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Posted by: admin  /  Category: Email
setting blackberry email
Paula Brett asked:


I’m sure you, like me, get a fair few emails plopping into your inbox on a daily basis from various marketers? Memberships, promotions etc.

Well, I managed to find a spare 10 minutes today to go through all my emails that I’ve filed away in a folder for `later on’.

It was only whilst I was going through the process of opening them all, that I realised I didn’t treat them all quite the same. Not all emails are equal, unfortunately!

Who they were from and how long I’d been on a list would determine how I read the email, or not, as the case may be. In fact, I can be quite schizophrenic when dealing with emails from lists I’m signed up to.

This lead me to thinking a little bit about how my subscribers read my emails…

I mean each one of my email subscribers will interpret my email message in their own way… what is important to me may not be important that day to one or more of my subscribers.

Of course, we all have bad days or often very limited time to spend opening and reading emails.

When your email arrives at the same time your kids are having a meltdown and crying at the top of their lungs, your dog just threw up in the corner and your wife announces there’s no milk for breakfast, are YOU going to read emails from anyone besides your mother? Not likely… click and delete!

I’ve been quizzing a few of my internet marketing colleagues and combined with my own email reading habits, I’ve come up with a list of 7 types of email readers, which may give you some great ideas when emailing your own subscribers.

The Scanner - This person will actually open the email, and `read it’, if you call scanning from point to point or running their eyes quickly down your email, looking for something dramatic to stop their scanning eye, actual `reading’.

Bulleted main points, framed as insightful questions that grab their curiousity, might slow down the scanning some. This particular `reader’ wants a general idea of your content and wants it quickly.

When you are finished with your email, read your bulleted points to see if they tell the story of your message by themselves. If not, revise them so they do.

The Multi-Tasker - This reader will never focus on the one task right before them, like your email. Their Blackberry, or other mobile toy, is practically superglued to their hand and your email message will be sandwiched between several tasks that demand their attention all at the same time.

Curiosity is your main weapon here once again. Fiddle with your email’s subject line until it asks a riveting question. Don’t be afraid to be a little off-the-wall.

You want to stop the multi-tasking and get your reader to put aside their grocery list and endless `To Do’ reminders and focus and on your message. Not an easy task.

Once you get a subject line that makes the Multi-Tasker stop and think, `What?’ and move on to your actual message, add bullets that maintain the curiousity you stimulated with your subject line.

If you run out of ideas, find another multi-tasker, like a two-year-old child, and ask simple questions about your subject to see which ones grab their attention. Use resources where you find them!

The Bookworm - This individual will read your message and take the time to consider what you have to say, even to the point of researching the validity of your key points.

Do not fluff out your message with meaningless statements. Google is this reader’s best friend.

Adding a link or two at the bottom of your email leading to valid, additional source materials for your key points will be perceived as `added value’ to this curious and insightful reader.

The Detective - This reader examines all aspects of your subject line, looking for clues that uncover the topic of your message and examines their opinion of you, the sender.

If, after all that, they are interested in what they think you are going to say, they will open your email. If not… click and delete!

The way to grab The Detective’s attention is to create subject lines that inspire curiousity but do not give your entire message away before your email gets opened.

The Graphics Lover - HTML graphics and text that take advantage of the display qualities of this format will appeal to many audiences and readers used to reading sales pages with their flaming fonts, bright arrows and other attention-grabbing techniques.

Other readers, though, might not be thrilled to wade through all your `enhancements’ to get to the message and will just click and delete before reading what you have to say. Some using mobile readers might not even get your email, if HTML scripts are blocked or are not a format their device will accept. Be careful of this technique.

The Examiner - This person will remind you of the tax man and their habit of saving anything that interests them for use against you later.

The Examiner will not only save everything to their hard drive or in email folders so they can read it later, but they will also analyze every statement you make for blatant hype.

Do not deliver your message with the hype that reminds The Examiner of those frenetic used car salesmen that populate late-night TV, or the Internet Marketers that promise $10,000 incomes for 10 minutes work a week… click and delete!

The Computer Chair Commando - This could be your perfect subscriber… the one you want to open your emails and read them. This reader will take the time to research your content or offer by following your links and analyzing the validity of your statements.

If they agree with your premise or can find something useful or interesting in your product or service, they will respond to your call to action… which is clicking the `Buy Now’ button.

If you can empathise with your subscribers and their email habits, you will be better able to create messages that appeal to their mind-set when they open their emails.

If you’re not sure about the composition of your list, try asking them what they like or want in the email notices you send out. Use those answers to format your future email campaigns and watch your conversion rates increase.

What type of reader are you? Go on, I dare you to fess up!!



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Blackberry Bold Review - the First in Many Categories

Posted by: admin  /  Category: Cell Phones
blackberry bold
Caroline Telford asked:


RIM recently announced the unveiling of a new Smartphone they have dubbed the Blackberry Bold. The Blackberry Bold includes many new features that RIM has never included on any of the current or previous Blackberry phones. The major “first” is that the Blackberry Bold is the first model to include 3G HDSPA technology. The resolution on the screen is also higher than on previous Blackberry models and with the addition of support while the user works with Microsoft office files, working with the Blackberry Bold will make it substantially easier than it was with any of the earlier Blackberry models.

The screen size on the Blackberry Bold measures around 480 x 320, which makes it large enough for a user to comfortably view mobile video and long emails. This larger display area means the Blackberry Bold has to be larger than previous Blackberry phones, but in spite of the size increase, it is still lightweight with a keyboard that is easy to operate. Another first for this model is the inclusion of Blackberry 4.6, the newest version of the Blackberry operating system. It has a 624 MHz processor and in addition to being the first Blackberry with 3G HSDPA high speed networking, it also has GPS and Wi-Fi.

Prior to the introduction of the Blackberry Bold, working with Microsoft Office files was rather obsolete, but new technology by RIM includes the DataViz Documents to Go. It is a more stable program that is considered a premium program among Mobile Office suite software. Documents to Go allows you to view documents and presentations almost the same as you would be able to view them on a desktop PC.  This is a definite advantage for those who do a great deal of traveling and rely on their Blackberry for communications with their office and clients. Remember, however, that you may only be able to view Microsoft documents but not edit them.

Since the Blackberry Bold is not yet available in all global markets, you may need to search a little bit to find a Blackberry Bold review that will allow you enough information to make a decision about upgrading to this Blackberry model. The features are designed with both the business and personal traveler in mind, so you don’t have to worry about any loss of features with the Blackberry Bold.

As the Blackberry Bold becomes more globally available, you will see a variety of mobile phone deals that will help ease the burden of purchasing the Blackberry Bold. It is certainly the wave of the future in Smartphones and the newest one from RIM. This first 3G phone from RIM provides many features that one would expect from a Blackberry that have not been previously available, and the fact that it includes so many first time features shows that RIM is looking toward a new generation of Smartphones. Read a Blackberry Bold review and you will understand why this model is destined to become more popular than any other model RIM has released.



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Smartphones: Cell Phones With Higher Education

Posted by: admin  /  Category: Computers
smartphone
Melissa Mashtonio asked:


Way back in the 1980s the cell phone was revolutionizing business and communication with its amazing ability to make calls no matter where you were. Since then, the world has changed a little bit and cell phones are looking a little bit different as well. Ok, so maybe they’re more than just a little bit different-they’re almost a completely different device! Now not only can you talk anywhere, but you can text and send a picture as well. However, cell phone innovation doesn’t stop there but recently has gone even further to become so much more than a cell phone.

Introducing, the smartphone. It’s a cell phone but with computer like capabilities. Talking and texting are a thing of the past for the smartphone which is busy listening to music and watching videos. The smartphone allows you to access the internet, send e-mails, works as a personal organizer, and drives your car. So maybe that last one is a bit of a stretch, but if the smartphone got together with your navigation system, who knows what could happen.

The first smartphone was created in 1992 by IBM and was dubbed “the Simon”. Since then, there have been dozens of other smartphones following in Simon’s footsteps. Generally the smartphone is thought to be a cell phone with advanced capabilities, often times working like a PC. However, it seems not everyone can agree on exactly what defines a smartphone and the definitions have changed over time. Some see a smartphone as simply a cell phone with some extra cool stuff added, but others say smartphones are only those phones with the capability to add applications.

Regardless of the definition, many smartphones have certain things in common. Most have e-mail capabilities, cameras, built in keyboards and/or a touch screen. These phones work as personal organizers and hold hundreds of contacts at a time. Most smartphones play music and videos and can read documents created in Microsoft Office as well as PDF files. But the most important feature in a smartphone is its unique ability to sync with your computer and its own programmable operating system.

Although there are now dozens of smartphones out there, here are examples of a few. These phones have all the same features as normal cell phones (such as voice dialing and cameras), but kick it up a notch with some added features.

1.) AT&T Tilt: offers a QWERTY keyboard (standard PC keyboard), tilting touch screen allowing for better visibility, wireless options, 3-megapixel camera, and AT&TMusic and Video

2.) Nokia N95: Adds high-speed 3G support, long battery life, 5-megapixel camera, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth options

3.) RIM BlackBerry Gold: Uses T-Mobile’s HotSpot@Home services to find Wi-Fi virtually anywhere, QWERTY keyboard and 2-megapixel camera

4.) Motorola Q9m: QWERTY keyboard, runs Windows Mobile 6, Bluetooth capabilities, works with Verizon’s V Cast Music Store

5.) Apple iPhone 3G: Has a touch screen, supports 3G networks, can add third-party applications, expanded e-mail, excellent for music and video

These are only some of the phone offering the smartphone capabilities, and some are becoming outdated quickly. Smartphones are improving at a rate so fast that it seems soon they will lose their smarts and just be a cell phone once again. Already most normal cell phones have cameras, originally a smartphone feature, so it may seem some smartphone are now simply “averagephones”.

The big question now is who will be the new genius on the cell phone block? What will be the new features? It all makes you wonder what the next step will be with the mixing of computers and cell phones as the lines blur with smartphones’ computer-like capabilities and programs such as Skype offering phone calls on your PC. I’ll leave you to ponder that on your own as I have to go for now -my phone just received an e-mail and my computer is ringing.



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