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Should we ePublish an eNewsletter?
By Deb Daufeldt
If you’re already doing some form of online e-publishing – that’s
great! If you’re hesitating (or worse yet, procrastinating),
perhaps I’ll succeed in pushing you over the edge. So, you’re
no doubt asking yourself - why email? What will it do for my business?
What’s the ePublishing Strategy?
Email is a relatively inexpensive but highly effective means of
communication. As a medium that is relatively young, many people
often don’t quite know how to take full advantage of all
of the available email marketing options, let alone how to get
started.
Goals for an eMail Marketing Program
In general, your goals for an email marketing program can be boiled
down to one or more of the following:
Maintain Top-of-Mind Positioning – Landing in the Inbox
on a regular basis enables you to stay top-of-mind, whether your
emails are opened every time or not. The timing to acquire your
products or services may not be now, but could be soon. Don’t
underestimate the value of building your brand and above all, be
patient if the phone doesn’t ring off the hook with your
first email broadcast.
Keep your customers, investors, employees and other interested
parties involved with your brand - Email keeps your stakeholders
connected with you and up-to-date on what you are doing. If you
have a large database, you couldn’t possibly reach out and
touch every one of your customers regularly via other mediums such
as the telephone.
Position yourself (or your company) as a leader - Email allows
you to educate your market about your work, little by little, positioning
you as an expert. Over time, your audience gains confidence in
your abilities and offerings.
Drive traffic to your locations, phone lines, or company
website – An
email campaign is a great way to drive eyeballs to targeted pages
on your website and a whole lot cheaper than paid placements on
the search engines (though certainly not a substitute for them).
Turn suspects into prospects and prospects into loyal
customers – Though
email is better known as a customer retention tool than an acquisition
tool, it can be a very effective way to begin and then develop
a relationship with a suspect that has shown even some interest
in your offerings. Over time, the suspect develops a trust in you
and a better understanding of your products or services and in
time slides into the category of “customer.”
Introduce a new product or service – What better way to
let your customers and prospects know you’ve got some new
great stuff to share with them. And as a subscriber, they will
be the FIRST to know about it. I like to call this the “Exclusivity
Factor.” It makes people want to be on your email list.
Build a Viral Marketing movement – One of the most popular
uses for email is to let your fans know about sales, discounts,
and specials… especially for retailers. Leverage email to
motivate your current fan-base to act as advocates for your brand
and "Tell-A-Friend" to drive new traffic to your online
and/or offline store for increased revenue and audience building.
Cross-sell and up-sell and re-sell existing customers – One
of the best ways to keep a customer is to make it harder for them
to leave you. Email is a dream of a medium to deepen the relationships
you have with your customers. They are less likely to “churn” (or
leave you for another provider) if they receive multiple products
or services from you.
Send Press Releases and stay on the Media Radar – Most
editors and reporters today have little time to sift through the
piles of press releases that cross their desks each day but they
do need leads for stories to fill their publications and broadcast
reports. In recent panel discussions with various members of the
press, spanning both broadcast and print media, one universal request
was clear - "Send it to us via email - no attachments, keep
it succinct - but use email." Adding members of the Press
to your email list keeps them abreast of your news just like the
rest of your list.
Fair Warning:
Although email is relatively inexpensive as a tool, it does require
a commitment of resources. If all you send out is advertising messages
it may prove difficult to keep people interested enough to stay
on your list. You need to commit to content that they want to receive,
which I’ll be discussing in future articles. It is the regular
dialog, back and forth, that builds valuable relationships between
you and the people who make up your list. If you do your e-mail
marketing the right way, your recipients will actually look forward
to receiving your messages. Check back next month when we delve
into some of the “HOWs” of doing email right.
*********************
Deb Daufeldt is the owner of Second Story Solutions, an email
marketing specialist based in Denver, Colo. She works with
many large corporations to help them use email marketing effectively.
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