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5 Secrets to
Creating an Email
Newsletter That Gets
Results
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5 Secrets to
Creating an Email
Newsletter That Gets
Results
Copyright 2005 Donna
Gunter
At almost every
meeting I attend in
my city, I get
really positive
feedback about my
email newsletter, (http://www.worksmartermakemore.com)
Work Smarter, Make
More, . People
generally tell me
they love it, or
they ask some
question about
something I've
written about in a
previous issue. All
in all, it's pretty
cool--I kinda feel
like a celebrity!
In everything that I
do, my goal and my
focus is to get
subscribers to my
newsletter. I'm not
trying to sell them
a coaching program,
nor am I trying to
get them to buy some
product. I just want
them to get my
weekly email
newsletter. That's
it. Just get a
little dose of Donna
on a weekly basis
(pun fully
intended).
My rationale behind
this comes from my
philosophy that
people have to know,
like, trust and
respect you before
they'll decide to
buy anything from
you. I've finally
acknowledged and
embraced that I'm a
pretty good writer
and have decided to
lead with that gift
and use that as my
marketing tool for
my business.
Back in 2003, I
decided that I made
some serious changes
to how I published
my email newsletter,
and I'm now starting
to see the results
of the writing I do
each week. The
results include
readers calling or
emailing me for
coaching, to sign up
for a program, to
sit in on a
teleclass, or to
form a strategic
alliance with them.
Just exactly what
I'd hope would
happen!
Here are the five
secrets to
newsletter
publishing that I
learned through the
"school of hard
knocks" that have
helped successfully
market my business
through email
newsletter
publishing:
1. Publish
consistently on a
weekly basis.
I initially
published my
newsletter on a
not-so-regular basis
initially because I
didn't see my
newsletter as a
serious marketing
tool (silly me!). I
then went to a
regular monthly
publication about a
year later and then
to a twice-a-month
publication, and
finally ended up
publishing weekly in
2003 Now, if I miss
a week, I'll get a
couple of emails
wanting to know what
happened and where
the newsletter is.
2. Let your
"voice" permeate
your newsletter.
My first newsletters
had some great
resources that a
busy business owner
would find helpful
in the management of
his/her business.
The only thing about
me was a short
paragraph about my
business at the end
of the newsletter.
What I realized was
that the newsletters
to which I best
responded were those
in which I got to
know the writer and
liked what s/he had
to say. Resources
were great, but
lessons through
personal experiences
were incredibly more
valuable and were
the things that I
remembered about the
newsletter. I
definitely put more
"me" into my weekly
newsletter now.
3. Show how you
can help clients
resolve problems.
I could just kick
myself for letting
almost 3 years slip
away by doing such a
slip-shod job in
demonstrating my
expertise. Again,
resources are
useful, but stories
of what I'm
experiencing or what
clients have
experienced in their
businesses and
decisions that have
been made to change
the way we're doing
business are much
more helpful to my
readers. Hence, in
every newsletter,
there's now a
"Business Gym"
article in each
issue to help my
readers run a better
business.
4. Set aside time to
write your
newsletter.
Finding space in my
calendar to set
aside time on a
weekly basis
exclusively for this
marketing activity
isn't always easy.
There are many times
I want to fill that
time with "profit
generating"
activities (i.e.
work with clients)
rather than holding
onto this time as a
business development
activity. Since I
now publish weekly,
it takes me about 2
hours to write the
main article for the
newsletter. I now
set aside time from
9 AM – noon each
Wed. morning and
knock out the
newsletter copy.
Some weeks the
process flows more
easily than others.
5. Repackage and
re-purpose your
articles.
One of my primary
motivations now for
doing my newsletter
is that I've now got
a personal article
bank of roughly 50
articles that I can
reuse, tweak or re-pupose
when I need to. I
submit my newsletter
article each week to
various online
article banks
through an article
distribution
service, place it on
my website, and have
it available to use
to create a special
ebook or report that
I can sell as
another income
stream, or
re-purpose as a
special report for a
give-away on my
website.
What I’ve now
discovered is that
by having this
client “reservoir”
in place (my email
newsletter
subscribers that I
go out and “tickle”
on a weekly basis),
my marketing has
gotten so much
easier. On a regular
basis one of my
readers will wake up
and decide that
they've had enough
and can’t do it this
way any longer and
decide to hire me.
If you don't
currently have a
newsletter in place
that permits you to
reach out and
"touch" potential
clients regularly, I
encourage you to
start one. I realize
that not everyone
likes nor enjoys
writing. Perhaps
there's someone you
can team up with who
could ghostwrite for
you based on some
conversations you've
had or on some
training or other
kinds of workshops
you deliver. If you
currently have an
email newsletter,
pay more attention
to its care and
feeding so that it
grows a healthy
prospective client
base for you. It'll
be one of the best
investments you'll
make for your
business.
About the author:
Online Business
Coach Donna Gunter
helps self-employed
professionals make
more profit in less
time online. To sign
up for more FREE
tips like these and
claim your FREE
ebook, TurboCharge
Your Productivity:
50 + Tools To Help
You Automate Your
Business and Make
More Profit in Less
Time Online!, visit
her site at
http://www.OnlineBizCoachingCompany.com.
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