Hi everyone,
I wonder if any of you have any thoughts on the following?
This afternoon I received an unsolicited email in my inbox from a company called Liquidshop - I've taken the liberty of reproducing the body of the text below:
If your website isn't easy to navigate on a mobile device then you're losing sales.
Time to consider a new ecommerce platform?
Liquidshop offers ecommerce with responsive mobile compatibility as standard. This means that whatever device your customers are using, they will see a properly formatted version of your website that's easy to buy from.
Multiple device display
In addition, Liquidshop delivers dozens of real improvements to the functionality of your website, for you as the administrator, and for your customers who are shopping with you. And an ongoing development programme means your website never goes out-of-date.
So, if you're considering upgrading and 'future-proofing' your ecommerce, Liquidshop could be a perfect fit.
Clients who have already changed to Liquidshop from Sellerdeck/Actinic have more than doubled their sales.
If you'd like to do the same, please drop me a line – I can send you some more details; specifications, case studies, etc, or you can let me know a good time to call for a chat.
If you prefer, give me a call on xxxxxxxxxxx or xxxxxxxxxx
If you're really, really not interested, you can opt out of future mailings below.
That would be a shame, as I'd like to stay in touch.
Regards
Dave Lomax
New Business Manager
Liquidshop
There was a link at the foot of the email to 'unsubscribe from this list' - now if there is one thing I really can't stand then it's being signed up to mailing lists from any Tom, Dick or Harry without my explicit consent. It ruffles my usually extremely placid feathers, and then some. I view messages of this nature as nothing less than spam.
After reading the email I immediately sent a reply requesting to know from where my address had been obtained (note that I have removed all references to the company's contact details as I have no intention of promoting their services given their dubious sales techniques)
I received a reply back after a couple of hours informing me that my email address had been found via "the Ts & Cs page on your website"
What I am particularly concerned about is the curious fact that my website in question is currently nothing more than a test bed for trying out new SellerDeck features. It does not host a working shop. There are no payment facilities, no logos, no terms and conditions, no stock items, nothing that would imply a live webshop where one doesn't even exist!
I'm highly sceptical that my email address was located from a manual search of the web. And even if it was, I take exception to anybody who feels they have a right to auto-subscribe me to an unwanted mailing list, and try to lure me away from SellerDeck into the bargain! It's unethical at best and bad business as far as I'm concerned.
Their technique has backfired in this instance, and I'm posting this partly to vent and partly in the hope that it will create some justified negative publicity for the company concerned.
Has anyone else had any unauthorised correspondence from this crowd?
I wonder if any of you have any thoughts on the following?
This afternoon I received an unsolicited email in my inbox from a company called Liquidshop - I've taken the liberty of reproducing the body of the text below:
If your website isn't easy to navigate on a mobile device then you're losing sales.
Time to consider a new ecommerce platform?
Liquidshop offers ecommerce with responsive mobile compatibility as standard. This means that whatever device your customers are using, they will see a properly formatted version of your website that's easy to buy from.
Multiple device display
In addition, Liquidshop delivers dozens of real improvements to the functionality of your website, for you as the administrator, and for your customers who are shopping with you. And an ongoing development programme means your website never goes out-of-date.
So, if you're considering upgrading and 'future-proofing' your ecommerce, Liquidshop could be a perfect fit.
Clients who have already changed to Liquidshop from Sellerdeck/Actinic have more than doubled their sales.
If you'd like to do the same, please drop me a line – I can send you some more details; specifications, case studies, etc, or you can let me know a good time to call for a chat.
If you prefer, give me a call on xxxxxxxxxxx or xxxxxxxxxx
If you're really, really not interested, you can opt out of future mailings below.
That would be a shame, as I'd like to stay in touch.
Regards
Dave Lomax
New Business Manager
Liquidshop
There was a link at the foot of the email to 'unsubscribe from this list' - now if there is one thing I really can't stand then it's being signed up to mailing lists from any Tom, Dick or Harry without my explicit consent. It ruffles my usually extremely placid feathers, and then some. I view messages of this nature as nothing less than spam.
After reading the email I immediately sent a reply requesting to know from where my address had been obtained (note that I have removed all references to the company's contact details as I have no intention of promoting their services given their dubious sales techniques)
I received a reply back after a couple of hours informing me that my email address had been found via "the Ts & Cs page on your website"
What I am particularly concerned about is the curious fact that my website in question is currently nothing more than a test bed for trying out new SellerDeck features. It does not host a working shop. There are no payment facilities, no logos, no terms and conditions, no stock items, nothing that would imply a live webshop where one doesn't even exist!
I'm highly sceptical that my email address was located from a manual search of the web. And even if it was, I take exception to anybody who feels they have a right to auto-subscribe me to an unwanted mailing list, and try to lure me away from SellerDeck into the bargain! It's unethical at best and bad business as far as I'm concerned.
Their technique has backfired in this instance, and I'm posting this partly to vent and partly in the hope that it will create some justified negative publicity for the company concerned.
Has anyone else had any unauthorised correspondence from this crowd?
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