Attain Financial Success With Your Own Profit-Pulling Newsletter
by Don Resh
To be successful with a
newsletter, you have to specialize and make it your own. It needs a personality.
Your best bet will be with new information on a subject not already covered by
an established newsletter, or at least your interpretation of existing subject
matter.
Regardless of the frustrations involved in designing and launching your own
newsletter, never forget this truth: There are people from all walks of life, in
all parts of the world, many of them with no writing ability whatsoever, who are
making phenomenal profits with their newsletter.
Your first step should be to subscribe to many different newsletters. Analyze
and study how the others are doing it. Learn how the successful newsletter
publishers are doing it, and how they are making money. Adapt their success
methods to your own newsletter, and add your own twist to it.
Plan your newsletter before launching it. Come up with a plan of action, daily,
weekly, bi-weekly, etc. Make a plan to distribute it, using subscription
services and lead sources.
Most newsletter publishers do all the work themselves, and are impatient to get
that first issue online. As a result, they neglect to devote the proper amount
of time to market research and distribution. Don't start your newsletter without
first having accomplished this task!
Market research is simply determining who you will be marketing your newsletter
to, and who will be interested in buying your products and services, and reading
your newsletter. You have to determine what niche you're going after and what it
is your readers want from your newsletter.
Your market research must give you unbiased answers about your newsletter's
capabilities of fulfilling your prospective buyer's need for information. The
questions of why they need your information, and how they will use it should be
answered before you proceed too far. Make sure you have the answers to these
questions, publish your newsletter as a method of fulfilling these needs, and
you're on your way!
You're going to loose prospects unless your newsletter has a genuine point of
difference that can be easily perceived by your potential buyer. If you are
using someone else's newsletter and just adding your own affiliate links, don't
be surprised when your prospects start leaving by the dozen. If you found the
newsletter you're copying, it stands to reason they've seen it before you did.
The design and graphics of your newsletter, plus your unique content will help
you keep your prospects from opting-out.
The name of your newsletter should also help to set it apart from similar
newsletters, and describe what your fundamental premise is all about. A good
name reinforces your marketing. Choose a name that defines what your newsletter
is all about.
Try to make your newsletter's name brandable and unforgettable - one that flows
automatically. Don't choose a name that's so vague it could apply to most
anything. The name should identify your newsletter and its theme promptly and
positively. You should also brand it with your domain name if at all possible.
When you send out your newsletter, make sure that you use a name variable with
your autoresponder. People like to see their own name and feel that they are the
only one that you are sending your newsletter to. You create trust and a feeling
in the reader that they are special and that they know you. This is a good
thing.
You may want to add a picture of yourself, so your prospects have an idea of who
is sending them this valuable information. The use of pictures will set your
publication apart from the others and give it an individual image, which is
precisely what you want.
The decision regarding whether or not to carry paid advertising, and if so, how
much, is another policy decision that should be made while your newsletter is
still in the planning stages. Some purists feel that advertising corrupts the
image of the newsletter and may influence editorial policy. Most people accept
advertising as a part of everyday life, and don't care one way or the other.
The only issue with accepting advertising in your newsletter would appear to be
that as your subscription list grows, so may the number of advertisers. At this
point, the basic foundation or philosophy of the newsletter often changes from
news and practical information to one of an advertiser's showcase. So think this
through clearly before you decide what you want the reader to experience with
your newsletter.
Promoting your newsletter, finding prospective buyers and converting these
prospects into loyal subscribers will be the most difficult task of your entire
undertaking. It takes comprehensive planning, persistence and patience.
Make sure you send a welcome letter when a new prospect signs up and tell the
reader how they are going to benefit from your newsletter, and then keep
emphasizing, right on through your "PS", the many benefits they will gain from
staying on your subscriber list. Give the reader a solid list of benefits with
examples of what you have, or you intend to include, in your newsletter.
You have to make your prospect feel that 'this is the insider's secret' to the
success they want to achieve. Present it to your subscriber as their own
personal key to success.
Prepare yourself for the fact that not everyone that signs up for your
newsletter will buy your product or service. That is all part of the internet
marketing business. However, you should not be disheartened, keep trying to get
as many subscribers as possible and always be available to answer any questions
your subscriber may have.
Good luck and good publishing.
About the Author:
Don Resh is CEO of WebForce,
Inc. A more detailed bio is available at:
WebForceSolutions
BizBuildSoftware
TurboMaxSoftware.
Source of this article:
www.goarticles.com
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