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Copywriting, Emails

8 ways to instantly boost online gaming email response rates

Nail your email!

Here are 8 ways you can instantly increase the effectiveness of your online gaming email communications.

1. Use subject lines that get the job done

The sole purpose of the subject line of an email is to get you to open the email. It is not 60-75 characters of free space for you to squeeze in what you think is a clever piece of word play. There are many ways to write subject lines that result in higher open rates: use of a greeting, being a bit vague, cutting off the end of an interesting sentence, promising something inside the mail… etc. Use your imagination. Think of what grabs your attention when you’re scanning the subject lines of emails in your own inbox.

2. Acknowledge your recipient!

What’s in a name? Everything!

Ok so they’ve opened your email. Now what? Make it clear that you acknowledge they’re a real person. Emails are named as such for a reason: electronic mail, like a virtual letter, if you like. If you got a letter in the mail from a friend, you’d be a bit miffed if they didn’t address you by name, wouldn’t you? It’s kinda rude after all. Same thing goes for emails. Greet your member by name or username for best results. Make it clear you are addressing them as an individual. Using no greeting appears rude, impersonal and spammy and is more likely to land you in the dreaded junk mail folder if your member happens to have forgotten who you are or why they’re receiving your mail.

3. Cut to the chase

The next time you’re structuring a member email, remember that you have a time limit of less than 10 seconds (often less than 5) to grab your member’s attention and get them to keep reading your email. And that’s the brutal truth. So don’t beat about the bush unless you’re absolutely 100% confident in your ability to hypnotise your member and have them float through every word of your email in a trance-like state. Try to include a headline that sums up the purpose of your email as soon as possible.

4. Talk about benefits, not features

This is missed so often it’s amazing… When communicating with your members, you have to talk to them in terms they’re going to understand. Always have in mind ‘what’s in it for them?’ when writing your member emails. Why are the features of your new casino software so great for them? So you’ve got widescreen HD graphics on your new slots… so what? What does that mean to me as the member? How does that change my gaming experience? Tell me why I should even bother giving it a chance? Don’t just assume that your members will be able to turn the features of your product or service into benefits for them, just like that, cos they won’t. Why the hell should they have to? You emailed them, they owe you nothing. Give them a reason to check out your great new product or service by telling them what they’ll get out of it when they do.

5. Tell them what to do now

Don’t forget a strong CTA!

Your members will not automatically know what you want them to do after reading your email: you have to tell them. Even if it seems obvious to you, just remember that you may not always have 100% of your reader’s attention. Plus, having a final kick in the right direction could be enough to push them over the edge and into the sale. Giving readers an idea of what to do next is usually done in the form of a CTA, or Call To Action. It’s a short, tight piece of copy that usually contains a big benefit to the reader while telling them exactly what to do now. Ideally it links to where you want them to go when taking this action cos remember, your readers can also be lazy so don’t give them any excuse!

6. You’re a real person too!

People hate to be spoken to like a flock of sheep. They may act like a flock of sheep in their buying habits, but they won’t be flocking anywhere near your products or services if you make them feel like sheep. So keep hold of that personal connection, remind them that you’re a person too in the main copy (use normal people speak, not robot talk!) and also by including a sign-off. You don’t have to put ‘Hugs and kisses, Your snookywookums’ but just make sure you have a real person’s name at the end of the email so your members know it’s a real person who’s written to them.

7. Use a PS

Final kick!

Studies have shown that the two areas of an email that get the most attention in that short space of time between readers opening your email and acting on it are the headline and the PS. So firstly, if you’re not using either, start! How do you use a PS though? In a written letter, a PS (or Post Script) was used to add on an extra important piece of information that the writer had forgotten to add in the main body of the letter. You can benefit from what is still a highly regarded wee piece of copy by putting the important part of your message into it, or including something that’s coming soon that readers should be aware of, or an added benefit that’s somehow related to the content of the email… It’s an extra chance for you to give them another reason to whip out their wallet… Use the PS wisely and that’s exactly what they’ll do.

8. Test, rinse, repeat…

Test, test, test!

Every casino’s member population will be slightly different and react to communicatins and offers in slightly different ways. The best way for you to find out what works is to test your emails against each other. It’s very simple to do as long as you keep a few important things in mind…

Only test one variable at a time: for example, test 2 different headlines or 2 different body copy versions, not both at the same time or it’ll be impossible to interpret the results.

Think about how you’re going to gather the results of your testing: open rates, click thru rates, subsequent actions taken by readers, increase in traffic to a linked LP, increase in deposits related to a certain promo.

Think about how you’re actually going to do the testing itself: the best way is to split your population right down the middle at random, since you don’t want any other variables dirtying your results. Think about what time of day you’re going to send the email (another variable to test in itself), when you’re going to gather the results, if you’re going to recheck the stats at a later date… etc.

How will you interpret the results: this can be tricky if you’re not careful. If you’ve kept all other variables constant, it should be relatively easy to interpret your results. For example, if the only thing you changed between both versions of your email split test is one single word in the CTA, you can be pretty sure any fluctuation in your results can be attributed directly to the use of that word. What you then have to figure out is why. And this is where it helps to know a little bit about the psychological aspect of copywriting.

Keep testing cos your members preferences will change periodically, thus so will the effectiveness of your email communications to them. And as we all know, there’s always room for improvement!

That’s your lot for now. Incorporate all of the above for best results and remember to keep an eye on those stats!

Copywriting, Language, Psychology

Effective copy is all in the mind

People buy for emotional reasons, backed up by logic

It’s all in the mind.

When talking to your poker population, for example, you have to put yourself in their shoes.

Do you know who your typical poker player is? What drives them? What their day to day life is like?

Why they play poker?

In general, there are many reasons people play poker. For some it’s just a fun way to relax after a hard day’s work.

For others, it’s a way to make a bit of extra money on the side to supplement their income.

And for yet others, it’s all about the psychological challenge, the thrill of the game against an unseen opponent, see who emerges the better player…

There are of course plenty of other reasons people play poker, but it’s the copywriter’s job to find out what kind of poker player the communication is aimed at.

Why? Because the most effective way to communicate with your target market is to get inside their head and find out what makes them tick.

Talk to them in their language, relate to them in terms of how playing poker makes them feel, whether it’s the escapism, the extra income, the challenge… whatever it is, talk in those terms, from that point of view.

In your communications, stir up those feelings they get when they play. For example, the way the casual poker player feels when he plays is gonna be vastly different to how the serious poker player earning a decent side income from his game feels when he plays.

Remind them why they play and that they can experience those same feelings at your poker site.

Get on the same level as your poker player and you’re another step closer to keeping them.

It’s not your product you’re trying to sell here. And this is the mistake so many gaming companies today make.

What you’re selling is an intangible emotional and psychological state of being.

And you can’t sell that through reasoning and logic.

A skilled copywriter knows how to make that psychological connection through the power of the right words at the right time.

Bookmark my blog for more tips and tricks on effective online gaming copywriting.

Copywriting, Language, Psychology

Attracting attention: It’s about what you say AND how you say it

So you walk into this lovely little cake shop and you start drooling over the sumptuous selection of cute little cherry bakewells, almond slices and other Mr Kipling rip-off delights…

You saunter over to one lil cake stand and take in the aroma of marzipanny deliciousness with a cherry on top.

Mmmm, cherry bakewell!

The seller catches the look on your face and gives you a knowing wink.

“These are really fab,” the girl says. “You won’t get any of that dryness you tend to get in the pastry of most cherry bakewells.”

You ponder some more, meandering over to another cake stand with what appear to be the same cherry bakewells on display.

A different girl this time… “Uh yeah so… buy one if you want one.”

Who would you buy from?

The online gaming industry has quickly become a saturated marketplace and everyone is offering pretty much the same thing.

Do you stand out from the crowd?

So how do you put yourself out there, right in front of your target market? How do you make yourself stand out above the rest? How do you get them to choose you over the thousands of other online gaming sites out there?

What makes you so special?

My lil cake shop example above demonstrates the often overlooked importance of effective communication if your aim is to trawl in those members… and KEEP them paying and playing with you!

It’s not just about what you say, it’s about how you say it too.

For example, try saying the following sentence without any kind of snidey tone in your voice…

‘What are YOU looking at?’

Pretty tough, right? Take the caps off the word ‘you’ and you’ve got a pretty harmless and neutral toned sentence.

That one word made all the difference.

Can you see how important it is to get every single word of your member communications right? Even if you think your brand’s the best and no further explanation is needed?

Your casino software could be the best out there but if you’re not telling your members about it effectively enough, you might as well be telling them to beat it.

Bye bye money!

Remember, people HAVE and WILL spite themselves by turning down the best just on principle. If they feel offended or insulted in any way by your emails, web pages or whatever else, you’ve lost them. They sure as hell won’t stick around for more.

Get the tone of voice of your copy wrong and you might as well hand those potential members over to your competitors on a silver plate.

Don’t get cocky. If you tell potential new members that you’re the best and you’re all that, like you’re doing THEM a favour just by being around, they’ll be off.

Besides, haven’t we had enough of every Tom, Dick and Harry in the gaming industry claiming to be the best online casino/poker/bingo site ever?

Keep it here and you’ll learn a variety of ways to reach (and win over!) your potential and current members without having to resort to blatant lies, puffed up over-exaggerated claims, or corporate robot-talk syndrome. ;)

Copywriting

3 of the biggest misconceptions about copywriting

In this post I’m gonna try and cover the 3 most common misconceptions about what really makes good copy.

‘Product knowledge equals communication power’

One of the biggest issues I face as a copywriter, and one which I know many of my copywriting friends also suffer from, is clients who think they know how to communicate the details of their product to their members simply because they know their product inside out.

Now, while my clients may well know their product/service inside out, that doesn’t necessarily mean they know how to communicate it EFFECTIVELY to their members.

As the client, you know what’s great about your product cos you’re involved with it every day. But can you put yoursef in the shoes of someone who knows nothing about your product and sell it to them in a handful of words, in a way that they will not only understand, but also become passionately motivated by?

Sorry to break this to you people, but there is no correlation between copy effectiveness and depth of product knowledge!

‘It’s all about good grammar’

Another common misconception about good copy is that it must be grammatically correct.

Rubbish.

Let me ask you a question… When was the last time you spoke to someone who speaks the Queen’s English?

Ever?

One of the best ways to break through that defiant ‘you’re not gonna sell to me’ front is to be personable. Talk to prospective members like they’re people cos guess what? They ARE people! And so are we!

Where am I going with this?

Effective copy is written the way people speak.

Think about the last time you told one of your friends about some great new place you visited and think they should check out too. You wouldn’t suddenly switch to robotic, perfectly formed Queen’s English, would you?

So why does it still exist in member communications?

Let’s try to relate to our members on a more human level with language that reflects how we really speak to each other.

NO – ‘Receive a 100% up to €400 bonus to play slots’

YES – ‘Grab this 100% up to €400 bonus and have a spin!’

NO – ‘We think you will like this’

YES – ‘You’re gonna love it!’ (yes, ‘gonna’)

‘It’s all about the details’

Another false impression of what makes good copy is that it should just stick to the details.

Think about this one. Were you ever sold on an item of food just by reading the ingredients list?

Imagine getting 2 emails about the upcoming WSOP or whatever…

One consists of just a list of package details, such as flights, accommodation, 2x seats in the WSOP main event, $500 spending money, whatever.

The other email starts off by picturing the scene: the excited flashing lights of the Vegas strip, the building chatter as players start taking their seats as the biggest poker series in the world gets underway, chips start clicking together, cards are flipped and quietly eyed, faces set and actions muted…

And suddenly it’s not about the details anymore. You just wanna be there, feeling all that for real! And the email gives you the way to get there.

People buy for emotional reasons. Get your members on an emotional level – make them FEEL your product or service – and they’re yours.

Ok well that’s your lot for now. Bookmark this page for 1-click-away insights into effective copy.