Unsubscribe – a quick and painless death?

We’ve been talking to a couple of clients this week about their un-subscribers, and how to read reports on them, assess the cost or value to your business, and act to effect the churn through your database. I will write on this more in another post soon. For now, it’s clear that losing a subscriber is usually losing a customer, and if that customer who likely (either directly or indirectly) makes you $200 or $2000 or $20000 per year then you need to do your best to stop them clicking the ‘eject’ button at the bottom of your emails!

Q. Why do you unsub from something?
A. Because it’s not relevant, or doesn’t meet your expectation. A Jupiter Research study found 53 percent of email users said they unsubscribe when the content doesn’t interest them.
Once you have the strategy of what your email is to achieve for your business, then state the benefits very clearly and remember the golden email rules: Personal, Relevant, Anticipated.

In our daily work we find another bunch who unsubscribe when they can’t change their profile… if you don’t allow your recipients to change their own email address they will unsubscribe even if all they actually want to do is tell you they have a new addy. You can check your unsub reports and read the comments – this is really common.

Next is unhappiness with message frequency. Calculate the ideal frequency with a formula that includes:
how central to their life are your products and services?
how often do they buy from you?
how much are you willing to invest to make this great?
how good is your content?
Then set the frequency and stick to it like glue. You can blow years of loyalty by caving to temptation or sales pressure by sending two messages in a day or a week, if your readers like to see you once a month, each month, like clockwork.
Allow your recipients to update their own preferences! If you don’t you will be losing money, without a doubt.

To summarise: The most common use of the Internet is email of course. If you don’t want an email any more you can choose to delete, ignore or unsubscribe. Deleting them is easy, and ignoring them is pretty straightforward. Unsubscribes are great because they are far more visible to you than the other two – so this week get out your calculator and work out how much a customer makes you, how much it costs to lose one, and how you can let them tell you what they want when – and then knock yourself out making a plan to give it to them.