Business Services Industry
Sign of the times: are you missing out on this simple, inexpensive marketing tool?
Entrepreneur, Jan, 2005 by Catherine Seda
How many e-mail messages do you send every day: 10, 50 or more? Seize the opportunity to promote your business to a highly targeted audience without spending a clime. Few words are mote powerful than those in your e-marl signature line.
Marketers whose e-mail messages only contain their names and contact information are missing out. E-mail recipients have already opted for communication from you. Plus, they're key members of your unofficial marketing network: prospects, clients, employees, press contacts and colleagues. Your signature line is the perfectly unobtrusive space for a customized promotional pitch. Try these tactics to turn your "sign-offs" into sales:
* Highlight what your company offers.
* Offer an incentive for recipients to take a specified action.
* Use the associated URL for the incentive, if it's also on your site.
* Give better visual positioning to the promotional pitch rather than contact information.
* Play with eye-catching fonts and colors.
Use less than 64 characters per line so the words don't wrap to a new line.
* Write a signature for different categories of recipients.
* Change your signature copy frequently.
Let's say you run a fitness-apparel company. Your company tag line could be "Company ABC Fitness Apparel: quality comfort for maximum performance." Especially critical for emerging brands, using a tag line explains how customers are served, and it supports or furthers brand awareness. All company employees should include the company tag line in their signatures for these reasons.
The tag line might not evoke a response, however; that's the job of the incentive. An announcement about a new catalog with discounts is an irresistible invitation to a fitness-apparel company's shoppers. This copy might do the trick: Penny Hamilton, CEO Company ABC Fitness Apparel: Quality Comfort for Maximum Performance. Surf our new spring catalog--save up to 25% today!
Let's try another market: employees. Why not use a signature line to boost your team's performance? Remind them about a reward program or a company event, or share a business affirmation. You could make your signature line fun as well as informative; the CEO of a fitness-apparel company could use this motivational signature in communication with her sales team: Penny Hamilton, CEO & Happy Hiker; Hit our sates goal, this month, and lunch is on me!
Although it's common to put a personal name first, followed by a company line and then an incentive line, see what works for you. Mix up the sequence of lines for the optimal visual layout and response, and always include contact information. Modify your signature line periodically. E-mail is often passed along, and you never know which signature will attract new business from the people you've already been communicating with over numerous e-mails.
Speaker and freelance writer CATHERINE SEDA owns an internet marketing agency (www.sedacommunication.com) and is author of Search Engine Advertising.
Most Recent Business Articles
- Multiple criteria evaluation and optimization of transportation systems
- Multi-criteria analysis procedure for sustainable mobility evaluation in urban areas
- A two-leveled multi-objective symbiotic evolutionary algorithm for the hub and spoke location problem
- Multi-criteria analysis for evaluating the impacts of intelligent speed adaptation
- The development of Taiwan arterial traffic-adaptive signal control system and its field test: a Taiwan experience
Most Recent Business Publications
Most Popular Business Articles
- 7 tips for effective listening: productive listening does not occur naturally. It requires hard work and practice - Back To Basics - effective listening is a crucial skill for internal auditors
- FAS 109: a primer for non-accountants - Financial Accounting Standards Board's "Statement 109: Accounting for Income Taxes"
- Design a commission plan that drives sales - Sales Commissions
- LIFO vs. FIFO: a return to the basics
- Too Young to Rent a Car? - 25-years-old the minimum age for car renting - Brief Article


