You May Not Know it But Your Business Probably Needs a Newsletter

By Steve Evans 

Despite the fact that a huge number of businesses have realised the benifits of having a Newsletter, there are still a great many that have not.

If you are one of those who is not using a newsletter within your marketing efforts then you are potentially missing out on existing customers who would become long term contacts and valuable long-term buyers.

What do Newsletters do? Well, Newsletters if written well, provide an effective tool for collecting interested visitors’ email addresses and converting them into buyers. Believe it or not they are the greatest way to keep in touch with your most valued contacts, which are your previous customers. How?

NEWSLETTERS KEEP CUSTOMERS

When you have a customer buy from you, but no newsletter to follow up, than you are virtually handing him or her back to your competitors. Of course, if the service was good and the product memorable they may come back, but what if you have a new product that your existing customer may wish to buy and they do not know about it? What if they lose your website address? What if they just forget about you? A newsletter will prevent these things from happening.

HOW FREQUENTLY?

That depends on various factors. Some Newsletter publishers contact their subscribers as often as every day, others as infrequently as several times per year. What works for you depends a lot on what you are selling, what information you can give them, how often your subscribers will want to hear from you, etc.

A good rule of thumb for many businesses is once per week. Twice a month if you really feel that is the most you can do. More often and the customer may unsubscribe or routinely delete your messages. Less often and you’re allowing your competition the chance to win over your potential customer.

WHAT DO I WRITE ABOUT?

Are you very informed on the product or service? Do you have a lot of contacts? Can you point out related products or services they might be interested in?

You do not need a long newsletter. A sale alert or announcement of a new service or product can do just as well for some businesses, while others find a tips format more suitable. Industry news or ‘How to…’ and ‘Top 5…’ topics are a good idea and always try to make a connection between the newsletter and your product or service. Subscribe to several competitors’ newsletters (they will surely be subscribing to yours). Use a free email account to subscribe and see what they are providing their customers.

DO IT CONSISTENTLY

The number of newsletters that are available online is huge, and each subscriber may have a number of them already posting to him/her. Because of this subscribers can forget which ones are legitimate and which are spam.

Keep your format consistent so your newsletter becomes visibly familiar. Also indicate that the subscriber requested the information and provide an unsubscribe link on EVERY issue. You must do this if you want to limit complaints or spam reports. They will be much more likely to thinks that yours are spamm if they are inconsitent.

Finally, your newsletter creation must be given adequate time and attention - it is your voice, and that of your company and will help you to build virtual one-to-one relationships with your customers (and potential customers) in a way that no other tool can. 
 
Steve Evans recommends the Spider Marketing System and Friends-Networking-Sharing to promote online and home businesses.

This entry was posted on Monday, August 25th, 2008 at 9:00 am and is filed under newsletter, newsletter distribution, newsletter publishing, newsletter subscriptions, newsletter writing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

 

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