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		<title>email marketing in 2025: best practices that work.</title>
		<link>https://futureproofcornwall.co.uk/email-marketing-in-2025-best-practices-that-work/</link>
					<comments>https://futureproofcornwall.co.uk/email-marketing-in-2025-best-practices-that-work/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[A Strike]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Jun 2025 11:25:24 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Brand Strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Content Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[E-commerce Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Email Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Generation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marketing Advice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[email marketing]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://futureproofcornwall.co.uk/?p=3877</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Email marketing is supposedly dead—has been for years, according to experts announcing the next big thing. Meanwhile, it quietly continues generating more revenue per pound spent than any other marketing channel.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><em>your inbox isn&#8217;t a dumping ground (and neither is theirs)</em></strong></p><p>By the team at FutureProof Cornwall</p><p>Email marketing is supposedly dead. Has been for years, according to the experts who keep announcing the next big thing that will replace it. Meanwhile, email quietly continues generating more revenue per pound spent than any other marketing channel.</p><p>But here&#8217;s the catch: email marketing in 2025 looks nothing like the spam-heavy, batch-and-blast approach that gave it a bad reputation. The businesses still using outdated tactics are the ones declaring email marketing dead – usually right before their emails end up in spam folders.</p><p>The businesses that understand how email marketing actually works in 2025 are building stronger customer relationships and generating more revenue than ever before.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>permission isn&#8217;t optional anymore.</strong></h2><p>The days of buying email lists and sending messages to people who never asked for them are over. Not just because it&#8217;s annoying (though it is), but because it literally doesn&#8217;t work anymore.</p><p>Email providers have become ruthless about protecting their users from unwanted messages. Send emails to people who didn&#8217;t explicitly opt in, and your messages won&#8217;t reach anyone – including the people who actually want them.</p><p>Modern email marketing starts with earning permission from people who are genuinely interested in what you offer. This means offering something valuable in exchange for their email address, not just asking them to &#8220;sign up for updates.&#8221;</p><p>People need a compelling reason to give you access to their inbox. Think about what information, discount, or resource would be valuable enough that someone would willingly trade their email address for it.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>mobile-first email design isn&#8217;t a trend anymore.</strong></h2><p>More than 70% of emails are opened on mobile devices. If your emails don&#8217;t display properly on phones, most of your audience won&#8217;t read them. This isn&#8217;t about making emails smaller – it&#8217;s about designing them specifically for mobile viewing.</p><p>Single-column layouts work better than complex multi-column designs. Large, tappable buttons work better than small links. Short paragraphs work better than long blocks of text. Images need to load quickly and display properly even on slower connections.</p><p>But mobile-first design goes beyond layout. Your subject lines need to work on small screens where only the first few words are visible. Your email content needs to get to the point quickly because people scan emails differently on phones.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>personalisation means more than &#8220;Dear [First Name]&#8221;.</strong></h2><p>Real email personalisation uses what you know about each subscriber to send them more relevant content. This doesn&#8217;t mean complex technology – it means basic segmentation based on how people interact with your business.</p><p>Send different emails to new subscribers versus long-term customers. Send different content to people who&#8217;ve purchased recently versus those who haven&#8217;t bought anything yet. Send location-specific information to local customers versus visitors.</p><p>The goal isn&#8217;t to seem clever with technology. It&#8217;s to send each person content that&#8217;s actually useful to them based on their relationship with your business.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>automation that feels human.</strong></h2><p>Email automation lets you send the right message at the right time without manually sending each email. But automated emails often feel robotic because businesses focus on the technology instead of the human experience.</p><p>Welcome email sequences should feel like a real person introducing new customers to your business. Abandoned cart emails should feel like helpful reminders, not desperate sales pitches. Follow-up emails should provide value, not just ask for more business.</p><p>The best automated emails feel so natural that recipients don&#8217;t realise they&#8217;re automated. They seem like timely, relevant messages from a business that pays attention to customer needs.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>subject lines that get opened in crowded inboxes.</strong></h2><p>Your email content doesn&#8217;t matter if nobody opens the email. Subject lines need to earn attention in inboxes filled with hundreds of other messages competing for the same attention.</p><p>Generic subject lines like &#8220;Monthly Newsletter&#8221; or &#8220;Special Offer&#8221; get ignored. Subject lines that create curiosity, promise specific value, or reference something timely get opened.</p><p>But avoid clickbait tactics that promise more than your email delivers. People remember when subject lines mislead them, and they&#8217;ll ignore future emails from businesses that over-promise.</p><p>Keep subject lines short enough to display fully on mobile devices. Test different approaches to see what resonates with your specific audience. What works for one business might not work for another.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>content that people actually want to read.</strong></h2><p>Nobody subscribes to email lists hoping to receive more sales pitches. They want information that helps them solve problems, saves them time, or entertains them.</p><p>The most successful email marketing provides value in every message. This might be helpful tips, local news, exclusive insights, or early access to useful information.</p><p>Sales messages work when they&#8217;re part of a pattern of providing value. If most of your emails help people, they&#8217;ll pay attention when you occasionally ask them to buy something.</p><p>But value means different things to different audiences. New parents want different information than retirees. Local customers want different content than tourists. Tailor your content to what each segment of your audience actually cares about.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>frequency that builds relationships instead of resentment.</strong></h2><p>There&#8217;s no magic number for email frequency. Some businesses succeed with daily emails, others with monthly messages. The key is consistency and value.</p><p>Send emails often enough that people remember who you are, but not so often that they get annoyed. If you can provide genuine value every day, daily emails work. If you struggle to create valuable content weekly, monthly emails might be better.</p><p>Pay attention to unsubscribe rates and engagement metrics. If people are leaving your list or ignoring your emails, you&#8217;re probably sending too many messages or not providing enough value.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>interactive elements that encourage engagement.</strong></h2><p>Modern email platforms support interactive elements that make emails more engaging than static text and images. Polls, surveys, countdown timers, and interactive buttons can increase engagement and provide valuable feedback.</p><p>But interactive elements should serve a purpose beyond novelty. Use polls to gather customer feedback. Use countdown timers for genuine time-sensitive offers. Use interactive buttons to make it easier for people to take desired actions.</p><p>The goal is to make your emails more useful and engaging, not just more complex.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>list hygiene that protects your reputation.</strong></h2><p>Regularly cleaning your email list improves deliverability and engagement rates. Remove subscribers who never open emails, addresses that bounce repeatedly, and people who haven&#8217;t engaged in months.</p><p>This seems counterintuitive – smaller lists feel like failure. But sending emails to disengaged subscribers hurts your reputation with email providers and reduces the chances that your emails reach people who actually want them.</p><p>It&#8217;s better to have 500 engaged subscribers than 2000 people who ignore your emails. Engaged subscribers generate more revenue and help ensure your emails reach other subscribers&#8217; inboxes.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>privacy compliance that builds trust.</strong></h2><p>Email privacy regulations aren&#8217;t just legal requirements – they&#8217;re opportunities to build trust with subscribers. Clear opt-in processes, easy unsubscribe options, and transparent data handling show respect for subscriber preferences.</p><p>Make it easy for people to manage their email preferences without having to unsubscribe completely. Some people want weekly updates but not promotional emails. Others want product announcements but not newsletters.</p><p>Giving people control over what they receive reduces unsubscribe rates and improves engagement from people who stay on your list.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>measuring what matters for business success.</strong></h2><p>Email marketing generates lots of data, but not all metrics matter equally for business success. Open rates and click-through rates are interesting, but revenue generated and customer lifetime value are more important.</p><p>Track which emails generate the most website traffic, lead to purchases, or encourage repeat business. This information helps you create more effective emails and demonstrates the real value of email marketing to your business.</p><p>Also track deliverability metrics to ensure your emails reach subscribers&#8217; inboxes. The best email content in the world is useless if it&#8217;s stuck in spam folders.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>integration with other marketing efforts.</strong></h2><p>Email marketing works best when it&#8217;s connected to your other marketing activities. Use email to follow up with social media followers, nurture leads generated by advertising, and stay connected with website visitors.</p><p>Cross-promote your email list on social media and your website. Use email to drive traffic to new blog posts or special offers. Create a cohesive experience across all customer touchpoints.</p><p>This integration amplifies the effectiveness of all your marketing efforts and provides multiple opportunities to engage with potential customers.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>the cornwall advantage in email marketing.</strong></h2><p>Cornwall businesses have built-in advantages for email marketing. Strong community connections, local knowledge, and authentic stories resonate with both residents and visitors.</p><p>Local businesses can share insider information about events, seasonal changes, and community news that national companies can&#8217;t provide. This local expertise becomes valuable content that people actually want to receive.</p><p>Visitors to Cornwall often want to stay connected with businesses they enjoyed during their visit. Email marketing helps maintain these relationships and encourages repeat visits.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>common mistakes that kill email effectiveness.</strong></h2><p>The biggest mistake is treating email like a broadcasting channel instead of a relationship-building tool. Sending the same message to everyone on your list ignores the different needs and interests of your subscribers.</p><p>Another common error is focusing on short-term sales instead of long-term relationships. Constantly asking people to buy something without providing value leads to high unsubscribe rates and poor engagement.</p><p>Many businesses also underestimate the importance of technical details like deliverability, mobile optimisation, and list management. These behind-the-scenes factors often determine whether email marketing succeeds or fails.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>the technical reality.</strong></h2><p>Effective email marketing requires understanding deliverability best practices, mobile design principles, automation workflows, and performance analytics. Most business owners don&#8217;t have time to master these technical aspects while running their business.</p><p>Email platforms offer powerful features, but using them effectively requires knowledge and experience. The wrong settings can land emails in spam folders or create poor user experiences that drive subscribers away.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>why professional guidance makes sense.</strong></h2><p>Email marketing that works in 2025 requires strategy, technical knowledge, and ongoing optimisation. It&#8217;s not about sending occasional newsletters and hoping for the best.</p><p>At FutureProof Cornwall, we help businesses build email marketing systems that generate real results. We understand how to create compelling content, optimise for deliverability, and measure success in ways that matter for business growth.</p><p>We start by understanding your customers and business goals, then build email strategies that turn subscribers into customers and customers into advocates.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>the bottom line.</strong></h2><p>Email marketing remains one of the most effective ways to build customer relationships and generate revenue. But success requires understanding how people actually use email in 2025 and respecting their inbox experience.</p><p>The businesses that master modern email marketing will build stronger customer relationships and generate more predictable revenue. Those that continue using outdated tactics will find their messages ignored or blocked entirely.</p><p>Your customers check email every day. The question is whether your messages earn a place in their attention or get deleted without being read.</p><p>Ready to build an email marketing system that actually works? Contact FutureProof Cornwall to develop an email strategy that turns subscribers into customers and customers into advocates</p><p> </p>]]></content:encoded>
					
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		<title>10 seo mistakes that are killing your rankings (and making google laugh at you)</title>
		<link>https://futureproofcornwall.co.uk/seo-mistakes-that-are-killing-your-rankings/</link>
					<comments>https://futureproofcornwall.co.uk/seo-mistakes-that-are-killing-your-rankings/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[A Strike]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Jun 2025 10:11:46 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Content Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Digital Strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Google]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marketing Advice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SEO]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://futureproofcornwall.co.uk/?p=3832</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Is your website buried deeper than a tourist's car in a Cornish hedge? You've probably committed at least half of these SEO sins. From keyword stuffing to ignoring mobile users, we reveal the 10 mistakes that are keeping your business invisible online – and exactly how to fix them.
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Right, let&#8217;s have a proper chat about SEO, shall we? We&#8217;ve seen enough websites limping around the internet like a three-legged pasty to know that most businesses are making the same cringe-worthy mistakes when it comes to Search Engine Optimisation.</p><p>If your website is currently buried deeper than a tourist&#8217;s car in a Cornish hedge, you&#8217;ve probably committed at least half of these SEO sins. Don&#8217;t worry though – we&#8217;re not here to judge (much). We&#8217;re here to help you climb out of Google&#8217;s doghouse and actually get found by people who aren&#8217;t your mum.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">1. keyword stuffing like it&#8217;s christmas dinner</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Cramming your target keyword into every sentence like you&#8217;re trying to win a &#8220;most mentions&#8221; competition.</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> Google&#8217;s algorithms are smarter than a Cornish fisherman reading the weather. They can spot keyword stuffing from a mile off, and they&#8217;re not impressed. Your content ends up reading like a broken robot having an existential crisis.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> Use your keywords naturally, like you&#8217;re actually talking to a human being (revolutionary concept, we know). Aim for about 1-2% keyword density – any more and you&#8217;ll sound like a malfunctioning GPS.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">2. ignoring page speed (aka the dial-up days nostalgia)</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Having a website that loads slower than the queue at Eden Project on a bank holiday.</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> Google cares about user experience more than we care about proper Cornish cream tea etiquette (and that&#8217;s saying something). If your site takes longer than 3 seconds to load, visitors bounce faster than a rubber ball off St. Michael&#8217;s Mount.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> Compress those images, minimize your code, and invest in decent hosting. Your website should load faster than you can say &#8220;proper job.&#8221;</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">3. mobile unfriendly = future unfriendly</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Having a website that looks like it was designed for a desktop computer from 2003.</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> More people browse on their phones than there are seagulls in St. Ives (and that&#8217;s a lot). Google&#8217;s mobile-first indexing means if your site isn&#8217;t mobile-friendly, you&#8217;re basically invisible.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> Responsive design isn&#8217;t optional anymore – it&#8217;s as essential as having proper sea defenses. Make sure your site works beautifully on every device from smartphone to tablet to desktop.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">4. title tags that say nothing (or everything)</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Either having no title tags at all, or ones that read like &#8220;Home | Welcome | About | Contact | Services | Kitchen Sink.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> Your title tag is like your shop front – if it&#8217;s boring or confusing, nobody&#8217;s coming in. Google uses it to understand what your page is about, and users see it in search results.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> Write compelling, descriptive titles under 60 characters that include your target keyword. Think of it as writing a newspaper headline that actually makes people want to read the article.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">5. meta descriptions that are mia</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Leaving meta descriptions blank or letting Google write them for you (spoiler: Google&#8217;s not great at sales copy).</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> Your meta description is your elevator pitch in search results. No description = no clicks = no customers = no pasty money.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> Write enticing meta descriptions under 160 characters that tell people exactly what they&#8217;ll get if they click. Include a call-to-action and make it irresistible.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">6. content thinner than rick stein&#8217;s patience with bad fish</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Publishing content with fewer words than a Cornish weather forecast and about as much depth.</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> Google rewards comprehensive, valuable content. If your blog posts are shorter than a tweet and less useful than a chocolate teapot, you&#8217;re not ranking anywhere good.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> Create in-depth, valuable content that actually helps your audience. Think quality over quantity – one brilliant piece beats ten rubbish ones every time.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">7. internal linking like you&#8217;re playing hide and seek</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Having pages on your website that are harder to find than a parking space in Padstow during Rick Stein season.</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> Internal links help Google understand your site structure and pass authority between pages. Poor internal linking is like having a maze with no signs – everyone gets lost.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> Link between relevant pages naturally within your content. Think of it as being a helpful host, guiding visitors to other interesting rooms in your digital house.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">8. ignoring local seo (when you&#8217;re not amazon)</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Optimizing for &#8220;web design&#8221; when you should be targeting &#8220;web design Cornwall&#8221; or &#8220;web design Truro.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> Unless you&#8217;re competing with global giants, local SEO is your best friend. People search for services &#8220;near me&#8221; more often than they ask for directions to the Eden Project.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> Include location-based keywords, claim your Google My Business listing, and get local citations. Be the big fish in your small pond rather than a minnow in the ocean.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">9. technical seo that&#8217;s more broken than cornish weather predictions</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Having broken links, duplicate content, missing alt tags, and XML sitemaps that would confuse a sat nav.</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> Technical SEO is like the foundation of your house – if it&#8217;s wonky, everything else falls apart. Google&#8217;s crawlers need to understand and navigate your site easily.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> Regular technical audits, fix broken links, add alt tags to images, create proper XML sitemaps, and sort out your URL structure. It&#8217;s not glamorous, but it works.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">10. playing the waiting game (but not actually playing)</h2><p><strong>The Mistake:</strong> Doing SEO for a month, seeing no immediate results, and giving up faster than tourists flee Cornish rain.</p><p><strong>Why It&#8217;s Killing You:</strong> SEO is like growing the perfect Cornish hedge – it takes time, patience, and consistent effort. Expecting overnight results is like expecting the weather to be predictable in Cornwall.</p><p><strong>The Fix:</strong> SEO is a long-term strategy. Consistent, quality efforts over 6-12 months will show results. Keep creating great content, optimizing your site, and building authority.</p><h2 class="wp-block-heading">the bottom line</h2><p>SEO isn&#8217;t rocket science, but it&#8217;s not exactly making a cup of tea either. It requires strategy, patience, and a good understanding of what both Google and your customers actually want.</p><p>At FutureProof Cornwall, we&#8217;ve helped countless businesses climb from Google&#8217;s basement to the penthouse suite. We know what works in the real world (not just in theory), and we&#8217;re passionate about helping Cornish businesses thrive online.</p><p><strong>Ready to stop making these mistakes and start seeing real results?</strong> Get in touch with us today. We promise to explain everything in plain English, without the jargon or the false promises.</p><p>Because life&#8217;s too short for bad SEO, and Cornwall&#8217;s too beautiful to be hidden from the world.</p><hr/><p><em>Want to future-proof your business online? Contact FutureProof Cornwall today for a no-nonsense SEO audit that actually tells you what needs fixing.</em></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
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