Are you thinking about buying an email list to increase your insurance
sales? Before you make that purchase there are some things you should
consider Before you throw money away that could be invested more wisely
for a better return. Plus you want to make sure you aren't getting
yourself into legal hot water and potentially huge fines.
It sounds like such a great idea. You could buy a list of 1,000,000
names and then send your sales message to those people. Just think if
even 1% of those one million people bought from you, why you'd get
10,000 new clients. Hold the send button email breath it doesn't exactly
work that way.
Exactly how did the company selling you those email addresses get those
names? Typically those companies have a website where visitors have to
agree to get messages either knowingly or unwittingly from a whole host
of other companies in order to get something they want. As an example,
during the political campaign season there were banners ads all over the
internet you could click on claiming you would get a free t-shirt for
your favorite candidate for free.
Once you clicked on the banner ad you went to a website where you had to
jump through a bunch of hoops agreeing to get other free gifts from
other companies in order to finally get your free t-shirt. So if you did
everything you needed to do to get your free t-shirt does that mean you
wanted email from those other companies? Not likely.
The legality of this process is tricky and one I'd never personally want
to risk. I certainly would never want to jeopardize my personal
integrity with the people I hope to work with in this way. The people
who got on this list didn't really agree to opt-in to your email list.
They may have opted in so they could get a free gift, but that isn't the
same as opting in to your opt-in email campaign.
That's exactly what could create a legal or technical nightmare for you.
When you send out your email thinking these folks are happy to get your
message you might just get a nasty surprise. When some of the big
internet service providers get a sudden burst of emails from an unknown
sender, you, going to their clients they'll flag you as a spammer and
block all your messages so no one on their service gets them. Your own
internet service provider may also flag you as a spammer when they
notice that all of a sudden you're sending a huge number of outgoing
messages and they could block you from sending any
purchase email list messages to
anyone through their services. Both of these nasty surprises are a
headache and can take a great deal of time and sweat equity to correct. A
third nasty surprise is far worse.
Either one of the internet service providers or even an individual email
recipient could report you as a CAN-SPAM legislation violator. Guess
who bears the burden of proof on that deal. Yep, you guessed it...you.
Even if none of those bad things happened a purchased email list is
still a bad investment because they'll opt-out of your email campaign in
huge numbers. Even the ones who don't opt-out are about as likely to do
business with you as you are to win the lottery. So getting a return on
your investment will be challenging to put it in the best way I can.
There's simply no logical reason to buy an email list when you could
easily build your own list of highly responsive people who will buy from
you. All you need is a one page website, a way to capture information
from your visitors, and an offer to give them something they'll want.
Then once you send them the information they asked for they really have
opted in to "your" list and you can legally prove it if you ever needed
to. Plus you have the opportunity to develop a relationship with this
stranger and convert them to a buyer.