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Business Professionals Learn eMail Marketing with Constant Contact

The Power Network, a leads group for members of the Newtown and Monroe chambers of commerce, hosted Lynn Moore as the fourth speaker in its series.

Lynn Moore, president of Moore Marketing LLC and a local expert on Constant Contact, gave members of The Power Network an overview of how a small business can engage and grow its customer base through email. The presentation was the fourth in a speaker series for the leads group exclusive to Monroe and Newtown chamber of commerce members.

Fifteen business professionals gathered at Spadaccino and Leo P. Gallagher & Son Community Funeral Home in Monroe for the event on Thursday morning.

"Most business comes from existing customers," Moore said. "Most forget to ask them for leads. Email marketing is direct marketing to people who love you."

Repeat customers spend 67% more of the time, she said.

Concentrating on building your business from within your community is a good way to earn clients' trust, according to Moore.

"Acquiring a customer takes seven touches," she said, adding that touches could be a phone call, an email or even running into someone in the store.

Most businesses use email, but Moore said valuable customers can be lost when it's not done right.

"You can really make or break a deal," she said of email. "I was buying a product and he kept writing me like we never met. 'Hey! I spent $400 with you.' He wrote like I was an uneducated consumer."

An email Marketing Campaign

Moore said you need to commit six months to an email marketing campaign, adding Constant Contact charges $200 for that period of time. The company can help account holders to create a logo and there are about 200 email templates to choose from.

"I talked to people in the library and told them you don't need a logo, just neat type in a consistent font and color — and that's a logo," Moore said.

A graphic designer happened to be in the audience for that presentation and Moore later bumped into him. "He said, 'You're right. It is a logo,'" Moore recalled.

Moore said Constant Contact can also personalize an email. "There's my name in bold. She's talking to me," she said.

One thing to avoid is coming off as spam, according to Moore, who said Constant Contact takes complaints of spam very seriously.

"The thing I like about Constant Contact is it's tough on spam," she said. "If there are five complaints, they say, 'Why are you bothering people?' Constant Contact doesn't want to be known as a shaky site."

The Right Timing

Moore said a business wants to deliver professional email communications to an interested audience with information they find valuable. But timing when emails are sent is also important.

For example, she said a Realtor can send out emails in the winter with tips of adding value to your home, then follow up with information on putting properties on the market in the spring and summer when most people decide to buy and sell.

A retailer can use Constant Contact to sell a product and automatically send out thank you emails to those who buy it, follow it up a week later with an email asking how things are going and offering any assistance the client may need. The next week, an email advertising another product could go out.

Constant Contact not only tracks how many emails are opened, but who opened them. "You can maintain a customer database," Moore said.

Some Power Network members asked who owns the information. Moore said, "Constant Contact manages information, but you own it."

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Brooke Burling May 24, 2013 at 08:33 am
Only one week to go until auditions (Friday, May 31), so interested actors sign up now!
Laura Tulley May 23, 2013 at 12:23 pm
Thank you everyone for your comments. Carl - will try not to be offended by your "anyone withRead More half a brain" comment. I am dismayed to hear Dawn that you have made this effort and been turned down by the town and police department (it's not uncommon for me to see the police speeding up and down Moose Hill Road too!) Glad to hear, though, that I am not alone in seeing a need for people to get a grip on the road. Slow down. Hang up. Comply with stop signs and stop lights. Be courteous.
Laura May 23, 2013 at 11:17 am
I have been tail-gated so many times - everywhere in Monroe - I drive a little over the posted speedRead More limit BUT I respect the people walking (most of the time in the wrong direction) and bike riders (they too ride in the wrong direction. HANG UP THE PHONE - DON'T PIGGY BACK thru a stop sign, and learn the right of way rule. AND STOP SIGNS mean S T O P!!! Robin lane people are good for running stop signs. And Pepper Street is 25 mph - NOT 45 or 50!!! Walkers & runners FACE TRAFFIC - Bike riders RIDE WITH TRAFFIC. AND one more thing - don't block the drive ways if there is a stop light - and someone coming in or out - let them and move on. THANKS for letting me get this off my chest!!!!!
Dawn May 22, 2013 at 10:28 am
Good luck Laura, My husband and I tried to get some on Purdy Hill Road from Rt.111 to Rt.25. theyRead More said they can't do it. I have asked numerous times to have a police officer sit in Farmview or use our driveway, said it's too dangerous, go figure. Tired of drivers around town having no respect for other drivers and people walking on side of road. It gets to the point that I don't even want to leave my house. Get a clue people slow down, stay off phones, it's not hard.
Pictured from left: Rev. John Hanwell, S.J., President; Dr. Robert Perrotta, Principal, Mark Giannini; John Hanrahan, Dean of Guidance & College Advising; and Jon DeRosa, Director of Student Activities & Christian Service.
Nancy B. May 22, 2013 at 03:08 pm
Congratualtions to Mark and his family!!!!! Well done Mark.....your future is bright!