Sending regular emails can keep you top-of-mind for prospects and let you demonstrate your expertise so that when they need a hand with IT, you’re the first one they contact. We’ve explored the fundamentals of email campaign management in previous posts, but what goes in your emails warrants its own discussion. In particular, let’s look at regular email newsletters, which you might send weekly, bi-weekly, or maybe just monthly depending on your ability to produce content for it. Regardless of how often you send, here’s what you’ll want to include in each newsletter.
Useful Content
Your newsletter should be useful first, sales-oriented second, but the type of content you include may depend on who it goes to. You may wish to send a different newsletter to prospects than you do to existing customers. For a prospect, you may have success illustrating ways outsourced IT can save a company money or why investing in great hardware can lead to a more productive workforce. Existing customers might like suggestions on how to avoid scams and ransomware, or general tech tips that make their lives easier. Whatever the case, newsletters should contain plenty of engaging content, and there are a few ways to structure an email around it. Remember that you don’t have to produce lots of original content to be helpful, and in fact, some email newsletters solely consist of links to videos and articles that exist all over the web. Linked content can be more business-focused like a productivity article on Forbes, or something more entertaining like a Wired piece about what’s going on with the latest drone tech. In any case, here are types of content you can put in a newsletter:- A full blog article – Post the full content of an article in an email with a link to your blog as well as a short promotional call to action (CTA; see section below).
- Article snippets – Post portions of several articles with links back to the full pieces on your blog.
- A list of helpful links – Curate a themed list with links to articles either on or off your website. This can be as simple as the week’s top 5 moments in technology.
- A combination – Use a mix of the above to create a unique newsletter with original content, links, and other useful info. Just don’t get crazy adding too much content. Short and sweet is always the way to go.