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8
Essential Questions For Aspiring Ezine
Editors
Teacher: Angela
Online business 'newbies' have
no doubt heard that offering a free newsletter is one of the
best ways available to build their business and their profits.
Some of the benefits include:
Increased credibility
Leverage for profitable Joint Ventures
More exposure through article reprints, for example
An additional source of income through advertising sales
While publishing a newsletter
can be a very profitable venture, the fact of the matter is,
they're also a lot of work. Here are a few things to think
about before you get started.
1. What Type of Newsletter
Do You Want to Write?
The type of material you include
in your newsletter is as endless as your imagination. Some
suggestions include:
Featured Article
Useful Website Pick
Reader Q&A
Letter to the Editor
Surveys or Polls
Product Reviews
Suggestion/Help Column for Subscriber Websites or Products
Tip of the Day
Inspirational Quote
2. Where Will You Get Your
Content?
Will you write all the content
yourself, get others to write it for you (ghost-writers), or
use 'recycled' articles from other writers?
Fresh, original content is best.
It gets tiresome when you see the same article in 7 different
newsletters! If you don't think you can manage writing *all*
of your content, perhaps you can compromise: mostly your own
writing, with the occasional third-party article thrown in.
3. How Often Do You Plan to
Publish?
One of the advantages of offering
a free ezine is the opportunity to build a relationship with
your readers. They come to know you and trust you, and you,
in turn, learn what types of products or services they're interested
in.
A newsletter that's published
too infrequently runs the risk of being forgotten by its readers.
On the other hand, one that's published too often may annoy
its readers and cause them to unsubscribe or delete the message.
Many popular ezines are published
once a week or once every two weeks. Use that as a *guideline*
for determining your own publishing schedule.
4. Can You Afford a Professional
List Manager?
A list manager automates the
tedious task of subscription management. In other words, it
automatically handles subscribe and unsubscribe requests from
your readers.
There are many good list managers
available. Some are 'free'; that is, you may use them for free
if you accept third-party advertising in your message or, alternatively,
delivered to your mailbox.
Professional list managers will
require an investment. They will allow you to send out ad-free
messages (and keep your mailbox free of more advertising!)
and typically offer a number of features not available in the
'free' version.
5. Will You Accept Advertising?
New editors often choose to offer
free ads to new subscribers. This is supposed to help them
build their lists more quickly. On the other hand, you could
end up with subscribers who join just to get a free ad, and
who never bother to read your newsletter.
Most newsletters start to charge
for advertising around the 1000 subscribers mark. If you choose
to do so, take a look at similar ezines within your niche market
to see what types of rates they charge.
6. Should You Publish an Email
or Web-Based Newsletter?
There are advantages and disadvantages
to both. You could choose to do both: send an email newsletter
and archive each issue on the web. Another alternative is to
publish on the web, but send out an email notification with
a brief blurb about each article. Include a tracking URL for
each article and you'll be able to see which topics interest
your visitors the most!
7. How and Where Will You
Promote?
There are many free ways to promote
your ezine. The question is, Do you have time to do it? Free
methods include:
Ezine directories
Message boards, where appropriate
Article submissions to websites and other editors
Ad swaps
Signature files
eBooks
... and more.
Ezine promotion requires ongoing
effort. If you don't have the time, desire, 'know-how' or traffic
to build your subscription base on your own, you may have to
consider using one or more of the 'pay-per-subscriber' services
available online.
8. How Much Time Do You Have
to Devote to Your Newsletter?
This is the bottom line. How
much time can you spare to produce a quality newsleter? Write
a couple of sample issues to get a feel for how much time it
takes. You may need to make adjustments; for example, you might
decide to cut down on the number of articles you offer in each
issue, but publish more frequently.
About the teacher:
Angela is the editor
of Online
Business Basics, a
practical guide to building an Internet business on a shoestring
budget. Find out why it's received so many rave reviews! Visit Online
Business Basics or click
here to request a series
of 10 free reports to get you started.
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