Tips on Writing Effective Newsletters

Discussion in 'General Marketing' started by Brandon Sheley, Apr 22, 2008.

  1. #1
    Tips on Writing an Effective Newsletter
    I seen a request in our forums for a little tutorial on writing an effective newsletter, so I thought I would give it a shot.
    I’ll spend a day or two writing and putting together the pieces our vBulletinSetup Newsletter. Articles and written and rewritten after thought of the whole layout may change with some event or special that we have to get out in the newsletter. I try to remove all spelling and grammatical errors and usually try to get a staff member or two to look over it before posting it live. Our newsletter page is a little out of alignment at the moment, but in the emails they look great. I guess I’ll just start listing off some tips and we’ll see how this goes.

    • Always keep your audience in mind: For obvious reasons, all the content in the newsletter is directly related to? vBulletin news, vBulletinSetup news. This can work with any niche, if your site is about ford mustangs,? then post the latest news in regards to that car.
    • Email newsletter should be simple: If you are pushing out an email newsletter, you should try to keep it as simple as possible. Don’t put many images in the email and use all text. Your content should speak for itself, when I do add images, I try to make them very small in compared to the text.
    • Take your time composing the newsletter: As I started above, it takes me a few days to actually put together the newsletter.
    • Only publish the best: This is where I’m lacking a bit. I’m lucky enough to have a wife in advertising and plenty of member that will look over our newsletter. This really should be the #1 goal in a newsletter.
    • The newsletter must be readable: Don’t stuff 20 full stories in your newsletters, no one will read past the first sentence before deleting the email. I will post a snippet then link to the full story in the forums.
    • Choose the lead stories carefully: This is your “front page” if you are thinking like it’s a newspaper. You only want to post the stores that will be attractive to the largest number of people.
    • Build up the newsletter: In the beginning a newsletter will most likely be very simple, a few lead stories , some short news, and then a message from the admin. As your publication grows, you can add some featured stores, banners or columns to split the page up, rss feeds even for other news sites in regards to your niche.
    • Include the source: Our newsletter is full of links back to the stories in the forums.
    • Use catchy captains in the title: This is something I don’t take advantage of, but I need to start. This is your first impression on the member reading your newsletter. If the title is boring, it will most likely be deleted.
    • Ask your readers what they think: Ask your readers what they think of your newsletter. They are the reason you post them aren’t they? This is a great way to find bugs that you may not see.
    • Offer incentives for newsletter writers: I tossed this in here because this is something we have been doing on our blog. You may have noticed a few more authors other then myself lately. bdude, David and Blake have been helping out with the blog post. This would also work for newsletter, to get a collaborative process for a better product.
    • Don’t sacrifice look for readability: You don’t want so many banners, tables and columns on the newsletter that it makes it hard to read. Keep it simple.
    • Enjoy the praise: Once we started getting threads of users saying “great newsletter” and “thanks for sending” I knew I was up to something good.
    A well written newsletter can generate a great deal of traffic, always try to improve your issues and don’t forget to ask for user feedback. I’m trying to think of a few more tips, I’m a bit stumped right now. This should be a good start.
    If you have a news letter, I’d love to see a link to it. Seeing what’s working for other people would really be appreciated.
    cheers
    -Brandon @ Crowdgather
     
    Brandon Sheley, Apr 22, 2008 IP
  2. alexsgs

    alexsgs Peon Affiliate Manager

    Messages:
    332
    Likes Received:
    9
    Best Answers:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    0
    #2
    Great tips list!

    If you don't mind I have a question. What is the number of newsletter subscribers good to start with? I mean, if you write great newsletter to 200-500 subscribers you might not even see any effect about this. So, how many subscribers should be there so one could feel the results? 500? 1000? 5000?
     
    alexsgs, Apr 22, 2008 IP
  3. Brandon Sheley

    Brandon Sheley Illustrious Member

    Messages:
    9,721
    Likes Received:
    612
    Best Answers:
    2
    Trophy Points:
    420
    #3
    Thanks! :)

    The newsletter that we use wasn't made untill we have a few thousand members already, but before that I had been sending monthly emails. I tried to formate them in a friendly way so I guess I was sending out a newsletter before then as well.

    I didn't send many emails out before we had 1,000 members.. I didn't want them to think I would be sending emails every month for the rest of their internet life I guess..lol
     
    Brandon Sheley, Apr 22, 2008 IP
  4. slymarketing

    slymarketing Active Member

    Messages:
    1,143
    Likes Received:
    17
    Best Answers:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    78
    #4
    I agree, great tips.

    When it comes to how many people you should start sending a newsletter to, I don't think that it really matters.

    I started with my newsletter "Internet Marketing Tips" when I had two guys on the list. They didn't know that, and they both really appreciated the content. I think that as long as you provide quality content, it doesn't matter how many times a month you send the newsletter or to how many people.

    When I started, I made sales from both the guys, so it was worth sending the newsletter as well.

    Jens
     
    slymarketing, Apr 22, 2008 IP
    Brandon Sheley likes this.