Create
your own Attractive HTML Email Newsletter
Common goals of newsletters
Here's a short list of the most common goals:
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Generate advertising revenue |
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Generate subscription revenue |
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Generate leads |
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Sell ancillary products or services |
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Position your organization as a leader
in its field |
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Drive traffic to your Web site |
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Keep the organization’s name in
front of prospective or current clients |
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Retain customers |
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Up-sell to customers |
This list is not all-inclusive and the goals are not mutually
exclusive. Benchmark recommends choosing one primary goal and adding one
to three secondary goals. After you decide what your goals are, quantify
them whenever possible. This may involve “guesstimating” the
benchmarks of what makes your campaign successful. Just figure out what’s
realistic and go with it. Remember that you can always adjust up if your
estimate is too low. If your estimate is too high, you may want to rethink
your campaign.
Creating an effective subscription page
Getting people to subscribe to your e-mail
newsletter is crucial. If you request too much info on your subscription
page, or your e-mail newsletter description is weak, you’ll lose
prospective customers. Here are a few tips to optimize list growth:
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Don’t as for more than five to seven
information items on the subscription page. If you ask for more, people
will abandon the page without completing the process. Just remember:
you can always gather more information down the line. |
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Request information that helps to individualize
content. For a b2b e-mail newsletter, you’ll need, at a minimum,
an e-mail address and a first and last name. Requesting a customer’s
zip code or location (state), has become standard, as is their title
and affiliation. |
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Asking for a street address, phone number
or information on purchase authorization makes it obvious to customers
that you want to sell their information and fill their electronic,
snail and voice mail boxes with solicitations. If you do this, customers
will either abandon your page without subscribing or lie about their
info. Neither of these results will further your cause. |
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Use multiple choice and drop-down menus
whenever possible. This makes things easy for subscribers to navigate
your e-mail and makes it easier for you to analyze data. This way,
you won’t have to sift through your responses to group together
those who typed “marketing director” with others who typed
“director of marketing”. Make the process easier for them
– and you. |
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Include elements that increase your registration
rates, including links to a sample issue or your privacy policy. Always
include a brief, one or two sentence summary of your privacy policy
on your subscription page. |
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Newsletters 101
When sending your e-mail newsletter, make sure it includes
an accurate description of its content and other factors. Have a marketing
person write it if you want a good, compelling description. The description
should include the following:
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Features: the type of
content in your e-mail newsletter |
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Benefits: how the customer
benefits by reading or subscribing to your e-mail newsletter |
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Frequency: how often
you publish |
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Audience: who reads your
newsletter, and who you write it for |
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Call to action: how to
unsubscribe |
Finding affordable content
Many syndicated articles are available in exchange
for attribution. Although these articles are cost-effective (many are
free – you can’t get cheaper than that), finding quality articles
that target your audience is often difficult. But there are many ways
to get affordable editorial content. Here’s what Benchmark recommends
to clients:
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