Hi my friend,
As you’ve probably noticed, I’m on a mission to expand my business. So I’ve been trying every list-building technique in the book. More subscribers, more potential sales.
Know what works best so far? It’s giving visitors lots of creative ways to sign up for my list. So I’ve started exploring the collection of form types included in my GetResponse email marketing account as an alternative to A Weber.
For example, it has shown me that on my blog, I can create a scroll form that follows the reader as they scroll down the page — a friendly reminder to sign up for updates. Or place a fixed-bar form at the top of the reader’s browser, so it’s always in view.
And GetResponse offers a range of interesting ways to grab attention — a shake form that … well, it shakes (very gently) to catch the reader’s eye. An exit pop-up form you can set to appear when the reader is leaving (to reduce bounces). And an image pop-up form that allows you to add a colorful photo or image.
One of the key strategies is to offer a sign-up incentive. To use a download form that releases the e-document and adds the new subscriber to my marketing list
You can customize these forms. In fact, there’s a Color Magic tool that matches the form colors to the colors on your website or blog automatically. And any form can be coded to add the new subscriber to the campaign of your choice.
Difficult? Nope. After finishing choosing the settings, copy a snippet of code and paste it into the website HTML — and there it is, looking great.
What else? Oh yes, you can add custom fields to the form. The extra data will be very useful for segmenting my list, personalizing messages, and providing dynamic content.
I am starting to use social media to build my list. (If you’re not, it’s time to wake up and smell the coffee.) GetResponse has free tools that integrate sign-up forms with everyday business tools like Facebook, WordPress, PrestaShop, Joomla, WooCommerce, and many more.
To sum up, I couldn’t be happier with Get Response to actively grow my email list. Once you get forms in place, they keep working night and day, week after week. And if a particular form seems to be under-producing, I can run an A/B test and then tweak it to find out what works best.
Click this link to try GetResponse free for 30 days.
Best regards,
Christopher
PS. Here is where you can get some other interesting free tools: