4 Tips to an Effective Subscriber Opt in Email Box


You’re an author. You have a book published or self-published, or you’re in the process of writing a book or ebook.

If this is the case, you no doubt have a website set up. If not, you’ll need to get one up as soon as possible.

With a website in place, you’ll want to promote what you have to offer by bringing traffic to the site. You can do this through article marketing.

So, far so good.

But, what do you do with the visitors who come to your site? Will a one-time visitor buy what you’re offering?

First time visitors most likely will not buy what you’re offering, so you need to grab that visitor to be sure she returns and so you can develop a relationship with her.

To grab a visitor, you need to get that visitor’s email address, with permission of course. Having the email address allows you to send weekly (or more often) newsletters or information emails. To get an email address onto your subscriber list, you will need a subscriber opt in box.

Well, let me backtrack a moment. First, you need to have an email service, such as iContact or Aweber. The email service you choose will have the tools for you to create a subscriber list and opt in box.

Okay, so now you have a website and you have the code to an opt in box that will go on your site. You’re right on track.

Now the question is: where do you put the opt in box?

4 Tips to an Effective Subscriber Opt in Emzil Box

1. Research shows that opt ins must be readily visible upon landing on the page and should be located on the upper right-hand side of the page.

2. Some studies also show that an orange colored opt-in box coverts better than other colors. I’m not sure about that though. But, you can easily test it out by changing the color of your opt in. If you’re not afraid to tweak the HTML code to your opt in, go into it and change the code for the background color.

You can check out the two sites below to get an idea of what color codes are and what’s available:

http://www.w3schools.com/html/html_colornames.asp
http://www.colorpicker.com/

You might also do an online search for “color codes.”

3. Let the visitor know his email address is secure. Make sure you have wording, either below your opt in box or adjacent to it, that assures the visitor his email address is safe and secure.

4. Along with having your opt in on your website, for higher conversion you should create a separate opt in landing page.

There you have it: Four simple tips to create a more effective email address list opt in box. 

If you'd like even more email marketing tips that will show you exactly how to create and build your subscriber list, check out:

 EMAIL MARKETING RIGHT V2

~~~~~

Karen Cioffi
Award-Winning Author, Children's Ghostwriter, Rewriter, Coach
Author-Writer Online Platform Instructor

~~~~~


MORE ON BOOK MARKETING

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10 comments:

Magdalena Ball said...

Thanks Karen - always innovative and interesting ideas with you. I haven't explored the use of colors, but I'm going to try it.

Mary Jo Guglielmo said...

Thanks Karen. I'm going to have to check out the color concept.

Karen Cioffi said...

Maggie, just look for the background color code and replace it with the color you'd like to try. I changed the orange I had to a color close to the theme background on this site. It's always good to test what works best for you.

Karen Cioffi said...

Mary Jo, it's worth a try. I love the saying, 'nothing ventured, nothing gained.'

D. Jean Quarles said...

Wow! I wondered how to do all that. Thanks for the help. I'll have to figure out how to add that to my own website. Great post.

Carolyn Howard-Johnson said...

I really like that this is basic and step-by-step but also addresses making the process effective. BTW, please note the Google's blogger uses an orange logo. Google is a powerhouse and may have literally trained folks to expect orange or identify orange with sign-up processes.

Best,

Carolyn Howard-Johnson

Excited about how much the new edition of the Frugal Book Promoter (expanded! updated!) can help writers with the tried and true and the new media, too. Now a USA Book News award-winner in its own right (www.budurl.com/FrugalBkPromo) it the original edition was also a Reader Views winner and an Irwin Award winner.

Karen Cioffi said...

Jean, once you get the code from the email service you can put it in your sidebar as a Gadget or Widget, or on any page.

Just be sure your working in TEXT, not Visual.

Karen Cioffi said...

Ah, that's right Carolyn. Thanks for the GoogleI reminder. I think that may very well be the case - trained by Google. :)

Anne Duguid Knol said...

Thanks for the easy-to-follow steps Karen. You are great at giving us the confidence to try out new ideas.

Karen Cioffi said...

Hey, Annie, Glad you found it helpful!

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