
How many newsletters do you receive in a given day, week or month? If you’re anything like me, it could be in the hundreds!
But more importantly, how many do you actually click on to read?
I bet that number is substantially less.
Do you know why that is? Why are you skipping past those unopened emails or deleting them before you know what they contain?
One of the big reasons is the subject line.
So imagine the same thing happening to your newsletters. Do you want them to be ignored and deleted?
If not, this article will help you better understand what gets your subscribers to open your newsletter.
You can have the most incredible article written that will literally change people’s lives. But if they never open the email, they will never read or experience your life-altering writing.
But to get you started, here are the top 5 reasons your emails are being ignored and what should be fixed in the subject line right away:

1.) Not relevant to the reader. Put yourself in your reader’s shoes – what would get them to want to read more? Are you leading them to an answer that they will find in your article? Are you triggering their curiosity enough to make them feel they are missing out if they don’t read further?
At the end of the day, if what you are sending out is not what your readers want to receive from you, then you’ve lost them in the inbox. So be sure you clearly understand who your target audience is and why they became a subscriber in the first place.
2.) Too many characters long. When a subject line is too long, there’s a good chance it will get cut off in the preview window and won’t be read. This will reduce your chances greatly at compelling your reader to open the email.
Best practices are to keep your subject line under 60 characters and that includes the use of emojis.
3.) Too clever or vague. Subject lines that perform the best are descriptive and clearly state the benefit the reader will have if they read it. Trying to be clever often leads to being too broad or vague where only you truly understand what it’s about but is lost on everyone else.
A valuable rule of thumb is to never make assumptions that the reader will be able to get what you mean. Always be clear and straight to the point.
4.) Not personalized. According to Convince & Convert, emails that include the recipient’s first name see a higher click rate than those that don’t. Just doing this one thing, could boost your open rate by 50%.
I don’t recommend you do this with every newsletter you send out, but make it a habit for many of them.
5.) Using spam triggering words and characters. 16% of all emails land in the junk folder often due to a poorly written subject line that contains spam-triggering words.
So before sending out your next newsletter, check to make sure it’s not over-sensationalized, over-promising, and over-used words that typical spammers use.
The next time you write your Newsletter, give twice as much thought to the subject line as you did writing the article itself and see if you get better open rates as a result.
Here’s a great subject line evaluation tool to use with every send out: www.subjectline.com to see how it stands up to industry standards.
Another good habit to get into is to check your stats after each newsletter – what is the open rate percentage? Are those stats improving or declining with each send out?
Also, if your Newsletter provider allows it, try doing split-testing to see which subject line style is more effective with your list.
If writing proper subject lines, let alone newsletters and blog articles, is overwhelming to you, then consider hiring marketing specialists who can do all of that tedious work for you!
by: Susan Friesen
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