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1. Spam I am.
Nonsense – a newsletter to your customers with an option to unsubscribe is no more invasive than a full colour insert into a newspaper. For some reason we feel that throwing away the unsolicited message in the paper is an acceptable practice, whereas unsubbing at a click is invasive. Humans are funny.
Each ezine must have value to your client base. So, just sending them ‘something’ every week will maintain top-of-mind awareness, however your content will be bottom-of-bum. This is a wonderful intention, but if you don’t resource it properly (i.e. pay someone to do it), forget it.
Maybe you can. But then you could probably also make your own print ad. Or film your own TV spot. However, if funds are limited, a badly designed ezine is better than none at all. I admit that.
Good luck. In about 10 years you would have collected enough addresses to match any targeted list you could buy today for less than the price of a print ad. Far less.
Sure you can. However, you are building an online relationship, and the overall objective should be to get recipients to click through to further content on your site. People want to be taken somewhere – give them a lift.
The content that people read falls exponentially as you move further down the ezine. Even a naked woman at the bottom of a long ezine would be missed by the majority of young male readers. The type of disciplined writing we find in newspapers applies here.
Telkom only allows 500 mails per hour from a server. You need a dedicated mail server for bulk emails today. Talk to me, I can get you one cheap.
True, there are some anomalies out there – corporations with Lotus Notes struggle to send pretty pictures, and sometimes people have the graphics switched off for incoming mail. The idea is not to judge these visually starved souls, but simply to place a text line at the top of your ezine that tells them they can view it online.
They may not have the reach, but a strategic ezine can do more for sales than you ever imagined. Where TV and radio are passive media (right-brained), and print an active medium (left-brained), the ezine seems to engage the recipient in a unique way – perhaps even dual-brained (the non-involvement of the ezine as a whole, with the cognitive engagement of deciding to click for more). Who knows?
The ‘Net is no different to a supermarket – people want value for money. In this case they want something for the attention they are giving you. It’s seldom about the new environmentally friendly carpets in your offices, or the fact that John has been with the company for 50 years. Tune into wiiFM – what’s in it for me.