120 likes | 219 Views
Newsletter No-Nos. A Beginner’s Guide Sarah Spencer. What are Newsletters GREAT for?. Teaching a course with multiple emails ( autoresponders ) Upselling to other products after sign-up Survey your customers Announce a new product. Building relationships
E N D
Newsletter No-Nos A Beginner’s Guide Sarah Spencer
What are Newsletters GREAT for? • Teaching a course with multiple emails (autoresponders) • Upselling to other products after sign-up • Survey your customers • Announce a new product • Building relationships • Communicate with inactive customers to do business with you again. • Communicate with other website owners/peers • Asking for links to your site. According to Frank Girard, author of "How to Succeed as an Independent Marketing Consultant“ they're great for:
Here are the Top 7 Newsletter No-Nos • Erratic Sending • NO SHOUTING • Spam Phrases • No Opt-Out Option • Not leaving a signature • Sending to a non-permission based list • BORING subject line
Erratic Sending Send your newsletter at least monthly, provided you have good content. Weekly if you have killer content. If you’ve created a new product, if it’s timely, if it’s a question your clients have asked you over and over and the answer would help a great many of your customers, then go ahead and send it. If you’re sending for the sake of sending – DON’T. Look for another writer/blogger to write the article for you. Find writers http://gotclicks.biz/linkexchange/links.html
2. NO SHOUTING!!! • Refrain from using all caps in your Subject line. Not only is “SHOUTING” rude, it can also be considered spam and your e-newsletter may never get to its’ destination.
3. Avoid Spam Words/Phrases • Here are the "nifty 250" words and phrases you'll want to avoid so your newsletter doesn't wind up in the spam filters. Here's a link that will help: http://www.wilsonweb.com/wmt8/spamfilter_phrases.htm
4. No Opt-Out Option • In order to stay within the CAN-SPAM laws, recipients of your email MUST be able to opt-out of your email list. • There’s nothing worse than having an unwelcome email come to your box that you have no way of opting out of receiving it. • Use a newsletter service that has this feature such as aweber, Constant Contact, or MailChimp.
5. Not leaving a signature • Make sure you use a signature file at the bottom of every email you send. • A sig file is a simple way to promote what you do with every email you send out. It’s how customers contact you in the event they’d like more information.
6. Using Outlook to send non-permission based emails • If you send to a list greater than 60 people, you could be accused of "spamming" people - sending unwanted email out to customers. • Risk: You could lose your ISP (Internet Service Provider) privileges to email. • To avoid this, use an email software program like MailChimp to send emails safely and effective.
7. BORING Subject Line • Want to guarantee no opens? Put in the subject line "ABC Company Monthly Newsletter." • It always shocks me how many marketing newsletters I subscribe to that never pay attention to the subject line. Most of us get 50-100 emails a day - tell me why your message is so important. • Give me a reason to click.
Resources • Want to see a GREAT newsletter in action? He uses NO fancy HTML, just GREAT writing and he gets GREAT results with his newsletter: Bob Bly: • http://www.bly.com/reports/ • Sign up for Got Clicks monthly newsletter and receive a FREE 152-page Affiliate Masters Course to help you get your online business started sensibly and profitably: • http://gotclicks.biz/affiliatemasters.html
Thank You! Sarah Spencer 802-899-1023