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Featured Ezine Articles

Advertising in Ezines
Advertising in Ezines has to be one of the best mediums for advertising your product, free ebook or website. If you want to reach an audience which is highly targeted and cost effective then advertising in ezines is the way to go. You ...

Ezine Publishing: 5 Ways to Make Sure Your Ezine Gets Delivered
Ezines are hot. It seems every small business owner and independent professional on the web has an ezine these days. And for good reason. They continue to be one of the easiest, cheapest small business marketing techniques available. ...

The Almost Complete Ezine Promote It List
Every Ezine writer knows that just publishing an ezine is not the only task that is involved in writing a Good ezine. You must constantly search for new material and ways to promote the list also. Of the list compiled below, if you join ...




"Ezine Readers Refuse to Buy? 3 More Secrets to More Sales"
 

Three more tips to maximizing your company ezine's sales power.
Every day we get dozens of letters from frustrated company newsletter publishers who want to know why their newsletter’s not selling like they think it should.

While every newsletter and each audience is different, we’ve found 9 areas that often need improvement. This month, we’ll discuss focus, format and measurement.

4. Focus: What’s your newsletter’s goal? Is it to increase sales 15%? Is it to increase name recognition for your brand. To cut down on calls to your help desk? Whatever your goal, you’ll want to make sure everyone who works on your newsletter understands that goal and how they can help reach it.

A manufacturing company recently contacted us when they discovered only about 25% of their readers remembered receiving their newsletter. We took a look at their layout to suggest changes. First, we discovered they printed their company name just once in the entire (very lengthy) newsletter! Plus, though they used HTML, the newsletter looked nothing like their other company materials, and it didn't even include the company's logo!

Because the manufacturing company wanted to build name recognition, they needed to start by helping readers associate the newsletter with their company. For all newsletters, this means using your company name throughout the newsletter. For HTML newsletters, this means keeping the look of the newsletter in line with your company image as much as possible.

5. Format: The formatting of your newsletter absolutely matters, and it relates strongly to your goals. A newsletter that’s designed to increase sales should make it easy for readers to buy (lots of clear links, pictures if appropriate, etc).

Before you make any other decisions, though, you have to decide whether to publish only in plain text or to also offer a HTML version. Our clients have found HTML to be anywhere from 50-75% more effective than plain text.

With HTML, you can include pictures of your products, use colors to emphasize special offers, and repeat elements of your image to strengthen your brand both on and offline. Plain text, however, is easier to send (since with HTML you need to send both), so if you only have time for one version, make it plain text.

Whichever you choose, to best take advantage of a newsletter’s major strength (permission-based follow-up), you’ll want to keep the format consistent. Many publishers rearrange their

newsletters each month, taking out and putting in new sections, re-ordering the articles, etc. No matter what your main newsletter goal, consistency is a powerful ally. By getting your readers accustomed to always finding a tip after the editor’s letter, they’ll become accustomed to your company.

6. Measurement: Without measurement, you can’t be sure how your newsletter’s doing. Certainly, some things can’t be measured easily (like brand recognition), but by keeping an eye on statistics and running surveys, you can get a pretty good idea what’s going on with your readers.

One stat to measure if you’re publishing in HTML is your open rate. While it’s not foolproof (or even especially interesting), keeping an eye on your open rate will alert you to potential problems. By watching for declines or surges in your open rate, you can learn which subject lines are most popular; you can also learn which newsletters trigger more filters than usual, and which newsletters might have bugs in the HTML code.

Another stat to keep an eye on is sales made as a result of your newsletter. An easy way to do this is to offer special discounts to readers of your newsletter. Using trackable links also helps, but it doesn’t alert you if your newsletter readers prefer to use the phone to order.

Keep an eye on your rate of subscription and unsubscription. Do readers unsubscribe more after you’ve covered certain topics? Do you see surges in subscribers when you offer bonuses for referrals? Watching what happens to your list from week to week can be very revealing.

A final stat all newsletter publishers should keep an eye on is bounces. Depending on how you maintain your list, you may lose 30% or more of your subscribers each year to full and abandoned email boxes. Keeping an eye on this stat each month helps you gauge which newsletter promotion plans are working and which are bringing lots of temporary subscribers.

What's the secret to more profits, happier customers, and expert status? A pink and purple polka-dotted ping-pong paddle, of course. Rocky explains: http://www.designdoodles.com/ping-pong.htm

About the Author

At The Write Exposure, Jessica Albon helps companies attract and retain customers with powerful newsletters. At http://www.designdoodles.com they reveal the secrets behind newsletter success.



Written by: Jessica Albon




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Ezine News

What NOT to do in an interview: walk in empty-handed - San Francisco Examiner
Sounds so simple, but it's easy to leave the house without them. Arriving at an interview without them tells an interviewer that you're just planning on "winging it", and that you don't anticipate the need to jot anything down to ask about later ...

Uhhh, I have to ask THEM questions? - San Francisco Examiner
Many people get so excited and stressed out about preparing what they're going to TELL an employer that they don't realize the value of ASKING an employer some great questions. When I was a hiring manager, I remember the candidates who asked ...

Save to My Home - HealthCentral.com
I am a dietitian with a genetic predisposition for high... Finally, you want more of something instead of less! HDL (high-density lipoprotein) cholesterol is also known as the "good" cholesterol. HDL removes cholesterol from your bloodstream and ...

ATTENTION TO THOSE CLAIMING SPAM!!!!! - Crunchgear.com
First your definition and my definition of spamming are two different things. I would like to clear things up. For your information Crunch Gear BFF is what you call an open source Wordpress Blog.  It’s not a forum in the tradition sense. It allows ...