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Is There a Best Day to Launch an Email Marketing Campaign?

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Conventional Wisdom on Email Timing is Evolving

A 2016 email marketing study concluded that Emails sent on Saturdays generate 60% higher-than-average conversion rates.

Wow! Everyone should start mailing on Saturdays, right?

Not necessarily.

email marketing
Think about your target. Are you emailing to businesses or consumers? Are your prospects senior citizens, or are they college students? Are you sending emails to “C” level executives or to small business owners?

Now, put yourself into the position of your target and ask “when would I be most likely to open an email if I were that person?

College students do over 80% of their internet activity on mobile devices and that’s something to keep in mind. They are not likely to read long-winded content and they are probably not receptive to emails on weekends when they’re engaged in social activities.
Mid-level management people will probably open their email at work during business hours. 

Early morning or after lunch might be the best time. “C” level executives may have their emails screened by an assistant and so you might want to slant the content for that possibility and deliver early morning during the work week.

Senior citizens? They have more time than people who work 40+ hours per week and they are looking for interesting content. You may want to avoid small type fonts for obvious reasons, and seniors generally wake up early so early morning might be an effective strategy.

A Brief Case Study

A software service marketed a new product to physicians and sent large quantities of mail on Tuesdays because that was the conventional wisdom at the time. The open rates were abysmal for the first few days but then they suddenly shot up on the weekends, especially Sunday.

Doctors simply do not have the time to open email during the work week when they’re occupied with exams, hospital rounds, or surgery. When the weekend comes and they have a few hours of free time they will often open their email.

Knowing what doctors had opened on Sunday but not converted, the sales team started a follow-up reminder campaign for the following Sunday morning so it email would be on top of their list. Opens, clicks, and conversions to sales all increased and the campaign achieved their goals!

When to Send?

The answer is to run tests. Fortunately GMass makes it easy to track clicks and opens in the Main Campaign Report. Run the report at various intervals and you will know who opened your emails and when. Here are a video and an article on that feature.


It can be a challenge to find the perfect combination, but try experimenting with different content, subject lines, and timing until you reach just the right combination. GMass is an excellent hands-on platform that is perfect for business owners and managers to use as they build and customize a successful marketing strategy!

You can now request your GMass invoices

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If you're a paid subscriber, you can now view the invoices for your account.


1. Launch a regular Gmail Compose Window.

2. Set the To field to invoice@gmass.co.

3. Type anything you like in the Subject Line, so long as it's not blank.

4. Click the GMass main button. Refresh your Inbox and you will immediately see an email message with a list of all of your invoices.

Important: Be sure to hit the red GMass button, and not the regular Gmail Send button. Hitting the regular Send button won't accomplish anything. 

Designing Successful Email Campaigns

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GMass has one of the highest delivery rates in the email marketing industry, but delivery is only one component of a successful email campaign.

Email marketing proves time and again to yield the most reliable results of any marketing channel.
Through the next several blog posts we will offer advice that has helped many of our users
experience campaign successes not seen before through other email marketing practices.

The next several posts will offer tips on how to construct campaigns that have worked very well for our users.

If you’re an experienced email marketer then you’re in the right place, and you’ll find that our delivery rates are much higher than what you’ve experienced in the past. Features like mail-merge, automatic follow up, email scheduling, automatic follow-up and more will allow you to build impressive, high-performing campaigns.

If you’re new to email marketing, you’re in the right place. GMass is easy to install, learn, and use to reach out to customers, colleagues, prospects and friends. You’ll use an existing Gmail account and the Chrome browser to build effective email marketing campaigns.

GMass is easy to install, learn, and use to reach out to customers, colleagues, prospects or even friends.

Why Email Marketing is the Right Choice

If you have a limited marketing budget and you want the best return on your investment (ROI), then the choice is clear. Email marketing produces more revenue per dollar spent than pay-per-click ads, direct mail, and social media advertising, as illustrated in this graphic:

Get Started

To get started, visit www.gmass.co, download the GMass extension, and connect it to your Gmail account. A free account allows you to send up to 50 emails in a 24-hour period, but the affordability and performance of the tool will speak for itself. 

Please follow us on Twitter, where we post each time there is a new blog post.

Creating Quality Email Content and Great Subject Lines

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Make your Email Stand out as Relevant and Valuable

First things first - and this cannot be emphasized enough - subject line is crucial. Subject lines not only introduce the tone and contents of your message, but they will also determine if your recipient even opens your mail.

Which of these subject lines sounds best to you?

1) Avocados on Sale
2) Football Season Means Guacamole and Chips • Coupon for Ripe Avocados

The second option communicates relevance and value up front. If the marketer has planned properly,
this subject line will accompany a recipient list targeted to football fans, and the email will have a
strong likelihood of high open rates.

Another school of thought argues that shorter subject lines yield the most success. Hillary Clinton
once sent out an email blast inviting people to attend a $500-a-plate fundraiser with the subject line “Lunch?”. This type of succinctness is appealing and generates successful open rates. 

For this product, I believe that #2 would have a great open rate.

The best advice for choosing a subject line is to ask yourself, “Would I open this email?” If not, it is time to re-think. It is also prudent to experiment with different subject lines. If you’re sending 5000 emails, you have a great opportunity. First, send two sets of 500 - each with a different subject line. Your open rates will determine the subject line which should accompany the remaining emails.

Content


Think about these four concepts when writing an email: Brevity • Empathy • Value • Action • Pictures

Whether short or long, remember that the subject line should be designed to communicate value catered specifically to the targeted recipients. Using the avocado example, this might be a good message:

Everyone loves fresh guacamole! Delicious, low in saturated fat and cholesterol-free...how could you go wrong? We know you want to please your guests when they stop by to watch the big game, so take advantage of the lowest prices this year on ripe, flavorful avocados. Click this link to get an additional 10% off your next purchase at Bob’s Fruits and Vegetables. And now, since you have those avocados on your hands...click here for this amazing guac recipe! Happy snacking!

This message is brief, relates to the reader, includes 2 value statements, makes calls for action, and has a great picture, but it could always be improved. Now is the time to experiment. Try a version with bullet points and a different picture; let the open rate make the decision for you.

Once again, do some testing. Try a version with bullet points and perhaps a different picture and then see if you click rate improves.

How to get the best support from the GMass team

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GMass is a bigger operation than it was when it launched in September of 2015. Now there are multiple team members, we use Zendesk as our support ticketing system, and we have tons of blog content answering almost every question imaginable.

Whereas before it was customary for users to email the founder (Ajay) directly, now we'd like our users to email our support email address, support@gmass.zendesk.com. Here are some additional steps you can take to ensure yourself the best possible GMass support:

  1. Please send one single email to support@gmass.zendesk.com and not to other email addresses.
  2. Make sure your email to support@gmass.zendesk.com comes FROM the Gmail account for which you are seeking help. If your email comes from a different From Address, be sure to specify the Gmail account with which you're using GMass and want help. If you send us an email "from" an address for which we can't locate a GMass account, and no other email address is mentioned, the support request will be discarded.
  3. Do not email team members directly for new requests. This lowers your response time, since the first step the team member will take is to forward your email to support@gmass.zendesk.com in order to create a ticket.
  4. Include screenshots and videos where applicable to illustrate the issue.
  5. If your question has to do with a specific campaign, include the campaign ID in your request.
  6. We endeavor to answer almost all questions on our blog, so start there.
  7. If you’re trying to cancel a campaign, read this article.
  8. If you're looking to stop other types of GMass emails from sending, read this article.
  9. If you’re looking to cancel a paid subscription, follow these instructions.
  10. If your emails are bouncing because with a "You have exceeded your limit" message, read this first.
  11. We prioritize requests by importance and urgency, and whether or not the answer is already on our blog. 
  12. If you are trying to cancel or request a tracking domain or do anything that requires an @gmass.co address in the To field, and you get a bounce, it’s likely you hit the Send button when you were supposed to hit the GMass button.

Email Marketing for Medical Practices

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A few years ago, I attended a marketing conference designed to help physicians boost their visibility online, where I met several enthusiastic medical professionals. To this day, one interaction with a doctor stays with me. After I explained our goal of luring more customers to their website and to their offices, he retorted indignantly, “They’re not customers, they are patients.” And indeed, he was correct.

Doctors serve patients in the most important commercial transaction there is: human healthcare. Advertising, money, and marketing metrics are not the focus in their industry.

At one time, doctors didn’t advertise at all. From the Journal of Medical Ethics, January, 2006: For generations following the first American Medical Association (AMA) Code of Ethics in 1847, the relationship between doctors and advertising remained unambiguous—advertising was forbidden. In 1975, however, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) accused the profession of “restraint of trade” and legally persuaded doctors to permit advertising amongst their clan.

Today, almost every doctor has a website. Many use their sites to lure more patients, but some are interested only in having a place to post their credentials and contact information. Because websites like Angie’s List, Google, and even Yelp regularly post reviews for doctors, many see the potential benefit of having influence on their online presence and a place to post assurances of their legitimacy and qualifications to prospective patients.

Email Marketing is a valuable tool for physicians when communicating with existing patients. It’s a great way to remind people of health information that’s currently making news, like the spread of a new disease. The sudden and concerning spread of Zika is just one example of an opportunity for physicians to notify patients of precautions and new information.

However, email marketing can be used for simple administrative purposes as well, such as  changes in office personnel. Patients are often interested in this information, especially the addition of a new doctor or nurse. Many doctors utilize email marketing to send regular communications or newsletters to their patients.

Why is GMass a great platform for medical professionals? GMass emails come directly from the sender’s Gmail account, via Gmail servers, resulting in much higher delivery rates than those from the other email marketing companies such as Constant Contact, Mail Chimp, and IContact. The email messages sent from those providers are often perceived by email filters as spam, and they do not reach the recipient’s inbox.

GMass permits our users to inject (no pun intended) the patient’s name directly into the subject line and greeting, making the message more personal and private, something patients will appreciate.

Of course, it is important for any healthcare professional to be aware of certain restraints when it comes to medical marketing, and they should always check to make sure they within boundaries of their state medical society, board, or any hospital guidelines.

GMass has a YouTube channel with videos showing how to install and use our email marketing platform; subscribe or visit gmass.co for more details.

Automatic follow-up email bug fix for large attachments

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GMass users using the email auto follow-up feature may have noticed that their auto follow-ups failed to send sometimes. Below is an explanation of when the issue surfaces and how we fixed it.

The Issue

If the original email campaign, to which the auto follow-ups were assigned, was larger than 1 MB, either by volume of text, or by attachment(s) that were larger than 1 MB when MIME-encoded into email format, then all stages of the auto follow-up emails failed to send. The user would not be notified of the send failure.

The Cause of the Issue

The cause of this has to do with how GMass processes auto follow-up emails when it's time to send them. GMass would create a temporary Draft in the user's account that stored pertinent details of the auto follow-up campaign. Recently, however, we discovered that Gmail Drafts are limited to 1 MB in size when the Draft is created by the Gmail API. Drafts created in the Gmail web interface do not have this limitation. If GMass attempted to create a Draft greater than 1 MegaByte with the Gmail API, an error would be returned that looked like:

Error: Google.Apis.Requests.RequestError
Request payload size exceeds the limit: 1048576 bytes. [400]
Errors [
        Message[Request payload size exceeds the limit: 1048576 bytes.] Location[ - ] Reason[badRequest] Domain[global]
]


The Solution

GMass is no longer using a Gmail Draft as a means of storing email auto follow-up details, and is instead creating a temporary message, which can be seen under "All Mail". This temporary message will only live in a user's Gmail account for a few seconds. It is deleted when an auto follow-up stage is actually sent.

Now, when the auto follow-up is sent, if the original email had attachments, regardless of size, the auto follow-up email will also contain the attachment(s) from the original campaign.

If you were affected by this issue...

Let us know by emailing us at support@gmass.zendesk.com. With your approval, we can manually trigger a past auto follow-up that failed to send because of this issue.

What to do if you get a "Requested entity was not found" error after clicking the GMass button

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Occasionally, after you've composed your mail merge campaign in Gmail and hit the GMass button, instead of sending, you may receive this error in the yellow status bar up top:

Your mass email has NOT been processed by GMass. Error details: Google.Apis.Requests.RequestError Requested entity was not found. [404] Errors [ Message[Requested entity was not found.] Location[ - ] Reason[notFound] Domain[global]

This is a temporary and rare error that sometimes surfaces due to how GMass communicates with your Gmail account. Technically it means that GMass wasn't able to retrieve an identifier to your message that is assigned by Gmail.

In almost all cases, this error will disappear and you can send your campaign by re-loading Gmail in your Chrome browser. When you do so, your Compose window should re-appear with your Message just as you left it. You will not lose any of your work. After you re-load, just hit the GMass button again and your campaign should send as normal.

You can now manually request a detailed campaign report

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As a GMass user sending mail merge campaigns from your Gmail account, you are likely aware that campaign-level reports are sent to the [CAMPAIGNS] Label, which is a sub-Label of the GMass Reports Label. Campaign-level reports are updated every 10 minutes, as new campaign activity is recorded, like opens and clicks, however, if open-tracking is turned off, then a campaign report may never appear.

Therefore in certain situations, you may want to manually request a campaign report. These situations include:
  1. You haven't received a particular campaign report, because you had open-tracking turned off.
  2. You have turned off GMass report notifications, in which case you will never receive a campaign report.
  3. You wish to see the campaign report for an old campaign that was sent before GMass campaign reports existed.
To request a campaign report on demand, follow these instructions:

I've set 552127 as the Subject, since that is the Campaign ID. After hitting the GMass button, my campaign report will be generated.
  1. Launch a new Compose window in Gmail.
  2. Set the To field to report@gmass.co.
  3. Enter the campaign ID of the campaign whose report you would like in the Subject field. If you do not know the campaign ID, you can find it in the email confirmation you received after the campaign finished sending. This email message will contain the campaign ID or a "Schedule ID". Either ID is acceptable.
  4. Click the red GMass button. Do not click the Gmail Send button. You must click the red GMass button.
  5. Go to the [CAMPAIGNS] Label under GMass Reports and you will see your new report.

You can now toggle GMass Report notifications on and off

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When you send a Gmail mail merge campaign with GMass, reports are generated and placed under the GMass Reports label. Everytime an email is opened, an "open" notification goes into the Opens label, every time an email is clicked, a "click" notification goes into the Clicks label. Additionally, campaign reports with detailed campaign analytics are placed in the [CAMPAIGNS] label. In most cases, GMass Report notifications are tucked away in these Labels and won't clog up your Inbox. In rare cases, however, like if you're using an email client like Apple Mail that doesn't respect Gmail's Labels, GMass report notifications may fill up your Inbox and you may wish to turn off GMass report notifications.

In the Gmail inteface, GMass Reports are tucked away under sub-labels of the GMass Reports label. Categories include Opens, Clicks, and the main [CAMPAIGNS] area that stores detailed campaign-level reports.

To turn off GMass report notifications:


You can turn GMass Report notifications off if they clog up your Inbox.

  1. Launch a new Compose window in Gmail.
  2. Set the To field to notification@gmass.co.
  3. Set the Subject to either "off" to turn notifications off or "on" to turn them on.
  4. Click the red GMass button. Do not click the Gmail Send button. You must click the red GMass button.

New Gmail Mail Merge Feature: Use Suppression Lists to filter out recipients of past campaigns

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Now you can set a "suppression list", also known as a "do not send" list when sending a Gmail mail merge campaign. Any email address on the suppression list will be filtered out of the current campaign.

To set a suppression list for a campaign, just select the past campaigns whose recipients you want to eliminate from your current campaign. You can select a single campaign or multiple campaigns from the dropdown. Use the CTRL key on Windows or the Command key on a Mac to select multiple lists from the Suppression select box.

Any email address that was part of the chosen campaign will be suppressed, or eliminated from, this current campaign.



When do Suppression Lists come in handy?

Let's say you're using GMass to invite 100 people to a party. You create a Google Docs spreadsheet with your 100 invitees. You then send a GMass campaign to the people on this spreadsheet.

The next day, you realize you forgot to invite 5 of your friends. Oh no, how can you easily re-send your invite to just those 5 missing friends?!

You could just add the 5 email addresses to your master spreadsheet, and re-send to the same list, but then the first 100 people will get the same email again, and that would look sloppy. If you use yesterday's campaign as your Suppression List, however, then only the 5 new people will receive the email.

Another use might be if you've collected a do-not-send list over time, and want to ensure that a particular campaign doesn't go to anyone on this list. You could add your do-not-send list to your Unsubscribe List, but that would prevent them from getting any future email campaign from you, and you may just want to use your do-not-send list on this one particular email campaign. In that case, you can create a manual suppression list.

To manually create a Suppression List:

You'll create a "fake" campaign that won't actually send but will hold the addresses you wish to suppress. To do so:
  1. Enter the suppression addresses in the To field of a new Compose window. Alternately, if you have a large number of email addresses, consider putting them in a Google Docs spreadsheet and then using GMass to connect to the spreadsheet.
  2. Enter a name for your Suppression List as the Subject.
  3. Set the GMass Action to Just create drafts. This will ensure that no emails are actually sent.
  4. Click the red GMass button.
  5. After the Drafts are created, you can click the link in the email you will receive to DELETE the Drafts.
Now your Suppression List has been created and you can choose this campaign to suppress these addresses.

What's the difference between my Unsubscribe List and a Suppression List?

They are actually quite similar, in that both lists are used to filter out recipients from a campaign.

Your Unsubscribe List, however, is universal to your account, and is used to filter out recipients for all of your campaigns automatically. You can't control when the Unsubscribe List is used to filter out recipients, because it is always used on every campaign sent from your account. Email addresses are added to your Unsubscribe list when they click the unsubscribe link at the bottom of your emails (if you included it), or if you manually import email addresses into your Unsubscribe List.

Suppression Lists must be applied to specific campaigns where you want to eliminate that set of email addresses for just the current campaign. Any past campaign can be used as a Suppression List, which is why all of your past campaigns show up in the Suppression dropdown menu.



How to resend your Gmail mail merge campaign to blocked email addresses

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If you sent a mail merge campaign with GMass and found that you experienced some blocking, you may want to re-send your email to the email addresses that blocked you the first time. You may especially want to do this if you've taken some action to fix the blocking issue, like setting up a dedicated tracking domain.

Using the GMass manual follow-up tool, doing so is just a matter of a few clicks.

1. Click the red @ button near the Gmail Search bar. This is the manual follow-up tool.

2. Choose the campaign from the dropdown that experienced the blocking.

3. Under Behaviors, choose Blocks.

4. Next click the main COMPOSE FOLLOW-UP button.

5. A Gmail Compose window will launch and the To field will be filled with the addresses you want to send to, the addresses that previously blocked your campaign.

6. Next load up the content of your campaign by clicking the GMass Settings arrow and choosing your original campaign from the Load Content dropdown. Your Subject and Message will be set.

7. Lastly, ensure all other GMass Settings are how they should be, such as Tracking of opens and clicks, and make sure the Schedule is set to the desired time of sending.

8. Finally, hit the red GMass button to send. Your campaign will now go to the email addresses that blocked you the first time.

How to resend your mail merge campaign to bounced email addresses because you exceeded your Gmail limit

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If you sent a mail merge campaign with GMass and found that some addresses bounced because you went over your Gmail limit, you may want to re-send your email to the email addresses that bounced the first time, if you've now waited a day or so to let your Gmail limit reset.

Using the GMass manual follow-up tool, doing so is just a matter of a few clicks.

1. Click the red @ button near the Gmail Search bar. This is the manual follow-up tool.

2. Choose the campaign from the dropdown that experienced the blocking.

3. Under Behaviors, choose Over Limit.

4. Next click the main COMPOSE FOLLOW-UP button.

5. A Gmail Compose window will launch and the To field will be filled with the addresses you want to send to, the addresses that previously blocked your campaign.

6. Next load up the content of your campaign by clicking the GMass Settings arrow and choosing your original campaign from the Load Content dropdown. Your Subject and Message will be set.

7. Lastly, ensure all other GMass Settings are how they should be, such as Tracking of opens and clicks, and make sure the Schedule is set to the desired time of sending.

8. Finally, hit the red GMass button to send. Your campaign will now go to the email addresses that blocked you the first time.

Why your Gmail account becomes inaccessible when sending a big mail merge campaign

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If you've ever been locked out of your Gmail account while sending a large mail merge campaign, you're not alone, and don't be alarmed. It's normal Gmail behavior, and you'll be able to use your account just as soon as sending is complete. During a large mail merge with Gmail, you might see this message telling you "the system encountered a problem" if you're already in your account:

You may see this "Oops" message when trying to check your email while a big mail merge campaign is sending.

Or, if you're trying to reload Gmail in the browser, you might see this "Temporary Error" message:

If you reload Gmail during a big mail merge, you might see this screen.


Why does this happen?

Gmail wasn't originally meant for sending mail merge campaigns or email marketing campaigns. GMass has finagled Gmail to make it possible, but Gmail's User Interface isn't able to process all the network activity that takes place during a mass email send. Whenever you send an email in Gmail, your browser makes several requests to the Gmail server in order to update the User Interface on screen in front of you. When sending hundreds or thousands of individual emails, the User Interface can't keep up with this network activity. Therefore, in order to protect itself from even more network activity, it withholds your access until sending of the email campaign is finished.

How to include a personalized link in a Gmail email marketing campaign

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GMass, the ultimate email marketing tool for Gmail, offers lots of mail merge personalization options, from simple mail-merge personalization to fallback values and even automatic first name detection. Sometimes, you may need to get a little more sophisticated and include a personalized link or URL for each recipient of your email marketing campaign.

The best practice for including a personalized URL is to include the full URL, with personalization in place, or an HTML code snippet of the link, as a column in your Google Docs spreadsheet.

Raw URL Example

Below is an example of a spreadsheet where the personalized link is in raw form, with just the URL specified.



After using GMass to connect to your spreadsheet, the Compose window launches, and your message might look like this:



When your email is sent, the recipient, maria@google.com, will get a message that looks like this:


The link appears just as it did in the row for maria@google.com in the spreadsheet. Hovering over the link shows that it points to the same URL as is displayed.


URL with Anchor Text Example

Next is an example of a spreadsheet where the personalized link is part of an HTML anchor tag, such that meaningful text is displayed that, when clicked, will take the user to the personalized URL. The full <a href> anchor tag will be inserted into the HTML message at the point designated by the {PersonalizedURL} mail merge tag.



After using GMass to connect to your spreadsheet, the Compose window launches, and your message might look like this:



When your email is sent, the recipient will get a message that looks like this:


The anchor text is displayed, since it was surrounded by <a href> tags in the spreadsheet cell, but hovering over the link displays the target URL in the bottom status bar of the browser (highlighted in yellow).


Click tracking will not be applied

If you enable click tracking in GMass settings, these particular links will not be modified, regardless of whether you use the raw URL or anchor text approach. That's because GMass applies click tracking to links before it applies mail merge personalization, so by the time the links are personalized, the click tracking process has already finished altering links in the campaign. In addition, theoretically, because these links are unique to each recipient in the first place, it's not necessary for GMass to click-track them since they are trackable on the web server of the domain in the personalized URL

Do not personalize links directly in the Compose window

The reason we advocate placing the full personalized URL as a column in your spreadsheet is because the Gmail Compose window is prone to altering a personalized link and rendering it a broken link. This is due to how Gmail encodes a message behind the scenes.

In this example:

Do NOT personalize URLs as shown above.

The user has attempted to personalize a URL directly inside the Gmail Compose window, by inserting the mail merge personalization variables as part of the URL. In theory this should accomplish the same objective as placing the full personalized link in the spreadsheet cell, but this actually does not work because Gmail encodes the curly brackets into their HTML-encoded form, replacing the left curly bracket with %7B and the right curly bracket with %7D. This encoding would break the GMass personalization process, causing these merge tags to not be replaced with their appropriate values.

Summary

If you need to send personalized URLs as part of a Gmail-based email marketing campaign, include the full personalized URLs, one for each recipient, in your Google Docs spreadsheet rather than including the mail merge personalization variables as part of the link in the Compose window.

How to resend your Gmail mail merge campaign when you get errors

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In the last few days, we've noticed an increase in the number or errors returned to GMass by the Gmail API. The Gmail API is the interface by which GMass connects to your Gmail account and sends email messages through your Gmail account. When the Gmail API spits back an error, it is usually temporary and intermittent and errors received during campaign sending can be overcome by resending your email to just the recipients that resulted in errors in the first place.

These errors are taking place on Google's servers and are not indicative of anything being wrong with GMass.

Usually you will notice errors in the form of a "backend error" from the Gmail API and you will see these in the email confirmation that you get after a campaign finishes sending. You might see:

Google.Apis.Requests.RequestError
Backend Error [500]
Errors [
        Message[Backend Error] Location[ - ] Reason[backendError] Domain[global]
]

listed under the Individual Recipient Send Errors of the email confirmation.

If you see that your mail merge campaign resulted in these errors, you can resend your campaign to just the email addresses that didn't receive it because of this error.

The GMass team is working on a way to automatically re-try sending these emails, but for now, you can follow the instructions below to manually resend your campaign to the errored addresses.

Using the GMass manual follow-up tool, doing so is just a matter of a few clicks.



1. Click the red @ button near the Gmail Search bar. This is the manual follow-up tool.

2. Choose the campaign from the dropdown that experienced the blocking.

3. Under Behaviors, choose Gmail API Errors.

4. Next click the main COMPOSE FOLLOW-UP button.

5. A Gmail Compose window will launch and the To field will be filled with the addresses you want to send to, the addresses that previously blocked your campaign.

6. Next load up the content of your campaign by clicking the GMass Settings arrow and choosing your original campaign from the Load Content dropdown. Your Subject and Message will be set.

7. Lastly, ensure all other GMass Settings are how they should be, such as Tracking of opens and clicks, and make sure the Schedule is set to the desired time of sending.

8. Finally, hit the red GMass button to send. Your campaign will now go to the email addresses that errored out the first time.

How I used GMass to buy a brand new 2016 Lexus under invoice cost

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My wife and I with our brand new 2016 Lexus NX 200t on August 1, 2016. We used GMass to negotiate the price of the car and never set foot in the dealership other than to pick up the vehicle.

As an email marketing and general purpose mail merge tool for Gmail, GMass can be used in an infinite number of ways. A few months ago in August, I used it to not only buy a new 2016 Lexus NX 200t, but to ensure I paid the lowest possible price.

I used James Bragg's system of buying a new car, which recommends you fax blast a letter detailing the exact car you want to every dealership within a 100 mile radius. You then let the dealerships compete against each other to offer you the lowest possible price. I adapted his method to email, and GMass was the perfect solution to coordinate, track, and automatically follow-up with car dealerships.

Setting up the email campaign to the dealers:

1. Using a combination of Edmunds.com and the Lexus.com websites, I spec'd out exactly what I wanted, from options to accessories to acceptable colors.

2. Then, I noted the Invoice Price and the MSRP for inclusion in the email. This way dealerships would know that I did my homework and was a serious buyer.

3. Next, I looked up every dealership within a 100 mile radius of Chicago and called each one and asked the receptionist for the email address of the sales manager. It's important to work with a sales manager as opposed to any old sales associate, because the sales manager has the greatest power to negotiate at-cost or below-cost deals. I placed the sales manager's name, email address, and other contact information in a Google Sheets spreadsheet.

The spreadsheet I made of all Chicago area Lexus dealers and sales managers

4. Next, I used GMass to connect to my spreadsheet and then drafted my email in Gmail. Here's the email:

The mail merge campaign I created to send to the 10 Lexus dealers in Chicago. I'm personalizing each email with the sales manager's name and the dealership name.

Using GMass, I personalized each email with the sales manager's name and the name of the dealership.

5. I included an automatic follow-up to be sent 24 hours later to any salesperson that didn't reply.

Setting an auto email follow-up would trigger a new email 24 hours later to anyone that didn't reply to the original email.

6. Finally, I scheduled my email to go out on the last Tuesday of the month, which in my case was Tuesday, July 26, 2016. Bragg recommends sending your offer on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays close to the end of the month.

7. I hit the GMass button and my campaign was scheduled.

After I sent the email:

1. Within ten minutes of the email being sent, two dealers called with an offer. Lexus of Naperville offered $3,750 off MSRP and Lexus of Highland Park offered $3,033 off MSRP.

2. Because these two dealers called rather than replying to the email, I didn't want them to receive the 24 hour follow-up email. So I manually entered their addresses into the GMass auto follow-up suppression system to ensure they didn't get the 24 hour follow-up.

3. Within the first three hours, five dealerships had replied to my email, either by calling or replying to the email.

4. By the time the auto follow-up went out 24 hours after the original email, only two dealerships hadn't responded, so only two follow-up emails were sent. Both of these dealerships responded within an hour to the follow-up, which is typical. That is the power of automatic follow-up emails...they essentially ensure you get a response. Each manager explained that he didn't work the day before and had just arrived at the office. I suspect neither would have responded if it wasn't for the auto follow-up, because they would have thought that the opportunity was gone since it was 24 hours old, but the auto follow-up email made it seem like the opportunity was still fresh and available. Here's an example of one of the auto follow-up emails:

The auto follow-up email that went out to a dealer 24 hours after the original email, because he hadn't replied yet.

After the initial round of communication, in which all nine dealers responded, I now had 8 offers from 9 dealerships. The 9th dealership did respond to my email but never actually made an offer. Throughout the process, I never set foot in a single dealership. I did it all from home, and apart from having to be on the phone for a few minutes, conducted all of the business by email and in an automated fashion.

Lessons learned from the negotiations:

1. Many dealerships called in response to the email instead of emailing back. I can understand that -- by speaking, they're hoping to lock up the deal right away, and the phone requires two-way communication so it's also validation for the dealer that I'm a legitimate buyer.

2. The car with the exact options I wanted wasn't available at any of the nine dealerships. Why? Because most car manufacturers, including Lexus, package the various options together into two or three different car configurations. Mathematically speaking, if a car offers 10 options, that's 55 different possible configurations of options, and no car manufacturer wants to make 55 different versions of their car. So they make two or three versions, with sets of options they think will be most attractive to buyers. So the car I ended up leasing had more options than the car I detailed out in the email.

2. In one case, the sales manager cornered me: "Tell me where I need to be on price to lock this up." As Bragg will tell you, refuse this question. Stay true to the process of making the dealer offer the lowest price, and you can walk away an honest man. You are communicating to the dealers that you're going to buy from the person that offers the lowest price, and if you spit out a price to lock in a particular dealer, you're not giving every dealer a fair chance to compete for your business. For me, I wanted to a) get the lowest price, and b) conduct my shopping in an ethical manner.

3. What I didn't know prior to speaking with dealerships is that at the time Lexus was offering two incentives on new car leases:
  • Waiving the first month's payment, whatever that may be based on the purchase price, money factor, taxes, and other variables.
  • $500 lease cash applied to the final negotiated price of the car. Meaning, if I negotiated the purchase price of $1,000 off MSRP, the purchase price effectively became $1,500 off MSRP. Every dealer offered this, although some were more transparent about it than others.
4. Leasing a new car in Chicago is always a losing game regardless of how good a negotiator you are, because of Chicago's ridiculous car lease taxes. Despite a recent law that lowered car lease taxes by taxing the monthly payment instead of the full price of the car, you still pay a whopping 17% tax (sales tax and use tax) on the monthly payment of a car lease. My wife's mom is a resident of Wisconsin, however, and she graciously agreed to let us lease the car in her name, saving us a significant $60/month x 36 months = $2,160. That's how much higher Chicago lease taxes are than Milwaukee's.

5. The best offer came from Bredemann Lexus in Glenview, Illinois. The initial offer was:

$1,200 under invoice for any NX 200t that I wanted, and then all other standard fees from Lexus Financial, which amount to:
  • $700 acquisition fee
  • $169 in document fees
  • .00085 money factor, which amounts to a low 2.04% finance rate
  • $500 lease cash-back on the final negotiated price of the car
  • First month's payment covered by dealer
Following Bragg's process, I conducted a second round of negotiations with each dealer to provide them the opportunity to lower their initial price. In this case, Bredemann, who unbeknownst to them, had already offered the best price, agreed to another $120 off the purchase price.

The Lexus lease contract:

The final Lexus lease contract. Note the final negotiated price and the $500 bonus cash. Total monthly payment = $512.79.

Final thoughts:

Using GMass, I negotiated and bought (well, leased) a new 2016 Lexus NX 200t for $41,080, when the sticker price was $44,854. I used scheduling to send the emails early on a Tuesday morning, I used open-tracking to track which dealerships received my offer, and I used auto follow-ups to ping the sales managers that never responded.

Anyone can use GMass to facilitate the same car buying process. The best part -- GMass lets you send up to 50 emails a day for free, so unless you're planning on contacting more than 50 car dealerships (which would be insane), you don't have to pay to conduct this process.

Be someone's car buying hero and share this!




How to uninstall GMass

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Occasionally, a user is unable to handle all the sales generated by using GMass and therefore wants to uninstall GMass.

If you find yourself in this predicament, this is how you do it. It's a two-step process to fully remove GMass from your Chrome browser and from your Gmail account.

Step 1:

Remove GMass from your browser by navigating Chrome to chrome://extensions, finding GMass in the list of extensions, and either unchecking the Enabled box it or deleting it entirely with the trash can icon.

Step 2:

Disconnect GMass from your Gmail account. Go to Apps Connected to your Google Account, and find GMass, select it, and click REMOVE.

New Feature: Recurring automated email campaigns with Gmail and Google Sheets

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We just enhanced GMass so that you can now send emails automatically to new rows added to your Google Sheets spreadsheet.

Be sure to reload Gmail in Chrome to get this GMass update.

This is the second most powerful feature we have ever built (the most powerful feature is auto follow-ups). Now, with automated recurring email campaigns, you can connect a campaign to a particular Google Sheets spreadsheet, and have your email campaign send daily to any new email addresses in the spreadsheet. Additionally, you can set auto follow-ups on a campaign, for a fully automated drip campaign system. Just add your new prospects to your spreadsheet, and the prospects will automatically start receiving your sequence of emails, including any auto follow-ups.

How do you set up an automated recurring email campaign?

Just check this one magical box when setting up your mail merge campaign…the one that says “Repeat daily”.

After connecting to my spreadsheet and composing my email campaign, I set it to repeat daily, so that this same email, and any configured auto follow-ups will send automatically to new email addresses added later to the spreadsheet.

This checkbox will show up anytime you compose a campaign after connecting it to a Google Sheets spreadsheet. It will cause the campaign to send daily, based on the time the campaign is first sent, and it will send to any new email addresses found in the spreadsheet every day. If you set your campaign to have auto follow-ups, then each new email address in the spreadsheet will get the original campaign and the sequential automatic follow-up emails, based on their behavior.

How do you get new email addresses into the spreadsheet?

You can enter them manually, or you can use a number of automated systems available, like Zapier, to tie your Google Sheets spreadsheet to any number of outside databases or CRM systems. 

Just add new rows and those people will get the email campaign and any associated automatic follow-up emails.

Here at my company, we house our data in a SQL Server database, and we use Zapier to push data from SQL Server into a Google Sheets spreadsheet daily. We then have a daily recurring GMass campaign set to email new GMass users every day. The campaign connects to the spreadsheet every day, finds any new rows, and sends the mail merge campaign.

New auto follow-up email option


Now, in addition to setting auto follow-ups based on those who didn’t reply and who didn’t open, you can also set the follow-up to go to everyone who received the original email by choosing All, regardless of their behavior. This is useful for creating for example, a series of welcome emails designed to introduce various features of your product or service to a new subscriber.

The new "All" option will send the follow-up to everyone that was part of the original campaign, regardless of whether they opened or replied.

I’ll be writing a separate article on how to use GMass and this new recurring campaign feature to create a “welcome series” email campaign to new customers. You can use this new option, with a Google Sheets spreadsheet, to fully automate a "welcome series" campaign, if your new customers are added to the spreadsheet automatically every day.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What's the big deal about recurring automated email campaigns?

A: The big deal is that now instead of creating and sending a new campaign every day or every week to your new prospects, you can set your campaign up just once and still have it sent to new prospects, just by adding the new prospects to your spreadsheet. You control who gets your sequence of emails by who you add to your spreadsheet.

Q: I've set my campaign to recur daily, but now I've changed my mind and want to stop it. How do I do that?

A: Just find the campaign in your GMass Scheduled Label, open the Draft, click the GMass Settings arrow and click the red Cancel button.

Q: I've set my campaign to recur daily, but now I want to change the spreadsheet it's connected to. How do I do that?

A: Once you've set up an automated recurring email campaign, you can't alter the spreadsheet or the spreadsheet filter it uses. You will need to cancel the campaign and create a new one that is connected to the new spreadsheet.

Q: How are auto follow-ups related to this new capability?

A: If you create a recurring automated email campaign with auto follow-ups configured, then every day when the email campaigns sends to new rows in the spreadsheet, those new email addresses will also receive a sequence of auto follow-up emails based on whether or not they open, reply, or are just a part of the campaign.

Q: If I set a filter when connecting to my Google Docs spreadsheet, when the campaign recurs, will it only send to new rows that match the original spreadsheet filter?

A: Yes, it will. For example, let's say you have a spreadsheet with a column called "DripCampaign" and you've set each row to "yes" or "no" for this column. When you use GMass to connect to the spreadsheet, you set a spreadsheet filter of "DripCampaign=yes". When you set your campaign, you set it to repeat daily. When the campaign looks for new additions to the spreadsheet every day, it will only look for rows where DripCampaign=yes.

Q: I've sent the campaign at 4:00 PM, but I want it to recur daily at 2:00 PM instead of 4:00 PM. How can I change that?

A: Just find the campaign under the GMass Scheduled Label, click the GMass Settings arrow, and change the scheduled time to the next day at 2:00 PM, and then hit the GMass main button.


Updates made to our Gmail Mail Merge Extension

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It's time to reload Gmail in Chrome because in addition to launching automated recurring email campaigns, we've made several improvements to the look and feel of GMass.

1. The Build Email List magnifying glass button next to the Gmail Search bar will now be hidden unless you've searched for something. Meaning now, there will only be two buttons presents when you first load Gmail instead of three.

2. Canceling a scheduled campaign is now much easier than before. Whereas before you had to find the campaign under the GMass Scheduled Label, and remove the Label from the Draft, now all you have to do is find the campaign in the GMass Scheduled Label, and click the Settings arrow, and then click the Cancel button.

3. We've added a splash of color to the GMass Settings panel, that shows better visual separation of functions. The light green area are all options to modify the Subject/Message of your email.

4. If you open up a scheduled campaign from the GMass Scheduled Label, you will immediately get a status of the campaign in the yellow status bar at the top of Gmail. In some cases, the status disappeared before you could finish reading it. Now, the campaign status will remain longer.

5. The Suppression dropdown menu is now collapsed by default, and you must hit the plus sign (+) to expand it to reveal the dropdown menu. This makes for a cleaner UI.
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