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Newsletter creator Tom Alder uses a minimalist welcome email asking subscribers to reply with "hey" and click a confirmation link for "tomorrow's" content. That link immediately delivers a case study, creating a surprise-and-delight moment that boosted his click-through rate from 23% to over 47%.
Instead of asking open-ended questions like "What's your biggest challenge?", prompt new subscribers with simple A/B/C or yes/no options. This lowers the cognitive load, making it far easier for them to reply and starting a valuable two-way conversation from the very first email.
Instead of directing users to a landing page, ask them to reply to your email with a specific word (e.g., "guide") to receive content. This tactic significantly increases conversions by reducing friction and simplifying the user's action.
Instead of a 'click here' CTA, instruct recipients to reply with a keyword (e.g., 'guide') to get content. This increases response rates by up to 300% over forms. More importantly, getting a reply is the strongest positive signal to email clients, locking in future inbox placement.
Instead of directing users to a landing page with a form, ask them to simply reply to the email with a keyword to receive a guide or discount. This reduces friction and can exponentially increase the number of people who take the desired action compared to traditional methods.
A welcome email is more than a confirmation; it's a prime opportunity. Capitalize on the user's peak engagement by immediately including a call to action. For e-commerce, this should be a direct prompt to start shopping, as that is likely why they subscribed.
A subtle but powerful formatting trick in emails and landing pages is to hyperlink an entire sentence or phrase, not just one or two words like "click here." This creates a larger, more obvious clickable target for the user, improving the experience and likely increasing clicks.
To verify if your audience is reading your content deeply, hide a specific call-to-action in the middle of an email, such as, "If you see this, reply with [word] and I'll send you something." This tactic provides a clear signal of high engagement beyond simple open rates.
Rephrase call-to-action buttons from a brand command (e.g., "Donate Now") to a user's first-person statement (e.g., "Yes, I want to help"). This simple change in perspective makes the user an active participant, significantly increasing engagement and click-through rates on emails, landing pages, and social media posts.
Asking for a prospect's time or interest is less effective than giving them something valuable. Emails that include a tangible offer (e.g., a benchmark, an audit, a unique insight) see a 28% higher reply rate. You get their time by not asking for it directly.
Contrary to the common wisdom of using a single call-to-action, an A/B test revealed a newsletter version with five links generated a 152% higher click-through rate than a version with only three. Offering variety can turn passive readers into active clickers.