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  Category: Articles » Internet & Online Businesses » Ezine & Newsletters » Article
 

The Five Deadly Fears of E-Newsletter Publishing




By Michael Katz

1. Fear Of Having Nothing To Say

As a small business owner, you know a lot more than you may
realize. And although running out of material is the number one
reason cited by small business owners for not launching an
E-Newsletter in the first place, I have never come across anyone
who knew enough about a particular industry or topic to start a
business in it, who didn't also have a nearly endless supply of
content to choose from.

Remember, your clients and others who have an interest in your
area of specialty, don't work in it every day the way you do.
The things that are second nature to you, whether it's how to
purchase life insurance if you're a broker; how to write a press
release if you're a marketing consultant; or how to troubleshoot
a light switch if you're an electrician; are all news to those
of us on the outside of your industry.

The people who are going to read your newsletter have questions.
You on the other hand, have answers, opinions, experience, and
perspective. When it comes to your industry, you understand what
matters and what doesn't, and how all the pieces fit together.
These brief, useful nuggets are the things you write about.

2. Fear Of Technology

An E-Newsletter has a lot of moving parts. There are mailing
lists to manage; links to set up; images to lay out; responses
to track; and dozens of other small pieces to coordinate and
fine tune, all in the course of writing and publishing a
newsletter month after month. Managing this process efficiently
requires a fair amount of technology churning away in the
background. That's the bad news.

The good news is that email marketing has finally evolved to the
point where there are dozens of vendors out there who, for a
very small fee, will take care of most of this for you (go to
Google and search on “email marketing vendors” for a look at
what's out there). So while it's true that you will have to go
down a learning curve before you can switch your newsletter
publishing into autopilot, you no longer need technical skill to
get there.

Managing the logistics of a monthly newsletter can be tedious at
times, no question. But if you've ever successfully assembled a
gas grill, you're more than technically qualified to publish an
E-Newsletter.

3. Fear Of Publishing On A Regular Basis

Although you may be sold on the value of a regularly published
E-Newsletter, you may still be worried that once let out of its
cage, this beast won't ever leave you alone. The truth is,
you're right to be concerned. If I had to point to one factor
that plays the most significant role in the failure of company
E-Newsletters, it's that the people behind them stop publishing.

Like starting an exercise program, we all go great guns out of
the gate: telling everybody we know, celebrating every issue.
But (also like exercise), by month four or five the thrill is
gone, and many people start to wonder how to quietly put the
thing out of its misery.

I'm happy to say that I've discovered two solutions to this
potential problem.

First, publish monthly. Although it may seem that dropping back
to a less frequent schedule will reduce the burden, in practice
the opposite is true. The less often you publish, the bigger a
deal it is, and the more it seems to hang over your head. A
monthly schedule however, means that the next issue is never
more than 30 days away, and you will find yourself less
concerned with achieving perfection each time.

Second, create a publishing schedule and stick to it. First
Tuesday of the month, third Friday, whatever. The important
thing is that you bake it into your monthly work schedule. An
E-Newsletter will never be today's top priority, and unless you
explicitly determine when it will come out, you're more likely
than not to keep pushing it to the back burner.

4. Fear Of Writing

I hear it every day from the small business owners I work with:
"I can't put out an E-Newsletter, I'm a lousy writer." Well,
you'll be happy to learn that writing an E-Newsletter - like
email in general - is a lot more like talking than writing.

People don't expect to read prose on screen, and they don't want
something that reads like an article from a local business
journal. They want a piece of you and your expertise. As a
result, the most effective E-Newsletters are those that sound as
if the company leader is just talking; filled with all the
slang, run on sentences and joking around that comes out in
person.

After all, E-Newsletters are simply glorified emails, and email
is fundamentally a two-way conversation. The more you can write
in an authentic, friendly, spoken manner, the more it will feel
to readers like somebody (i.e. you) is really on the other end.
So don't worry about something that your high school English
teacher would be proud of. Focus on turning out something that
breaks down the walls between your company and your customers.
Something real.

5. Fear That SPAM Makes It All A Waste Of Time

There's no doubt about it, SPAM has decreased the effectiveness
of E-Newsletters over the last 12 months, and we are all much
more aggressive with the delete key than ever before.

But, let's put that into some perspective. A good E-Newsletter
sent to your house list will still be opened by over 50% of the
people it's sent to. That's 5?, 10?, 50? times better (you pick)
than the percentage of people who read your newspaper ads;
respond to your direct mail; or accept your unsolicited phone
calls. The fact is, for the small business owner, an
E-Newsletter represents the first time in history that she's
ever been able to cost effectively communicate with her entire
customer and prospect base over and over and over again. Not
only that, but thanks to the inherently democratic nature of
email (i.e. the big boys don't get any more space in the email
inbox than the rest of us), an E-Newsletter gives us the
opportunity to not just compete with, but outperform our much
larger competitors for the attention of readers.

Yes, SPAM has taken some of the shine off of this diamond. But
make no mistake, it's still a diamond.

A Final Comment

You may be waiting to launch your E-Newsletter until everything
is "just right." Until your mailing list is large enough; until
you've stockpiled enough columns so you'll never run out; until
you've hired that new marketing person; etc., etc.

I've got news for you. No matter how much you plan and prepare,
things are going to go wrong even then. I've been midwife at the
birth of dozens of E-Newsletters, and every time we launch one
(every time), something goes wrong. It's never the same
something, but it's always there. So don't worry about it, just
get in the game.

Three reasons: First, because the cost of error online is
exceedingly low. If you make a mistake -- or simply change your
mind! -- you can fix it. Nothing about your newsletter need be
permanent, from the name to the look to the content. Every issue
is an opportunity to start fresh.

Second, because time is your enemy. Relationship marketing (of
which, your E-Newsletter is a tactic) is a long term approach.
The sooner you get started reaching out to your circle of
contacts, the sooner you'll see the results. With an
E-Newsletter in particular, you lose much more by waiting than
you gain by perfecting.

Third, because experience is your friend. You can do all the
research in the world, but until you've got a living, breathing
newsletter of your own, it's just a theoretical exercise.
There's only so much insight to be gained intellectually; the
real "A-ha's" occur when you get behind the wheel and drive it
yourself.

Bottom Line: These five fears are common among burgeoning
E-Newsletter publishers, but on closer examination, not all that
daunting. Go ahead, get started with yours today!

(c) Copyright. Michael Katz. All rights reserved.
 
 
About the Author
Michael J. Katz is Founder and Chief Penguin of Blue Penguin
Development, Inc., (www.BluePenguinDevelopment.com) a Boston
consulting firm that helps clients increase sales by showing
them how to nurture their existing relationships, and that
specializes in the development of electronic newsletters. He is
author of the book, E-Newsletters That Work.

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  Some other articles by Michael Katz
10 Really Good Reasons to Quit Your Job and Start Your Own Business
It’s been five years since I made the decision to leave my corporate job and start my own company. No question about it, leaving nice coworkers, a stable paycheck ...

  
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