Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Make Your Email Newsletter a Must-Read for Your Customers
Do you like this story?
At first the decision to publish a newsletter looks easy: "My competitors
have newsletters; therefore, I need one." Theirs come out monthly, so
yours needs to be monthly. Theirs is HTML-based, so yours needs to look the
same.
Many first-time newsletter publishers make this mistake. But launching a
newsletter because your competition has one is not the right reason to publish
one.
It takes time, money and energy to produce a newsletter that people look
forward to reading, enjoy and are willing to pass on to their friends and
colleagues. Before you make this commitment, you should have a mission for the
newsletter and a plan for creating it on a regular basis.
The Mission
A newsletter can be promotional or marketing oriented, informative or
relationship building. Regardless of the mission you choose, you should let the
reader know your intentions about the direction of the publication and stick to
that plan. Consistency is important. If you promise news and information, don't
bore the reader with sales promotions. If, on the other hand, the plan is to
send out a relationship-building newsletter 11 months of the year and then
publish a promotional one come spring, let readers know it’s coming.
The Content
Readers are looking for timely, practical, useful information. If a company
increased profits by 320 percent over the same time last year, that’s news!
News can also be promotional. Do you have a new service or product coming to
market, or a seasonal item? Then it makes sense to publish the newsletter at
that appropriate time.
You can also use the newsletter to build relationships with clients. For
example, if calls are coming in about specific problems with a product, then
discuss the problem and solution in the upcoming newsletter. This is a win-win
situation. Customers are grateful that someone is looking after their best
interests and the number of support calls will certainly drop.
Your newsletter can be informative. You can discuss how a new technology may
affect your customers’ or prospects’ business. Give them honest information
about how this improvement helps them deliver better service or generate more
revenue.
Another way to pique readers' interest is to write two- and three-part
stories. It's a good way to keep people coming back for more, and sometimes
information just cannot be crammed into one issue. Don’t be restrictive. Give
the information the space it deserves.
Making Email Newsletters More Social
The Frequency
Now that you've determined you have enough news and information to share,
decide how often you to publish. Newsletters need to come out on some schedule
so people can anticipate receiving them. If you publish too often, the reader’s
interest will wane or they will start considering you spam, even if they
willingly signed up for the newsletter. Newsletters can also drain resources.
Writing articles can take enormous energy, and sometimes newsletter editors
find themselves trapped in a format they must "feed." Keep it simple
and newsworthy.
A good approach is to start out slowly. Make sure there is time allocated to
produce the newsletter and it’s a good read. Perhaps start out quarterly and
then move to bimonthly. People rarely complain about receiving useful news too
often.
The Metrics
One of the best advantages email newsletters have over their printed
compatriots is metrics. When you mail a paper newsletter, it's impossible to
find out if it went straight into the recycle bin or if the recipient loved it
so much they photocopied it and passed it on to numerous friends. Email
newsletter services, however, offer many useful metrics. You can find out how
many people received the email, how many "bounced" because of a bad
email address, how many people opened the newsletter, how many forwarded it to
friends, and more. These services also handle your unsubscribe requests,
ensuring you are following the law when people request to opt out of your
newsletter.
Do You Know What Clicks With Your
Email Newsletter Readers?
And because of the importance of these metrics and the unsubscribe process,
finding a good email service provider -- Constant Contact and iContact are two
popular choices -- is a crucial step in the creation of your email newsletter.
Serving the Reader
Finally, know your reader base. Don’t take them for granted. Find out what they
are interested in knowing or learning. Invite readers to respond. Ask for their
opinion. Let the reader get to know the editor of the newsletter. A person should
let their personality show through the writing. It is much easier to build a
relationship if each party shares information about themselves.
Respect their time: If a newsletter cannot be read within five minutes, it’s
destined for the trash folder. It hurts, but it’s the truth. Busy people
segment their time with five minutes for this and 10 minutes for that. A good
newsletter fits into that window.

This post was written by: Franklin Manuel
Franklin Manuel is a professional blogger, web designer and front end web developer. Follow him on Twitter
0 Responses to “Make Your Email Newsletter a Must-Read for Your Customers”
Post a Comment