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> Get Articles > Ezines and Email Newsletters > THE PROBLEM WITH HTML EMAIL NEWSLETTERS

THE PROBLEM WITH HTML EMAIL NEWSLETTERS


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Windsong
webmastermarketing-resources.com

Marketing Resources
http://marketing-resources.com/


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A courtesy copy of your publication would be appreciated but not

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THE PROBLEM WITH HTML EMAIL NEWSLETTERS

by windsong



The recent trend towards HTML email really disturbs me.

I, for one, do not like HTML email. If I want to see the

glitz and color, I will go to your website, but send me

plain text in your email. Do I receive HTML emails? Sure.

But the delete key is right there and I use it. And so do

a lot of other people. HTML belongs in web pages.



One major concern is bandwidth. HTML email files are much

larger than plain text. I resent the fact that it takes

longer to download the HTML email from my server. It also

takes longer to load it into the email window. Then I have

to scroll back and forth. Forget it. Deleting is easier.



Regular email done in HTML is rather pointless. My biggest

concern are newsletters done in HTML. These are large

emails anyway, and doing them in HTML is only compounding

the problem. One must consider the recipient. Are we so

egotistical to believe that ALL the people on the 'net are

in the USA?? What about the millions of people in other

countries who pay by the minute to download these extra

large files of HTML emails? Some of these people prefer to

download their email, and then go offline while they read

them. This makes the images in HTML email rather useless.

For the images to work, you must stay online.



Then there is the problem of some email programs that do

not support HTML. Just because yours does, doesn't mean

that mine does. DO NOT assume that everyone can read HTML

e-mail just because you can. Consider, too, that not all

email readers will display your HTML in the same way. It

may not look the way you think it does.



Some newsletter publishers give their subscribers the option

of receiving plain text or HTML. This is all well and good,

however, it seems to me that it would be twice the work for

the already overworked editor to format the same newsletter

twice. Maintaining two lists of subscribers would also

become a burden.



Whats the point in making your newsletter look just like

your website? Why bother with the newsletter? Just send 'em

to your website and be done with it.



What makes a newsletter good? Simplicity, readability, full

of content that the reader wants, and a lack of flashing

glitz. Keep it simple, and keep your subscribers.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

windsong is the editor/publisher of six newsletters.



One of them is All About E-Zines:

http://marketing-resources.com/EZzine.html



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~





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