How to Use Emotional Triggers Effectively in Email Campaigns
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How to Use Emotional Triggers Effectively in Email Campaigns

CAMPAIGN MONITOR - FEB 11, 2020

Have you ever crafted what you thought was perfect marketing email, only to be disappointed when it didn’t perform well?

It can be frustrating to troubleshoot your process and figure out where you went wrong.

Let’s say you’re already working with an appropriately segmented and healthy distribution list. You even have automated customer journeys and other workflows set up to keep your subscribers engaged. You make sure that you’re including all the essential parts of an email in every campaign component.

What else could you improve upon? You might consider using emotional triggers.

Read on to learn about emotional triggers. We’ll discuss what they are, what types of email campaigns would benefit from them, and how to include them in your email marketing efforts.

What are emotional triggers in email?

Emotional triggers are exactly what they sound like. Most people have emotion-based responses to certain opinions and intentional actions of others. These responses make people sensitive, stressed, and sometimes unable to act logically. In marketing, emotional triggers tug at customers’ heartstrings to affect buying decisions.

Here are some positive emotional triggers that are fairly easy to bake into your campaigns:

The idea is to craft emails that target specific emotional triggers. Emotional marketing depends on knowing how your words and visuals will affect human behavior.

How do you include emotional triggers in email campaigns?

As with any marketing campaign, you need to determine its purpose. You can’t decide on which emotion to provoke without knowing the end goal of your marketing email.

Now comes the tricky part. You need to hone your emotional marketing skills well enough for your subscribers to forget about your bottom line. Practice this by highlighting the helpfulness of your content.

Here are four must-haves of every email employing emotional marketing:

If you want to raise the chances of subscribers clicking on your CTA, you can repeat them once or twice throughout your email body.

Here are 5 examples of creative ways to implement emotional triggers in email marketing.

Examples paint a clearer picture of how emotional marketing works. Study the emails below to get a grasp of how you can embed emotional triggers in campaigns.

1. Build excitement by offering the option to pre-order an anticipated product.

If you’re working with a retail brand, you already know the importance of hype. When a product is popular and desirable but not yet available, you can send out promotional emails provoking excitement.

Make your subscribers feel special and lucky to be part of your email list. Give them the first look at a new product if possible. It’s a great way to engage subscribers and keep them loyal to your brand.

Source: Really Good Emails

The Oculus email above offers the option to pre-order both the Oculus Quest and the Oculus Rift S, using separate CTAs. While the focus is to rack up pre-orders, most of the email is anticipating what you need after big-ticket items: upcoming games, VR experiences, etc.

2. Strengthen connections by celebrating a milestone with your customers.

You may already have an email campaign with a successful emotional trigger running in the background: a birthday email. Most marketers give subscribers the option to provide this information, along with their name, gender, and location. These details make it much easier to personalize email marketing campaigns.

As previously noted, personalization gets your foot in the door. Celebrating milestones together is the stuff of relationship-building. Nothing feeds that sense of belonging like having shared special occasions.

Source: Really Good Emails

The email above shows theSkimm celebrating a brand milestone with its customers. Dynamic content reminds customers of the brand’s presence in their lives for the past five years. The referral program mixed with a raffle rewards loyal subscribers and accomplishes significant lead generation.

3. Pique curiosity by leading with an interesting question.

Did you know that the typical adult has an attention span of approximately eight seconds? Longer than that, and a task might remain undone—even something as simple as reading an email.

If you notice that a majority of your subscribers have a short attention span, you can design more scannable emails. You may also attempt to trigger their curiosity.

Source: Really Good Emails

The TrustedHousesitters email above asks: “Can I trust a stranger in my home?” While not the most clever, it’s relatable and connected to the brand’s identity.

The curiosity gap is easily crossed once you open the email. Their CTA even encourages further curiosity by telling you to “Ask a Question.”

4. Cultivate FOMO by adding a countdown timer.

The idea of adding a countdown timer to an email used to be so novel. Modern technology has made it much easier to do in recent years, and it’s changed the game when it comes to creating a sense of urgency in your email.

Numbers slowly decreasing can impact decision-making in surprising ways. Emails with countdown timers average at least 14% higher conversion rates, as well as 59% higher transaction rates.

Source: Really Good Emails

The Harry’s email above has a trifecta of FOMO-inducing elements: the “Chop! Chop!” heading, the CTA button with the text “Shop immediately,” and the countdown timer.

5. Tell an uplifting story to trigger hope and encourage donations.

Telling stories is one of the most common tools email marketers use in crafting campaigns, and for good reason. It’s one of the most ancient ways human beings have passed on and preserved messages and historical accounts from one generation to the next.

Why are stories so effective? Ninety-five percent of cognition occurs not in the conscious brain, but in the subconscious. When you tell a story, you activate parts of the mind associated with emotions, movement, sight, sound, and taste. This observation carries even more meaning when we say that giving is an emotional act.

Source: Really Good Emails

The Help for Heroes email above leads with a story and ends with a donation request. The language used to tell the story is crucial: thoughtful, hopeful, and powerful. It elicits a real emotional response.

Ideally, the act of giving should bring positivity to the donors as much as it does to those receiving the donations.

Wrap up

Everyone has similar emotional triggers. To understand and influence your subscribers, you need to hone your emotional marketing skills. Some common triggers you can use are anticipation, belonging, curiosity, fear of missing out, and hope.

Here are 5 ways to include these emotional triggers in email marketing:

Raring to use emotional triggers in marketing campaigns? Increase the quality of your work and boost your ROI by using email personalization hacks.

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