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Online Brand Management - Deliver the Best of Your Brand with an Online Newsletter
by Enzo F. Cesario
Advertising Articles

Published on this site: August 18th, 2010 - See
more articles from this month

Many organizations are replacing their hard copy,
dead-tree-edition newsletter with an email publication. Emailed
newsletters have the benefit of requiring fewer resources, going
out faster, reaching a wider audience with less effort and being
easier to correct if a mistake slips in. However, many of them
end up being ignored just as much as their physical counterpart.
Every interaction designed for a brand, whether print, online or
face-to-face, should be something that advances the brand's
purpose. If the audience's reaction to anything you send out is
'what was the point of that?' - or worse, no reaction at all -
something has gone wrong. There are, thankfully, several tips
available for making sure that even a newsletter can have the
desired effect and reach audiences with the message you want them
to get.
- Have a Clear Purpose, and Stick to it:
Your organization has a purpose, and your brand has a purpose. It
therefore follows that whatever you publish under the aegis of
either should support that purpose. The most important thing to
remember about your audience is that they are people. It is quite
likely that they have jobs, interests and activities entirely
unrelated to anything you wish to send them. In general, people
are quite good at discerning what things are worthwhile and speak
to their interests vs. things which are a waste of their time.
The quickest way for your newsletter to enter the latter category
is for it to be pointless.
When putting together a plan to launch or publish a newsletter,
stop and ask yourself what purpose it needs to accomplish. If you
can't answer in less than 10 seconds, it is time to re-evaluate.
Make sure that the newsletter provides strong content related to
your primary goal as a brand and understand exactly why the
newsletter is needed to get this content to the audience.
- Combine Sign-up With Registration:
People are also creatures of habit, and will often keep on
features simply because they're offered. Make sure that the
signup form for your organization automatically includes the
email newsletter as part of the package, so that registering
signs the audience up for the newsletter as a matter of course.
If they dislike it, they can choose to opt out later, of course,
but having it in front of them from the beginning means it is
more likely to get to them, and thus they are more likely to read
it at least once.
- Protect Yourself from the Spam Patrol:
Spam protection is a huge deal on the web at the moment. It
isn't just a matter of disliking clutter or being irritated at
receiving the same mindless emails again and again, either. Many
spam messages contain viruses, malware, adware, spyware (and
probably other 'wares' that haven't been named yet, but are
sure to be). Spam filters protect against these threats, and are
native to most email clients now. Actual security suites like AVG
or Norton provide even more aggressive email monitoring, and many
newsletters find themselves getting censored out in the mess.
Take some common sense steps to keep your newsletter from this
fate. Make sure your title isn't too generic. Including words
like "Free" or "As Seen On" are sure to trigger most filters.
Put a dynamic, creative title in the subject line instead. Don't
overuse HTML in the body of the email, as this can also trigger a
spam filter. Avoid writing in all caps, and other mistakes.
Common spam-triggering mistakes can be easily researched on the
web, and a little research can go a long way in getting your
email to its destination.
- Brand Yourself:
Remember that integration is the key to all branding success. Put
your brand or organization name at the beginning of your subject
header. Always take the opportunity to cement your content with
your brand, so that people associate the two instinctively.
This, of course, ties back strongly to having a clear and
valuable purpose for your newsletter. People associate negative
impressions even more strongly than they associate positive ones.
Put out content you are proud to put your name on. or don't
bother.
- Be Welcoming and Inviting:
When someone signs up for your email newsletter, send them an
email congratulating them for this. Let them know about the
newsletter's purpose and schedule of delivery, and thank them
for their interest in your product. This reinforces in the
customer's mind that the newsletter is a feature they can look
forward to, rather than surprising them with it sometime later,
when the act of signing up has gone out of their head.
In the welcome letter, consider inviting them to sign up for a
paid product. This could be an expanded service offered by your
site, or it could be your signature product. Don't dominate the
letter with it, because a sales pitch isn't always welcome.
Simply make it a matter of mention, to further associate your
brand with your product.
A Last Word
Always consider the option of not publishing a newsletter for a
particular period. If nothing has happened that would warrant a
newsletter, don't send one because you 'have to.' Never send a
letter out of habit or out of course, but always for a purpose.
Forcing the issue is one of the surest ways to get your
newsletter disregarded and trashed.

Enzo F. Cesario is an online branding specialist
and co-founder of Brandsplat, a digital content
agency. Brandsplat creates blogs, articles, videos
and social media in the "voice" of our client's
brand. It makes sites more findable and brands more
recognizable. For the free Brandcasting Report go to
http://www.BrandSplat.com/ or visit our blog at
http://www.iBrandCasting.com/.


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