Transparency, Anyone? 52 Ideas for Behavioral Email Marketing Ideas - AI Assisted PLR
Published: Wed, 09/27/23
I'm heading off to bed but wanted to get this out to you. Here's a tip as someone who not only creates PLR but who loves a good find on PLR, too for one of my niche sites: Whenever I see a list like this with 30 or 52 or 100 items, I not only have an instant eBook to sell, but I repurpose the heck out of it. Break it into 52 emails, 52 blog posts, 52 Instagram posts, 52 FB posts, 52 YouTube videos ... and so on. I love in-depth topics and this one is a doozy.
The one I did tonight is a measly $0.18/page and I spent a lot of time editing and tweaking and getting it where I wanted it. It gave me a few ridiculous categories, which I replaced with something much more formidable. The result is a great eBook that you can put your name on and sell instantly. (Change it to "A Year of" or "52 Weeks" if you want to set it apart a bit).
For pennies per page, this one is a goldmine of readymade ideas that will help niche marketers with a FULL year's worth of weekly emails designed to zero in on their behaviors and triggers!
52 Ideas for Behavioral Email Marketing Ideas - AI Assisted PLR
This is an AI-assisted PLR lead magnet called 52 Ideas for Behavioral Email Marketing Ideas where I worked with AI to come up with a topic and slant and develop a full outline then had it deliver what I wanted with light editing.This is something that I can price much cheaper, less than $0.18 per page rather than $2 per page for the limited PLR. This PLR will not be limited in quantity, and you can do the same things with it - edit it, put your name on it, etc. Use it as a lead magnet, email series, etc.
This is a content piece that teaches a one-year, weekly strategy for behavioral email marketing based on subscriber actions and triggers. It involves emails for nurturing, cart abandonment, transactions, re-engagement, milestones, selling and more in an effort to improve engagement, conversions, and the customer experience in general. You'll be able to segment your list and use these ideas based on where your customers are in their journey with your brand. It uses marketing as the example throughout but can be applied to any niche and there are TONS of examples to explain the concepts.
Note: I am putting the categories for email ideas below, not each individual idea. You can re-order these however it makes sense for your business model and niche needs.
This 57-page, 24,139-word PLR covers the following:
- Ideas 1-3: The Welcome Series
- Ideas 4-7: Nurture and Engagement Emails
- Ideas 8-9: Abandoned Cart Communications
- Ideas 10-12: Emails for Re-Engaging Your List
- Ideas 13-16: Emails for Promos and Seasonal Deals
- Ideas 17-20: Reward and Milestone Emails
- Ideas 21-23: Transaction-Based Emails
- Ideas 24-26: Educational and Informative Emails
- Ideas 27-28: Emails with Social Proof
- Ideas 29-31: Personalized and Segmented Email Concepts
- Ideas 32-33: Service and Support Emails
- Ideas 34-36: Harnessing Feedback for Improvement Emails
- Ideas 37-38: Gamification Emails
- Ideas 39-40: Good Deed Emails
- Ideas 41-42: Behind the Scenes Emails
- Ideas 43-44: Special Industry Emails
- Ideas 45-46: Mistake Emails with Learning Opportunities
- Ideas 47-48: Additional Selling Emails
- Ideas 49-50: Tweaks and Optimization Emails
- Ideas 51-52: Recaps and Teaser Emails
** This PLR comes in both Word and TXT formats
Pick it up here for just $10 (Less Than $0.18/page):
https://www.plrlaunch.com/52-ideas-for-behavioral-email-marketing-ideas-ai-assisted-plr
Transparency Isn't a Weakness - It's Your Strongest Asset
I saw this quote when working tonight and it struck a chord with me. Over 2 decades ago, I got online and started ghostwriting for some of the biggest names in the industry. I learned a lot about the reality of this industry - not the "show" that's put on for everyone to make things seem like they're simple.Maybe that's why I was never jaded when trying to achieve success. I knew the hard work and hours that went into truly being successful. I understood that it wasn't push button or overnight.
Recently, there's been discussion behind the scenes about people who "put on airs" as we say. They act like they're superior to newbies and I guess they feel like this superiority will get them more customers. I'm sure they're right. When you exude confidence, even if it's misplaced, people will tend to believe it.
But I hope you don't feel as if that's a better course than being humble and transparent. Transparency is refreshing. When someone owns up to a mistake or says they don't know it all, I crave more from that person because I can trust them more to be honest with me.
I try to speak up about things I get flustered with as a marketer. I feel dumb with technical things. I worry about running out of ideas, even though I never seem to. I get stressed and burnt out. I've had kneejerk reactions to criticism, which isn't anyone's fault - it's a by-product of my abusive former marriage and how I grew to feel I always had to defend myself. So I'm slow to realize when I'm not being attacked, just someone trying to help.
Transparency is something you need to exhibit. It's also something you need to look for in people you learn from. If people are too polished and perfect or always being vague, I run in the opposite direction. Flawed, normal people who open up about their entire experience is who you want to turn to.
Tiff ;)