
E-mail signatures
High quality
information about E-mail signatures, website promotion, meta tags and search engine optimization.
They are often forgotten, but E-mail signatures can prove to be a very useful
website promotion tool that produces great results compared to the effort required
to use it. After all, most of us send a lot of E-mails,
and many end their messages with expressions like "Take care" or "See you
later" followed by the writer's name. Such signatures are nice, but why settle
for just one brief line with very little useful content?
Think about it for a while. People are used to handing out their business
card to nearly everyone they meet, but the same people sign their E-mail
messages with merely their name, if they even bother to sign them at all.
Instead of just signing with your name, why not include a full-scale E-mail
signature at the bottom of your messages? Since you're going to send those
E-mails anyhow, it would be a very good idea to turn them into a traffic
generator by using a good signature. But how can that be achieved?
Unfortunately it is hard to give detailed instructions on what to put in
your E-mail signatures. Because people are different, signatures should also
be different. A teenage girl promoting her site about the latest pop band
would hardly want to use the same style in her signature as a middle-aged
man trying to get visitors to his online computer store.
Before you create your signature, think about what kind of people you usually exchange E-mails
with. Then try to figure out what these people like. Should you use "power"
words in your signature, such as "FREE" or "NOW", or would you be better
off with a strictly formal version that only contains the name of your site
and its address?
If you are unsure about what kind of signature you should create, I would
advise you to go with a more formal style instead of marketing hype. Since
a signature is something that very much represents you in the eyes of everyone
you exchange E-mails with, you should be careful not to spoil your reputation
with a signature that the receiver might consider to be unprofessional or
tactless.
Creating a good E-mail signature
So, what does a good E-mail signature consist of? In my opinion, it
OK, we have went through the theory. Now let's have a look at an example
signature:
---
Sincerely,
Joe Kirkegaard, CEO of Best Computers Inc.
Best Computers - powerful hardware at a price you can afford: <site address
here>
---
Why is that a good example? Because it is short and gets right to the point.
At the same time, it is able to deliver accurate information about who you
are, where your site is located and how the receiver might benefit from visiting
it. The above signature is also an excellent example of a plain and un-aggressive
"one size fits all" signature that could be used in messages sent to just
about anyone. If you want to add a bit more "hype" or "action" to your signature,
feel free to do so, but as I warned before, make sure that you don't overdo
it.
Now that you know how to compose the perfect signature for yourself, it is
time to add it to your E-mail program so that you don't have to type it again
every time you send out an E-mail. How this can be done depends on the program
you use, but here is a set of brief instructions on how to
add
E-mail signatures to the popular Outlook Express 5.0 and Eudora Pro programs.
You now have a good signature that you can use in your E-mails and in your
Usenet, discussion forum and messageboard postings. As discussion forums
and the Usenet are a bit different from E-mails, those who are thinking about
using their signature in the above mentioned places might want to read my
article called "Signature advertising in the Usenet" about the topic.
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