Do I Have Your Permission?
Are you the kind of person who likes to bother people?
No - of course you're not.
Do you like people who bother people?
Probably not.
So why would you consider bothering strangers by sending them a mass e-mail without their permission?
It's easy to send bulk e-mail, and there's nothing really preventing you from doing it. Just because you can doesn't mean you should. Think of the other messages you're sending about yourself aside from the one in your fancy HTML e-mail.
- Respect. Sending a bulk e-mail to someone you have no real connection with sends the message you think you're more important than they are. It takes no time to send an e-mail to someone you don't know. It takes time for them to decide whether it's junk or not. You're interrupting them and wasting their time which is not a sign of respect. If someone did this to you in another context you'd likely get annoyed.
- Work ethic. When you take the time to build a permission-based list, you're doing things the "hard" way. You're offering something of value to your audience and you are rewarded when they CHOOSE to sign up to your list. Message after message you send to that list contains enough value that they remain subscribers and you are rewarded for that effort when subscribers buy from you or tell people they know to choose you as a supplier they can trust.
Sending bulk e-mail takes very little work. You haven't built a relationship built on value with your audience and they know it. Your spam campaign might generate some results, but you lower your credibility and damage your reputation with everyone else who doesn't respond. - Quality. Think about the other things pushed on bulk e-mail. Flaky investment schemes. Lottery scams. Libido (and other body part) enhancements. Porn.
Do you really want to be lumped in with the rest of the companies that use spam to push their products? I know - you're using spam to let people know about your wonderful product or service and you have no other way of reaching them. However, since you're sending e-mail flogging your business to people who don't know you, how are they to know you're a legitimate business and not some fly-by-nighter? Spamming your list regularly isn't a way to show you're a stable company either.
Labels: internet marketing, knowing your customer, spam, tell a better story, uce, unsolicited commercial e-mail, value
