The promotional message must express extremely clearly, what the user should do once he or she receives the advertising email:
- Click here to buy now with 30% discount
- Request a visit from one of our sales managers now to take advantage of the current promotion
- Download the coupon and present it immediately at the store nearest you.
These are just a few examples.
Haven’t you ever gotten an advertisement and wondered , “Okay, but now what should I do?”
This is a typical example of an unclear “call to action.”
The call to action can generate different behaviors, depending on what the strategy determines: transient, nontransient.
If the advertising email is not transitive, it means that the whole strategy is contained in the email itself:
Call us. Several times in the email, prominently displayed, is the phone number to contact. If we receive the DEM on a smartphone, we simply click the number to initiate the call.
Write to us. Like the previous point, the email entered is clickable.
Download coupon. There are one or more buttons in the advertising communication that allow the coupon to be downloaded.
Book a visit from our salesman. The form is already contained in the advertising communication. Simply fill in the fields and press submit.
If our Direct Email Marketing Strategy involves transitive communication, it means that the user will be “taken somewhere else.”
That is, when he clicks a button, he will arrive at an external entity. Generally this is a website, or a landing page.
Landing page is definitely better performing.