
Julian ShapiroContributorJulian Shapiro is the founder of BellCurve.com, a growth marketing agency that trains you to become a marketing professional.
He also writes at Julian.com.More posts by this contributorWeve aggregated the worlds best growth marketers into one community.
Twice a month, we ask them to share their most effective growth tactics, and we compile them into this Growth Report.This is how youre going stay up-to-date on growth marketing tactics with advice you cant get elsewhere.Our community consists of 600 startup founders paired with VPs of growth from later-stage companies.
We have 300 YC founders plus senior marketers from companies including Medium, Docker, Invision, Intuit, Pinterest, Discord, Webflow, Lambda School, Perfect Keto, Typeform, Modern Fertility, Segment, Udemy, Puma, Cameo, and Ritual .You can participate in our community by joining Demand Curves marketing webinars, Slack group, or marketing training program.
See past growth reports here and here.Without further ado, onto the advice.Based on insights from Nick Selman, Fletcher Richman of Halp, and Wes Wagner.First, a few obvious pieces of advice for avoiding low open rates:Avoid spam filters by avoiding keywords commonly used in spam emails.Consider using email subjects (1) that are clearly descriptive and (2) look like they were written by a friend.
Then A/B your top choices.Include the recipients name in your email body.
This signals to spam filters that you do in fact know the recipient.Now, for the real advice: Lets say 60% of your audience opens your mailing, how can you get the remaining 40% to open and read it too?First, wait 2 weeks to give everyone a chance to open the initial email.Next, export a list of those who havent opened.
Mailchimp lets you do this.Important note: The reason many recipients dont open your email is because it was sent to Spam, it was buried in Promotions, or it was insta-deleted because it looked like spam (but wasnt).
The goal here is to resuscitate these people.
You have two options for doing so:(1) Duplicate the initial email then selectively re-send it to non-openers.
This time, use a new subject (try a new hook) and downgrade the email to plain text: remove images and link tracking.
De-enriching the email in this way can help bypass spam filters and the Promotions tab.(2) Alternatively, export your list of non-openers to a third-party email tool like Mailshake (or Mixmax).First, connect Mailshake to a new Gmail account on your company domain.Next, configure Mailshake to automatically dole out small batches of emails on a daily schedule.
Let it churn through non-openers slowly so that Gmail doesnt flag your account as a spammer.Emails sent through Mailshake are more likely to get opened than emails sent through Mailchimp.
Why? Mailshake sends emails through your Gmail account, and Gmail-to-Gmail emails have a greater chance of bypassing Spam and Promotions folders, particularly if the sender doesnt have a history of its emails being marked as spam.