FHS 39 Newsletter

Are mailing lists and newsletters important for your business? The short answer; yes! The long answer; you have a direct line to your potential customers, clients, and colleagues through a mailing list. A mailing list and newsletter a way to communicate to a direct set of people.

 

 


 

Create a Newsletter

A newsletter is a powerful tool. It is a direct link to your audience. Its an invite from them to start talking to them and providing valuable content. If you are a business owner, freelancer, consultant, or anything else, having a newsletter should be in your wheelhouse.

Create a newsletter by first planning what type of audience you are planning to have with your newsletter. The easiest start is to look at your industry and become someone who keeps that audience up to date with news, events, or information. You are the expert here even if you don’t feel like you are. Get rid of that impostor syndrome because you’re already kicking butt and taking names!

Take it one step at a time and you’ll be able to grow your audience to impressive numbers.

Opt-In

Worry about the platform and tool that you’re going to use to manage the newsletter later. Plan on what you’re going to be giving away in exchange for that potential customer/clients email address. You’re building a small community around your idea or product, so give something away that is related.

The Opt-In item is something that the client may already be looking for and is little to no cost for you. A brochure, booklet, how-to guide, checklist; these are all great opt-in items that you can give away in exchange for that email address. You just need to make sure that the item is related to the newsletter.

Frequency

Try for once a month for your release dates. That’s only 12 emails that you’re sending out to your audience. Slowly build your frequency to hit about once a week. That’s only 52 emails a year that is going out to your audience. Once a month is great, but if you can do once a week, you’re doing better.

Quality vs Quantity

Quality is what is going to compel the audience member to stay with you and consume your content. Don’t just churn out content just because you need to hit those numbers. Strategically plan and think of the reasons you’re sending out these emails.

Over time, your audience is going to help guide you into what type of content you’re going to be sending out.

Part of sending out quality is that you’re going to retain those quality clients/customers. You are striving for people who interact with you and your content, repeat readers, and potential customers.

It’s better to have 5 people on your list that interact with you versus 100 people that don’t even open your newsletter.

Content

Content can come from anywhere and anything. You are already the expert in your field and industry enough that you can talk about it. If you’re still stuck on where to find content, check out these two suggested places:

  • Feedly.com – A multi-website scrapper that brings content to you into a single dashboard. You’re able to group and organize multiple website feeds into different “buckets”. From there, you can create numerous newsletter content sources or research. The best part is that the free version lets you add a metric ton of sites before you need to upgrade.
Feedly Freelance group
  • Reddit.com – Reddit is a very popular website that consolidates a lot of content into a single site. You can easily get lost within the different sub-reddits and discussions happening every day. In a nutshell, Reddit is a forum where you can participate or read discussions based on a wide range of topics. Perfect for inspiration or content for your newsletter.

Tools to Use

Mailchimp [affiliate link] – Mailchimp is a free newsletter platform that lets you simply and easily send out your content. Mailchimp manages your contact list, your content, your scheduling, and a lot of the automated processes behind the scenes as well.

The delivery system allows me to queue up a few newsletters to go out in the future. I can also create rules around the newsletters that just went out, such as “if noone opens this, send a reminder”. The automation is very impressive and perfect for what most people need. It helps keeps clients and customers engaged in you and your content.

With Mailchimp, you can also create templates for each newsletter that you’re about to send out, so you’re not rebuilding each newsletter from scratch. A template is going to save you a lot of time and helps make your messages consistent.

Mailchimp Signup - MarionOwen

Drip – Drip is the next level when it comes to newsletters. When you need something that allows you to take control over every aspect of your contact list, newsletter, and content, this is where Drip works best.

Drip works best for ecommerce and situations where you want to keep clients/customers coming back to your site and shop. Mailchimp does this as well, but in my opinion, Drip does that a lot better.

Prices for Drip start at $50/month, but their feature list well makes up for that price. The performance for what you’re getting, Drip is an impressive tool that lets you take minute control over your communication to your audience.

Conclusion

Create a newsletter to have a direct connection with your clients and customers. Starting one begins with planning what type of audience you are speaking to. Work on that Opt-In piece to trade for an email address. Work on the frequency of how often you will send out an email, but shoot for at least 12 to begin with. Then look at what platform you are going to be using to send those newsletters out with.

Once you get going with a newsletter, you’ll find your rhythm and voice and you’ll notice the signups going up.

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