Rand's presentation from Searchlove on how to get (almost) everything you've ever wanted with just an email. If you're trying to do email outreach to improve your content marketing, social media efforts, link building, public relations opportunities, networking, product feedback, and more, these slides are for you!
1. Rand Fishkin | Founder & CEO
How to Kick Butt with Your
Email Outreach
Get Everything You’ve Ever Wanted (professionally) by
Sending the Right Message to the Right People
3. Analysis of Rand’s Strengths & Weaknesses
BloggingSEOSales WritingCodePublicSpeaking Email
Top1%
Solid
Mediocre
Dismal
GAH!Run!
DamnGood
BeingGeraldine’s
Husband
So how come you never talk
about your top skills!?
4. Rand Fishkin | Founder & CEO
How to Be
Married to
Geraldine!
A comprehensive guide on how to be an excellent partner
to my favorite person in the world.
5. What We’ll Cover in Today’s Talk:
How to plan for inevitable hangriness
Shopping Tips for TJ Maxx and Nordstrom Rack
Baking ingredient emergencies
Protecting your legs from frozen feet
Emotional support during writer’s block
The subtle art of not bringing up JFK “conspiracy” theories
6. Analysis of Rand’s Strengths & Weaknesses
BloggingSEOSales WritingCodePublicSpeaking Email
Top1%
Solid
Mediocre
Dismal
GAH!Run!
DamnGood
BeingGeraldine’s
Husband
OK… Fine… We’ll talk
about this one.
7. First: How Not to Use Marketing Tactics
Awesome new tactic
I learned at
Searchlove
Go back to the office and re-
shuffle marketing efforts to
prioritize it
Think up a way to use
it for your
organization/goals
8. Instead, Do This:
Awesome new tactic
I learned at
Searchlove
If it doesn’t fit cleanly
right now, don’t force
it!
Align it to current
business & marketing
goals
Experiment on side projects;
have tactics ready when
they’re useful
12. Tactics First Leads to Poor, Long-Term Results
Business Goals
Marketing Channels
Marketing Goals
Individual Tactics
Learning about these at conferences leads
tofeedback of “this wasn’t actionable,” or
“advanced enough.”
So… events & speakers bias
totactical topics
(including this talk!)
13. Promise to use these tactics only when it fits with
your business and marketing goals?
Let’s talk about how to kick butt
with email outreach.
Cool.
14. As Part of My Research for SparkToro…
I Spoke to Lots of Outreach-Focused Marketers
15. The Sobering Reality:
Content, social, &link
agencies have told metheir
outreach response rates are
even lower…
~1 in 200
16. The 1-minute outreach email:
Found an EmailAddress
Sent a Crappy, Low-Value,
Programatically-Customized
Bulk Email
Google Search
Probably has a <0.1% success
rate
17. The 5-minute outreach email:
Dug around my site to find
my email
Slightly customized a
mildly clever message
Tried toID reasonable
customer targets
Probably has a <1%
success rate
18. 100 messages at 1%
5 messages at 20%
vs.
Spend 20X as long on these
and get the same results?
Yes, please!
19. Just a few links or atiny bit of
amplification, and your work’s in
the top 1-5% of all web content
ViaBacklinko
30. Transactional Usually Yields Evaluation
I want X in exchange for Y.
to meet you
to get your input
to raise money from you
to get a link/share
to get an endorsement
to use your work
money
reciprocation
credit (link or other)
exposure
connections
31. Altruistic Usually Does, Too
I want X in order to help Y .
to meet you
to get your input
to raise money
to get a link/share
to get an endorsement
to use your work
social cause
political issue
friends/people
charitable org
thing we believe in
33. This is Why Most Self-Serving Outreach Pretends
to Be Transactional or Altruistic
Of course, these make us all more
suspicious of outreach.
34. Successful Outreach Needs to Avoid Certain
Characteristics that Correlate with:
Low quality Messages
Spam
Scams
Harassment
Irrelevant Junk
Self-Serving Outreach in Disguise
35. Unclear, difficult-to-evaluate request
Multiple asks in a single message
Historical Reputation from Gmail/Hotmail/etc (i.e. recipients have
marked your email as spam in the past)
Poor targeting (i.e. request has low relevance to the target)
Source characteristics (name, email address, photo/image, writing
style, etc) align with common spam features
To Break Through, Avoid These Characteristics
42. Email Spam Reputation Can Linger for Years
Ifyou’re an actual spammer, you
probably don’t care. But, if you’re trying
tobuild areal business…
43. Brand Memory & Associations Also Suffer
Forbes has trained me
(through bad outreach,
sketchy authors, & their
annoying interface) not to
visit their site
44. Unclear, difficult-to-evaluate request
Multiple asks in a single message
Historical Reputation from Gmail/Hotmail/etc (i.e. recipients have
marked your email as spam in the past)
Poor targeting (i.e. the request is irrelevant to the target)
Source characteristics (name, email address, photo/image, writing
style, etc) align with common spam features
To Break Through, Avoid These Characteristics
Nailed These?
You’re already better than
95% of outreach
61. Direct Works Great Once a RelationshipAlready Exists…
Request for something
comes into my inbox…
Do I KnowThis Person?
Yes!And I
like them.
Never heard of
them.
No, but I know of them or their
company/organization
High
Likelihood of
a Yes
High
Likelihood of
a No
Depends on the ask, their brand, my
history, the relevance, timing, etc.
62. In Some Cases, Indirect is the Way to Go:
I want these things
Get more people to know, like, and
trust me (and my brand)
Links to my site
Create unique value that stands
out to your audience
Press coverage
SocialAmplification
What can I do that will deliver those?
Focus outreach on these goals first
63. Tactical Hacks to Improve Your Odds of
Getting a “Yes” from Someone Who
Doesn’t Know You6
64. #1: Reach Out First When You Have an Interest, Not
an Agenda
ViaTwitter
65. #2: Grow Your Potential Connections Through
Networking (But Most People Get This Wrong)
I want a bigger,
better network.
I should go to “networking
events” and… “network.”
66. I want a bigger,
better network.
I should go to “networking
events” and… “network.”
#2: Grow Your Potential Connections Through
Networking (But Most People Get This Wrong)
67. Instead… Create Catalysts for Organic Network Growth
You
Good
Connection
Bubble of ComfortThat _______ You’ve Been Thinking About
Good
Connection
Good
Connection
class
conference
club
adventure
activity
podcast
video series
Good
Connection
68.
69. The Networking Spectrum
Worse Opportunities
Smaller Events Larger Events
Better Opportunities
In-Person Remote
Relatively Specific inAppeal Appeals to aWide Group
Shared Personal &Professional Values Dissimilar Values
NotActually Focused on “Networking” Specifically Focused on “Networking”
More Unusual More Common
70. #3: Align Your Outreach with Your Target’s Personal
Beliefs, Causes, and/or Values
84. Don’t Forget… Like This:
Bunch of outreach
tactics I learned at
Searchlove
If it doesn’t fit cleanly
right now, don’t force it!
Align them to current
business & marketing
goals
Experiment w outreach for small/side projects
so you’re ready when your biz needs it!
85. Rand Fishkin | Founder & CEO
Thank You!
Bit.ly/artofoutreach