By Bill McCloskey on Wednesday, 09 December 2015
Category: Email Design

Subject Lines: Originality is the Key to Sustainable Success.

To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often.
Winston Churchill

Subject lines… the easiest thing to write, the hardest thing to get right. There is just no single best practice, rule or tactic that works every time.

Symbols might produce killer open rates one week but that doesn’t mean every subsequent send should be jam-packed with JJJ and «««. You have to keep your subscribers on their toes.

The key is originality in moderation. But how much originality and how much moderation?

Email marketers are not very original

Team Alchemy Worx analyzed data contained within Subject Line testing tool tool Touchstone. We categorized each subject line as unoriginal and original - original being a subject line that contained at least one word the sender had never used before.

You might think that with such a conservative definition for
originality most marketing emails would be classified as ‘original’.
But as the pie chart shows, less than a third were classified as original.

Original subject lines boost click rates
So what effect does originality (or unoriginality) have on open and click rates? The results are below:

While we only see a modest increase in open rates when using original words, we see a significant lift – 34% – in the unique click rate.  So what’s happening?

Using new and original subject lines triggers an entirely different subset of subscribers to open your emails – “Oh, this doesn’t look like the weekly newsletter I usually ignore”. And since first-time openers and long term inactives are more likely to click than regular openers, the click rate goes up.

This also explains why the open rate does not increase as much as the click rate. Fewer regulars opened the email, but more irregulars did.  And since irregular subscribers are more likely to convert following an open, the click rate is improved. 

Originality is about more than vocabulary

But it’s not just the words themselves that contribute to originality and variety. The way the message is presented is just as important. These are called tactics. Look at these two subject lines about a re-brand:

They are different because they use different tactics. The first is long, specific, multi proposition with a discount and brands.  The second is short and intriguing.

It’s a common goal of A/B split testing to identify the tactic that works best. We have found this often only tells you which tactic worked best for that campaign and that attempts to repeat it offer diminishing gains.

Here are the last two years’ of Alchemy Worx emails broken down by 15 common tactics. With one or two exceptions there aren’t significant differences between the tactics. That’s because there is no single tactic that works all the time. It’s the change in approach that yields results and naturally these even out over time. And when you do find big differences, think of them as opportunities – so we should probably use symbols a little more and not worry about personalisation!

Use tactics to write more varied subject lines

So, even though there is no golden tactic that works every time, the tactics themselves provide a structured framework for writing varied and original subject lines. Take the 4 subject lines below for the same re-brand e-shot and 10% discount:

The only changes here are to the vocabulary. Here are 15 different ways to write this same message using some of the most common subject line tactics (the color and formatting highlight the part of the subject line using the tactic):

For each tactic there will be many different ways to convey the message and still remain within the style of the tactic. You can play with the word order, change the tense or use a thesaurus to find different ways to say the same thing.

You can also combine tactics. Here small tweaks and additions to multi-tactic subject lines make subtle but noticeable differences:

Again, it’s important to remember that the tactics are being used as a framework to write varied and interesting subject lines, not to find which tactic works best for you. All of these tactics will work for you at some point, just as all of them will fail at some point.

Once you are comfortable with the tactics, then writing 10, 20 even 30 varied subject lines on the same topic should become 2nd nature. And it’s that variety that is the key to a subject line strategy that embraces constant, strategic change.

Finally once you settle on a particular tactic for the next mailing make sure to A/B test your options using Touchstone – virtual testing that gives real results.

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