Email marketing gets overlooked by a lot of local businesses, which is wild because it’s the highest-ROI marketing channel available. For every dollar you spend on email marketing, you get back $42 in return. Compare that to social media (around $6 per dollar) or paid ads (typically $2–4 per dollar), and it’s clear that email should be a core part of your strategy.
Here’s the thing though: email marketing only works if you have a list. And most local businesses in Texoma aren’t building one. They’re hoping customers will remember them, come back on their own, and refer others. Some will. Most won’t. Your website gets traffic, you make sales, and then those people disappear. They don’t hear from you again until they need your service again—which might be six months or two years down the road. And by then, they’ll probably have forgotten about you.
Building an email list and staying top-of-mind is the antidote to that problem. Let me show you how.
Why Email Marketing Has the Best ROI (And Why Most Businesses Miss It)
Email has been around for decades, so some people assume it’s outdated. It’s not. It’s actually more effective than it’s ever been because so many of your competitors have abandoned it.
Here’s why email works:
It’s owned media. Social media platforms can change their algorithm tomorrow and destroy your reach. Google can update their search algorithm and tank your traffic. But your email list? You own that. As long as the email addresses are valid, you can reach those people.
It’s targeted and personal. You’re reaching people who have explicitly said they want to hear from you. They gave you their email address. They’re not just a random person who happened to scroll by your content.
It drives real revenue. Email isn’t just for brand awareness. It directly drives purchases and bookings. Studies show that email marketing has a higher ROI than almost any other channel. If you do it right, email pays for itself several times over.
It builds relationships. Regular, valuable emails build a relationship between you and your customers. They start to know you, trust you, and think of you as the expert when they need your service.
The reason most local businesses don’t do email marketing is simple: they don’t have a system to capture email addresses. They don’t have a reason for people to give them their email. And they’re not sure what to send once they do have a list. We’ll address all of that here.
Build Your List By Offering Real Value
You can’t build an email list out of nowhere. People need a reason to give you their email address. That reason is called a “lead magnet”—something valuable they want, in exchange for their email.
For service-based local businesses, here are lead magnets that work:
A free checklist or guide – “15-Point Home Inspection Checklist,” “The Complete Guide to Choosing a Web Designer,” “HVAC Maintenance Checklist.” Give away something useful that builds trust in your expertise. People will trade their email for practical information.
A free quote or assessment – “Free 15-Minute Landscaping Consultation,” “Free Website Audit,” “Free Roof Inspection.” This works especially well because it gets people talking to you directly, not just reading content.
A discount or promotion code – “Get 15% off your first service” works, but only pair it with something else. The discount alone won’t build a long-term relationship.
A webinar or training – Record a 20-minute video on something you know really well. Host it on Zoom or a simple landing page. People register with their email, watch the training, and you’ve delivered real value.
A template or tool – A budget spreadsheet, a project timeline template, a decision-making worksheet. Anything that helps them do something.
The best lead magnets answer a question or solve a problem that someone is already thinking about. A roofer’s lead magnet should be about roof problems, not about their company. An accountant’s lead magnet should address tax questions, not about the firm’s history.
Where do you promote this lead magnet? Everywhere:
- Your website homepage and service pages
- Your social media bio
- Your Google Business Profile
- Your business cards and print materials
- In-person at your location
- Your email signature
Don’t be shy about it. Ask for people’s email addresses. Most of them will be happy to provide it if the offer is genuinely valuable.
What to Send (And Why Frequency Matters)
Once you have an email list, what do you actually send? There are several types of emails that work for local businesses:
Welcome series (automated) – When someone signs up, send them 3–5 emails over the first two weeks. Email 1 thanks them and delivers the lead magnet. Email 2 starts sharing useful tips or telling your story. Email 3 makes a soft pitch about a service. Email 4 shares a customer success story. Email 5 makes a stronger pitch about working together.
This is automated, so it happens the same way for everyone. It’s worth spending time getting these right because they do the work automatically.
Monthly newsletters – A 3–5 minute read with 2–3 tips, a company update, and a call-to-action. This is your “stay top of mind” email. You’re not always selling; you’re being helpful and reminding them you exist. Send this the first Tuesday of every month (or whatever cadence works for you).
Promotional emails – Seasonal sales, limited-time offers, new services, or special pricing. These have a clear ask and a deadline. Don’t send these more than once or twice a month, or you’ll train your audience to ignore you until you have something to sell.
Timely/seasonal updates – Spring cleaning tips from a cleaning service. Tax deadline reminders from an accountant. Summer maintenance from an HVAC company. These are relevant to what people are thinking about at a specific time of year.
Educational content – Deep dives on topics your customers care about. A step-by-step guide to something. A walkthrough of how you do what you do. These build authority and trust.
How often should you send? Once a week is ideal if you have good content. Once every two weeks is solid. Once a month is the minimum if you want to stay top-of-mind. Anything less than monthly, and people will forget they signed up.
The businesses that see the biggest revenue from email are sending at least 1–2 emails per week. Don’t worry about “unsubscribes.” Some will happen, and that’s normal. The people who are genuinely interested stay on your list and engage. The people who aren’t? They were never going to buy from you anyway.
Best Practices for Subject Lines and Open Rates
Your subject line is the difference between someone opening your email and them deleting it. Here’s what works:
Use the person’s first name – “Hi David, here’s your monthly update” gets opened more than “Monthly Newsletter.” It feels personal.
Ask a question – “Is your website costing you customers?” “When was the last time you had your HVAC serviced?” Questions trigger curiosity.
Create curiosity or urgency – “Don’t make this roof mistake this spring” or “48 hours left: Spring savings” – but don’t lie or overuse urgency. Once people realize you’re always saying “limited time,” they stop believing you.
Be specific – “3 Ways to Cut Your Electric Bills” gets opened more than “Money-Saving Tips.” Specific number feel like concrete value.
Keep it short – 50 characters or less is ideal. On mobile, people see 30 characters. Make every word count.
Test different approaches – Your audience is different from every other audience. What works for a Sherman HVAC company might not work for a Denison marketing agency. Try different subject lines and pay attention to what gets opened.
Segmentation: Sending the Right Message to the Right People
This is where email gets powerful. You don’t need to send the same email to everyone.
Your new subscribers have different needs than your long-time customers. Someone who abandoned a free quote request has different intent than someone who’s worked with you for five years. Segment your list so you can send targeted messages:
- New subscribers get the welcome series
- Past customers get updates about complementary services
- People who downloaded a free guide but never bought get a “here’s why working with us is worth it” email
- People who bought once get customer retention and upsell emails
You don’t need complex segmentation to start. Just split your list into “subscribers,” “past customers,” and “leads.” Send different messages to each group.
Avoid These Common Email Mistakes
Don’t spam your list – Every email should have value. If you’re just selling all the time, people unsubscribe and tune out. The ratio should be about 80% helpful content and 20% sales.
Don’t buy email lists – Email to people who didn’t opt in gets ignored or marked as spam. It tanks your sender reputation. Only email people who asked for your emails.
Don’t ignore unsubscribes – If someone wants off your list, let them go. Respecting that boundary builds goodwill, and you can’t sell to someone who doesn’t want to hear from you anyway.
Don’t send at random times – Pick a consistent day and time. Tuesday and Wednesday at 10am tends to work well, but test what works for your audience. Consistency trains people to expect your emails.
Don’t neglect mobile – Most people read emails on their phone. Make sure your emails look good in a narrow format. Use short paragraphs, clear fonts, and big buttons people can actually click on a phone.
Use Your Website to Capture Emails
For this to all work, you need a website that captures emails. A homepage with an email signup form. A services page with an offer to get a free quote via email. A blog post with a lead magnet at the bottom.
If you don’t have a website optimized for capturing emails, that’s the first place to start. Our Custom Website Design & Development service includes building lead capture systems that actually convert.
The Tools You’ll Need
You don’t need expensive software to start email marketing. Mailchimp is free for lists under 500 people. ConvertKit, ActiveCampaign, and Klaviyo are all reasonable monthly investments when your list grows.
Whatever tool you choose, make sure it:
- Makes it easy to build landing pages for lead magnets
- Has email templates you can customize
- Allows automation (welcome series, triggered emails)
- Provides analytics so you know what’s working
- Integrates with your website
Start Today, Don’t Wait for Perfect
Email marketing is one of those channels where starting imperfectly beats not starting at all. You don’t need fancy designs or perfect copy to get results. You need a list and the discipline to send regularly.
Pick your lead magnet this week. Add a signup form to your website (or create a simple landing page). Write an email to your list about something useful. Hit send.
That’s it. You’re now doing email marketing. Everything else is optimization.
Let Us Handle It For You
Email marketing works best when it’s done consistently, and consistency is hard when you’re running a business. Our Email Marketing service takes that burden off you. We handle strategy, list building, automation, and sending. You focus on your business and watch the revenue come in.
We also work with Custom Website Design to make sure your site captures emails efficiently. The whole system works together.
Ready to build an email list that drives real revenue? Let’s talk. Call us at (469) 790-0543 or contact us online for a free consultation. We help Texoma businesses build email lists that convert. Let’s get you started.


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