Kick-Starting Your eNewsletter Now
Posted: March 21, 2009
Filed under: Pro Tips
Comments: Leave a comment
Your eNewsletter Basic Strategy
When designing your eNewsletter always keep in mind the amount of time you can expect your reader to spend viewing your eNewsletter. Everyone today is information hungry, but always in a hurry.
How you display your content within your eNewsletter can capitalize on this assumption. What information should I include in my eNewsletter? Obviously, this will depend on your business and the audience in which you are marketing, but here are three recommendations:
Announcements
Include recent information about your company and/or products that impacts your readers. For instance, you can include a link to an upcoming tradeshow where your company will be exhibiting or perhaps a seminar that your company will be sponsoring.
Article
Include an article that relates to your products or services and helps your readers. It is also a great idea to develop a resource library that contains additional articles and provide a link for your readers so they can find more information on similar topics.
Case Study
Provide an example of a client who has achieved great results while using your products or services. This will help build credibility with your readers. Again, provide a link where your readers can view additional case studies.
Those are three key items to include in your eNewsletter. If you include these, you are keeping your readers up to date on recent information about your products or services, including an article providing value on topics affecting them and by providing a case study you are proving to your readers that others are achieving success by using your products or services.
Making Your Articles Easier to Digest
Think of how we read newspapers; the same holds true for how we read material on the web. We skim headlines looking for something that interests us and only then will we begin reading an article. We also stop to view photographs and any visual cues offering greater insight as to the information held within an article.
I see far too many articles within e-newsletters that are very long (greater than 900 words). When writing your article try to keep it at 800 words or less and break each section into smaller, easy to read blocks with bolded headlines over each section.
This will encourage your reader to skim your article and stop at each section they find interesting. If you are finding it impossible to trim your article simply find a good point within 800 or fewer words and provide a link to a webpage that contains the article in its entirety.
Sharing Your e-Newsletter with Others
Always give your readers a reason and a means to share your eNewsletter with others. By providing valuable and relevant content to your subscribers, they will be inclined to share this information with others by forwarding your newsletter.
Some email marketing software provide a “Forward-to-a-Friend” feature that inserts a link within the footer of your message allowing your readers to easily forward your newsletter.
The goal is to obviously reach out to as many people as possible by providing valuable, relevant, timely content and an easy way for your readers to share this information with others.
Source: An Article by Brandon Milford @ iContact Community
