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Entrepreneurs - 3 Ways You Can Profit From Newsletters Without Writing Them Yourself
By Yaro Starak
I'm sure you have heard many online marketers touting the
benefits of having a newsletter. I have used newsletters in the past
for many sites. I've used them as a source of revenue by having
advertisements embedded within the newsletter content. They are also
effective as a means to keep a site sticky - to "anchor" clients and
bring them back to the site. Newsletters can also be a great selling
tool to provide free information, samples of your expertise or
services, and as a taste of your full product/service. The lure of free
content from newsletters can help you to turn casual surfers to
potential customers and then finally paying customers. I find the
biggest problem for me personally is to consistently provide new
content (which is strange since I have no problems writing a daily
blog, go figure!). Consequently I have looked for methods to get around
this problem. Many of the sites I control I enjoy for the
business management side of things and don't actually provide the core
services myself. For example at BetterEdit.com I don't do any of the
editing. I have professionals on staff that handle that aspect of the
business. Consequently I have found it difficult to write newsletters
that appeal to my target audience. Other times I've just grown bored of
the subject matter and it becomes a chore to write a newsletter. If you
don't have enthusiasm your output is not going to be very good. Over the years I've developed ways to make money from newsletters without writing them myself. 1. Hire Writers The
first and most obvious way is to hire people to do it for you. I did it
this way for a community site I built with over 1000 members. In this
case it was quite easy to find people that had experience and
enthusiasm for the subject matter; I posted a news announcement looking
for newsletter writers. I hired two people and paid cash on a per
newsletter basis though at one point my writers were happy to write for
free, they just enjoyed contributing to the community (though I made
sure to pay them whenever there was advertiser revenue). To make a
profit I just made sure I had more revenue from advertisers than I had
to pay my writers. A simple equation but one that takes time to balance
since you need an audience, advertisers and writers. If you have a
popular site (the audience) the other two variables should come easily.
Alternatively you could try searching for a freelancer to write for you. 2. Other People’s Content Another
method that I've utilised is to put together a summary style newsletter
that simply links to content online. You take the time to find the
quality articles and links for your members but you don't have to
actually do any writing yourself. IncWire is a good example of a
newsletter like this. It provides links to great entrepreneurship
articles that have been drawn from all over the net. The newsletter is
free and sponsored by advertisers. Of course you can also make use of
article repositories such as EzineArticles.com and simply use other
people's articles in your newsletter. This is a reliable and easy
option since there is no shortage of great articles available for free
publication everyday. 3. E-Course You can also try
an e-course style newsletter. This is a bit different to a traditional
newsletter. Your visitors sign up and then over a period of time
intervals they get sent the course via email. You can use plain text
emails (this is the best method in my opinion - keep it simple stupid -
kiss!), or HTML email or Adobe PDFs. You can send them out once a day
for the next seven days or once a month for a year. It's up to you but
generally the sooner the better because you want to continually build
up interest over a short period of time. Will Swayne at
Marketing-Results.com.au recommends a consecutive seven day e-course. While
initially you do have to write the content yourself once it's written
your done. You don't have to constantly provide new content and your
course can be sent out to unlimited subscribers. The benefit of an
e-course is that you can really focus on what your speciality is. Your
course acts as a showpiece for your core competency, your skills, and
allows people to try before they buy. You can monetise the course by
inserting affiliate links, advertisements or selling your own
services/products (or all three!). Newsletter Software You
might be thinking this is all well and good, but how do I manage my
newsletter. How do I handle an e-course being sent out every day for
seven days to hundreds of different people without being blocked by
SPAM blockers. What technology is available and what do I recommend. Personally
I use Marketer's Choice to handle all email communications but if you
just want a newsletter service it's definitely way too expensive - it's
more of an all-in-one marketing tool. I've tried a few different
newsletter software packages. Some you install on to your own server
and then manage online, others that are externally hosted subscriber
based services and one that functioned a lot like an email client that
sits on your desktop and sends out emails through your mail server. All
of these have pros and cons. Of course it depends on your budget, but
as I have stated you often get what you pay for so be wary of the free
packages out there. I recommend you try my favourite script
source, The PHP Resource Index (http://php.resourceindex.com), in
particular the Mailing List category should be your first port of call.
You can try good old Google search as well. Anti-SPAM Before
you commit to any newsletter software make sure you check how they deal
with SPAM. Do they have an official policy and description of how your
newsletters will be received? Are they just mass broadcast? Your
newsletter software should provide double-opt in protection which means
your subscribers have to opt-in and confirm their subscription via
email before they receive anything. This helps to keep you from being
accused of spamming. One of the main reasons I chose Marketer's
Choice was because they have a very good system to make sure your mail
is delivered to your subscribers. They have an in-built SPAM checker
which reviews email you send out and tells you the likelihood your mail
will be blocked by anti-SPAM software. It has the capability to
personalise every email that is sent out so it appears with "Dear
clientname" rather than just a generic "hello". This is an important
feature both as a sales tool (people tend to read emails that start
with their name) and it's more likely that your mail won't be classed
as SPAM by anti-SPAM software, which flag non-personalised email as
potential SPAM. It's the extra benefits that professional services
provide that make them worth the cost, but you do have to go out there
and test to find what suits your needs. Newsletters Are Ace! Really
I can't think of many reasons not to have some form of newsletter or
e-course on your site. Yes it does take time to set things up but it's
worth the effort. I suggest you write it in your to-do list now if you
don't have a newsletter already!
Our credits to the source/author of this article:
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Author: Yaro Starak
Are
you interested in online marketing, Internet business, blogs and
podcasts? Are you sick of "gurus" trying to sell you the latest get
rich quick online deal? Get educated, it's the key to real online wealth. Download and read
quality how-to articles and listen to podcast audio files in mp3 - Visit my blog: Entrepreneur's Journey.
This article is taken from the EzineArticles
website.
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