Newsletters
Newsletters have four times the readership of a traditional ad.
Readers find newsletters to be more credible and believable than ads.
Publishing a professional newsletter helps establish your company as an authority
and leader in its field. It also improves name recognition and sets your
company apart from the competition in the minds of readers.
A newsletter allows you to give more in-depth information to readers than an ad.
This is especially important when you're trying to educate consumers about complex
products or services. Once customers fully understand the many benefits
of your products and services, they'll be more likely to buy.
Newsletters have a longer shelf life than ads and are more likely to be read by multiple people.
Chances are you've probably received a newsletter in the mail, read it and passed
it on to a coworker or family member who was interested in the information.
Or you may have clipped an interesting newsletter article and posted it on a bulletin board. Ads, on
the other hand, are rarely clipped and posted or shared with
others.
Newsletters can be used to attract new customers, increase repeat business from
existing clients, enhance your company's reputation as an industry leader
and improve customer communications.
However, a customer newsletter will only be effective if it is carefully planned
and looks professional. Here are some tips to help make your customer newsletter
more effective at generating sales:
Carefully choose your articles so each one generates results.
Don't waste space by printing "fluff" articles that have nothing to
do with your company's area of expertise. Also, avoid using generic filler material, such as
recipes, famous quotations, etc.
Every article should be used to generate specific results. For example, one
article might be used to prompt sales by introducing a new product and its benefits.
Another article might profile one of your best customers, showing readers new ways to use your company's
products and services. Another story might improve
customer trust in your company by highlighting the impressive qualifications and accomplishments of
key employees. Yet another article might discuss a hot
industry trend and would draw in new readers who comprise your target market.
It's also important to keep each article focused on its goal. I recently received
a customer newsletter from a new bank that opened near my home. The bank did
an "Employee Spotlight" article featuring its customer service manager. The article talked
extensively about the manager's personal life: She has "three lovely
children," loves water skiing, collects antiques, etc. Although this article may make the featured
employee feel good, it's probably not going to attract many
readers or cause anyone to switch their checking accounts to this new bank.
The bank had the right idea. Employee spotlight articles can be very effective.
However, the bank's article lacked focus. Instead of concentrating on the
employee's personal life, the newsletter could have quoted the employee as to how, for instance, she
has 20 years of valuable experience in the banking industry;
how she's "totally dedicated" to customer service; and how she's implemented innovative new
procedures to make sure customers are served quickly, courteously
and accurately. This more-focused article would be far more likely to attract new customers to the bank
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Attract more readers — and more potential customers — by featuring articles that give free, helpful
tips related to your company's area of expertise.
These should be tips that are useful to readers regardless of if they do business
with you. For instance, a home-security company might offer crime-prevention
tips in its customer newsletter. A hotel conference center might offer meeting-planning tips in the
newsletter that it sends to corporate clients. A sign company that
sends a newsletter to local businesses might list tips on how to choose the right color combinations
for an interior sign.
These "free tips" articles are not only a good way to demonstrate that your company is an
industry expert and is concerned with helping out customers. They also
draw in a wider range of readers who will likely get hooked on the newsletter and read your other more
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Generate sales leads by promoting free subscriptions to your newsletter.
An easy way to generate sales leads is to add a line at the bottom of your company's
marketing materials — ads, brochures, catalogs, signs, etc. — that
encourages customers to call and get a free subscription to your newsletter. For instance, a home-security
company might add a sentence at the bottom of its
newspaper ads saying "For valuable tips on crime prevention, call us now and get a free subscription
to our Crime Watch newsletter."
People who add their names to your mailing list make excellent qualified sales
leads. For instance, in the example above the home-security company's sales
people would want to follow up with each subscriber because they already know that those who've requested
the newsletter are concerned about crime. Thus,
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Add customer testimonials to make your newsletter more impactful.
Customer testimonials can be extremely persuasive to potential clients. You
can use these testimonials in several ways.
The most effective way is to do a feature story on one of your satisfied clients. Interview the customer
and quote the person as to how beneficial your products have
been to him or her, how helpful your company's employees were, how he or she would recommend your company
to others, etc.
Another way to use customer testimonials is to put a feature in your newsletter
called "From the Mailbag," or something similar. Here you can reprint positive,
complimentary customer letters that your company has received.
If your company doesn't get many customer letters, one good way to generate
customer testimonials is to send out a feedback form to each customer who
orders one of your products or services. Ask open-ended questions, like: "How satisfied are you
with the product you ordered?" "Please describe the level of
customer service you received." "How can we improve the product or service that you received?"
At the bottom of the feedback form, add a sentence that says: "Occasionally,
we use customer comments in our promotional materials. Is it OK if we use your
comments?" Then have the customer check a "yes" or "no" box.
If the person approves, you can then reprint any appropriate comments in your
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Maximize your newsletter's exposure, and you'll maximize its results.
If your company is going through the time and expense
of publishing a newsletter, you'll want to get maximum exposure out of it. Some suggestions:
Mail your company's newsletter to all former and current customers. Also, send it to potential customers
who may have requested information on your
products in the past, but never ordered from you.
Give your salespeople copies of the newsletter to hand out on sales calls. Asking
potential customers if they'd like a "free newsletter full of valuable tips," is
a great door-opener and conversation starter for salespeople who make cold calls.
Send the newsletters to all potential clients who may have a strong interest
in certain articles. If you did an article in your newsletter about how a local bank
is saving thousands of dollars in labor costs because of a new computer system that your company installed,
send a copy of the newsletter to all other banks
in your service area.
Place a stack of newsletters at your places of business, wherever customers
visit. This may include your office lobby, a retail store or showroom.
Give out your newsletters at your company's trade-show and exhibition booths.
Put your newsletter and its back issues on your company's Web site. No other
medium gives you such widespread access to potential clients throughout
the world for such little cost.
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