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Lessons from the Front Lines
Email Marketing News, Articles, Strategies and things we should all think about
11.14.2008
Scare Tactics
To any advertisers out there that might be reading this, please don’t use scare tactics to create ads. Very rarely do I see a fear-based ad that I think is effective. If you want to create an emotional connection with customers, try using a positive emotion. Do you really want customers to associate your brand with fear? Is that the best decision? Is that healthy?
I’ve seen a few fear-based ads that I thought were well done, some of those car commercials about the passengers surviving accidents. These ads were pretty good as individual ads, but could you imagine a successful fear-based campaign? I’m having trouble envisioning one (but that might be because I only got 4 ½ hours of sleep last night).
When I think of fear-based advertising, the first ad that comes to my mind is LBJ’s infamous “Daisy” ad. For those of you who aren’t familiar with the background of this ad, Lyndon Johnson was running against Goldwater (I forgot his first name). This was during the 1964 election, and Cold War tensions were very high. Goldwater had a history of being trigger-happy, so Johnson played off it. The ad was only shown once, then pulled off TV for obvious reasons. Tell me if you think this commercial creates social harm or social good.



Also, check out Dylan’s blog post for an example of fear-based advertising from FedEx. It’s not nearly as severe as the Daisy ad, but it shares a lot of the fundamentals behind it.
http://theemailwars.com/2008/11/14/using-email-to-build-fear/#more-1311 Posted by: Jeff Kempf at 9:05 AM  |  Permalink


11.10.2008
Which practices are best?
If you work with email marketing, then you're probably aware of all the different best practices. It seems like everyone who has ever sent an email claims to know all the exact details for crafting that perfect email, as if there was one perfect email to send to everyone, in every industry, for every product. Well, there definitely are some practices that will improve any email, like testing and proper targeting. If you get confused over some specifics of your latest email campaign, stop what you're doing, take a short break, then think about the fundamentals of email. Think about how the email will reach the reader. If you were in the reader's shoes, would you read the email and click through it? If not, what makes you think the reader will? In his blog, Dylan claims the three most important elements of email are deliverability, the welcoming message, and creative. This might sound like just another set of best practices, but they make sense. Check it out at
http://theemailwars.com/2008/11/10/3-things-to-be-good-at/#more-1302 Posted by: Jeff Kempf at 9:20 AM  |  Permalink




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