Your
recipients might see your email message differently on their computers than you
do. You can't rely entirely on the email advertisement looking exactly like it
does when you view it. The following formatting tips will not only help to ensure
that your email piece looks good to the largest number of people, but it will
also help to improve the readability and your response rate.
Text or
HTML : Which Works Best?
This is the first question every
email marketer must ask himself prior to launching a campaign. I continue to hear
conflicting stories about which format works best.
My own personal
conclusion is that they can both do very well. The best campaign I've ever seen
has been a plain text email, well-formatted and sent to a targeted list.
HTML
email, because of its additional text formatting capabilities and graphics, puts
more creative options at the marketer’s disposal. HTML also has more potential
problems and an increased chance that your email might not be viewed properly.
If you are running your first campaign, I'd stick to doing a
text based email. You want to get your copy down properly, which text email allows
you to do.
The Differences Between Text Email And HTML?
Any
time you see colored text, graphics, words that are underlined (besides hyperlinks),
bold text, etc. in an email, you are looking at an HTML email message. HTML allows
you a variety of ways to format your message text, graphics and color.
Text
Messages
Plain text email accounts for the remaining messages
that are sent. A plain text message looks like something written in a basic text
editor. Notepad, which comes loaded with your PC’s operating system, is a great
editor for sending text messages. Most professionals who send text messages use
Notepad to edit their copy.
Benefits of Text:
-
Easy
to produce
-
Allows you to focus on your copy
-
Everyone will be able to view it properly
-
Users
of handheld email devices (a growing number) can read it easily.
-
All hyperlinks
must appear in their entirety. For example: http://www.yahoo.com
-
You can't hyperlink words
-
No graphics
-
No font formatting such as underlining, boldface type, or color
-
You can't track the open rate
HTML Messages
When you send an HTML email, you can create a wonderful
impact with graphics and attractive fonts. However, you are not actually sending
the images in your email. Rather, you are sending the instructions in HTML for
the email. These instructions point to the location on the Internet where your
images that make up the email message are stored. Since HTML email messages point
the recipient’s browser to the Internet in order to display the graphics in an
email, viewers of HTML email must be online in order for the images to appear
properly. If someone downloads your email message to view while offline, they
will see broken images or blank boxes where the images should have appeared.
Benefits
of HTML:
-
You can track the open rate
-
You can include images like company logos, product photos and
other graphical enhancements
-
Formatting options
like boldface, underline and coloring can be included
-
You
can include forms and other more complex html features
-
Colored
text can be used to help words stand out
-
Centering
and other alignment can be used
-
Too many graphics can distract
and turn off your audience
-
Not everyone can view
HTML ads properly. (Only 50% to 75% have HTML capabilities)
-
Images
appear broken when you try to view the message offline
-
Slower
to load the messages
-
Can be easily recognized as
an “advertisement,” causing it to be tuned out
-
Requires
a background in HTML and graphics to do well
The
Bottom Line
Both formats can work very well in email marketing. A well-written
text message without any graphics can perform very well and deliver results. Text
messages are easy to create and closely follow the format of a professional sales
letter which many marketers are already familiar with. HTML campaigns can capture
their audience with a few well-placed visual focus points.
Well-written
copy sells better than weaker copy with fancy graphics. If you’re new to online
marketing, my suggestion is to start with text. If you really want to use HTML,
you need a good designer. Collect some examples of HTML email advertisements you
have responded to and model your campaign after them.