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> Get Articles > Ezines and Email Newsletters > 12 Ways to Improve Your Newsletter's Format

12 Ways to Improve Your Newsletter's Format


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Stephen Bucaro
bucarotechelpearthlink.net

Bucaro TecHelp
http://bucarotechelp.com


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Permission is granted for the below article to forward,

reprint, distribute, use for ezine, newsletter, website,

offer as free bonus or part of a product for sale as long

as no changes are made and the byline, copyright, and the

resource box below is included.

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12 Ways to Improve Your Newsletter's Format



By Stephen Bucaro



Has your newsletter kept the same format for over a year?

Is your newsletter's format based on a currently available

template? If so, you may be losing subscribers and money.

Over the last year, several major changes have occurred on

the Internet that may have made your newsletter's format

obsolete.



One change is the pervasiveness of spam and the wide

implementation of email filters to deal with spam. Another

change is the increased sophistication and lack of patience

exhibited by Internet users. Bring your newsletter up to

date by making the 12 changes described below.



1. DO NOT use a creative email subject line.



Do not use a cute or creative phrase for your newsletter's

email subject line. This will cause the recipients email

filter to send your newsletter to the spam bucket. The

subject line should contain only the name of your

newsletter. To avoid getting filtered, make sure the

subject line contains the word "newsletter".



2. DO NOT personalize your newsletter.



Everybody knows their name was inserted by an automated

application and that you don't really have a clue as to

what their name is. Your readers will view you as insincere

and dishonest. Don't use insincere and dishonest automated

personalization. You are tricking no one.



3. DO NOT put a "this is not spam" message at the top of

your newsletter.



Unless your newsletter can be mistaken as spam, do not

put a message near the top of your newsletter stating

something similar to "by subscription only ..." or "you

subscribed ..." or "to unsubscribe...". If your newsletter

can be mistaken as spam, see the following tip.



4. DO NOT use a "top sponsor" ad.



Although advertisers pay more for the top sponsor ad

position, accepting them causes you to lose money overall.

This is because the first thing your subscribers see when

they open your newsletter is advertising. You lose

subscribers. Don't waste your subscribers time, get to the

meat first - your feature article.



5. DO NOT use a "Contents" section.



Do not put "Contents" near the top, or anywhere in your

newsletter. Although almost all newsletters have a contents

section, there are three reasons why you don't want it.



1. You are publishing a newsletter to make money. You make

money through advertising in your newsletter. You want

your readers to peruse the entire newsletter, including

the advertising. If your reader sees nothing of interest

in the contents they just delete your newsletter without

reading any part of it.



2. It wastes the readers time. As an example, next time

you watch TV news, notice how they waste your time

"telling you what they are going to tell you". Instead of

wasting so much time telling you what they are going to

tell you, why don't they just tell you?



By enticing you with coming stories, they hope to prevent

you from flipping to another channel when they go to

commercials. That doesn't work with me. As soon as they

start telling me what they are going to tell me, I flip

to another channel. Don't waste your readers time by

telling them what you are going to tell them, just get to

it!



3. The contents section lists only the titles of the

articles. Unfortunately, nowadays writers are too busy

thinking up cutesy titles that don't give you a clue as to

what the article is about. Therefore, reading the contents

is a waste of time.



6. DO NOT put a message welcoming new subscribers.



Assuming that your newsletter has a low turnover rate, the

vast majority of your readers will be old subscribers. You

force old subscribers to read the same "welcome new

subscribers" message over and over again in every issue.



The fact is that even new subscribers are not interested

in your "welcome new subscribers" message. New subscribers

are trying to determine if your newsletter will provide

them with useful information, or if they should

un-subscribe immediately. Judging by a "welcome new

subscribers" message, your newsletter appears to waste

their time.



7. DO NOT bore readers with your personal life.



As your subscriber opens your newsletter, they are thinking

"what's in it for me". They couldn't care less that you

are going on vacation, that your child did something cute

yesterday, or that you have a new puppy. They only care

about what's in your newsletter that is useful to them.

Don't waste your readers time with trivia about your

personal life.



8. DO NOT leave a lot of white space.



Someone wrote that text is easier to read if you leave a

lot of white space. Was that idea based on a scientific

survey, or was it one persons opinion? I suspect it was

the latter. Leave one blank line between paragraphs. Never

leave more than one line blank anywhere in your newsletter.



White space is equivalent to "dead air" time on radio or

TV. Leaving a lot of white space in your newsletter just

forces your reader to scroll more. Don't waste your readers

time.



9. DO NOT apologize for a missed schedule.



Sending your newsletter on a regular schedule is one

indication of professionalism. But it may surprise you to

know that if you miss a publication date - nobody will

notice. Contrary to your delusions, not all of your readers

are sitting on the edge of their chairs waiting for your

newsletter to arrive in their email box. Your newsletter

is just not that good.



If you are a day or two, or even a week late sending out

your newsletter, I promise you, nobody will care. And the

last thing you need to do is post a message in your

newsletter pointing out your lapse in professionalism and

making excuses.



10. DO take advantage of viral marketing.



A virus is an organism that spreads itself around. Your

newsletter should be like a virus. Ask your readers to

forward your newsletter to their friends. Make sure your

newsletter has a subscribe link so that anyone that comes

into contact with it can easily subscribe. Give reprint

rights to the articles, as long as they include your

resource box.



11. DO thank your readers for their support.



There are hundreds of thousands of free newsletters. This

reader chose to give your newsletter the value of their

time. An honest thank you is never a waste of the readers

time.



12. DO tell subscribers why they should not unsubscribe.



You should always place an unsubscribe link at the bottom

of your newsletter. Just above the unsubscribe link, you

should put reasons why the reader should NOT click on the

unsubscribe link.



Remind the reader of what they get from your newsletter.

Entice the reader to stay by mentioning what will be in

the next issue. Display the number of subscribers. If that

many subscribers think the newsletter is of value, maybe

unsubscribing would be a mistake.



Major changes that have occurred on the Internet over the

last year may have made your newsletter's format obsolete.

By making the 12 changes described above your newsletter

will be better able to deal with spam filters and with

todays demanding and impatient Internet users.

----------------------------------------------------------

Resource Box:

Copyright(C)2002 Bucaro TecHelp. To learn how to maintain

your computer and use it more effectively to design a Web

site and make money on the Web visit

http://bucarotechelp.com

To subscribe to Bucaro TecHelp Newsletter Send a blank

email to mailto:bucarotechelp-subscribetopica.com

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