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Main › Computers & Networking › Ebooks & Ezines
 

Customer Newsletters: Are You Neglecting Yours?

 
Author: Anna Hinds

Have I got News for You. . .

Just like your oldest jeans, your existing customers can be relied on to perform, but are they in need of a bit of love and attention? Theyre your best source of business, so dont let them down.

Tell me what you want

I recently surveyed some newsletter readers, asking them to rate its content. Staff profiles and company news barely scraped into the top 40. What was the number one demand from these cynical readers? Special offers and new products.

What about what the company wants? Its usually two things: to improve the corporate image (strengthening loyalty), and to make more sales.

But its not impossible to combine all three goals.

Relationship Building

At its best a newsletter can be intimate, warm and friendly like a phone call from an old friend. And with luck, this warm fuzzy feeling will send your customers straight to their wallets...

The award-winning smoothie company innocent sends out email newsletters that are just like a witty note from a good friend. The newsletter is a fabulous read, and brightens up rainy Monday mornings without pushing any products.

Think of it as a first date. What are your readers interests? What will you talk about and what sort of person will you be? Chatty or formal? Humorous or technical? Casual or sophisticated? Old or young or young-at-heart?

Think about how your brand is already perceived and what sort of voice you should use to address your customers. If youre not using a copywriter, is there somebody in-house who is the same age or level of expertise as your customers? Run it by them first.

Why not identify competitors who are already producing newsletters and sign up to see how theyre pitched?

Humour is one of the best ways to get your customers on side. Dont take yourself too seriously this isnt an advert or a press release. Start with the relationship-building, and work up to the selling later.

Basic News Writing

Heres a crash course in writing news.

The pyramid technique is used by journalists every day. The story is set up like a pyramid, with the most important message in the first line, and the detail gradually being introduced as people read.

The first line must be simple and attention-grabbing. The pyramid technique involves picking out the key benefit and opening with it. In other words, instead of this: Between April and July this year, Hodsons Organics was reviewed by an independent panel of auditors, who reported that our apples were 50% cheaper than supermarkets and vegetables were over 60% cheaper.

...This first sentence should read: Hodsons vegetables are 60% cheaper than supermarket organics, according to a recent audit.

The next sentence will provide detail about the secondary findings, and the following sentence will explain the time period and the auditors role. Readers lose interest more quickly than you might think so dont tease them!

Pop in some quotes

If theres a human-interest angle to your story, thats what you should lead with. After all, this is supposed to be an interesting newsletter, not just a sales tool. Quotes and photos from key figures will brighten it up and give the story credibility take a look at any newspaper to see this technique in use.

Photos

You dont have to hire a press photographer! Recently one companys sales staff were heading off for world trips. They were instructed to take some pictures of anything exciting they saw or did. When they got back there were tonnes of great stories and pics for the newsletter!

Relevant subheadings

Help people to pick out the bits they want to read. This is vital in a newsletter especially when readers are trying to skip over the adverts!

Adding Value in an Instant

Try:

Staff articles or cartoons
Web links for further information (Lastminute.com use this trick)
Expert articles (look at Crocus)
Celebrity endorsements (see Figleaves)
Competitions even a small prize usually works (innocent smoothies
Cut-out coupons

Tip-top Feature Ideas

Awards and reviews of the company or products
Gifts or recipes for special occasions (seasonal if relevant)
Company fundraising (what did you do for Children in Need?!)
Staff news or profiles (but keep it short)
Product improvements
New products
Features on the faces behind the products or where the products start life
Top sellers chart
Events (successes and future dates)
Promotions & Special Offers
Competitions
Invitation for feedback
Feedback and responses

Tips on production

Layout

5-6 articles per A4 page keeps the reader awake. Keep words, sentences and paragraphs short.

Email Newsletters

The list of recipients belongs in the BCC, not the CC field. This way nobody sees anybody elses address.

Think carefully about what to put in the subject line. It shouldnt be too long and it shouldnt be something vague like December Update. I delete anything with a remotely odd subject-header these days, to avoid emails about sex toys and African widows

Link to the newsletter on your web page (Because lots of email servers will send a huge attachment straight back)

Provide a functional link for unsubscribing. (Just make the newsletter dazzling enough to convince them not to.)

Recipients

Your own customer list is heaps better than buying in a list of names. Allow people to opt-out easily and dont send out the newsletter too often you risk becoming a stalker-by-mail

THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN 'CATALOGUES TODAY', 2004

Author Bio:
Anna Hinds is a proclaimed scripter. Anna likes to write articles about this topic.
You can search for this article using: free ebooks, ebooks, e-books, learn beekeeping ebooks, free e books, free e-books, cheap kids ebooks
 
 
 

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