EFTA00643530.pdf

DataSet-9 7 pages 992 words document
👁 1 💬 0
📄 Extracted Text (992 words)
From: The Boomerang Team <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: Secrets of Writing the Perfect Email (and your Year in Review) Date: Thu, 18 Feb 2016 14:24:06 +0000 a Your 2015 in Review with Boomerang for Gmail Happy (Lunar) New Year! We hope this is both the last (yep, this was supposed to go out early in January. Happy Year of the Monkey!) and, more importantly, the most useful year-in-review email you'll receive from a web service this year! At Boomerang HO, we spend a lot of time thinking about email and how we can use it to communicate more effectively. Over the past year, our customers asked Boomerang to remind them if someone didn't respond to over 40 million emails. So we decided that rather than email you to brag about how much we've grown* or show you our swanky new logo", we'd review the year by figuring out what factors matter when you want to get a response to your messages. There's a lot of advice about how to write a good email on the web, from general writing advice to full sets of pre-written email templates. But almost none of that advice shows the data behind it (we're guessing because there isn't any), and a lot of it contradicts itself. EFTA00643530 So here's the roundup of what really matters when you're sending an email, and how much each factor matters. Need to redownload Boomerang? GET IT NOW and put these techniques to work. Get it now! Sentiment graph giFazia,QPitatinke okter est din One of the most significant factors in determining response rates is how positive (words like great) or negative (words like bad) the words in the message are. Emails that were slightly to moderately positive OR slightly to moderately negative elicited between 5-15% more responses than emails that were completely neutral. We would advise against both excessive flattery and writing hostile, day-ruining screeds. Poisonously negative emails were less likely than even neutral emails to get a response, and extremely positive emails did little better. EFTA00643531 Message length data gyago,QPicainke older est din The sweet spot for email length is between 50-125 words, yielding response rates above 50%. While average emails from Jeb and Hillary clock in at 10 and 9 words respectively, unless you're running for President, sending emails that short mean you'll sacrifice about 30% of your responses. Response rates slowly declined from 125 word messages to 500 word messages, then fell faster after that. So if you need to send War and Peace, you might want to send it as an attachment! EFTA00643532 Subject length data giF©is,QPigainke older est din Email marketing veterans know that testing subject lines is a critical step in designing an email campaign that will have a high open rate. Likewise, the length of your subject line impacts response rates, and the optimal length is shorter than we expected. Subject lines with only 3-4 words (excluding email conventions like Re: and Fwd:) received the most responses. Including some sort of subject line is critical: only 14% of messages without any subject line at all received a response. EFTA00643533 Reading Grade Level Data giFal;IMQPiainke older est din Our most surprising finding was that the reading grade level of your emails has a dramatic impact on response rates. Emails written at a 3rd grade reading level were optimal, providing a 36% lift over emails written at a college reading level and a 17% higher response rate than emails written at a high school reading level. The main components of reading grade level scores are the number of syllables in your words and the number of words in your sentences. So try using shorter sentences and simpler words than you normally would. You can check your contenrs reading grade level in the Word Count tool in most word processors, or search for "Flesch Kincaid grade level" to find a multitude of online tools. EFTA00643534 Question Data Subjectivity Data 2,FajZib,QPiGainke 2,FaZibQPiGainke okter est din okter est din The number of questions you ask in an email If your natural writing style has a "just the has a sweet spot, just like the number of facts, ma'am" bias, you should consider words you write. We found that emails that including more opinions and more asked 1-3 questions are 50% more likely subjectivity into your messages! The more to get a response than emails asking no opinionated the content of the email, the questions. But a bombardment of questions higher the response rate climbed. One won't help you either - an email with 3 caveat - we have no idea if those subjective questions is 20% more likely to get a emails generated positive responses or response than an email with 8 or more! declarations of war, so caveat writer! If you found this information helpful, we'd really appreciate it if you shared it with others! Our blog post describing these findings (with even more details) is available below. See the blog post! EFTA00643535 Tips to Get a Response 2,FalZib,QPiQUnke older est din * Boomerang has almost exactly twice as many users as it had this time last year, in case you were wondering. Happy customers remain our largest source of growth, so thanks for telling your friends and coworkers about us! " OK, we did make our logo swankier. Our designer hopes you noticed! *** If you found this information fascinating, we're hiring! Our mailing address is: Our other products Baydin Inc. Boomerang for Android -Advanced Boomerang 100 View St Suite 112 functionality for Gmail and Exchange accounts Mountain View. CA 94041 on your Android phone. USA Boomerang Calendar • Smart scheduling assistant built into Gmail Unsubsaibe from these emails Inbox Pause • Stop the flood of incoming emails You are receiving this email because you are a The Emai Game • Lightweight Gmail client that user of Boomerang helps you handle emails more efficiently Boomerang for Outlook - The ultimate productivity add-in for Outlook and Office 365 EFTA00643536
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
99128986f0d82248a313005423080e1e8a08d47d75bafc2bfeb2e9ab5f8b8385
Bates Number
EFTA00643530
Dataset
DataSet-9
Type
document
Pages
7

Community Rating

Sign in to rate this document

📋 What Is This?

Loading…
Sign in to add a description

💬 Comments 0

Sign in to join the discussion
Loading comments…
Link copied!