Posts Tagged ‘ customers ’

Don’t Look a Gift Horse in the Mouth (a Word About Email Newsletters)

emailnewslettersI don’t usually like to make sweeping statements, but I can’t resist this time: any business or organization that won’t let you sign up for their email list for free is behind the times.

A few businesses and nonprofits I know of still offer email newsletters as a paid membership benefit. I’m not against that at all … as long as there’s a free version of the newsletter too. Sure, maybe don’t give away the specialized info or the special deals paying members get, but – why would you turn down the opportunity to get an interested consumer’s email?!

Email is one of the most personal ways to stay in touch with a customer (other than face-to-face interaction or calling them on the phone). Despite all the great ways businesses can now connect with customers through social media, email still is king in that regard. Someone can Like your Facebook page and never see a single thing you post (because of Facebook’s ever-annoying Edgerank algorithm). I don’t know about most people, but I check my email probably 50 to 100 times a day.

I understand if a business wants to share “premium” content via email to paid members, but, in not capturing a potential customer’s email, they miss a chance to try to sell that membership … along with whatever other product they are pushing … to that customer on a weekly basis. And on the flip side – customers deserve a bit of a trial sample of what you are going to offer through email. Will you provide me with interesting, relevant information and good resources? If so, I may just sign up for one of your paid memberships. But I’m not going to pay you to send me emails right out of the blocks. And I don’t think many other people would either.

This comes back to the most essential tenet of successful digital marketing: give good content away for free. A great example of a local business that does this right is Tattered Cover Bookstore. They send me monthly emails with interesting news about the latest books that are out, in-store author readings and all sorts of other events. I’ve ended up back at that bookstore more times than I can count because of something I saw in an email they sent out.

They send me emails for free, and in return draw in my business time and time again. And that’s how it should be. Because the goal is not to sell people emails but to sell them your product.

Incentive

What I’m learning more and more about social media and blogging is that, for the most part, nobody cares what you have to say. They’re not interested in new things that are good for you. They are interested in new things that are good for them. For instance, yesterday I launched a new page on our blog where readers can get to know our bloggers (through short bios and photos). I even added a very click-worthy graphic on the main page of the blog to draw some attention to the new page. Despite promoting it on our Facebook page, the number of visits to the site increased about 7% from the day before, which itself was a slow day.

You might say that 7% is not too bad, but when I post a new blog and promo it on our Facebook page, the number of views usually goes up by about 700%. And no, that’s not a typo. I know why that happens. We have really great bloggers who have humorous, insightful and sometimes moving posts, and our demographic likes those because they get a benefit out of reading them. And our demographic is not likely to go read our blog unless we remind them it’s there and remind them how humorous, insightful and sometimes moving it is. So, just like in sales (and in life), I have to create a perceived benefit to our fans if I want them to do anything.

I’ve got a few strategies in the works, and now it’s  time for some more brainstorming.

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