Email Marketing Apps for Small Business
Email marketing is one of the dominant ways that a small
business reaches out to customers and prospects. Email marketing is about
relationships — and successful relationship marketing involves a lot more
thought than simply firing off a newsletter via email.
According to MarketingSherpa’s 2010 Email Marketing
Benchmark Report, email marketing is one of two marketing budget items that saw
an increase in 2009. The other is social
media.
But where many have claimed that “email is dead,”
MarketingSherpa has proven otherwise in its studies. In fact, they show that email is quite
social. A recent survey asked users how
they share information they find on the internet: 78% responded that email is how they do
it. 22% use social media sites.
Here are 30 small business email marketing applications to
grow customer relationships and your business:
Emma: Emma is a
Web-based service that combines do-it-yourself with free personal assistance
when you need it (custom email design comes at an additional charge). They have strong tracking and analytics
components that allow you to learn what works, or doesn’t, with your audience.
Constant Contact:
They offer a free 60-day trial. They have been around a long time and have a
strong arsenal of email marketing tools from HTML newsletter templates to
personal coaching on how to get your email campaigns done right. They have added event management so you can
handle online registration, as well as online survey tools to gather info from
customers and prospects.
Aweber: AWeber
grew very popular because it focused on auto-response emails. They made it very simple and elegant to
create a form a prospect would fill out.
This service is auto-responded to that information with whatever message
you had set up. They offer a robust set of tools including email newsletters,
emails to RSS, and, of course, auto responders.
First month is $1, and then pay-as-you-go based on subscriber
count. You don’t pay per email with
them.
MailChimp: MailChimp
is one of the first email marketing providers to offer a “forever free”
plan. Small business users I know love
this plan as it gives you up to 500 subscribers and 3,000 emails for free each
month. After that, it has pay-as-you-go
pricing. On top of the email newsletter
and database list management, they offer integration with online event
registrations and ticket sales via Eventbrite.
iContact: iContact
offers all of the same features as the others, but they focus attention on
their deliverability rates – often talked about as whitelist agreements. While
it may not seem like a big deal at first glance, if your email provider isn’t
doing things right, your email may not get through. iContact partners with a third party, Pivotal
Veracity, to score emails to help improve how many get through to recipients.
They offer a free trial, no credit card to get started, and a good educational
resource section.
Vertical Response: In
addition to email, Vertical Response is probably one of the more integrated
services out there, with integration to Intuit and Salesforce. They offer postal mail options, too, so you
can send a postcard to a prospect or customer to add another touch beyond email
and it has great educational materials also.
EmailBrain: I
liked that they had a “no credit card” free trial signup. More importantly, I really appreciated that
they offer an industry-focus approach with 20+ industry examples and case
studies. You could dig in and see what
someone else like you was doing — a good way to get a jumpstart on your email
marketing.
eConnect: eConnect
Email’s claim to fame is their the first provider to offer a tagging system for
email. Look at it as a meta-organizing
system where you can see what your customers and prospects find interesting and
are clicking on. You can tag items in a
specific email, in a campaign, and across multiple campaigns. That information is then available on a
subscriber level, so you can see the top five tags your customer is interested
in.
FuseMail: FuseMail
offers email hosting as well as campaign management. They have a 14-day free trial. The big area that stood out for me was they
have an SMTP Direct service (which is an email gateway) where you can use your
existing email newsletter program and gain the advantages of their email
servers. The advantage of this is that
you don’t have to get everyone on your existing mail list to “opt-in” to your
newsletter again, which is almost always a requirement when signing on with a
new service. FuseMail doesn’t have this
requirement with their SMTP Direct service.
SimplyCast: SimplyCast,
owned by Mailworkz (offers 300 emails a month “free forever” account, similar
to MailChimp). Some of the key features
that SimplyCast offers are worth considering:
Image hosting (so you can easily have your image render properly), easy
to include attachments, forward-to-a-friend options from within the email
(great for viral stuff), and dozens of template categories.
JangoMail: Many
providers tag your emails with “Powered by ABC Email…” and you probably don’t
particularly want to see this sort of branding on your email messages to
customers. JangoMail promises “your
emails are your emails, not ours.” Even
though they are a web-based email provider, they allow for you to manage your
messaging through Outlook or Thunderbird, and other web-based apps like Gmail
and Yahoo, too. Free trial allows for 50
test emails.
GetResponse: GetResponse
appears to be very social media savvy.
They offer video email and social media tools. Your email subscribers, for example, can
easily receive your Twitter updates via the GetResponse service. They also have a split-testing feature so
that you can test one email against another to see which one pulls better
results.
Contact29 : Contact29
is an email marketing provider focused primarily on the real estate and
mortgage industries. If you are in those industries, they are worth a look.
SendLabs: SendLabs
has created a tool to help you see what your email will look like in the
recipient’s inbox. With a single click,
this feature within the SendLabs Summer ’09 release will send a copy of your
email to all of the major email programs (Outlook, Lotus Notes, Yahoo!, Gmail,
etc.) and provide a screen shot report on how well your email will render for
everybody.
Campaigner: Campaigner
offers a nifty workflow tool that allows you to determine when and what actions
trigger an email to be sent to your customer or prospect. It is similar to an auto responder (which
sends an email when a customer fills in a form on a website usually), but a bit
more advanced. With their workflow tool,
you can trigger a specific response based on what a customer does within the
email. If they click a certain link, for
example, they might receive an email 1 hour later. Free trial, of course.
EasyContact: I
liked the very simple 3-step plan that EasyContact presents to first time
visitors. You get a clear sense that
they have thought about how to make it as easy as possible. They also offer a free forever plan and low-cost
pay-as-you-go options.
Big Response: The
other services may have similar offers, but Big Response has a couple of things
worth mentioning: First, they highlight
that you can collect an unlimited number of subscribers – meaning you don’t pay
to store contacts and only pay for emails sent. You get unlimited phone and email support
from their experts.
Benchmark Email: Their
competitor comparison chart reveals a lot about what they offer that others
don’t. You can tie into your Google
Analytics account. You can view all of
your subscriber opens within a map within the reporting feature. You can segment out all of your email lists
easily which is handy as you get to know your customers better.
StreamSend: The
big differentiator for StreamSend is they offer every customer a private IP
address, which helps you keep your reputation intact. You are not judged by the email provider you
use, but by your email quality.
myNewsletterBuilder: myNewsletterBuilder
stands out in the crowd of email marketers by providing pre-written content
that you can use in your newsletters and emails, by industry segment. They also partnered with eVoiceSpot, which is
a multimedia rich presentation service that you can embed into your email or
newsletter.
YesMail: YesMail
has one major awards and recognition for its platform and service. They have a specific small business offering
called YesMail Direct. This link goes
direct to that page. They are connected to InfoUSA, so if you need to build a
mailing list you can do it all under one roof.
Mad Mimi: Mad
Mimi is a simple email marketing system.
One of the nice features is it comes with free design assistance. It also has a limited edition that is
completely free and includes good sharing functions like Forward to a Friend,
among many other standard features.
PoMMo: PoMMo is a
free open-source program that bills itself as “mass mailing” software. It is a no-frills program. It’s is 100% free. However, like many open source apps, remember
there’s always a cost — it costs you time.
You are pretty much on your own when it comes to installing it and
troubleshooting issues. There is no
customer support to call.
CRM EMAIL:
Many companies don’t like their email efforts separated from
their customer data. Keeping it all together is a lot of work. Customer relationship management software
companies have listened, but these five web-based offerings are aimed at the
small business owner. If you want to
enable customized emails to your customers, with full tracking and opportunities
to create new campaigns from your customer data, then you should look closely
at these companies:
Infusionsoft : Infusionsoft
is a popular CRM solution with automated email marketing as a central
concept. As you make contact with
customers via email, or via interactions on your website or online shopping
cart, Infusionsoft tracks those contact points.
You can then use those interactions to send targeted and relevant
communications. Your salespeople can access this info and understand what
communications the customer has seen, or where they’ve gone on your site, and
have a more intelligent conversation.
(Note: Infusionsoft is a sponsor
of this site’s Internet radio show.)
Zoho CRM: Zoho is
an online application suite like OpenOffice or Google Documents, but with a lot
more applications and options for managing your business. Their ZohoCRM tool recently introduced the
email within CRM option. The email add-on is $5 a month additional.
Highrise HQ: Highrise
HQ is a web-based CRM from 37 Signals (owner of Basecamp, a popular project
management tool). Like most CRM
solutions, they allow you to track who you talk to and so forth, but the
ability to see all of your email efforts and dialogue with a customer on one
page is fairly useful.
Leopard CRM : Integrating
your email into your CRM efforts always looks daunting, but Leopard CRM simply
says — calls our support team and we’ll walk you through it.
SalesBoom : SalesBoom
is an online CRM application that offers an email campaign management
tool. With it, a user can capture leads
via a simple web form and then send individual emails, or manage entire drip
marketing campaigns where you email customers or prospects a series of emails
over a period of time.
SalesJunction: SalesJunction
offers one of the lowest monthly costs for a web-based CRM that I’ve
found. The basic edition has a 15 day
trial.
Lyris HQ : Lyris
HQ used to be known as Email Labs. It
integrates with Salesforce.com, which is the industry-leading online CRM
solution, so that’s a plus for the many business owners using Salesforce. I could not find pricing on their website,
which is a downside in my opinion. Small business owners are too busy to talk
to sales reps or sit through web demos just to discover pricing.
SOCIAL EMAIL
There’s loads of proof that social networks have changed how
we communicate. They increase transparency, build trust, and give people
(customers and prospects) the choice to opt-in to our messages.
With social media you can communicate directly to your
customers without the traditional email hurdles and miss the inbox
altogether. For example, your company
can send messages to people in a Facebook or LinkedIn Group today. Twitter does not offer a group feature where
you can message a group of people privately, but a third party app called
Tweetworks does. You could accomplish
something similar by addressing a group with a hashtag although it wouldn’t
remain private. The goal with a private
message is to avoid bothering others that would not be interested in the offer
or message.
Return on Subscriber offers a solid post on how to achieve
more social email: Making your email
marketing social
Finally, remember that programs and offer details
change. But, to the best of my knowledge
all information herein is accurate as of the time of publication.
We hope these 30 applications and ideas help you. What email marketing software do you use
now? Leave a comment below with your
favorite.
Source:
smallbiztrends.com
Email Marketing Apps for Small Business
Reviewed by Journey Of Digital Media
on
12/23/2013
Rating:
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