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Tackle
a Newsletter and Come out on Top...Part 1
Unlike
any other marketing vehicle, newsletters give you the opportunity
to contact your audience and convey your expertise in a way that
offers value and information. Newsletters provide a reason -- and
a structure -- to maintain ongoing contact. One of our clients has
even said that recipients call if her newsletter is a few days late.
A
newsletter can include all kinds of information you might otherwise
have to develop multiple vehicles to communicate.
Provide
Information :: new phone numbers,
address changes, new hires, additional services.
Get feedback
:: announce a contest, run
a survey, promote a hotline.
Brag
:: share recent successes,
a case study, announce staff speaking and publishing efforts.
Its
very important to provide some non-self-serving information too.
Educating your audience about your field can only enhance your image
and the value of your relationships.
If
gathering all this information on a regular basis seems daunting,
it doesnt have to be. There are ways to manage the task and
develop a valuable piece in a timely and cost-effective manner.
- Schedule
:: Seriously think
about how often people want to hear from you, as well as how much
time you have to devote to a newsletter. Time does cost money,
whether you do it yourself, delegate it to a staff member or contract
with an outside creative firm. Develop a schedule you can sustain.
- Size
::
How long should it be? Look at others in your field, ask good
clients, and think about how much time you want yourself, your
staff or your service provider to invest in this project.
- Scope
:: What is it going
to be about? One way to tame content is to choose a few areas
to cover and write articles within those areas. For each section,
have a list of topics. When building each issue, fill each "slot".
You can also expand and re-purpose content you already have. Create
a "news" section to re-purpose press releases, a "question
of the month" that draws from the FAQs on your website. What
to include depends on your audience. Longtime clients may connect
with knowing that Mary Jones had twins last month, but will the
CEO of your hottest prospect?
- Send
::
Choose your mailing list according to the goals of the project.
Is the main purpose client contact, prospecting, education or
something else? You can pull names from your own database, build
a new list from research, or rent lists from a variety of list
brokers.
- Style
::
Are you going for a casual note or a professional communiqué?
The answer lies in your brand. This piece, as in all good marketing
development, should not be developed in a vacuum. Your newsletter
should be an integrated element of your corporate positioning.
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NEXT
MONTH ::
The
last "S" in the list could easily be Spend.
Check out Tackle
a Newsletter and Come out on Top...Part 2
to learn how to publish a great newsletter while maximizing
your budget and your time -- or sign up now
to receive Focal Point and have great articles like
this emailed directly to you.
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