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11 Ways to Combine Email & Social Media Marketing to Get More Customers

 

11 Ways to Combine Email & Social Media Marketing to Get More Customers

By Tamsin Fox-Davies

 

There are mysterious forces at work in the world of small business marketing.

Techniques that once stood alone are coming together to form powerful alliances.

Although some “gurus” still proclaim that one has mastery over the other, the most savvy small businesses are seeking to harness the power of email marketing and social media marketing (drum roll please)—AT THE SAME TIME!!!

Crazy, right?

Well, the good news is … you can too!

Here are 11 simple things you can do to maximize your marketing efforts using email and social media together to get more customers.

1. Link back to your website from your social profiles and your newsletter

The smart way to do this is to link to a specific landing page on your site, rather than your homepage. Think about why your social follower wants to visit your site and give them what they’re looking for as soon as they arrive.

2. Post on social media about your newsletter or email update

Use a tool like our Simple Share function to automatically post to your Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn accounts when your newsletter is published. It’s totally customisable and on LinkedIn and Facebook you can include a picture, too.

3. Encourage newsletter readers to share your email with their networks

You want more readers who are like your current readers, so tap into their networks by asking them to share your newsletter. Two great ways to do that are with our Sharebar and using Click To Tweet.

4. Include links to your social profiles in your newsletter

Don’t just shove a social icon on your newsletter, tell people why they should follow you. Is it for articles, quotes, discounts, jokes, or something else? They will want to know.

5. Invite your newsletter subscribers to connect with you on Facebook

When you launch a new social campaign, tell your subscribers with a single purpose email. Tell them why  they should “Like” your Page and give them a deadline for the freebie to be over.

6. Let social subscribers know when your email is coming out

The day before your email newsletter is due, post an update on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to let people know what’s going to be in it, and that there’s still time to sign up. Don’t forget to give them a link to your sign-up page (not your homepage).

7. Use a mailing list sign-up app on your Facebook Page

Constant Contact has an app called Join My Mailing List. If people come to your Facebook Page and they are interested in what you do, you can nab them for your email list whilst they’re there, by encouraging them to sign up on your Page itself. I recommend you customise the app thumbnail to match your brand and alter the default text to tell people WHY they should join (e.g. “Get Offers Here First”).

8. Pin your newsletters on Pinterest

Go to your newsletter archive and view your latest newsletter. Now pick out a key image from your newsletter and pin it to one of your Pinterest boards. THEN (and this is the important bit), link it back to your archived newsletter. It will give you extra exposure and some nice SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) benefits, too.

9. Use content snippets from your newsletter on Twitter and Facebook, and link them back to your email archive

Yes, here’s another one using your archive. The easiest way to post your content snippets is to schedule them using a tool like Timely.is or MarketMeSuite. You can post several to go out over the next few days all in one go. To make the most of your archive, remember to include a nice clear “Join My List” button on your newsletter, so that if someone lands there from one of these snippets (or Pinterest, etc.), they can see how to sign up immediately.

10. Include social media snippets in your newsletter

If you really want to encourage newsletter subscribers to connect with you on social media, try taking screen shots of good engagement that you’ve had on social media channels (like Twitter and Facebook) and use the Microsoft Snipping Tool, or something like Snagit, to take a picture of some of those great messages and include them in your newsletter. This works particularly well if you pair it with a call to action, as call to action success rates are greatly increased if you pair them with a testimonial.

11. Put email and social media marketing plans on a common calendar, and create themes of content on all channels

The smart thing to do is to use your marketing emails (like your newsletter) and your social media updates to reinforce each other by running common themes through all channels. All this means is that you talk about related things on all your social media accounts and emails, during a set time period, e.g. your blog has a how-to article about your theme, on Facebook you post some client examples of how you’ve helped people do that thing, and on Twitter you post a daily fact about that topic.

 

Find out more here Constant Contact

 

Bio – Tamsin Fox-Davies

 

Tamsin Fox-Davies has made it her mission to help small business people achieve their dreams and create successful and sustainable organisations. As a Constant Contact’s small business evangelist, she shares her valuable insight in a variety of ways from in-person training, to speaking at events and creating useful resources including blogs, articles, and newsletters. A published author, Tamsin also writes for the Constant Contact UK blog and has contributed to BusinessZone, Women Unlimited, the National Black Women’s Network, The Association of Business Mentors, The British Franchise Association, SmartInsights, Enterprise Nation, and Entrepreneur Country, as well as other national and regional outlets.
Tamsin has educated more than 5,000 small businesses on behalf of Constant Contact since joining the team in March 2012, and has presented at The British Library, Facebook London, Google Campus, Social Media Week London, Spring Fair International, Trade Only, The Modern Marketers Forum, Social Media Strategies Summit, Our Social Times, National Outdoor Events Association, and Get Growing! The Great British Roadshow, amongst many others.
Tamsin comes from an extensive background in the field, with more than 10 years small business marketing experience. Prior to Constant Contact she ran her own business, supporting, mentoring, and training other small businesses in practical marketing that works. Tamsin built her business using face-to-face networking and online marketing, and now shares that experience with other business owners. She also sits on the board of the Association of UK Business Mentors.