Steve Jobs wore the same uniform every day.

In fact, he owned 100 identical black mock turtlenecks. The uniform simplified his life and gave him one less thing to think about each morning.

Meanwhile, most of us stand in front of an overflowing closet and wonder what to wear. We may try on a shirt that doesn't fit and then put on a different top—only to find a stain that we didn't notice the last time we wore it. Soon, we have a pile of clothes on the floor and nothing to wear.

Steve Jobs knew that too many choices lead to decision paralysis.

Less Is More (When You're Selling)

You've likely heard of the famous jam study conducted by Columbia University.

Professor Sheena Iyengar and her students set up a tasting table a gourmet market. Throughout the day, they alternated between offering 6 and 24 types of jam. Customers who visited their table tasted an average of two flavors—regardless of the variety available. Iyengar's team also gave every taster a coupon for $1 off a full-sized jar.

Who bought the jam?

About 30% of the customers who chose from the small assortment purchased jam. Meanwhile, just 3% of the tasters who sampled from the large selection bought a jar.

Having too many choices resulted in most customers' not buying.

The Four Essential Parts of a High-Converting Email

Decision paralysis also applies to your email marketing: If you give your subscribers too many options, they won't know what you want them to do or where they should click.

Instead, focus on the Rule of One.

Veteran copywriter Mark Ford created the Rule of One after comparing successful and unsuccessful promotions.

According to Ford, "The Rule of One is the driving force behind great copy." The rule essentially states that every promotion must contain the following:

  1. One powerful idea
  2. One core emotion
  3. One single, desirable benefit
  4. One inevitable response

Let's see how that applies to your email copy.

1. One Powerful Idea

Each email should focus on one key message, and that message must speak to your readers' top challenge.

If you address too many pain points or include multiple ideas, readers may lose interest. You'll also bloat your email with details that don't matter at this stage because—the point of an email is to get readers to take the next small step. You don't need to convince them of everything all at once.

What is the No. 1 thing that readers must know so that they will click the link in your email?

2. One Core Emotion

When we think of emotional advertising, we often think of consumer-focused ads. (Years later, Sarah McLachlan's ASPCA commercial still makes me reach for the tissues!)

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The No. 1 Rule and Four Essential Parts of High-Converting B2B Emails

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Rachel Foster

Rachel Foster is a B2B copywriter who helps technology marketers improve their response rates, clearly communicate complex messages, and generate high-quality leads. Check out her B2B marketing blog.

LinkedIn: Rachel Foster

Twitter: @CopywriterTO