Measure the impact of subject line changes
Posted: Thu Jan 23, 2025 4:31 am
I got humble. I asked them for help. This technique does very well on social media. People like to help. If your audience has positive feelings toward you, they want to help even more. When they get to be helpful and give their opinion about something… boom – it’s a win. I got somebody else involved. Sure, they’re helping me, and hopefully they’re helping themselves (because I genuinely do want to create exactly the content they want), but they’re also helping the wider community.
By answering my email, they’re homeowner data helping “everyone else” who wants to succeed. Helping other people, especially people like ourselves, wins big points for feel good motivation. My new subscribers are responding to that. Three magic questions this next technique builds on the first. Remember the wording of my welcome email, where it says “what’s your biggest question”? Well, there’s a fellow named glenn livingston who’s found a way to never mess up a product launch by asking people that and two other questions.
He’s even figured out a way to quantify it, so you can score responses. This is the jist of those three questions. If you want the exact version, you should seek out dr. Livingston: what’s your most pressing question about x? (text box for answer) how hard has it been to find information about that? Score - , is easiest, hardest what prompted you to sit down and begin your search today? (text box for answer) notice anything? Well, to start you might notice this survey format was designed for squeeze pages (“what prompted you to begin your search?”).
By answering my email, they’re homeowner data helping “everyone else” who wants to succeed. Helping other people, especially people like ourselves, wins big points for feel good motivation. My new subscribers are responding to that. Three magic questions this next technique builds on the first. Remember the wording of my welcome email, where it says “what’s your biggest question”? Well, there’s a fellow named glenn livingston who’s found a way to never mess up a product launch by asking people that and two other questions.
He’s even figured out a way to quantify it, so you can score responses. This is the jist of those three questions. If you want the exact version, you should seek out dr. Livingston: what’s your most pressing question about x? (text box for answer) how hard has it been to find information about that? Score - , is easiest, hardest what prompted you to sit down and begin your search today? (text box for answer) notice anything? Well, to start you might notice this survey format was designed for squeeze pages (“what prompted you to begin your search?”).