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Here are the goals:
You
regularly send out relevant and anticipated email newsletters to your
ever-growing list. You have a form on your website that asks people to
sign up for your email newsletter. When someone signs up, they give you
their name and email address and they receive a few automatic and
customized emails that you previously crafted while they wait for their
first newsletter edition. You have a database that stores each person's
email address and you have a way to send out regular emails to them
all, including beautiful HTML newsletters (e-zines). You watch the list
grow over time and watch readers turn into customers.
Here are the benefits:
? You are continually building a list of loyal readers that grows over time ? Your readers spread the word that your organization is helpful, knowledgeable and experienced. ? Your readers are regularly reminded of your organization's continued existence, growth and relevance. ? Some loyal readers will turn into loyal paying customers. ? You learn more about your customers and site visitors by asking them to communicate with you through the newsletter. ? You generate a new income stream by selling advertisement space ? You'll have a regular source of fresh and original content to add to your website which will help search engine rankings.
There
are two distinct, but equally important aspects of starting an email
newsletter that need to be addressed for you to accomplish the goals
and gain the benefits listed above. First, you need the infrastructure
and functionality to make all this happen, such as a database, an HTML
form, a method for sending out emails in quantity and so forth. Second,
you need the content that will be in each newsletter. This article will
explain how to do both.
The Needed Infrastructure & Functionality for an Email Newsletter
Does
getting the infrastructure sound difficult? Does it sound like you have
to know a lot about programming? Neither is true. This wheel doesn't
need to be re-invented.
There are a number of websites that
offer paid services that provide the entire infrastructure for you. The
cost is a fraction of the cost of developing the infrastructure
yourself. Two good examples of this type of service are Constant
Contact and Aweber. I prefer Aweber and find its interface intuitive
and easy to use. I use Aweber for our company email newsletter and
suggest it to all our clients.
Using a browser I can log into
my Aweber account and create text or HTML email auto-responder messages
for people to receive when they visit our site or sign up for our
e-zine. I can create a simple HTML form that asks for people's name and
email as well. In fact, the html code for the form is created for me
and all I have to do is cut and paste it into my site. No programming
needed.
Each person's information is stored in a database on
Aweber's servers. I can manage my leads list in my browser and sort by
different ways. It also allows me to see how many of my auto-responders
have been sent already. And every email that we send out has a
personalized first name greeting.
There is a place in Aweber
where I can manage my messages, whether they are regular emails to part
of the list or a newsletter that's sent to the entire list. And there
is a place where I can enter my messages, edit them, check to see if
they will trip any sp@m filters, I can test the messages by sending
them to my own email address first, and finally I can send them all out
at once with one simple click.
The Needed Quality Content for an Email Newsletter
It's
not good enough to just have the infrastructure and functionality. You
need content that makes people want to accept and read your newsletters
over and over again.
Your newsletter ought to be related to
your website and organization. Every person and organization has
valuable and unique knowledge and experience to offer others. And you'd
be surprised at how many people want your unique knowledge. Sharing
this knowledge and experience with your existing and potential
customers is what the Web is all about. People use the Web for getting
information. So make your newsletters about various aspects of your
business or organization, and make them educational, so that your
readers come away with more useful information than they had before.
So
if you're a Web design firm, write about Web design in your
newsletters. If you're a small local bookstore, write about how to
become an author, or how to start a local bookstore. If you're a
financial advisor, write about how people can make sound investments.
If you're a furniture builder and seller, write about how to fix up old
pieces of furniture on your own.
Newsletters that are just
extended advertisements don't cut it. If your newsletter only has
announcements of new or improved products or services, or specials that
you're running, then you're missing the boat completely. There is so
much more you can offer.
Creating newsletters that contain
useful, relevant and anticipated information for your readers is what
to aspire to. You want to give away ideas and concepts for free that
can be used to help improve some aspect of your reader's lives. You
obviously don't want to give away the whole farm since a lot of your
expertise is what you charge for in the first place. But giving some
information away for free is a win-win.
Most often, your
readers don't care about you or your company or your specific products
or deals, they only care about what you can do for them. If they take
the time to open your email newsletter and read it, it better provide
them with some real value or they won't bother again and your list will
not grow, but eventually wither away into oblivion.
In return
for providing useful, original content, you develop a constantly
growing list of loyal readers who will spread the word that you are an
authority in your field. Your readers may eventually buy from you if
they haven't already. And you can use your list to occasionally sell
your products or services, but do this very sparingly. You can use the
newsletter for selling advertisement space, but again, use sparingly.
Finally, you can use your list to learn more about your customers and
site visitors. You can ask the people on your list to fill out an
online survey, but be sure to offer them an incentive for their time.
If
you don't know any programming or HTML but want to send out a regular
newsletter, you can use Aweber to create text-only messages. If you
want to send out professional HTML email newsletters, then either learn
HTML and design (which is obviously time-consuming, but certainly
possible), or hire a Web firm to do it for you. I would also suggest
hiring a firm to help you with writing the content as well if you're
not comfortable with writing.
But as you can see, you don't
need much to get an email newsletter going. If you can regularly create
quality content, just sign up for an online service like Aweber and
away you go. An internal customer email list is a very valuable asset
for any organization. Handle it with loving care. Never sell or rent
your list to anyone, try to offer value in your writing, and don't
overuse it as an advertisement medium.
About Author Jason OConnor owns and operates NFL and MLB Game Tickets - a place to buy cheap tickets to NFL, MLB, NHL, NBA and NCAA games. Find theater and concert tickets too.
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