Post by account_disabled on Dec 27, 2023 21:52:56 GMT -7
I'm back to talking about newsletters for writers . As I said some time ago, I currently only find one newsletter useful, that of the American copywriter Bob Bly. Apart from the newsletters sent as updates to the blogs I follow, the others do not offer useful and interesting content for me. Writing a newsletter is not easy, but at the same time it is not that difficult either: it is like having a second blog, but instead of a public one, reserved only for subscribers. The point now is: can it be useful for a writer to create a newsletter with unique content? I don't have any for now, but I wanted to think of some solutions for the authors. How to build a list of newsletter subscribers To create a list of subscribers to send the newsletter to, we need two things: A site/blog.
A newsletter service. And then also about another thing: the contents . Lots of content, because no one signs up for a newsletter if they come to an empty blog or one with the last post dating back to a year ago. And finally about a fourth thing: time . Because creating a lot of content takes time, it takes years. There are many articles on the web about how to get subscribers to a Special Data newsletter . I have read many of them and generally follow everything they recommend for a long time. My opinion is that there is no exact formula for having subscribers: every blog has its own. Content certainly works, that is, it must be interesting, with all the meanings we want to give to this term. How to send the newsletter I have selected 4 tools to send a newsletter .
Each has its pros and cons and should be chosen based on the number of subscribers you have and how many newsletters you send per month. Feedburner : It is a free system. It only works to receive blog updates, via feed, which arrive via email. The graphics are not customizable. I find it useful for beginner blogs. This is the first newsletter sending tool I used for «Blue Pen». Mailchimp : free tool for up to 2000 subscribers or 10,000 monthly mailings. This means that if you have 1999 subscribers, but send 6 newsletters a month, your mailings rise to 11,994, so it's no longer free. Going beyond these quotas, you will find different price ranges. The graphics of the emails are customizable (as you can see if you are subscribed to my newsletter ). TinyLetter : It's part of Mailchimp, but it's free for up to 5,000 subscribers.
A newsletter service. And then also about another thing: the contents . Lots of content, because no one signs up for a newsletter if they come to an empty blog or one with the last post dating back to a year ago. And finally about a fourth thing: time . Because creating a lot of content takes time, it takes years. There are many articles on the web about how to get subscribers to a Special Data newsletter . I have read many of them and generally follow everything they recommend for a long time. My opinion is that there is no exact formula for having subscribers: every blog has its own. Content certainly works, that is, it must be interesting, with all the meanings we want to give to this term. How to send the newsletter I have selected 4 tools to send a newsletter .
Each has its pros and cons and should be chosen based on the number of subscribers you have and how many newsletters you send per month. Feedburner : It is a free system. It only works to receive blog updates, via feed, which arrive via email. The graphics are not customizable. I find it useful for beginner blogs. This is the first newsletter sending tool I used for «Blue Pen». Mailchimp : free tool for up to 2000 subscribers or 10,000 monthly mailings. This means that if you have 1999 subscribers, but send 6 newsletters a month, your mailings rise to 11,994, so it's no longer free. Going beyond these quotas, you will find different price ranges. The graphics of the emails are customizable (as you can see if you are subscribed to my newsletter ). TinyLetter : It's part of Mailchimp, but it's free for up to 5,000 subscribers.