Charlie Cook's MArketing for Success Insider's Club

 

Return to Sender

Author: Michael Katz   |   September 16th, 2010

You know what word I have trouble spelling? Oppossed.

See what I mean?

Same with curiculum, entreprenur and envionment, although I blame that last one on having lived in Boston for 25 years, a place where the letter “R” has never been welcome.

Happily, I’ve got a spell-checker in Word and a spell-checker associated with my e-mail. And with 98% of my written communications occurring between those two, for the most part, nobody knows about my spelling weakness (Shhh).

The truth is, it’s this kind of automation – online purchasing, cell phones, remote e-mail, PDF downloads, online backup, spell-check and others – which I find make the logistical aspectsemail marketing of running a small business so straightforward.

I don’t have a great memory to begin with, and as I’ve pushed “Mr. Systematic” out of the way and let the right side of my brain take over these past several years, I’d be lost without a whole bunch of prearranged processes running in the background.

Which is why I’m so excited about the concept of automated e-mail marketing messages – or “autoresponders,” as those who frequent trade shows sponsored by companies with oddly-spelled names filled with too many capital letters like to call them.

An autoresponder is simply a message sent – automatically – in response to an e-mail received or a web form filled in. The most common autoresponder is a vacation message: You write it before you leave, and while you’re gone, anyone who sends you an e-mail gets your pre-written message sent back to them.

Here in E-Newsletter Land, the most important autoresponder is your “Welcome Message,” a message sent immediately to anyone who signs up to receive your newsletter. Any e-mail marketing vendor worth its salt (and if you don’t have a salty e-mail marketing vendor, I suggest you get one) offers this feature. It’s an opportunity for you to welcome new readers as they take that first step onto your list.

Specifically, make sure your welcome e-mail includes:

  • An explicit thank you for subscribing
  • A reiteration of what your newsletter is all about and when they can expect to receive it
  • The name, title and, if you want to get fancy, handwritten signature of an actual human being within your organization
  • An invitation to send feedback

Simply put, the point of a welcome message is to offer a hearty, electronic handshake to your new friends.

Whatever you do, don’t simply send the uncustomized, default welcome letter that your e-mail marketing vendor provides. These tend to be as cool, bland and multipurpose as a brown paper bag, and will do nothing to enhance your brand or spread warm fuzzies across cyberspace. Give this all-important first message the same care in voice, content and design that you give the newsletter itself.

In my case, for example, I’ve now got it set up so that after the initial and immediate welcome letter, new readers receive:

  • On Day 2, an e-mail that points them to my newsletter archive
  • On Day 16, an e-mail that points them to my page of additional free resources
  • On Day 45, an e-mail that demands cash. Ha, ha! I’m kidding. It’s an e-mail that asks how I’m doing and what else they’d like to see in the newsletter.

Bottom Line: New newsletter subscribers are like new employees in an organization (except they don’t steal office supplies). Welcome them with open arms, show them around, and pay them special attention in that first month or two of the relationship.

Whether you accomplish this in an automated fashion or in some other way, don’t miss the opportunity to start them off on the right foot as a (future) long time subscriber.

Michael


Join the Discussion!

What do you think? We value your input. Share your comments, advice or ask a question.