Is Your Car Dealership Using Email Marketing as a Technology or as an Art Form?

Sean Cassy
4 min readApr 19, 2018

If I say “Email Marketing” are you thinking about technology, or are you thinking more of it as an art form for communications? Should I dare say, like a musical instrument…

Now don’t worry; this is not another boring blog about email open rates, click-through, personalisation, segmentation, and the oh-so-scary compliance. There are already plenty of great content on the subject, including some quality pieces we have curated through our social media channels.

No, this blog is more my effort to help you “stand on your desk” so you can look at email marketing from a different perspective, and with a fresh set of eyes.

Why Should You Look At Email Marketing From A Different Angle?

If you’re an automotive marketing professional, you would be crazy to dismiss email as a communication tool for your dealership. It is still, in 2018, in the top 3 most effective channel to drive visits to your dealership website, and the most effective digital technique to generate sales; so keeping informed about the latest trends in the industry is paramount.

But while having a good understanding of email techniques and best practices is critical, failing to understand that email marketing is an art form that requires practice and finesse will be detrimental to any email strategy and will prevent you from achieving your communications goals.

For this reason, I would like you to imagine, for an instant, email marketing as a piano or a guitar. You probably know many people who own one of these instruments, but I’m sure that not all of them are great pianist or guitarist. I cringe at the idea of visiting a few of my relatives who always seem to find a way to force me to listen to them play, while I try to hide the grimaces on my face every time they hit a wrong note. You probably have a few acquaintances of your own that like to trap you in the same way, right?

So we both agree: owning a musical instrument doesn’t necessarily make you a great musician, able to move people and evoke strong emotions while playing. Same goes for email marketing; it’s not because you own an email marketing software or solution that it makes you a great email marketer!

Stop Thinking About Email Marketing as an “Email Blast”

When we start working with a new dealer, their marketing team usually sees email marketing as a powerful technology to push specials and promotions. The first symptom that points to the faulty mindset is when we hear a dealer talk about doing an email “blast”. The expression encapsulates much of the behaviors and “false notes” that will follow.

Most of the time, these dealers will start their email marketing campaign strategy with an offer they want to communicate. The offer is their starting point. They then craft a message around the offer, embellish the offer with some cool graphics, and finally write a subject line and email copy that will reinforce the offer.

There are no surprises for the prospect throughout the campaign. From the subject line, the email, the graphics and the landing page, everything says the same thing. In many cases, the prospect can literally figure out the whole campaign from the initial subject line.

In addition, the verbiage is usually very corporate, and other than a few personalized merge-fields here and there, the tone of the message speaks to their entire database as a whole; like if all their customers were sitting in an auditorium while the message was read out loud.

It might go something like this: “Hi first name, our dealership would like to invite you to take advantage of this incredible service offer we have on this widget for you this month at an unbeatable price of…” and come with a fancy creative that immediately tells the recipient that every other customer from the dealership received a similar offer because, let’s face it, who in their right mind would take the time to create some graphics when sending an email to a friend or a colleague?

Don’t take me wrong, the emails look great! But they convey a corporate message shared from a corporate soapbox. No wonder the results are often minimal after execution.

Try This Instead: Start With The End in Mind

Next time your car dealership needs to send an email, try instead to be clear about the action you want your prospect or customer to take. Then reverse engineer the process to build your email strategy. In other words, don’t think about the offer; think about your goal for the prospect.

Continue reading this article here.

Sean Cassy is the Digital Marketing Specialist and Co-Owner of Turbo Marketing Solutions. You can reach him by phone or email every weekday at Turbo Marketing’s head office: https://www.TurboMarketingSolutions.com

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Sean Cassy

Automotive marketing is my passion. I am on a lifelong journey to learn everything I can about influence and technology. Let’s learn, and grow, together.