails in the footer?

      I figure I can just copy that link to enter on my subscribe pages?

      Also, something else that seems to work: I cross promote my lists. I have an e-commerce site as well as a blog with separate subscriptions (the blog is an RSS campaign) When someone signs up for one, I show a link to sign up for the other in my confirmations emails and such. I’ve just started doing this but sure enough I get new subscribers signing up for both at the same time.

    • Ben says:

      Hi Paul,

      Some people like to point people to a web page, where they provide instructions for adding your address to their address book for every single email app out there.

      We didn’t think that was a very elegant solution, since so many email apps change so often (not to mention all the different webmail variations popping up, like Yahoo Beta, Yahoo Classic, Hotmail, Windows Live, etc.) You’d need to write and constantly update all those instructions. I’d rather poke my eye with a hot needle.

      So we added the vCard attachment to all welcome emails. vCards are pretty universal. If that doesn’t work, then your contact information (which you provide when you setup your list) is also included in the welcome process as text, so that users can easily copy-paste into their address books.

      Also, the contact info is formatted in hCard standard so it’s easily recognized by machines as “someone’s contact info.” As more systems begin to comply with the hCard standard, you’ll be able to very easily add contacts to your address book.

      Very nice tip on cross-promoting your lists. I’m sure other readers would be interested in how you differentiate the two lists.

      I assume the blog updates are sent daily, and are just “general news” while the other list is special deals and offers? Very nice. BTW, love the fact that your top-navigation is numbers. I had to think about it for a second, then realized they’re corvette model years. Nice.

    • Paul says:

      Yes, the rss campaign is just for daily updates, news, new items we carry. Some of these things do trickle over into our promotional emails, but they are mainly for special deals and offers, and sent about twice a month.

      Check out the website now, I published a quick redesign last night, much easier to see those “years”.

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