Recent sites

Please have a look at some of the sites that we have developed:

We hope you like them.

Interested in working with BarnesGraham?

It's usually best to start with a chat.

Why not call Tom on 0117 230 8428 to arrange a meeting where we can talk about your needs (or email info@barnesgraham.com)?

 

Tags

Related pages:

Internet marketing blog:

The big stories:

Internet Marketing - Bristol & The West
Email Us Phone Us - 0117 230 8428


Bookmark and Share

Email Analytics Reveal Sweet Spots In Subject-Line Length

Click a star to add your rating of this article

CAPTIVA ISLAND, Fla. -- Email marketing analytics have led Dela Quist, CEO of London shop Alchemy Worx, to discover a sweet spot for how long subject lines should be.

He says open rates climb when the subject lines are in the 50-character range or 80-character range. But, perhaps counterintuitively, they fall in the middle when the length is 60 or 70.

The magnetic Quist gave the keynote address Saturday at MediaPost's Email Insiders Summit conference: "Emailing People Not Lists: Using Customer Based Metrics to Drive Performance Improvement."

Research culled from 250 million messages sent over the past two years, with 660 different subject lines, has led him to believe that a 50-character subject line touting a "powerful" offer is appealing (30% off Spring Getaway flights to Florida on Delta).

And a longer 80-character-plus line describing a newsletter in enticing fashion works (Find out Secrets to Spice up your Barbecue this weekend and all Summer Long and enter to win a New Weber Grill.)

Somehow, in the 60- to-70-character middle, he says, the subject line is either too long or not long enough.

Quist has various theories, but one is that the longer the subject line, the better chance a marketer has of presenting different concepts that may appeal to different consumers and boosting open rates. So in the above example, some may be interested in the ways to improve their grilling, while others would seek the new grill, leading to higher open rates.

Quist's research--his clients include PayPal and Intercontinental Hotels in the U.S.--showing that "long subject lines work better" goes against conventional wisdom, he said.

"Our experience tended towards the belief that long subject lines work better," he said. (The longer the better goes against conventional wisdom.) A more descriptive subject line can also build goodwill with consumers, since it can provide enough info to easily either turn them on or turn them off.

Published by: David Goetzl

Published 27th May, 2008

Add comment

Click a star to add your rating of this article


home contact us privacy sitemap accessibility

© 2010 BarnesGraham - Bristol and The West - 0117 230 8428
info@barnesgraham.com