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Articles: Online Business - Be
Careful With Your List
By Gary Durkin
Just in case you
don’t know, your ‘LIST’ – is you list of optin subscribers who have
taken the time and effort to personally subscribe to your newsletter
or ezine. Treat them like GOLD!
However, after
nearly 7 years online, seeing quite a few classic examples of how to
use, abuse and lose your list (including one or two made by myself)
– and of course, the mega-hype (and well deserved it is) about the
rock-solid, vital importance of your list. People still mess things
up. Here are my Top Ten ways to avoid getting things Soooooo
wrong.
1. Backup your list of subscribers regularly. Don’t
expect your web-host to do this for you, or to be reliable. If the
server crashes, is hacked, infiltrated with a virus, blows-up…… your
list could be gone forever. I personally lost 12,000 subscribers
because one host I used simply closed down without
notice.
2. If you spend
half your time building up genuine optin subscribers, only to be
tempted into buying a ‘ready-made’ list in order to boost your
numbers, watch out! Unless you are paying Top-Dollar per subscriber
name on one of these lists, the chances are the list is useless,
worthless and has been harvested by a spammer. This will result in
spam complaints, and have you closed
down.
3. Deliver WHAT
you say. If you tell your subscribers that you will send them a
newsletter or ezine, which contains new informative articles, plus
possibly guest articles, maybe on a certain subject, perhaps maybe
tips, jokes, Q&A section, special offers or discounts which are
only available to subscribers (and nowhere else) – then DO IT. Look,
if you promote your newsletter as providing great content targeted
at say, ‘Female Bodybuilders’ – don’t include content on non-related
subjects, or even subjects that may be considered unrelated, but
which you think have a tenuous link.
4. Deliver WHEN
you say. If you say your newsletter or ezine is published monthly,
then the subscriber is within reason to expect 12 copies a year. If
you then send them 37 copies – or even 3 in a year, that will
disappoint them. Some publishers chose daily – that’s fine,
providing you tell your subscribers, and the daily newsletter isn’t
too long, and has quality content. You must also be one time (within
reason). A Monthly Newsletter should be sent on roughly the same day
/ date each month. Weekly, on the same day if
possible.
5. Don’t offer free ads to new subscribers. This is a
HUGE pitfall by many publishers. In order to get more subscribers,
they offer a free classified ad to each new subscriber. I have seen
newsletters / ezines which do this, and because they do, they must
publish each new subscribers ad. The reason why it’s so wrong is
simple. Firstly, it is typical for someone ONLY to subscribe, in
order to get a free ad. If so, they are worthless on your list,
because they are not interested in your content, or for that matter,
interested in anything else apart from getting THEIR ad in your
newsletter – they will never read the rest of the content – just
look for their own ad. Next, if you have a number of new
subscribers, and each one has submitted a free ad for your to
publish, this will simply fill-up your newsletter with free ads,
which most people won’t even read. I’ve seen ezines with up to 200
free classified ads. Would YOU read each one?
No.
6. Limit your paid
advertising. Unless you are providing a newsletter or ezine which is
completely aimed at providing advertising, and your subscribers WANT
to see all adverts, don’t cram it full of Ads. A few well placed,
chosen adverts to break-up the newsletter or ezine is fine - after
all, if you can make a few bucks without reducing the quality of
your content, that’s fine. But if you really think that subscribers
really will actually READ your newsletter from top to end, every
issue, which has more adverts and less valuable content – you are
sadly mistaken. Here’s another tip….. as subscribers get bored with
high levels of ads, and lower levels of good quality content, they
will read less, which means they will not click on ads (even the
good ones), the advertisers will notice that the click0thru rates
are low, and will not be willing to pay to advertise in your
newsletter or ezine. It’s a vicious
circle.
7. Multiple
Newsletters. If you run multiple websites, it may be that you try to
get subscribers from each one. Perhaps one website is Female
Bodybuilders, another is Niche Marketing for Mums, another could be
Homeworking Secrets, and then perhaps Direct Mail Tips. Whatever the
categories, it is likely that they are all different, and if you
promote a newsletter which is meant to target each category, make
sure the newsletter content really is targeting correctly. Too many
publishers / marketers use this multi-list approach, but abuse it by
sending the exact same content to different targeted lists. If you
sign up for the Females Bodybuilders Newsletter, and receive content
aimed at Niche Marketing….. wouldn’t you be
annoyed?
8. If for some
reason you decide to move web-host, this of course, means a new
server, with a new email server, new IP address…. etc. The chances
are, you will use a shared server, meaning other people will have
their website(s) on the same server as you, or others have shared
the server before. What this means………..could be trouble for you.
Many of the anti-spam agencies, black-list or block emails which are
delivered from certain servers or IP Addresses. If by chance, the
server you are on, has been used previously by some moron spammer,
it may be that it’s the server / IP Address of the server which is
blacklisted. This means anyone else (other than the spammer) trying
to legitimately send email / newsletters / ezines, could also be
blocked. Check first with the web-host provided if their servers are
blocked or blacklisted anywhere. If they can’t or won’t tell you,
ask them for the server IP address which you can check with certain
spam blocking services to see if its already blacklisted. If you
web-host won’t even tell you this, find another
host.
9. Don’t treat
your subscribers as if they are Money-Banks. Some publishers think
that they should squeeze cash out of everyone, and do it multiple
times a year. Not everyone will buy products or services from you,
not everyone will click on the advertising… it might be difficult to
believe, but some just like reading articles and good
content!
10. If you exclude
your readers, you will alienate them. Ask them for feedback,
questions, comments, even articles – and use them or at least reply
to them. Readers like to see you showing an interest in their
opinions.
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