Simple Way to Add Content Sharing Into Your Emails

Jul 21 2010

Many of you might not have tried content sharing in your emails yet. Sure you added a Follow Us, Friend Us, Fan Us, Sweat Us (I made that last one up) link in your header or footer but is that really making an impact and driving lift to your campaigns. You might be surprised at the results and some simple tests and implementations will allow you to show results to those you need to prove the integration of the channel to with data.

Many people are promoting social sharing today in their systems, but before you go down the path for a feature you should give it a try. With developing some ideas on how to place it, where to place it, and what your goals are of using it you can get started fairly quick. Don’t over think it. It is a test. But do have some clear goals or hypothesis in mind to be watching. It is really easy to test and learn how it works for you.

I would suggest starting at the KEY point in the email. Is is a sale, deal, new article, study, event, webinar… what is it. Start by testing the main focus of the email. Give it some time to see how it works. If you are using social sharing through other means like placing links into these ecosystems manually, make sure that you are using different links in order to track them as separate efforts.

Here are the simple codes to use:

Facebook Share Button Code

Here is the Facebook share code, which can also be found at http://www.facebook.com/share_partners.php/.

<script type="text/javascript">
     function fbs_click() {
	u=location.href;
	t=document.title;
	window.open('http://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u='+encodeURIComponent(u)+'&t='+encodeURIComponent(t),'sharer','toolbar=0,status=0,width=626,height=436');
	return false;
     }
</script>
<a href="http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=LINK_GOES_HERE" onclick="return fbs_click()" target="_blank">
    <img src="ADD_IMAGE_URL_HERE" alt="Share on Facebook" />
</a>

Twitter Share Button Code

Here is the Twitter share code:

<a href="http://twitter.com/home?status=Currently reading: LINK_GOES_HERE" title="Click to share this post on Twitter">
    <img src="ADD_IMAGE_URL_HERE" alt="Share on Twitter" />
</a>

LinkedIn Share Button Code

Here is the LinkedIn share code, which can also be found at http://developer.linkedin.com/docs/DOC-1075.

<a href="http://www.linkedin.com/shareArticle?mini=true&url={articleUrl}&title={articleTitle}&summary={articleSummary}&source={articleSource}" target="_blank">
    <img src="ADD_IMAGE_URL_HERE" />
</a>

Now your challenge is to test some of your content specific (deals, articles, events) in each newsletter or email campaigns. Don’t try to overshare and give everything in the email the ability – but selective choose 1-3 areas depending on the campaign and test them. These can be used in your emails as well as used on landing pages associated with the campaigns as well.

Start simple, refine and expand.

One other thing I would suggest is to use a URL shortening service like Bit.ly or Ar.gy to track how they are used and spread across the web. Use a different one for each of the above links and medias (LI/FB/TW).

Now go get em.


Published in Behavioral Marketing, Best Of Email, Best Practices, E-Mail Marketing, New Marketing Ideas, eMail Marketing Optimization

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9 Responses

  1. 1
    Tweets that mention The Email Wars | Simple Way to Add Content Sharing Into Your Emails -- Topsy.com says:

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by eROI, iMai Marketing, Rooftopping, Emailing Tips, Bottle on Beach and others. Bottle on Beach said: Simple Way to Add Content Sharing Into Your Emails: Many of you might not have tried content sharing in your email… http://bit.ly/bSTFuE [...]


  2. 2
    Adam Blitzer says:

    Thanks for the tips Dylan. Another good way I have found is to use AddThis (http://addthis.com/). It’s fairly flexible and allows you to choose from a lot of different social media services. ShareThis would also work well.


  3. 3
    Dylan Boyd says:

    Thx Adam. Not the biggest fan on the share this or add this as it gives too many choices and does not allow you to focus on your core marketing strategy. It gives a shotgun effect to the channels in many cases. And unless you think Bebo and FriendFeed are going big OR you are in the MySpace and Google Buzz target audience I would stick with the cores for now.


  4. 4
    Jay Chambers says:

    @adam – i’m a fan of add this for email. I wrote a post a couple of days ago on the subject:

    http://www.jaymail.net/2010/07/add-social-share-email-newsletter/

    But Dylan, i can see your point too – b2b i mainly focus on linked-in, facebook and perhaps twitter.


  5. 5
    Adam Blitzer says:

    Thanks for the comments guys. AddThis is really customizable so you could limit it to just the ones you want (e.g. Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc.). We have actually just added a plugin for it to automatically insert code into our email WYSIWYG.


  6. 6
    Paul Prewitt says:

    To follow best practices and avoid the SPAM/JUNK folders I’d suggest using the simple URL for the Facebook option.

    http://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=&t=

    Although the makes it fancier I really doubt there is that much added value to it when compared to the trade off.

    What do you think?


  7. 7
    Bryan Quilty says:

    I use MailChimp occasionally, and their “Like” button implementation is very cool. Definitely the next step beyond just “sharing” an email through Facebook.


  8. 8
    How to add content sharing in your e-mail » Marketing Email says:

    [...] Click here to find the full article on the blog The Email wars (07/21/2010) [...]


  9. 9

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