Top 10 Ways to Promote Your Practice Using an E-mail Newsletter
If you publish an e-mail newsletter, or "e-zine," it's important
to realize that it WON'T attract and keep subscribers without
offering practical content. If you only drone on about how
wonderful you and your services are, your readers won't stick
around for long.
But you CAN toot your own horn, as long as you don't drown out
the useful content your readers are looking for. This careful
balance is the key to increasing your response rates and
increasing business.
Here are my top 10 tips on how to accomplish this:
1) Make sure your MAIN ARTICLE always provides information that
your readers will find valuable.
By having a main article as the foundation of your issue,
readers will feel they got what they came for - helpful
information. Try a "how-to" article, a list of resources, a list
of top 10 tips, a review of a trend in the industry - that sort
of thing.
2) Begin each issue with an "EDITOR'S NOTE" or "PUBLISHER'S
NOTE."
I have found this is the perfect place to let readers know about
what's happening with me and my business, give them a taste of
my personality, and announce any upcoming events or workshops.
Because this is a personal message from you to them, and because
it's NOT your main content, you have more leeway in being direct
and self-promotional.
3) In your article, throw in LINKS to related articles you've
written or been featured in, when appropriate.
Your readers will appreciate the additional information and
resources, and it's one more chance for you to demonstrate your
expertise and credibility.
4) Make sure your links are "clickable."
To ensure your links come through as hyperlinks on your reader's
end, make sure you put the "http://" prefix before them. And to
make any e-mail addresses clickable, insert the prefix "mailto:"
before them, with no space in between.
5) Directly after your article, give a quick PROMO BLURB,
mentioning your services, books, reports, or workshops.
Why right after the article and before anything else? If someone
reads your article and says to themselves, "Gee, that was great
information!" They'll be ready to hear what else you have to
share on that subject.
A great lead-in for your blurb is: "Did you like today's
article? If you did, you'll LOVE my [services, book, report,
upcoming workshop, etc.]..."
6) In each issue, offer a TESTIMONIAL or success story from one
of your clients.
I saw another e-zine publisher doing this last year and thought,
"What a great idea! She's giving her readers further reason to
try her services."
After your article and promo blurb, put a small section that
says "What My Clients Are Saying." In each issue, feature a
short but raving testimonial from one of your clients here.
7) Tell us what YOU'RE all about!
At the end of your e-zine, take at least 10 lines and give a
concise description of YOU, what you have to offer your readers,
why they should hire you, and what they should do next (e.g.
call you or e-mail you).
8) End your e-zine with a "call to action."
What would you like your readers to do next? Call you for a free
consultation? Sign up for your teleclass? Buy your book online?
Tell them what to do and they'll be more likely to do it.
9) Don't forget your contact information!
This may seem like a "duh-duh," but it's amazing how many
e-zines I've seen that don't tell me how to contact the
publisher. Give us your name, title, business name, phone
number, e-mail address, Web site URL, and street address
(optional). The phone number is important, because some folks
will want to speak with you instead of writing you.
10) Occasionally, make a special announcement in a SOLO MAILING.
If you have something very special to announce, send it out
separately from your regular issues as a solo mailing. A solo
mailing is any mailing you make to your e-zine subscriber list
that is NOT a regular issue of your e-zine. Keep these to a
minimum of two a month, and make sure your announcements are
truly newsworthy. Perhaps one of your special discounts is
coming to an end, you need your readers' help, or you're
offering a last-minute workshop and need to fill seats. Get the
idea?