Saturday 18 May 2013



Sometimes, it seems like everything in the world has turned upside down and few 
immutable rules are left standing. But that's not so in the world of business-to-business 
(B2B) email marketing as far as I'm concerned. So to help draw some order from the 
chaos, I'll share my 10 commandments of B2B email marketing.

Rule 1: Nobody cares. No one is sitting at his or her desk anxiously awaiting your B2B 
email. Yes, I know you have a carefully crafted messaging platform and that you're 
extolling key product features. But those are irrelevant. All that matters is that your 
email, on some level, connects with the recipient. Now ask yourself, what do you know 
about the people receiving your message?

Rule 2: Inform and link. I have never ignored an email that contained a citation from an 
analyst group or a link to an article about my industry. Yet, I seldom receive such 
email. Most business professionals are information junkies. Feed their habit. Help 
them do their jobs better. Become an authoritative source of information about your 
industry or profession.

Rule 3: Email newsletters work. Not the way you do them, though. Sorry, friend, but 
your idea of an email newsletter is some kind of "house organ" that is all inside talk, 
not outside talk. Guess what. I'm on the outside. The content of your email newsletter 
should be 80 percent about industry trends, analyst reports, and white papers and just 
20 percent about you, such as a press release about a new customer you have signed 
or a new product you are offering.

Rule 4: Words over images. Trust me on this. B2B marketing is still dominated by 
copywriting. Of course, businesspeople are people, too. They might find an HTML 
email to be pleasing to the eye. Ultimately, though, you make your connection with 
readers, not viewers. You make that connection through the art of gentle surprise, 
candor, intelligence, and self-effacing humor. (Business brands so seldom "speak" in 
this way. In other words, there's a real opportunity here.)

Rule 5: Email for a person must come from a person. Use a personal address for your 
email marketing communications. If you're trying to reach an executive audience, it is 
imperative that the email comes from your CEO or, at the very least, from someone 
who might be viewed as a peer.

Rule 6: Don't ignore the world. Too often, it seems that email marketing messages 
exist in a vacuum. And in that vacuum one can use the equivalent of a phrase like 
"end-to-end enterprise antigravity and pro-levity platform" with a straight face. B2B Email Marketing Rules
2 Remember, there is a world out there: current events, rumors, fads, and so on. It might 
be wise to selectively reference current events.
Plus, 2001 is quite different from 2000. A certain cynicism has gripped many 
enterprise decision makers who feel that they were scammed by the new economy's 
pitch people. Then along comes September 11, the Pearl Harbor of the New World 
Disorder. And it's safe to say that business folks are in a sober, cautious frame of 
mind. You might want to give that some thought before you push "send" on your next 
campaign.

Rule 7: When all else fails, try being truthful. Let's say that yours is small start-up firm 
specializing in electronic logistics. Is it really necessary to portray yourself as a 
"leading" anything? How much more powerful might it be to speak in a personal way 
about how your firm can save transportation costs, even admitting to the fact that 
you've got a staff of just 15?

Rule 8: Get a free Aberdeen Group e-sourcing white paper. That is to say, don't ignore 
the obvious. Put the obvious in the subject line of your email. White papers attract 
attention. Don't be impolite to your market by making them root around for the good 
stuff.

Rule 9: Tell them what you're telling them. We've had great success with putting an 
executive summary-- usually with a dollop of humor -- at the top of an email message. 
That way, the market knows what it's getting and can choose to dive in or race away. 
It's not bad when they race away. You had nothing for them, so why waste their time?

Rule 10: It's OK to be long-winded. I know, this violates email marketing gospel. But if 
you have something valuable to comment about -- such as a myth you've uncovered 
that needs debunking -- we've found that even time-constrained executives will stay to 
the end of your message. The real problem is that email is, more often than not, 
crafted by advertising agency folks who don't really understand your industry. And no 
matter how times you revise, something almost always rings false. In that case, keep 
the email short. And strongly emphasize the free white paper.

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