building trust with new subscribers
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â  Want to watch me write this email? I took a new approach this week and talked my way through it, explaining why I made certain choices. Watch it here, [Tarzan Writes Her Emails - Episode 2](. So Iâm on a date with this guy "Dave" who is at least 10 years older than his profile picture. Later heâll reveal that his real name is Dimitri. (UM, WHUT? That is so much cooler. Why advertise yourself as Dave?) His hair is one hundred percent gray. Later Iâll revisit his profile on Hinge and see that itâs brown in literally every picture he uploaded. Not a speck of gray.  Itâs our second date and weâve just finished tennis practice, followed by a swim and a soak in the hot tub while "Dave" tells me in a thick Ukrainian accent all about his import-export business, admitting it is "not quite legal." I assume itâs drugs but actually it involves selling truck containers of hotel towels or unsellable designer shoes in random sizes. At this point Iâm losing track of all the flaming red flags but I also find him interesting, like Iâm on a date with an elder Gaston from Beauty and the Beast. What will he do next?! I ask him if he wants to go for dinner and he agrees. He keeps insisting we get in his car and drive to the restaurant together, and I keep affirming, "No, weâll each take our own cars." "Trust me," he says, flipping his hair back with a shrug, "Iâm not going to [really awful thing] you."* WOAH. Okay, now Iâm definitely on high-alert. Saying, "Donât worry, you can trust me. Iâm absolutely not going to do the thing you are most afraid of and that people like me have historically done to a LOT to people like you"... â¦thatâs just not how trust works, which is why it is one of the worst ways I can think of to build trust. Bringing this around to your email marketingâIâll close the loop on Dimitri in a second. I used to have this graphic on many of my thank you pages, asking new subscribers to drag my email out of Gmailâs promotions tab and put it in the primary tab. [screengrab of gmail inbox with an arrow showing how to drag an email from the primary tab into the promotions tab] "Trust me!," my landing pages would proclaim. "Iâm not one of those people. Youâre going to love my emails!" Then thereâd be the standard fine print at the bottom saying, "We will never spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time." The fact is, everyone with an email address has been on the receiving end of an onslaught of emails they never consented to, and been given no obvious way to turn them offâor at least turn the volume down, say, by clicking an opt-out link that turns off promo emails but letâs you stay on the email list. Brand new subscribers donât know you yet. Itâs the email equivalent of a first date, and that new subscriber is taking a risk giving you their email. Theyâve been burned so many times before. For all they know youâre going to drop their email straight into a slick funnel with 75 emails making them feel so bad about themselves they will not be able to resist hitting the buy button just to make the pain go away for one second. As email marketers, thatâs what you and I are up against. So asking to be allowed entrance into the primary tab, a sanctuary reserved for one-to-one emails from your boss, your bestie, your mom and maybe your girlfriend/boyfriend/theyfriend(s)⦠â¦just why? Why would I invite you to dinner with my mom? WE LITERALLY JUST MET, BRUV! And anyway, thatâs not what the primary tab is for. Does that mean business emails should never be there, or that you shouldnât even ask for a seat at momâs table? Of course not! Itâs my goal to be in your primary tab. In fact, Iâd love it if you dragged this email over there right now! But being in your primary tab is a PRIVILEGE. Marketers have to earn their way in, just as you need to earn your way into your subscriberâs primary tab. That means building trust first. Here are three ways you can build trust as an email marketer: Nurture your list consistently.
Show up when you say youâre going to show up. If you said you email once a week on a Tuesday, then do it. Itâs okay to take a break now and then but let your list know. You could say, "Iâm stepping back for a month to take care of myself. See you in July!" Let them turn off promo emails.
Those who arenât interested arenât reading until the end of your email, so go a layer further than just including a link at the bottom of your email. Put it at the very top and encourage people to click it if they donât want it or the timing isnât right. Tell subscribers whatâs coming.
Instead of springing a high-pressure promotion on them out of the blue, inform them ahead of time what youâll be offering and when, a little about who itâs for and what it costs. Just one sentence is fine. For example, starting mid-June Iâll be promoting my mastermind Power, which is for business owners who want to grow their bottom line while wielding their power in a way that benefits more than just the people at the top. It costs $12K and starts July 26. Want to be notified when it's open? [Click here to be added to the notification list](. Trust takes time. There are no shortcuts. Thatâs partly why we see so much use of coercion on the internet. If your goal is to make your business profitable AT SCALE in the next 30 days, coercion works really well. But the slow way is more sustainable, more fun, and youâll like your customers better. At the same time Iâm building trust with you, youâre building trust with me, letting me know itâs safe for me to talk about things that are really important to meâlike safe drug use, or being a polyamorous queer! I love that youâre here, doing email marketing this way, with me. I hope you give it a try on your subscribers too. And Dimitri? I never saw again after that day. When I recounted the date to my bestie, I actually left out that awful thing he said as he leaned out the window of his carâit was such a flaming red flag I was a bit embarrassed that I still had dinner with him. Iâm getting better at red flags, both online and offline. Iâm also getting better and not BEING a red flag myself, which takes time and careful study. Iâm still learning. XOT *Actually Dimiriti used the "r" word, which I didnât want to put in an email because it made my body sweat uncomfortably, but including a content warning at the top of this email felt unnecessarily sensational. [Watch me write this email â]( (youâll hear me explain a TON of things along the way, including why I made certain subject line choices, why I chose certain images, and even why I took out the "r" word.) Want to access your fave emails on the go? Subscribe to the [Tarzan Reads Her Emails]( podcast]( to, well, hear Tarzan read her emails. 🤷ââï¸ [New recordings released every Tuesday and Friday. Exclusively for my email subscribers]( Enjoy the email? Why not share it with a friend? [Facebook]( Â
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