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How
To Grow Your Newsletter List In 6 Easy
Steps
Teacher: Jim
Turner
Every newsletter publisher wants
more subscribers - and you are probably no different. The reason
you are publishing your newsletter is probably to build your
relationships with your subscribers to build familiarity, trust
and ultimately sales. And the more subscribers you have, the
greater number of sales.
Here is a way to increase the
number of your subscribers, quite quickly and without a whole
lot of work. It harnesses the power of joint venture marketing
and endorsements - key ingredients for internet marketers without
huge budgets but who still want results. And it catches the
prospects when they are very open to receiving new information.
Step 1
Identify other newsletters similar
to your own - that either provide information similar to yours,
or serve an audience which is likely to be interested in your
newsletter as well.You can find them in newsletter lists or
directories listed at www.ibizcenter.com/members/directory_list.htm
Look for:
Active newsletters with
increasing numbers of subscribers. Clues include subscription
bases over 1000 which have been in existence over 6 months.
Newsletter publishers who
appear to be attracting new subscribers at close to the same
rate as you are, as you will probably get the best response
from them, as compared with a newsletter that is getting grossly
more per week than you are.
The newsletter lists or directories
which show the number of subscribers to each newsletter on
the list are helpful here. The list of the sites with lists
of newsletters that arrange for ad swaps at "Getting
Advertisers for Your Newsletter" is
quite helpful there.
The sites that show publishers
that sell ad space usually contain updated subscriber number
information are also helpful, such as:
-The Directory of Ezines from Lifestyles
Publishing - $39.95/year
- Ezine
AdSource - $99/year
Step 2
Subscribe to 15-20 of these newsletters.
Explore their newsletter archives if they exist.
Quickly review the newsletters
to get a feel for them. See if they are of the quality with
which you would wish to be associated (and I am assuming that
you are of the quality that they would wish to be associated
with).
Note:
*the topics covered by the newsletter
- (are they ones likely to attract the same target audience
as yours?).
*the attractiveness of the layout.
*the spelling and grammar.
*the tone (blatantly hype / commercial
versus professional).
*are the articles original, or
reprints of articles you see everywhere?
*the kind and numbers of advertisers
and sponsors of the list,
*how it is published (on a free
service, paid-for professional mailing list management service
or by a personal e-mail program).
For those that meet your selection
standards, add the publisher's name, contact e-mail address
and newsletter name to a spreadsheet, database or text file
which contains the following fields:
Publisher's name
E-mail address
Newsletter name
Date message sent
Date response received
Date follow up message is sent to the non-respondents
Response: Yes or No
Wording of the message to be added
Date their message is added to your welcome letter
Date your revised welcome letter is sent to the list owner, requesting theirs
in return
Date the list owner's welcome letter which includes your subscription instructions
is received.
Date follow up message is sent to those who have not sent their revised welcome
letter to you.
Date of latest monitoring unsubscribe - resubscribe
The more organized you are, the
easier it will be to keep track of what you have done and what
you still need to do. Follow up is critical to success.
Step 3
Contact the list owners, with
a courteous, brief, direct, to-the-point, e-mail message. Tell
them:
*who you are and what you do
*you have subscribed to their
newsletter and like .......
(tailoring your letter to the
specific newsletter dramatically increases your response rate)
*why you are writing this letter
and why their reading this letter will benefit THEM! Stress
the benefits to the list owner from your proposal.
*how big your list is. Don't
inflate the numbers of your subscribers or lie about anything.
*how fast your list is growing.
*what plans you have to expand
it further - but avoid hype.
*that your newsletter is free,
and that it is an "opt-in" list.
*that your new subscribers automatically
get a welcome message.
*how the joint venture would
work
*where they can view a sample
of your content - your newsletter archives on your web site
or an autoresponder where they can get a sample of your newsletter.
A sample letter may be viewed
on the online version of this newsletter.
Step 4
Revise your welcome letter you
send out to new subscribers by adding the information from
the list owners who reply positively to your joint venture
proposal. Do this immediately as the favorable responses come
in - at least daily. Confirm with them by sending them a copy
of your revised letter to demonstrate your follow through.
Request that they send you a copy of their welcome letter with
your information.
Step 5
Send a follow up letter to those
who did not respond. You can increase your total response dramatically
with a second request, and with very little extra work. Simply
pull up the original e-mail message and hit "Forward" and add
your reminder message to the top and "Send".
A sample reminder message is
included in the online version of this newsletter.
Step 6
Do this again with the next group
of 15 - 20 prospects. And again, and again.
These are the basics. The 6 step
process works great, just as it is. There are numerous refinements
to this tactic, however, that you will find in the online version
of this newsletter that dramatically increase the response.
Bottom line: think innovatively
about how you can work with others to benefit everyone - even
competitors. This is not a zero-sum game, where if one wins
that means others lose. By working together, we all can win
more than if we remain strictly independent.
About the teacher:
Jim Turner, Publishers
Only List
WebProfitSource
jim@webprofitsource.com
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