Writing Effective Email Newsletters
Writing Effective Email Newsletters by
Patrick Schwerdtfeger
Email newsletters are clogging your inbox. And it’s not just
you. It’s everybody. Email newsletters are a great way for
people to stay in touch with their audiences and everybody knows
it. And that means everybody has a newsletter and they all want you
to sign-up, giving them your email address along with an invitation
to email you with whatever they might be offering.
This is not entirely a bad thing. Fact is; we’re receiving
more free information than we ever have before. All these merchants
are trying to capture our attention and gain our trust with
valuable content. And of course, we have to option to sign up for
whichever newsletters we might be interested in so the information
we’re getting is essentially by request. But the sad reality
is that most email newsletters never get read. In fact, a recent
study found that only 19% of email newsletters ever get looked at.
That’s bad news for those writing them.
If you’ve had any experience with email newsletters,
you’ll know that they tend to fall into two buckets. In the
first bucket, you’ll find the cookie-cutter newsletters with
standardized formats, nicely crafted colorful layouts, interesting
sidebars and perfectly positioned articles. In the second bucket,
you’ll find the emails that come to you regularly from a
provider you signed up for but that look more like a personal text
email than a formal newsletter. And as it turns out, these two
approaches deliver very different results.
The probability of having a conversational text-based email read
are far greater than having a standardized and html-formatted
newsletter read and it’s because recipients perceive the
former as a personal message and the latter as spam. Of course, it
doesn’t take long before they realize that the supposedly
personal message is spam as well but if the opening sentence or two
are captivating enough, the recipient may already be caught in the
web and destined to read the whole thing.
For those of us who send out periodic email newsletters, there are
a couple lessons we can learn from all this. For starters, if
you’re using a standardized newsletter template, consider
changing to a less structured and more conversational format. And
by the way, this includes the title. Don’t reference
“monthly newsletter” in the subject line. Instead, use
something more timely and unique. Use a title you would write to a
friend, something that looks more personal.
Anyone who uses Outlook knows that the preview pane allows you to
glance inside the email before actually opening it. This is where
the standardized format can really hurt you. If the contents are
just straight text and appear more conversational, the chances of
having the email opened goes up dramatically. And a strong timely
subject line adds to that probability as well.
Once the email is open or at least being viewed through the preview
pane, make absolutely sure your opening sentence or two are dynamic
and captivating. Make sure those opening words are well-written and
that they clearly define the value available to the recipient if
they read further. This is the biggest mistake of standardized
newsletters. They always have some boring standardized text at the
very top. Don’t do it. Make sure your opening sentence is
unique for each newsletter and encourages the recipient to continue
reading.
Taking this approach may reduce the perceived formality of your
newsletter but it will definitely increase the number of people who
read it. Don’t get caught up with the formality issue. If
you’re presenting valuable information, your clients will
respect you plenty. The sad reality happens when you send out
valuable information and nobody knows because nobody read it.
You’re better off catering to people’s natural
curiosities and writing your periodic newsletters in a casual and
personal way.
Tactical Execution with Patrick Schwerdtfeger is a strategic
company focused on growth marketing and program implementation
across business markets. Visit the website for actionable guidance
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