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Tag Archive for: Political Email

Posts

Email, Politics, Republican Email Tracking

I Asked ChatGPT About Joe Biden and Donald Trump’s Emails And It (Inadvertently) Threw Some Serious Shade

Joe Biden and Donald Trump both send a lot of emails.

But how many they send, and the content of their email programs, is vastly different.

I reviewed 20 emails from each of the two campaigns (they were the most recent 20 emails from a random moment in time – Friday, May 17th at 10:45am central).

Here are some of my findings.

According to the Archive of Political Emails (where I pulled all of these emails), Joe Biden’s campaign sends an average of 1.7 emails per day.

joe biden email sends per day according to politicalemails.org

Donald Trump’s campaign, on the other hand, sends an average of 10.6 emails per day.

THAT IS NOT A TYPO!

Donald Trump’s campaign sends ~10x more emails per day than Joe Biden!!!

donald trump email sends per day according to politicalemails.org

If you are wondering, that is not normal!

Let’s look at their senders

Joe Biden had 10 unique senders for his 20 emails. But mostly, they were just different ways of saying they had come from the campaign.

Four came directly from Joe Biden.

Two came from JoeBiden.com.

One came from Jill Biden and two from Barack Obama.

The rest came from Biden HQ, Team Joe, Team Biden-Harris, Biden-Harris Merch Team, The Biden Campaign and Biden 2024.

Donald Trump had nine unique senders for his 20 emails. But of the nine, six were just different ways of saying Donald Trump.

One was from Donald Trump directly.

Six were from Donald J. Trump.

Two were from I AM DONALD TRUMP (caps his).

One was from “President Trump – Emergency Broadcast” (this one was about him breaking his “unconstitutional ‘gag order’” and declaring that a “liberal judge in New York just threatened to THROW ME IN JAIL”).

And one more was from ALERT FROM TRUMP (again, all caps his).

The remaining emails came from Eric Trump, Lara Trump and three from Donald Trump, Jr.

Let’s look at the email domains they used to send their emails

Here things get interesting.

According to the Archive, all of Joe Biden’s emails came from info@joebiden.com, or the subdomain info@contact.joebiden.com.

This is normal. Typically, no matter how often a campaign emails, all of their emails come from a single sender/domain. This is best practice to let Gmail, Yahoo, AOL, et al know that you are a legitimate organization, not a spammer looking to get through those spam filters.

I reviewed other power senders in the Archive’s database (including the DCCC, John Fetterman, AOC, Ruben Gallego, Ted Cruz, Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley) and while a few of them used more than one domain, it was generally clear that the switch was due to website updates or some minor deviation. I saw nothing out of the ordinary.

This is not the case with the Trump campaign, who, since the summer of 2019 (when the Archive started their tracking), have sent campaign emails from the following domains:

contact@victory.donaldtrump.com
contact@team.donaldtrump.com
contact@victoryacrossamerica.gop.com
email@usa.buildingourmovement.com
support@theamericanvoter.com
noreply@email.donaldtrump.com
supporting@ourpresident45.com
JKoons@Trumpvictory.com
info@mail.secureconservative.com
donaldjtrump@theoffice45.com
contact@win.donaldjtrump.com
contact@email.donaldjtrump.com
desk@deskofdonaldjtrump.com
contact@mail.saveamerica45.com
gopvictory@saveamericamajority.com
contact@email.saveamerica45.com
contact@m.trumpstore.com
contact@deskofdonaldjtrump.com
contact@e.saveamerica45.com
contact@send.saveamerica45.com
contact@mail.donaldjtrump.com
contact@email.donaldtrump.com
contact@info.donaldjtrump.com
contact@trump.winwith45.com
info@win.donaldjtrump.com
contact@trump-emails.com
contact@support.donaldjtrump.com
contact@victory.donaldjtrump.com
contact@email.trumpvictory45.com

Why might a campaign do something like this?

I asked Josh Bartley, Co-Founder of Campaign Deputy about it. Here’s what he had to say:

There are some legitime reasons for an organization to use multiple domains. Separating out by brands, or products, though in the political space it’s mostly [called] snowshoeing.
Political organizations typically have one email domain they send from, while some larger groups may have one dedicated to donors while keeping their GSuite domain reputation on a separate domain. After that, it starts to get into “Snowshoeing” which spreads your email activity over numerous domain names to try and stay under the radar of spam filters due to the much lower volume per a domain. Having 5+ domains sending is a clear sign of snowshoeing.
This also hurts educating email recipients on detecting fraudulent emails as they are used to frequently changing domain names. BIMI helps with that though no one using a snowshoeing technique will ever sign up for BIMI.
I added the emphasis, because it’s obviously pretty dang important.
The Donald Trump campaign is sending on average 10+ emails a day. In the process, they are doing everything they can — legitimate or otherwise — to avoid spam filters.
This is not a sign of a healthy email program.

General Themes and Takeaways

Beyond the health of the program, let’s dig into the themes and takeaways.

Donald Trump really likes stylized pictures and graphics in his emails.

I say stylized pictures because it’s never just a photo. It’s always a graphic, with a photo in it.

screenshot of a donald trump emailEvery single email has at least one.

Joe Biden on the other hand sends emails that are more text-heavy, and opts for photos over graphics.

I will caveat that this is a place where a 20 email sample size felt quite small. I’ve seen wonderful graphics from the Biden campaign throughout their program. But in the 20 emails I reviewed for this analysis, it was mostly text-based emails, with a few photos, a few GIFs and one chart.

screenshot of biden email

The average word count of a Donald Trump email is 131.05 compared to 210.45 for a Biden email.

Biden’s emails are mostly focused on fundraising, merch or the debate.

Donald Trump’s emails are mostly focused on fundraising, surveys, merch, signing his birthday card and getting advice about his VP pick. Also, on him being gagged and silenced by the Democrats of course.

I did a pronoun analysis.

Joe Biden’s email program used the word “I” 27 times and the word “me” 7 times.
Donald Trump on the other hand used the word “I” 58 times and the word “me” 63 times.

Biden used “we” 87 times compared to Trump using it only 10 times.

Biden used “you” 79 times compared to Trump using it 60 times.

Biden used “us” or “our” 119 times, compared to Trump using them 101 times.

And while Biden’s emails only referenced “they” or “them” once, Trump’s emails referenced “they” or “them” 15 times.

Biden’s emails mentioned “Biden” 36 times and “Trump” 47 times.

Trump’s emails mentioned “Biden” 15 times and “Trump” 70 times.

It was quite clear that while Joe Biden’s emails are very focused on “you,” “we,” “us” and “our,” Donald Trump’s emails are very focused on… Donald Trump.

Issues Mentioned In Their Emails

While both programs are quite focused on fundraising, merch and the like, there were also some clear policies and issues laid out.

The Biden campaign spoke about protecting democracy, healthcare, reproductive rights, LGBTQ+ rights, the economy and infrastructure.

The Trump campaign on the other hand was focused on the real issues that matter, like defending Donald Trump from his many legal issues, calling Democrats corrupt, taking on the media and, of course, railing against the Deep State.

What Does ChatGPT Think About The Two Campaigns?

While I, a human, conducted my own analysis, this is 2024. So of course I had to ask AI to weigh in on these two programs.

So I fed all of these emails into ChatGPT and tried mightily to get it to give me anything interesting and worth sharing.

For the most part, it fell flat.

It’s programmed to be positive, and clearly isn’t interested in stirring the pot.

I asked it for sentiment analyses.

Here’s what I got for Joe Biden:

“Based on the sentiment analysis, the Biden campaign emails vary in tone from optimistic and determined to urgent and concerned, with a primary focus on fundraising and mobilizing grassroots support. Thematic breakdowns include small donations, grassroots support, debate challenges, merchandise promotions, and urgent fundraising appeals.”

Versus what I got for Donald Trump:

“Based on the sentiment analysis, the Trump campaign emails vary in tone from confident and positive to urgent and alarmed, with a primary focus on rallying support, engaging the audience, and fundraising. Thematic breakdowns include endorsements, birthday cards, VP selection, merchandise promotions, defense team formation, and surveys to gauge support.”

I asked it to rate both programs’ level of hopefulness, on a scale of 0-100. Biden got 70 to Trump’s 65. I asked it to do the same for level of desperation and it gave Biden a 45 to Trump’s 35.

I asked it to sum up each program in one word.

Joe Biden got “Inclusive” and Donald Trump got “Defiant.”

It elaborated (because that’s what it does):

“Joe Biden Campaign – Inclusive: The Biden campaign emails focus heavily on unity, grassroots support, and collective action, emphasizing inclusivity and a broad coalition of supporters.

Donald Trump Campaign – Defiant: The Trump campaign emails are characterized by a strong, assertive, and often combative tone, rallying supporters to stand firm against perceived adversaries and challenges.”

I had to try a few ways to get it to give me an answer, but I asked it, based solely on these emails, who would be a better lunch date. It split the difference 🙃

“If [you] value a warm, empathetic, and policy-oriented conversation, Joe Biden might be the better choice. His emails suggest a more personal and inclusive approach, which could make for a thoughtful and engaging lunch.

If [you] prefer a high-energy, assertive, and bold personality, Donald Trump might be the better choice. His emails suggest a dynamic and lively conversation, focusing on leadership and defiance against opposition.

Ultimately, it depends on [your] personal preferences and what kind of conversation [you] are looking for.”

Ummm… thanks?

Finally, struggling to get anything interesting out of it, I asked “If these two candidates were characters from Seinfeld, who would each of them be?”

According to ChatGPT, Joe Biden would be Seinfeld, while Donald Trump would be George Constanza.

BOOM!

I then asked it the same question but about Succession.

According to ChatGPT, Joe Biden would be Logan Roy, while Donald Trump would be Kendall.

DOUBLE BOOM!!

While I’ve never watched Sex and The City, I figured it might be a helpful way to get to the heart of these two candidates.

According to ChatGPT, Biden’s a Carrie, while Trump’s a Samantha.

DAY-UMMMM!!!!

While ChatGPT worked hard not to say anything, in the end, it kind of said it all!

Have any questions for me (or ChatGPT) about these two email programs?

Drop them in the comments or hit me up on Twitter.

Want to make your digital program sound more like a Logan Roy and less like a Kendall? Let’s chat!

 

 

Here are the links to the 40 emails ChatGPT and I analyzed for this blog post:

Biden
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423675
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423439
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423338
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423278
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422840
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422627
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422243
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422027
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1421785
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1421313
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1421064
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1420959
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1420893
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1420800
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1420514
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1420395
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1420045
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1419695
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1419606
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1419451

Trump
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423721
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423666
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423567
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423441
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423411
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423287
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423255
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423083
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1423001
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422983
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422723
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422581
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422345
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422238
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422174
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1422170
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1421965
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1421947
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1421850
https://politicalemails.org/messages/1421691

 

May 24, 2024/0 Comments/by Josh Klemons
https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/trump-vs-biden-emails.png 1080 1080 Josh Klemons https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Reverbal-Communications-Josh-Klemons.svg Josh Klemons2024-05-24 09:21:562024-05-24 10:38:25I Asked ChatGPT About Joe Biden and Donald Trump’s Emails And It (Inadvertently) Threw Some Serious Shade
Audience Outreach, Email, Politics

The First Rule of Email Marketing: Respect Your List (A Quick Case Study)

first rule of email marketing - respect your list

I’m on a lot of email lists.

I recently did a roundup of Digital Marketing Newsletters I subscribe to. You can find that here.

I’ll soon be doing a roundup of political newsletters I subscribe to. Want to know when that comes out? Subscribe to my newsletter here.

I also subscribe to A LOT of political newsletters.

I do this because a) it’s part of my business and b) I genuinely appreciate the craft of political email. There are so many bad lists out there, I really and truly appreciate the good ones.

One of the many political lists I’m on is that of Parler. (They’re a bad one FWIW – as this post will quickly layout.)

If you don’t know Parler, they were trying to be the rightwing alternative to Twitter before Donald Trump’s Truth Social rolled out.

So now they are equally bad as Truth, but much less relevant.

But their email program is something.

Like any good right-wing grift, they are as likely to email news as they are to write promoting some miracle berry that cures tummy fat.

Last week, I got an email from them announcing that “Hearing aids just got their biggest upgrade yet.”

Parler - equally likely to send political email as they are to send spam

They also do something I’ve never seen a political email list do: they rent out their list to any campaign (or right-wing grifter) who wants to use it.

They regularly send emails from Matt Gaetz trying to raise money directly from the list.

I know of nothing like that on the left. Or really anything else like it on the right.

But that’s not why I’m writing.

I’m writing because this week Parler broke the most important rule in email marketing: respect your list.

The above example is of course the opposite of that. But I’m writing with something more specific.

On November 22nd, they sent me an email from James O’Keefe (his name, their email address in the sender). The subject line:

Will you help me expose a Supervillain?

Then on November 25th, they sent me another email from James O’Keefe. Identical subject line:

Will you help me expose a Supervillain?

The emails were identical.

Is that a bad thing?

Not necessarily? It’s not always bad to resend an email to your list. BUT as a rule of thumb, you would only resend an email to non-openers. And it’s best practice to update the subject line, so folks who saw the first one (but didn’t open it) will think it’s a new email, even though it actually isn’t.

I opened the first one, and yet still got the second one. And the subject lines are identical.

So that’s just really bad email list management all the way around right there.

But none of that is why I’m writing. Here’s the line that really stood out to me upon re-read:

Before midnight tonight, I have to raise $46,300 to break even and cover our operational costs.

They used the same exact dollar amount — and the same BS deadline — for both emails. Despite the fact they were sent days apart!

Now here’s my assumption: Parler doesn’t care what copy James O’Keefe asks them to send, so long as his check clears. He paid to send the first email. He sent in his money. He paid to send it again. They took the money and hit send. Again.

But in so doing, they broke the cardinal rule of email fundraising: respect your audience!

How long would it have taken to update the copy to say “I have to raise another $25,000 by midnight tonight” before sending the second email?

It’s still complete and total BS, but at least it’s less obvious BS!

Anyway, don’t be like Parler (and obviously don’t be like James O’Keefe!). Respect your audience.

Don’t make up deadlines that aren’t real. Don’t make up matches that aren’t real. And don’t tell your audience you need to raise a specific amount of money BEFORE MIDNIGHT TONIGHT, and then use the exact same copy a few days later… unless of course it’s real 😏

Need help managing your email program? Or any other part of your digital marketing program?

My team and I would love to help! Let’s chat!

I put together an Email Success Checklist, to help make sure your email is ready to go before you hit send. Download it free today.

November 27, 2023/0 Comments/by Josh Klemons
https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/first-rule-of-email-marketing-respect-your-list.png 1500 1500 Josh Klemons https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Reverbal-Communications-Josh-Klemons.svg Josh Klemons2023-11-27 12:35:352024-03-25 16:22:20The First Rule of Email Marketing: Respect Your List (A Quick Case Study)
Email, Politics, Republican Email Tracking, Uncategorized

I’ve Been On All The Top-Tier Republican Presidential Candidates’ Email Lists For 7 Weeks. Here’s What I’ve Learned.

 

I've been tracking the Republican Presidential Candidates' Email For 7 Weeks. Here's what I've learned so far.

In mid-June, I signed up for the email lists of the 6 top-tier Republican presidential candidates. That list includes Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Tim Scott, Mike Pence and Chris Christie.

I wrote about signing up for their lists and what I learned in the process. You can find that article here.

I created a graphic breaking down what I’d learned after one week. You can find that here.

I also created a graphic summing up my findings after 7 weeks. You can find that here.

I was invited onto the Business of Politics podcast to discuss what I was seeing. You can listen to that episode here (or wherever you stream podcasts).

I also checked in with City and State FL specifically about the DeSantis campaign’s email program. You can find that article here.

Let me clarify quickly that there are MANY more Republicans running for President, but I had to draw a line somewhere and at the time, these six seemed the most likely to get on the debate stage (that has since changed, but this is where we’re at).

I also want to clarify that I was also on a bunch of their lists with other email addresses. I signed up for all 6 of these lists with a dummy email address, that included tracking info built right in. I did this so a) I could see what their lists look like to brand new folks, not folks they’ve been emailing for years and b) so I could track what they do with my email address as their campaigns proceed and (at least!) 5 of them ultimately concede.

I described how I did that in my earlier blog post. You can also find a deeper dive I did on that tracking hack here.

So now that I’ve been on each of their lists for a little under 7 weeks, I thought it a good time to do another deep dive and see what we’ve learned thus far.

Donald Trump

Total emails received: 19
Average emails per day: .39*
Onboarding series: No
Number of senders: 2
Biggest takeaway: It took me a month of trying to get added to his list!

Donald Trump is a notorious spammer. His campaign is constantly slamming our collective inboxes screaming doom and gloom. But don’t worry, for just a few dollars you can help right the ship. And good chance, your donation will be matched 1000 times over! You just need to kick in $25 right now to save your favorite president from damnation.

So with about 48 days on the list, you might be shocked to see he only sent me 19 emails. I too was shocked. Like, legit shocked. I spoke in-depth on the Business of Politics podcast about this.

Here’s the thing: while his campaign has ONLY sent me 19 emails, the first one didn’t come in until about a week ago.

Hence the asterisk next to average emails per day. In reality, they are sending me 2.375 emails per day.

They just didn’t start emailing me… for over a month.

Why did this happen? I have no idea! I subscribed to his list numerous times (at least 5 if I had to guess). The emails just never name.

Until they did. And then, they came hard.

All the emails came directly from Donald J. Trump or Official Trump Alerts.

I’m a big fan of onboarding series, which serve to ease folks onto a list. (You can learn more about onboarding series here or here.)

Not only did the Trump campaign wait over a month to start emailing me, when they did, here’s the first things I saw in my inbox.

Donald Trump email subject lines

I’m going to go ahead and dub this an anti-onboarding series.

If the goal of the onboarding series is to ease the reader in, this instead dumps them in in the worst possible way. It assumes they know exactly what’s going on with this list.

The content of those emails is bizarre and all over the place. One just that looks like a series of tweets.

donald trump email - series of tweets

This one looked more like a press release.

Donald Trump email - press release

Clearly, none of them were written with a new subscriber in mind.

They kept up the daily update angle for a few days, and then ditched that and got right back into his more traditional spammy subject lines/preview texts.

“NEW BOGUS CHARGES AGAINST ME – ###########################”
“Re: New bogus charges from Biden’s DOJ” (who are you re: ing? Not me!)
“FW: the back-stabbing plot… – They’re coming after me, instead of the real enemy.”

You get the point. Lots of hyperbolic fear-mongering begging me to open the emails and donate.

Whether you’ve subscribed to his list or not, I’m guessing you have at some point received his emails. So I think you get the idea.

The only surprise with this was that it took over a month for them to take my email address – that I willingly gave them – to actually get me added to their list.

Curious to see if they’re going to add all my other attempts to the list, or if their CRM is smart enough to merge them all together.

I’ll keep you posted.

Overall impression of his program: 5 eye rolls (out of 5, if that wasn’t clear)

Ron DeSantis

Total emails received: 131
Average emails per day: 2.73*
Onboarding series: Yes
Number of senders: 11
Mentions of Donald Trump: 1
Primary takeaway: They copy and paste emails… a lot!

Okay, DeSantis has emailed me 131 times in 48 days. Which is a lot. But you’ll notice, we’ve got another asterisk in average emails per day. And that’s because, after adding me to his list and emailing me 6 times in 3 days, they dropped my email!

I did nothing. I didn’t resubscribe, or try and reengage. I just sat tight. Eleven days later, they re-added me to their list.

And from that day on, they’ve emailed me an average of 3.38 times per day.

Which is SOOOO many emails.

I was impressed by how many senders they had… until I wasn’t.

I count 11 senders in my inbox. Which is better than Donald Trump’s list. But at a point, I’d argue that’s just too many for a single month.

Ron himself emails me. As does Team DeSantis. And DeSantis for President. Also his wife. And Calli (Head of Merch). And Jordan (Team DeSantis). Also Xavier. And Olivia. And Seth.

It’s… a lot.

Multiple senders can be a cool way to tell a story. Especially when folks are familiar with your senders. Joe Biden’s been using a ton of high-profile names on his list recently and that makes sense. Different senders might get different readers to open. But other than their moms, I’m not sure anyone cares about Jordan or Xavier or Olivia… you get the point. No offense to them, but for the average reader, it’s just too many senders too quickly.

And when you open the emails from these unique senders, they don’t have a unique voice or angle. They just feel like yet another DeSantis email.

I like the concept, but feel they have vastly overdone it.

Now let’s look at some content.

In 131 emails, Team DeSantis uses the word “woke” 128 times (!!!!).
They use CRT 123 times (without defining it once – they do spell out Critical Race Theory 2x, but neither time next to the acronym, so if you don’t know, you don’t know!).
They use DEI 128 times, again without ever really defining it.
They use the exact phrase “do not tell my children that men can get pregnant” 3 times and mention that concept in a few more emails.

My biggest takeaway: this is not a digital program with its finger on the pulse of the voters. Like his campaign, his digital program is hyper-online and can’t imagine that the vast majority of Americans likely have no idea what CRT or DEI even mean.

I like that his email calls out some of the shadier tactics currently running rampant on both sides of the aisle. He has pledged not to buy email addresses (not novel for a political campaign, but pretty stunning for a presidential candidate imho) or scam folks with BS matches or fear-mongering.

He also regularly emails with asks beyond money. Which is great!

BUT… I noticed something fascinating.

I have 22 emails trying to get me to donate in exchange for a free bumper sticker. Which is.. a lot in 6 weeks. But okay, at least he’s not trying to scare his donors.

But check this out: of the 22 emails he sent pushing bumper stickers, all but 5 were EXACTLY THE SAME EMAIL! He changed the subject line (sometimes, not even always) and then copy and pasted the exact same email over and over and over.

ron desantis email program

THIS IS NOT A NORMAL THING TO DO FOR A CAMPAIGN EMAIL PROGRAM!

And they did the same thing with their yard sign emails.

Overall impression of his program: Decent bones. Needs a lot of work.

Nikki Haley

Total emails received: 111
Average emails per day: 2.31
Onboarding series: Yes
Number of senders: 10
Mentions of Donald Trump: 1
Primary takeaway: Best email program of the bunch

I’m not a fan of Nikki Haley. But I do think she’s running the best email program of the candidates we’re tracking.

She had the best onboarding series by a mile. While DeSantis sent me one onboarding email, Haley didn’t ask for money until email 5.

And each of the first four emails had different asks and ways to get involved.

I think she, like DeSantis, has a few too many senders. But all in all, they seemed clearer regarding who was emailing and why.

Her campaign manager “Betsy A.” sends weekly campaign updates. This is something we’ve seen Team Joe do, but it’s a solid play.

It’s unclear to me why she signs them Betsy A. If it was me, I’d use her full name OR just Betsy. In my opinion, adding the A. makes it less personal, not more.nikki haley email program campaign manager

They send them using a typewriter font, which is a clever way to make them feel more operative. I actually think it’s probably harder to read these emails for some on a mobile device, but I appreciate the angle and totally get what they’re going for here.

As “Try that in a small town” has been trending, they sent an email from Haley with the subject line “Try that in a small town” all about being born and raised in a small town.

The song is clearly problematic with racist undertones. But for a Republican electorate, this is a smart strategy. Republicans clearly see the song as an anthem, leaning in is good politics. And the fact she can connect it to her personal story makes it all the better. Finding those trending moments and tying them into your campaign is huge and so important if you want to break through the clutter.

She asks her readers for questions… not novel. But then answer them in emails. Which is… fun! I actually quite like that.

Here she is calling out two of her opponents for frivolous spending.

nikki haley email calling out her opponents

I notice she left out the very heavily reported story of Donald Trump using campaign funds to pay his legal bills. 🤔

But still, I bet this was a solid performer for her.

She uses GIFs throughout, her weekly recap emails are quite solid, she has her kids emailing on her behalf in language that actually sounds like it’s coming from them…

Overall impression of his program: While it’s a pretty low bar, I still declare this to be the strongest program of the 6.

I think they email too much. And 107 of her 111 emails mentioned the word “woke”. But all in all, solid program.

Tim Scott

Total emails received: 55
Average emails per day: 1.15*
Onboarding series: Sorta
Number of senders: 5
Mentions of Donald Trump: 1
Primary takeaway: Not great, not the worst

Okay, first of all, let’s dive into that asterisk.

I signed up for his list in mid-June and immediately got an email with the subject line:

tim scott email bad subject line

Oof. That’s so bad.

But what’s worse: I opened the email, didn’t mark it as spam or do anything else to imply I wanted off the list… but that’s exactly what happened.

They dropped me completely from their list.

I re-subscribed on July 10 and 54 of my 55 emails came since then.

Bringing his daily average send from just over 1 all the way up to 2.62 emails per day.

Like I said, oof.

His emails are fine. Lots of big buttons and decent graphics.

Tim Scott email graphics

They also use a bunch of GIFs of the candidate talking to the camera.

Tim Scott GIFs

And plenty of red meat for the base.

Tim Scott speaking directly to his base

I don’t think his list does as good a job of telling his story as Haley’s, but it’s probably second so far of the programs we’ve reviewed.

His emails are skimmable (a huge plus in my book!), use large fonts and are easy to read.

I’ll say that I’m confused why I have to sign-up for exclusive updates from Tim.

tim scott exclusive emails

I get that this likely makes some folks feel special, but I would have followed the Betsy A. model from the Haley campaign and just let folks in. Maybe even made it easy to unsubscribe from that sublist. But forcing folks to do a whole other sign-up seems like the wrong call.

Overall impression of his program: It’s fine. Assuming he wants to be Vice President, this is likely working for him.

Mike Pence

Total emails received: 35
Average emails per day: .73*
Onboarding series: No
Number of senders: 8
Mentions of Donald Trump: 7
Primary takeaway: This program is written by an AI Chatbot asking it to sound like Ronald Reagan

Am I being unfair in describing his campaign as a chatbot with the Reagan setting turned all the way up?

Here’s the last email he sent me:

Mike Pence email

The asterisk is back because he took a week to send me an initial email and then either removed me from his list or went silent on July 15th.

I tried to check some websites that track emails to see which: neither of them have anything for poor, poor Mike Pence. Lolz

So yeah, I legit don’t know if he’s ghosting me, or full on turned off his email program.

If you know, please share that info with me!

Given that I got all 35 emails in about a 2-week window, that puts his average daily send at 1.83.

His first email to me (a week after I subbed to his list) was about Obama. His second was about Hunter Biden.

I wound’t say it’s really gone uphill since then.

Overall impression of his program: Even his campaign seems bored by their program.

Chris Christie

Total emails received: 57
Average emails per day: 1.1875*
Onboarding series: No
Number of senders: 11***
Mentions of Donald Trump: 34
Primary takeaway: He almost immediately sold my email!!!

Okay, Chris Christie is a fascinating case study when it comes to Republican politics.

He undoubtedly helped Donald Trump get elected in 2016. He worked hard for him throughout the campaign and the transition, despite Trump openly mocking him for his weight.

He was part of Trump’s 2020 debate prep team when Donald Trump knowingly infected everyone on his team with COVID. Christie almost died.

He then turned on Trump. Hard.

He’s clearly not running to be President (I mean the more he talks about Trump, the more the Republican electorate hates him), but rather to settle the score.

And that’s something to behold in a presidential election.

Now let’s talk email. I signed up on the 14th. The first email came from him on the 22nd. So a week later.
Then something interesting happened: he sold my email to his Super PAC (or somehow gave it to them). Which is shady AF!

They are called Tell It Like It Is PAC. And of the 57 emails I’ve gotten to the email address I used to sign up for Christie’s list, 49 came from them. 49 out of 57!

The Christie campaign has only sent me 8 emails in 7 weeks. They’re outsourced their entire program to their PAC.

I’ve never seen anything like that.

The emails he does send are not good.

Here’s an example:Chris Christie generic email

It’s just… ugly. There’s no personality to it. It’s copy-and-paste content that could have come from anyone.

Like Christie, his PACs email are very interested in getting him on the debate stage and going after Trump.

 

chris christie super pac email chris christie super pac email 2

 

He’s the only candidate going directly after Trump.

It’s pretty clear that’s his primary goal in the race. And that’s how it feels in the inbox.

And good for him I guess. Trump almost killed him. And he did so knowingly!

Overall impression of his program: Christie is outsourcing his digital program to a PAC. So it’s kinda hard to take his digital program seriously.

###

I hope this was fun. I’m working hard to read all these emails and track all these programs… so you don’t have to!

The least you can do is follow me on social media. 😂🤣😂

You can find me on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok and LinkedIn (and in all the other places as well where I’m @jlemonsk).

I have a political podcast you might enjoy. It’s called Hello Merge Tag: Where social media and politics intersect. Listen to all episodes at HelloMergeTag.com or wherever you stream podcasts.

I also have lots of other blog posts you might enjoy. Find those here.

If you are running for office or doing cool stuff, or know anyone who is, let’s talk! I help progressive campaigns, organizations and brands win the internet!

Keep in touch y’all!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

July 31, 2023/0 Comments/by Josh Klemons
https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/republican-candidate-email-lists-tracking.png 1080 1080 Josh Klemons https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Reverbal-Communications-Josh-Klemons.svg Josh Klemons2023-07-31 16:05:102023-12-19 16:39:08I’ve Been On All The Top-Tier Republican Presidential Candidates’ Email Lists For 7 Weeks. Here’s What I’ve Learned.
Email, Politics, Republican Email Tracking, Uncategorized

I Signed Up For All The Top-Tier Republican Presidential Candidates’ Email Lists. Here’s What I Learned.

 

Republican presidential candidates email programs

 

I’m a huge nerd for politics, digital and where they intersect. With the Republican nomination for President now in full swing, I just had to sign up for all the top-tier candidates’ email lists. (Someone has to do it!)

While I was already on a few, I started from scratch for all of them, using a backup email address… with tracking!

If you didn’t already know, you can track Gmail addresses (including professional emails using G Suite/Workspace). I wrote a whole blog post on that. Check it out here (there’s a great story in there about a candidate selling his list to a group who went on to support one of his opponents in his primary – so that’s fun!). I did this to make it easier to see who’s selling and renting out their email lists, as the race proceeds.

Donald Trump

So of course, I had to start with the frontrunner.

When I search for Donald Trump, I have to scroll halfway down the first page of Google to find his website. Which makes sense from an SEO standpoint (dude’s in the news A LOT).

With all the money he spends on digital ads (and he spends A LOT), I was a bit surprised to find he wasn’t using Google Search Ads to push to his site. But also, not that surprised. Folks who want to find the Donald, will. So no reason to spend money if he doesn’t have to.

Now here’s something interesting. When I first started doing this (on Wednesday, June 14th), his site redirected me to a WinRed donation page.

Donald Trump political website

But today (Thursday, June 15th), that’s no longer the case.

Not sure if they were updating the site or doing some testing. But whatever it is, his site no longer redirects to WinRed.

His email list sign-up form is right there on the homepage.

His campaign doesn’t ask for name (not even an option to include it). Just email and zip. Both are required to sign up for his list.

Donald Trump Email List

After signing up, I’m redirected to a volunteer form.

Donald Trump Volunteer Form

This one actually surprised me. I’d think the Donald would optimize for money above all else.

There’s still of course a contribute button in the header, as well as a GIANT donate button (like comically large) at the bottom of the page.

Donald Trump donate button

But still, the fact that they are optimizing for volunteers over trying to immediately get me to open my wallet legit surprises me from the Grifter-In-Chief.

Social Channels Listed On His Site

When it comes to social accounts in his footer, he’s got Truth Social, Rumble and Twitter. WHICH IS FREAKING WEIRD!

Donald Trump social platforms

He IS active on Instagram and Facebook. He is NOT active on Twitter – like famously so!

WHY IS THAT IN HIS FOOTER?!

It makes no sense whatsoever.

Ron DeSantis

Next up is Tiny D. Or is it Ron DePuddingFingers? Prefer Ron DeSanctimonious? How about Meatball Ron?

Whatever you call him, he’s second in the polls (though a distant second fwiw).

His site’s about 1/3 of the way down the first page of Google. Not great, but not terrible.

His site design though is… a choice.

Ron DeSantis website

It looks like something out of the MySpace era of the internet.

You have to click “join the team” to sign up for his list. No option to do so directly on his homepage.

Once on the form, he requires first name, last name and email to sign up.

Ron DeSantis email list

 

I personally always recommend against requiring last name. The more info you require, the more folks are going to fail to convert. Get them on the list and then work to learn more about them

That said, I do recommend asking for first name, so you can personalize emails, as well as zip code, so you know where folks live.

Social Channels Listed On His Site

He has the three standard ones – Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Plus Rumble.

Ron DeSantis social platforms

Nikki Haley

Haley’s site comes up on Google second only to Wikipedia.

When you get there, there is A LOT going on.

Nikki Haley website

One of the many CTAs she has on her homepage is to join her email list.

She doesn’t require last name to sign up, but she does require BOTH state AND zip code. Which is redundant! If you have my zip code, you have my state! Why ask folks to provide both? That’s just bad digital work.

Nikki Haley email list

Social Channels Listed On Her Site

Haley went totally traditional when it comes to social icons on her site. Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

Nikki Haley social platforms

Tim Scott

When I Googled Tim Scott, the very first thing I saw was a paid search ad pushing me toward a WinRed donate page.

Tim Scott winred

That’s the first candidate so far with any search ads for their name. Interesting!

His actual website was about halfway down page one of Google. Which isn’t great, but he’s still early into the race.

The first thing I see on his site is a MASSIVE pop-up with A LOT of CTAs.

Tim Scott website popup

  • Watch a video
  • Donate
  • Check out his store
  • Get tickets for his Hannity Town Hall (Hard pass, but thanks!)

Once getting past his over-stuffed popup, he’s optimized for joining the team. BUT… it sure looks like he and Nikki Haley have the same web developer, doesn’t it? Same header and donate CTAs.

Tim Scott Website

 

Nikki Haley website

When signing up, you are required to provide a cell phone number to join his list.

Which in my personal opinion is ridiculous!

Get folks where you can. How many folks didn’t join his list because they didn’t want to provide a phone number? I’m guessing quite a few.

(I for one gave him a fake phone number — I’m willing to read his emails, but I really don’t want his texts.)

Tim Scott email list

Social Channels Listed On His Site

Like Haley, he has all the traditional channels on his site. Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Tim Scott social platforms

Chris Christie

When Christie first announced his run, he didn’t have a live website. His URL didn’t redirect to an email sign-up form or a WinRed donate page. It was just a giant white screen. The favicon and preview both said “coming soon.”

To announce a Presidential run without a website, in 2023, is bananas. Nothing else to say here.

Chris Christie Website at LaunchHe now has a site. And when I Google him, it’s the first hit.

So that’s good for him.

He’s optimized his homepage for email sign-ups.

Chris Christie Email List

He requires first and last name to sign up. As I mentioned above, I personally wouldn’t make last name required. But that’s nothing like requiring a phone number!

Social Channels Listed On His Site

Christie too has the traditional social suite on his site.

Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

Chris Christie Social Platforms

Though it’s kinda funny because since his whole campaign is based on the idea that “truth matters” he invites folks to “follow the truth.”

Which means something specific for Donald Trump (ala Truth Social), who gave his social channel the dumbest name of all time. That kind of language still must lead to confusion, even for power users of the site.

Mike Pence

Finally, we come to Mike Pence.

Poor, poor Mike Pence.

He’s the second candidate running search ads against his name. They direct to a WinRed donation page.

But WinRed paid ads aside, his website’s not on Google. I mean, I’m sure it is. But I scrolled — FOR A WHILE — and it was nowhere to be seen.

I saw a Vox page covering Pence as VP. Same with C-Span and Fox. And lots of coverage about his launch. Apparently, he even has an IMDB page, which showed up (I assumed it was some poor sap who shared his name, but NO, it’s him!).

Here’s what he’s “known for” if you’re curious.

Mike Pence IMDB

I also saw numerous paid ads directing to his WinRed page. But his actual website was nowhere to be seen. And like I said, I scrolled… for a while.

I finally had to go to his Twitter account to find his URL. It’s mikepence2024.com. He also owns mikepence.com if you’re curious. That URL redirects to his site.

His site’s fine.

His sign-up form is front and center.

It doesn’t ask for first name (a mistake imho).

It does ask for phone, but doesn’t require it, which is smart.

Mike Pence email list

But… get this… when I try to fill out the form, it doesn’t work.

No error message, no confirmation. Nothing. Which is just… too perfect. 🙃 😂 👀

Social Channels Listed On His Site

Like all the other candidates polling in low single digits, he has the traditional social platforms on his site.

Mike Pence social platforms

In the coming months, I’ll be following all of these candidates’ email, social media and general digital programs… so you don’t have to!

Join my mailing and list and connect with me on Twitter and/or TikTok for regular updates.

If you are into this type of content, you’ll probably also appreciate my podcast Hello Merge Tag. It looks at social media, politics and where they intersect. Listen to all episodes at hellomergetag.com or wherever you stream podcasts.

Want to take your own digital program to the next level? My team and I would love to help!

Learn more about what we do and let’s connect and see how we might work together on better telling your digital story.

 

###

 

I wrote a follow-up after being on these lists for 7 weeks. You can find that here.

June 15, 2023/2 Comments/by Josh Klemons
https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/republican-email-list.jpg 1080 1080 Josh Klemons https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Reverbal-Communications-Josh-Klemons.svg Josh Klemons2023-06-15 12:01:112023-12-19 16:39:20I Signed Up For All The Top-Tier Republican Presidential Candidates’ Email Lists. Here’s What I Learned.
Email, Hello Merge Tag, Politics

9 Things We Can Learn About Email From A Truly Awful Email Program | Hello Merge Tag Ep 5

Man looking horrified at his phone - name of Hello Merge Tag episode: 9 things we can learn about email from a truly awful email program

A while back, a conservative organization acquired our email address and started spamming us with one of the worst email marketing programs we’ve ever seen.

This was next-level bad.

So bad in fact that we just had to write up some takeaways we could learn about writing better emails from their no-good-very-bad-what-is-even-happening-here email program.

We covered 9 key takeaways:
1) Don’t Buy Email Lists
2) Onboard New Signups To Your List
3) Subject Lines Matter
4) Preview Text Also Matters
5) Spell Check Is Your Friend
6) Formatting Is Also Your Friend
7) Keep Your Calls To Action Clear
8) Preview Your Draft Before Sending
9) Write For Mobile… Or At Least For The Internet!

Have anything to add to our key takeaways? Share them with us at hellomergetag.com or hit us up on Twitter.

*****

This episode of Hello Merge Tag was adapted from a blog post published in March. You can find that blog post – along with loads of screenshots – here.

We also mentioned a blog post that shared the story of a political campaign selling their email to a group that went on to open support one of their opponents. You can find that post here.

This episode also references an episode of our other podcast Step Up Your Social where we talked about using customized bitly links. You can find that episode here.

Listen to the full episode right here or wherever you stream podcasts.

Find all episodes at HelloMergeTag.com

 

 

 

I put together an Email Success Checklist, to help make sure your email is ready to go before you hit send. Download it free today.

 

May 30, 2023/0 Comments/by Josh Klemons
https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/tips-for-better-political-email.png 1500 1500 Josh Klemons https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Reverbal-Communications-Josh-Klemons.svg Josh Klemons2023-05-30 10:12:292024-01-11 12:07:599 Things We Can Learn About Email From A Truly Awful Email Program | Hello Merge Tag Ep 5
Email, Politics, Uncategorized

9 Things We Can Learn from the Wisconsin Conservative Digest About How To Run Better Email Programs

When it comes to digital marketing, I’m not one to punch down.

Digital — like life — is hard. People are doing their best. There are going to be typos. And broken links. Formatting is going to occasionally fail you.

It happens.

But some digital programs are so bad, we would be remiss NOT to learn from their mistakes.

And since I never subscribed to this particular email list, yet they were fine acquiring my email address and spamming me with their no-good-very-bad-what-is-even-happening-here email program, I just had to pull together a blog post outlining 9 things we can learn NOT TO DO from the Wisconsin Conservative Digest email program.

First things first — what is the Wisconsin Conservative Digest?

I legit have no idea. Other than getting their emails in my inbox, I am not familiar with their work.

They clearly have an agenda, but their goals — as you will soon see — seem to be a bit all over the place.

So let’s dig in.

1) Don’t Buy Email Lists

The digital world is full of list swaps and emails for sale. It’s a huge problem, both for campaigns and organizations trying to do digital right, as well as for anyone who actually uses email. Which is, you know, all of us!

People are becoming afraid to give their email address, much less financial support, even to orgs and campaigns they support, for fear that their email will quickly get passed around, sold and shared by campaigns near and far.

Wisconsin Conservative Digest bought (or somehow acquired) my email address.

How do I know this?

First of all, I never subscribed. So that’s a pretty big hint!

Second of all, they acquired a version of my email that has a tracking code built right into it.

I wrote a whole blog post about this if you want to dig deep, but the short version is that I subscribed to the email list of a candidate using a version of my email that was unique to his campaign.

That email address promptly got sold, to many other groups and campaigns, including one that was openly supporting one of his opponents. Which is… decidedly… amazing. Want the full story? It’s in that blog post I mentioned which you can find here.

So WCD bought my email address and now they spam me with their oh-so-so-so-bad content. Which is a HUGE part of why I’m willing to punch down here.

Cause most of us are legit just doing our best. But that forgiving attitude goes out the window the moment you start buying and swapping lists and spamming people. In my humble opinion anyway.

Okay, so let’s keep going.

2) Onboard New Signups To Your List

Let’s reiterate that you shouldn’t buy people’s emails. But if you’re going to, the least you can do is properly onboard them!

What does that mean? Write a short series of emails that introduce people to you, your work and why you’re in that sacred inbox you’ve hustled your way into!

And WCD definitely did not do that.

They acquired a list of emails (mine included), added us to their Constant Contact account and just treated us like we were long-time members of their list.

No introduction, no explanation, no expectation setting… just emails about their work and spouting their agenda.

So many campaigns do this as well — they acquire lists of unassuming folks and just start asking them for money.

Which is bad for soooo many reasons. But first things first, don’t start with a money ask! At least let me know who you are, why I should care and what you’re fighting for.

If I like what I hear (and make it through the first few emails without unsubscribing and marking you as spam), THEN you can ask for money.

Never before.

But the thing about an onboarding series is that they aren’t only for emails you bought. They are also great for folks who have intentionally opted to sign up for your list.

Picture this: someone gives you their email. They don’t get a message from you for 10 days. Then they get a generic money ask.

You had someone excited to connect with you and your mission. You treated them like an ATM. Bet your conversion rate isn’t great.

Now picture this alternative: someone gives you their email. Twenty minutes later, they get a note from the campaign manager or executive director welcoming them aboard. The email is short, but outlines what your organization is working on and how important the community is in helping reach your collective goals.

Three days later, they hear from another stakeholder in the org telling them about a recent success.

Four days after that, they get a note letting them know about the work you are doing on social media to bring about change and you invite them to join you.

Five days later they get another email asking for money. They’ve been on your list for less than two weeks. But during those two weeks, you’ve brought them along on a journey. You’ve treated them with respect, showing them you see them as a valued member of your community, not just a potential rube with a credit card.

Now when you make your ask, the recipient understands why their $5 or $10 matters, and how it can help move the needle.

Which of these two approaches is more likely to lead to long-term supporters, engaged in keeping your mission going?

If you’re not sure, then digital marketing might not be the right path for you.

The second path is harder, but digital is about building relationships. And you don’t build relationships with quick churns and cash grabs. You build it by investing in the people who share your passion for the shared mission.

3) Subject Lines Matter

Other than sender, a subject line is the first thing the reader sees. And that SL will likely determine whether or not the email gets opened or sent straight to the trash.

Look at these subject lines:

Subject Lines matter

A good subject line captivates and makes you want to learn more.

A bad subject line says something generic like “The latest news for you” and then it repeats itself over and over and over and over.

Write subject lines that make people want to read more.

4) Preview Text Also Matters

After sender and SL, the next (and potentially only) part of an email that a recipient will see is the preview text.

While the idea is that it’s showing you a preview of the text in your email, Mailchimp, Constant Contact and any CRM worth its salt will let you write whatever you want into the preview text.

Which is great. Sometimes your hook isn’t the first line of your email. But it can still be your preview text.

A good preview text gives readers a bit more context behind what’s waiting for them, should they click open.

Here’s an example of some bad preview texts:

Preview text for emails

The subject line told me nothing. The preview text was just as bad.

I’m sure that a whole lot of people just deleted and ultimately unsubscribed from this list.

I took on the terrible job of staying on their list for you! Someone had to review these emails to help us learn what not to do in email marketing.

So… you’re welcome. 🤦‍♂️

5) Spell Check Is Your Friend

I had spell check on my computer before I had AIM, much less Friendster. It is not a new technology.

Use it!

It’s fine to write fast. But then take time to edit.

Remember that your email is going to be read by real people (assuming you can get them to open your email with a decent subject line and preview text).

There are loads of free and paid tools that will do your spell-checking for you.

Grammarly is quite popular! Install it and let it check your work.

Hemingway App is another cool tool you can try out.

Drafting your emails in a Google Doc? Go to the menu bar and select “Tools.” “Spelling and grammar” is the very first option!

Using spell check in a google doc

Needless to say, Wisconsin Conservative Digest does not take advantage of any of these simple tools.

Avoiding typos in an email

This is a random smattering of just a few of the many, many spelling and grammar issues I immediately saw within their emails. There were scores more in the dozens of emails they sent me.

Typos happen — even with spell check and Grammarly and professional editors. But at least try to catch them!

This email program clearly isn’t concerned about typos. You should be.

6) Formatting Is Also Your Friend

The majority of people will read your email on their phone. Write it with that in mind.

Formatting matters so much.

Look at this email.

The importance of formatting in an email.

It doesn’t really matter how good (or in this case BAD) the content is, I’m not going to read it!

Why is it all centered? That makes it so much harder to read.

They used short paragraphs, which is actually great. But they should have added an extra line of space between each one (you know, like I’m doing here). That would make it so much easier to read.

Why is their name and address plopped right at the top without context or explanation?

They tell you to “watch our website” but then type out their organizational name without hyperlinking it to their website. Am I supposed to do a Google search to continue connecting with them?

The fascinating thing with their email program is that I’ve received dozens of emails and they do seem to be testing different formatting approaches. Three or four in a row will have a certain look. Then they’ll switch it up and try something else.

But all of them are hard to read and even harder to follow.

Yes the content is bad. Yes the spelling and grammar are bad. But also, the formatting shows they clearly gave no actual thought to the person on the receiving end of this screed.

Think less about the medium and more about the reader. What would help you read your own email? Is it easy to skim for someone who doesn’t have time to read every word?

Use bold and italics to clarify what’s important. Don’t be afraid of headings and bullet points. Images can really keep things moving along.

Or… you can just send something like this and guarantee no one reads a single dang word of it.

When it comes to emails, formatting matters.

7) Keep Your Calls To Action Clear

Generally speaking, an email should have one call to action.

The general rule of thumb is that you if you want a second CTA, it goes in the PS.

Al Franken popularized this concept. In his emails, back when he was in the Senate (as opposed to now, guest hosting The Daily Show), he’d regularly pull back the curtain and make a joke about how he gets to ask for something extra in the PS.

If this concept of a single CTA surprises you, go back and read an email from AOC or Katie Porter or Joe Biden or the Sierra Club or… you get the idea.

The biggest and best run email programs follow this rule.

Why? Because asking readers to do more than one thing is the equivalent of asking them to do nothing at all.

Folks aren’t going to do eight things after reading your email. Heck, you’ll be LUCKY if you can get them to do one. So pick your priority and then build your email around it.

Now in fairness to WCD, they are a “news” organization, as opposed to a nonprofit or a political campaign. (I use the words “news” here very lightly.)

But a lot of their emails aren’t trying to share breaking news or do round-ups of top stories. Rather they are trying to get folks to take action.

And yet, their emails are regularly stuffed full of CTAs.

Vote early. Tell your friends. And donate. Also, join us at some upcoming events. But also watch out for ticks. And get your vaccination for Shingles. (Yes, those last two are actually discussed in numerous emails that are otherwise fully political.)

They’ve also got this weird thing they do where they are pushing their emails as “CHAIN LETTERS” and asking everyone to forward them on to their friends. You know, like we all do on the internet in 2023.

Write your emails for your audience.

The next time you write an email for your organization, pick one ask and build the whole email around it. You’ll be amazed how much easier it is to write something clear and compelling when you’re not asking folks to do 15 things, but just focusing on a single actionable goal.

8) Preview Your Draft Before Sending

You wrote a draft. You edited it. You had your co-workers review it. You’ve run it through spellcheckers. Everything is perfect.

You load it up into your email program and you hit send.

Then you receive your email in your inbox, open it and immediately notice that your logo was chopped in half. Or there is a weird spacing between your paragraphs. Or the text is so small, you can’t read it without a magnifying glass.

There are a million things that can go wrong, even if your draft was perfect. 
Which is why you should always preview your email before sending it out to your list.

When you do so, you see it the same way everyone else on your list will.

Read through it with fresh eyes. Click links and make sure they work. Quadruple-check that everything looks good and is easy to read.

WCD doesn’t preview their emails. How do I know?

There are sooooo many ways.

For one, if they previewed their emails before sending, they would catch a lot of the problems we’ve laid out above.

But here’s something I noticed in one of their emails recently.

Why you should always preview your emails

What the hell is that? That’s instructions on how to use an element from Constant Contact who specifically instructed the sender to “delete this section before sending!” They even put it in bold and used an exclamation point.

Is that easy to miss while setting up your email? It sure is.

But it’s pretty near impossible to miss if you actually read the dang thing before hitting send!

Here’s another one I love.

Email formatting

Okay, for this one I had to zoom out A LOT to give you a sense of what was in my inbox. This is about 1/3 of the email. The following 2/3 are… more of the same.

Which is ridiculous. It should have had one of those little boxes and then listed the dates with links and info. Showing the same image over and over and over and over… there’s no better word for it than ridiculous.

But now let’s zoom in on one of those boxes.

Formatting an email

Okay, as a standalone graphic, it’s fine. And they used a customized Bitly link to simplify the URL. Which is actually great! A lot of folks don’t do that and it’s a huge missed opportunity when using link shorteners. (I actually cover this topic in a recent episode of my podcast Step Up Your Social.)

But here’s something important you should know: Bitly links are case-sensitive.

Which is bizarre, but it’s also a fact.

So if you go to bit.ly/dk_watertown, you get to a sign-up form for the event.

BUT if you go to BIT.LY/DK_WATERTOWN (which is how they wrote it in the email), well…

are bitly urls case sensitive?

Now I am a certified digital nerd. Do I blame you for not knowing that Bitly links are case-sensitive? Not at all!

BUT if WCD had looked at a preview of their email, and checked their links, they would have quickly caught their mistake.

Don’t be like the Wisconsin Conservative Digest. Preview your emails!

This brings us to our final takeaway from this brutal email program:

9) Write For Mobile… Or At Least For The Internet!

We’ve already looked at a lot of ways that WCD isn’t writing content that’s optimized for mobile devices.

But often, their content isn’t even optimized for the internet!

Write your internet content, including emails, for the internet.

They’re asking for money. And then putting in a bunch of lines for me to… well I’m not really sure!

I guess they expect me to print these emails out, fill them in and mail them in with a check?!?

It’s fine to offer the option to send money by check. But they don’t even offer an option to donate online!

It’s 2023 — get a PayPal account!

I could pull more examples, but I think you get the idea.

To recap, here are 9 things we can learn about writing better emails:

1) Don’t Buy Email Lists
2) Onboard New Signups To Your List
3) Subject Lines Matter
4) Preview Text Also Matters
5) Spell Check Is Your Friend
6) Formatting Is Also Your Friend
7) Keep Your Calls To Action Clear
8) Preview Your Draft Before Sending
9) Write For Mobile… Or At Least For The Internet!

I did the hard work of staying on this list, and actually opening their content, so you wouldn’t have to!

I hope this was helpful.

Anything to add? Let me know in the comments or hit me up on Twitter.

Need help making sure your email program doesn’t look, sound or feel like this? My team and I are here to help!

We’ve run and consulted on email programs for local and statewide political campaigns, nonprofits and companies, big and small, and everything in between.

Be in touch today and let’s step up your digital program!

 

I put together an Email Success Checklist, to help make sure your email is ready to go before you hit send. Download it free today.

March 31, 2023/0 Comments/by Josh Klemons
https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/bitly.png 1080 1080 Josh Klemons https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Reverbal-Communications-Josh-Klemons.svg Josh Klemons2023-03-31 09:36:462024-01-11 12:09:029 Things We Can Learn from the Wisconsin Conservative Digest About How To Run Better Email Programs

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