I am often asked, “what is the ideal length for an email message?” and “what subject heading gets the best open rate?”
In B2B marketing, there has been a lot of emphasis placed on developing content and nailing the right message. These things are obviously important. But equally important is building the right audience. If you are putting your message in front of the wrong people, the poor response may cause you to waste time refining a message that might have performed well when aimed at the right audience. This would be like trying to change how the quarterback throws when all you needed to do was replace the receiver.
Let’s use a real world example: A certain private jet charter service sent me the same email five days in a row last month. Here’s why that’s a problem:
Here is where those two elements create a problem. If the audience is skewed toward too many people like me, the response they are getting to this outreach is going to be very low. And the low response is likely going to generate a metric that has someone scratching their head and re-thinking the approach. And they would be wasting their time looking at the wrong problem; because no matter what that email said, it wasn’t meant for me.
Having devoted my entire career to B2B prospecting, I can tell you that taking the time to organically build a carefully curated audience of the right prospects, pays off in two ways:
This element has become so important for initiatives meant to quickly build a lead pipeline, that MarketLauncher has built a service offering devoted strictly to Audience Development. We establish a company profile and decision-maker personas and then research the market to build out a master list of suspects in the addressable market. Then we put a team of market researchers on the phone to navigate through organizations and identify the right decision makers – prequalifying companies and individuals based on the intel we are gathering. This approach also creates the added advantage of warming up prospects so they can be properly pulled into an email nurture campaign.
Feel free to email me if you want to learn more.