Aug 27

As business people, marketers and advertisers, we all want our messages to be heard by as many people as possible. In order to generate new leads and business, that’s typically the goal: get the word out to hopefully thousands of sets of ears.

That being said, there are so many articles and services out there that claim to help boost the number of followers you have, or subscribers to your mailing lists. Many people focus on numbers, trying to always increase followers with the idea that they will increase the chances of their messages being viewed. I’m here to argue the opposite.

It is more important to have a following or mailing list comprised of those truly interested in what you have to say, rather than a list filled with people who follow you but don’t really care to listen to you.

Twitter There are services out there—both free and paid—that guarantee 100’s of ‘quality’ followers to follow you. If you sign up today, start following their members or pay them a few dollars, you’ll have hundreds of followers by tomorrow. In reality, it takes time to build a list of quality Twitter followers. By ‘quality’ I mean followers who might have more than a passing interest in you or your business and who follow you out of a genuine desire to read your tweets. Social media is all about, well…socializing. Exchanging dialogue. Meeting new people or staying in touch with current ones. To have random followers follow you without any real interest in you—those who are following you simply because they are being paid to do so or want to increase their own following—won’t really benefit you in the long run. You’ll have a high count, but not a lot of attentiveness. Follow those you genuinely want to follow, and in time, others will follow you back—others who really want to follow you back.

E-Mail Marketing If you compile a list of e-mail addresses of those who did not consent to be on your list, not only is the practice illegal, but the likelihood of the recipients actually opening your e-mails is small. Even if you compile a list of e-mails from current customers (which is legal without explicit consent, if they in fact had a transaction with you during the past two years), but do so without their consent, you’re likely to have many unopened messages. It is much better to either A). ask them if they would like to be included on an e-newsletter list, or B). incorporate a form on your web site for such a sign up. Once again, traveling this route will take time for your list to increase in numbers, but those who do sign up will do so willingly and will be more likely to open your messages and read them.

For example, a business I worked for compiled a list of current clients, a list of about 300. Very few were asked if they wanted to be included on that list, but they were in fact current clients. The open rate for this list hovered around 10%. However, a smaller list of about 150, compiled entirely from newsletter signups regularly had close to a 50% open rate.

For both Twitter and e-mail marketing, building quality followings takes time. Start out slow and do what comes naturally: for Twitter, follow those you find of interest; for a mailing list, gather names and contact information only from those who truly consent to receive the mailings. Think quality over quantity. If your first few mailings go out only to a handful of people, be reassured that those people want to hear from you; they will expect to see your messages in their “in” boxes and are likely to be receptive to the messages contained in them.

This is not a paid endorsement, but one given by me, from the heart: if you want to give e-mail marketing a try, check out Mail Chimp. They have a “forever free” plan that will cost you $0 for up to 500 subscribers and 2,000 e-mails a month. Now that’s an offer I couldn’t refuse!

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