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Eight reasons why e-mail marketing works for mortgage brokers

May 25, 2010

Mention e-mail marketing to fellow mortgage brokers and you may find that many are still hesitant to move away from their tried and true snail mail methods. Others, however, are rapidly discovering that e-mail marketing is just about one of the most effective means of generating business. Want proof? When Shop.org surveyed retailers for their “State of Retailing Online 2009” report, they found that e-mail was the most-mentioned successful tactic overall. The Ad Effectiveness Survey, commissioned by Forbes Media in February/March 2009, placed e-mail marketing second only to SEO (search engine optimization) for generating conversions. And, research conducted in 2009 by the Direct Marketing Association (DMA) demonstrated that e-mail outperforms all other forms of direct marketing. The bigger question, of course, is why? Out of all the hundreds or even thousands, of messages consumers are exposed to each day, why is e-mail marketing so effective? There are several reasons, and mortgage businesses who embrace these principles will quickly find themselves with more customer relationships. Those buyers are likely to remember you as they narrow the field of choices for mortgage origination. E-mail marketing has a broad reach. It’s tough to find anyone who doesn’t have at least one e-mail address these days, which means you can reach out to your entire customer and/or prospect base. Just be sure to get their permission first by asking if you can add them to your mailing list. E-mail marketing is proactive. Many mortgage professionals—especially those running a small business—start promoting their services by taking out ads in a phone directory, a real estate guide, a local community newspaper, a billboard or by sending direct mail and placing door hangers. The problem is your customers and prospects have to stumble across the ads in order to see them. E-mail marketing goes directly to a place they are already looking—their e-mail inbox. And unlike paper-based mail or door hangers, e-mail gives them the opportunity to contact you directly to get a quote or more information by simply clicking a mouse. E-mail marketing is targeted. Most forms of advertising are based upon the concept that, if you hit thousands of people with your message, even though it means nothing to most of them, a few are likely to respond. E-mail marketing, though, is based on the idea of sending the right message directly to the right people based on their preferences, local market conditions and other factors. You can build one master list, and then segment it by geographic location, marital status, gender, age, income, seasonality, etc. It eliminates a lot of the guesswork that makes other forms of marketing so inefficient and ineffective. E-mail marketing provides data. If you’re using an e-mail marketing application or service designed for small business, you can run reports that show which e-mails or messages worked, as well as which didn’t, so you can improve upon your next campaign. You can even run split tests, sending one offer or message to half your list and a different one to the other half, so you can get a better feel for exactly what makes customers and prospects buy from you. E-mail marketing allows you to engage. It’s nice to get the immediate reaction from a buyer who sees your e-mail just as he or she decides to make an offer on a property. But, your real goal is to build a relationship with a broader base of prospects so they think of you whenever it’s time for them to refinance or consider mortgage services. E-mail marketing allows you to do that by bringing them community and market news, current rates, timely tips (such as how to compare debt instruments), and more on a regular basis. It’s a great way to engage them and keep them engaged. E-mail marketing has a low cost of entry. Most forms of advertising or marketing require a big upfront investment before you see any results. That can get expensive for a mortgage broker trying to keep expenses down. E-mail marketing has very little upfront cost, allowing you to market effectively without having to stop your core business work for long periods to get it done. E-mail marketing is less intrusive. Unlike a lot of advertising, such as telemarketing calls, e-mail marketing doesn’t interrupt a prior activity to deliver a message. Opening e-mail is the activity your customers and prospects are engaged in when they see your message. If you’ve done a good job of building that relationship, they’ll actually look forward to seeing what you have to say. E-mail marketing works. According to the DMA’s research, e-mail marketing generated a return on investment of $43.62 for every dollar spent on it in 2009. You’re unlikely to find that kind of ROI (return on investment) out of any other form of marketing or advertising. That, of course, is the best reason of all to launch an e-mail marketing campaign. Done correctly, e-mail marketing allows you to become (and remain) visible to your customers and prospects with highly-targeted messages at a minimal cost … all while delivering outstanding, measurable results. Wendy Lowe is director of product marketing for Campaigner, an e-mail marketing solution that enables organizations to have personalized one-to-one e-mail dialogues with their customers, measure how they respond, and analyze those responses. Campaigner is provided by Protus, provider of Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) communication tools for small-to-medium businesses (SMB) and enterprise organizations, including my1voice virtual phone service and MyFax.
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Published
May 25, 2010
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