Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Monday, 18 January 2010

Blogging and e-newsletters – a formula for success

(This blog entry follows on from the last one written by Marie on 20th December last year.)

Most marketers will at some stage or other have been involved in producing a customer newsletter. Back in the day these were long drawn out affairs involving copywriters, editorial teams, a designer, typesetter, external printer and fulfilment house. Nowadays they are far more likely to be digital e-newsletters and all you need for success is a mailing list, an internet connection and something to write about.

I’ll tackle content ideas another time but for now, here’s a case study on how I’ve developed a successful model of writing and publishing e-newsletters.

I’ve entitled this post “Blogging and e—newsletters” because I use the two in an integrated manner. For the purpose of this article my business is irrelevant really, but if the context helps you, I sell training DVDs online to church based musicians. I blog most days and every week or so collect the posts together to create a newsletter which is then e-mailed. My more tech-savvy customers get the blogs as they happen on RSS feed but most still prefer a less frequent newsletter by email. And how do I know this? Well having been blogging and emailing for a fair time I then asked my customers what they thought of the frequency and content using a wonderful free online survey tool called www.surveymonkey.com. In case you are interested my survey is here. The results were great and showed an extraordinarily high satisfaction rate (you can see the summary responses here).

Firstly, WHO to send it to?

A permission based list is a no brainer. Don’t buy-in lists, instead focus energy and resources on creating your own. This will be previous and existing customers, prospects, industry contacts, journalists etc etc. Create a simple sign-up form on your website (offer an incentive if you like), capture email details at trade shows, publish your newsletter via your Facebook fan page, your Tweetfeed, offer it to relevant people in your LinkedIn network. In three years we’ve grown our business database to about 20,000 and we run a very small niche business so that’s quite substantial.

Don’t forget to send a copy to your own staff – its good internal marketing. And if you’re publishing via a blog, encourage them to contribute their own comments.

Secondly, HOW to send it

First rule – don’t use Outlook. Outlook is simply not designed to cope with large lists and if you do use it for multiple email addresses you’ll find your email frequently classified as spam.

I’ve used a low cost piece of software called Gammadyne very successfully. It integrates with my database and I had a designer put a newsletter template together for me. You will need a tech to help you the first time but after that its fairly straightforward. The downside with software like Gammadyne is that its sent using your own mail servers which increases the likelihood of the mailing being classified as spam, and also needs to be pulsed so on a big list can take several hours to send.

More recently I’ve been using Mailchimp. This is a hosted solution, beautifully simple and very low cost. I’ve found our click through rates to be far better and the software will manage your unsubscribes and bounces for you. You get lots of data and statistics with great tracking functionality which will also let you discover your most and least popular articles (see screen shot below). They even have a mailbox inspection service which checks your content for spam trigger words and provides a snapshot of how your newsletter will look in different browsers. Click to read my recent Christmas newsletter to give you an idea of my approach to content.

Content - full articles or snippets?

Assuming your e-newsletter has more than one story, you will need to decide whether to publish the full article (main drawback is a very lengthy newsletter) or headline and teaser only (requiring the reader to click through to your website). I’ve gone for the latter approach because once on the website it’s clear from our web Analytics that they tend to stick around, browse and even buy.

I’ll make sure that each newsletter has a good cross section of articles. Remember that mine will all have been posted on the blog in the previous week so I need to be somewhat strategic in having a plan for what to post. You may have some fabulous CRM software which enables you to send different content to different customers depending on their preference, but as most of us probably don’t have that functionality, the best thing is to mix it up and provide something for everyone.

So I will have something funny, something serious and educational, an “ask the expert” question relevant to my industry and perhaps a video clip or podcast. I’ll integrate something more salesy such as a mention of a new product, but its important not to have your newsletter dismissed as a sales tool. People will rarely click and read heavy sales material. Use your articles to build trust and position yourself as a thought leader rather than to overtly generate sales. Trust me, the sales will come but you have to woo the customer first.

Cross links – retaining customers on the site

So by clicking on any of my newsletter teasers you will click through to the full post on the blog. I’ll try and find an engaging photo (www.istock.com is a great low cost source). The blog post itself should be well written, as succinct as possible, spell checked with hypertext links as appropriate.

I also try and add in a list at the end of other related posts on my site that readers may also be interested in. Search engines love this cross referencing and it’s a useful service to readers. I know from my Analytics that they are used – its also a great way of reminding readers of older posts.

Its all in the headline

Your open rate will be directly related to how good your headline is. I’ve found controversial headlines have great open rates, comedy is irresistible and celebrity names work well too. There is some great advice at Copyblogger.com

Other things to think about are the text you use in the “From” field on the email. I would recommend using your company or brand name as customers will already be familiar and less likely to consider it spam.

And think also about your subject line. Research shows that using the word “newsletter” improves open rates. I change the subject line with each issue to reflect the content of the newsletter, but a standard “Your Company Name Newsletter” is not a bad option.

It also makes sense to personalise your newsletter with your customer’s name. Again, research shows better open rates with personalisation.

Monitoring success

Google Analytics is a great free tool which will help you monitor click throughs to your website from any mailing you have done. Simply embed the code in your hypertext links before you send the mailing. Mailchimp and other providers will give you even more data such as click through rates (which you can benchmark against industry averages), open rates by country, forward rates and far more.

If you watch the popular articles, and the ones that are avoided you will soon learn what works. And if you are publishing the posts on a blog, you should get plenty of nice feedback from the comments section.

How often to send

My recommendation would be to start slow. Suddenly inundating your list with a weekly email when previously they have heard from you biannually is going to annoy them. Perhaps start with a monthly or quarterly newsletter. I would say its better to be more frequent with less content than publish some epic tome every six months. Think about the way you read email content sent to you. If it’s short and sweet you are a lot more likely to click and read.

If you are getting a good response with your first few newsletters then perhaps up the ante a little and start posting more frequently. Talk to customers and ask them what they think. Perhaps even try some split tests where half your list gets a weekly and half a monthly newsletter. See how the response rates vary.

But does it work?

In a word, yes. You do need to have the right content (and if you struggle to write well then perhaps look to outsource to a freelance copywriter) and you do need a reasonable mailing list. In the last month alone, our e-newsletter and blog have accounted for over a quarter of our sales. That’s more than search engines brought in despite our SEO being up there at the top of Google. And that’s a lot more than any expensive advertisements or trade shows will have brought in. The budget needed was peanuts. What was needed, however, and will continue to be needed is for me to make time on a regular basis to research and write something compelling. Are you up for the challenge?

I’ll finish with a quote from the guru of permission marketing, Seth Godin:

“It starts with permission, the understanding that the real asset most organizations can build isn't an amorphous brand but is in fact the privilege of delivering anticipated, personal and relevant messages to people who want to get them.

It adds to that the fact that what people really want is the ability to connect to each other, not to companies. So the permission is used to build a tribe, to build people who want to hear from the company because it helps them connect, it helps them find each other, it gives them a story to tell and something to talk about.”

Marie Page runs an international e-business selling instructional DVDs teaching contemporary musical instruments. She blogs at http://musicademy.com/blog

Sunday, 20 December 2009

Blogging for Business

First let’s get one thing straight. Neither I nor your customers want to hear about what you had for breakfast. Get your social media straight. Blogging is not Facebook and neither is it Twitter although of course you might use either of those tools to promote your blog. Neither is blogging generally a diary of your day-to-day activities and teenage angst – that’s LiveJournal.

If you’ve seen the 2009 Meryl Streep film Julie and Julia you’ll know the true story of an office worker and aspiring writer who loved to cook. Julie Powell blogged about her year of cooking every recipe in Julia Child’s epic French cook book. Julie chose her subject and blogged about her passion, attracted thousands of readers and ultimately a book and film deal.

All very well for an aspiring writer but you’re a marketer - why should you blog?

20 reasons to blog (rule number one of good blog writing – blog readers love lists!)

  1. To engage with your audience and collect customer feedback (blogs allow comments and 2-way dialogue).
  2. Because it makes SEO sense - search engines love websites with updated, unique, keyword dense copy. They reward it with a higher page rank. Blogging works for SEO. Seemples.
  3. To enable you to sell more – a first visit to your website is like a first date – are you really expecting your customer to go all the way? Woo them. It takes time to develop trust and commitment.
  4. To position yourself and your company as a thought leader in your market.
  5. To create a place to think, plan and reflect.
  6. To make a big impact with zero budget.
  7. To showcase products and images and tell behind the scenes stories. You, rather than a journalist, are in charge of your content.
  8. Because its a place to be more informal and risqué.
  9. Because it humanises your company – people buy from people, not websites.
  10. To improve your writing – good for your job and your career.
  11. To create content for newsletters (I’ll blog about this in a future post).
  12. To play with technology and ideas.
  13. To force you to read and research about your market in order to gather the information you need for your posts.
  14. To collaborate with others – guest posts are really effective and it gives you the chance to interview others in your industry, work with other departments, talk to customers, senior staff and even the odd celebrity.
  15. Because there is no need to wait for the webmaster.
  16. To express yourself and create a historical record of your content – in 18 months of blogging I now have hundreds of entries, a huge archive of brilliant marketing material that we ransack on a daily basis.
  17. To podcast/videocast easily.
  18. Because it is enjoyable, compulsive and rewarding.
  19. Because it doesn’t have to be perfect.
  20. Because interruption marketing doesn’t work any more.

But I’m not a journalist

You might not be the best writer in the world but I can guarantee that you know more about your specialist subject than most other people in the world. So you work for the most boring company in the world selling boring components in a boring industry (or at least that’s what everyone else outside your marketplace thinks). But inside your marketplace is a world of people actually quite interested in those components, in how they are made, who makes them, where you sell them, who else buys them, what they then do with them and what the stories are behind the brand.

I’ll create a detailed list of blog content ideas in a future post but try sitting down for 10 minutes and thinking about all the questions your customers (or the people you meet at networking events and tradeshows) ask. You’ll have yourself a list of topics to write about in no time that will be scratching where your potential readers are itching.

How to get started

The beauty of online publishing is that it doesn’t have to be perfect but it is very easy to get going. Copy shouldn’t need to be approved from everyone from the CEO through to the office cleaner. I’d recommend using software such as Wordpress and have the content added to your website hosting (www.yoururl.com/blog) rather than being hosted somewhere else (like blogger.com). Like that you get the SEO advantage and the right corporate association from the start. Wordpress is simple to use and there is even a magazine-like idiots guide to getting started (Bloggers Handbook – How to succeed in social media and blogging. ISBN 978-1-906078-38-6).

Now that’s assuming that you are writing the official blog for your company. If you are simply an employee and the blog is unofficial then by all means use hosted software such as blogger.com. Other platforms include Joomla, Typepad, Moveable Type, Vox, Drupal, Tumble, Silverstripe, Clear Content and Squarespace.

But I don’t know what I’m doing – I’ve barely even read a blog

Get introduced to the art of blogging by signing up for marketing guru Seth Godin’s blog. Apart from showcasing thought leadership, he’ll turn your brain inside out about marketing. http://sethgodin.typepad.com/

The Marketing Profs Daily Fix is also full of bite sized marketing tips and advice http://www.mpdailyfix.com/

Stuff White People Like is a fun site which will have you forwarding links and content in no time

http://stuffwhitepeoplelike.com/

Innocent’s blog is a nice example of a corporate blog that nicely reflects all Innocent’s off the wall brand values

http://innocentdrinks.typepad.com/

Ice Cream Journal – another corporate blog with some very nice touches http://icecreamjournal.turkeyhill.com/

Idiots Guide to Blogging – the ultimate how to guide

http://www.idiotsguidetoblogging.com/

Likewise Thoushallblog is full of ideas to get you started

http://thoushallblog.com/

http://thexfactorfromapersonwhoknows.blogspot.com/ - topical blog written by a teenage friend of mine. She wants to be a journalist so has started blogging to hone her writing craft. It’s a nice example of how easy it is to get started and create a professional looking blog

And the one I write – very much for a niche market and the most effective marketing tool we have ever used. www.musicademy.com/blog


Marie Page runs an international e-business selling instructional DVDs teaching contemporary musical instruments. She blogs at http://musicademy.com/blog

Friday, 16 October 2009

Is Facebook useful to my business?

Facebook has over 300 million active users! This doesn't make it useful to your business automatically, but many brands are now setting up pages within Facebook and attracting and engaging with 'fans' on this basis.

Have a look at http://tinyurl.com/c82zq7 for an example (you don't need a Facebook account to look at this but you will if you want to 'connect' with Innocent.)

Facebook also allows advertising (it didn't at the start) and this can be paid for on a pay per click basis. Look at http://tinyurl.com/d8s4h6 to read about where ads can be displayed on Facebook pages and how social ads tie in to actions that Facebook users take.

Have any of you had experience of using Facebook within your digital marketing campaign? Share a comment with other readers so we know your views.