Thanks to the Writers’ Guild strike, my TV remote has been wandering into uncharted cable territory of late. I can’t say that it has made for great viewing, but it did reintroduce me to the 1997 sci-fi/horror film “Event Horizon” and the seemingly unassailable notion that black holes are bad and to be avoided at all costs.
A black hole, as you might recall from Physics class or Jeopardy reruns, is an area in space with a gravitational pull so strong that nothing can escape once inside—not even light.
The marketing equivalent that continues to be used by too many reputable marketers is the black hole email subscriber center — a place where subscribers get in, but they can’t get out (i.e., unsubscribe) without a great deal of frustration.
The best practice, of course, is to make it just as easy for visitors to subscribe as it is to unsubscribe. Too often, though, the unsubscribe process is given short shrift. Think about your own email subscription center. When’s the last time that you audited it—actually going through step-by-step to subscribe, unsubscribe, and change your preferences in all of the various ways it permits? My guess is that it’s been a while…if ever.
If that’s the case, I encourage you to dig into your email subscriber center with fresh eyes: enlist new or non-marketing resources if you have to, and walk-through every page, instruction, and process documenting those opportunities to:
- Clarify on-screen instructions
- Verify that all subscription-related links (via website or email) work as intended and land on the desired page
- Simplify the effort needed to subscribe, unsubscribe or change personal information
- Give subscribers the ability to offer & edit more personal data
- Capture other means of contact that may be used in the future (secondary email address, home phone, cell phone for SMS)
- Optimize both subscription and unsubscribe confirmation email content
- Make everything faster & easier
With fresh eyes and a little bit of effort, you can not only rid your email subscription center of any black holes that are damaging subscriber relations, you can also build trust with your subscribers—trust that will be imperative if you plan to expand into SMS and other forms of one-to-one messaging in the future.
