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E-newsletters: Making Your Customer Relationships Click
June 26, 2002
Any experienced e-mail user knows the drill: Log on, check mark the spam, and
click delete. Then, if you have any relevant e-mail, you open and read it. For
those e-mails youre not sure of, you may open them -- but if you dont
see the point within two seconds, click! Deleted.
This is the landscape that faces booksellers who send, or are planning to send,
subscription-based e-newsletters to their customers. Consumers have no mercy
when it comes to their inboxes -- if theres any question to the relevancy
of your e-mail, you can kiss your e-newsletter, and possibly any hope of building
a solid customer relationship with that consumer, good-bye.
That said, an e-newsletter done properly is a great, inexpensive marketing
tool, especially for independent booksellers, who depend on customer loyalty.
E-marketing may be relatively new, but already, there are some fairly defined
rules for creating a successful e-newsletter. Some things to consider when starting
an e-newsletter are:
- Getting started
- Collecting e-mail addresses
- E-newsletter vendors and list management
- E-newsletter content and length
- Designing the newsletter: text vs. HTML
- E-newsletter frequency
- Gauging your e-success
- Posting your e-newsletter
Getting started. Before beginning your e-newsletter
project, make sure you have clear objectives, said Michael Katz, the founder of Blue Penguin Development, Inc. (www.BluePenguinDevelopment.com),
a consulting firm that specializes in the creation and management of effective
e-newsletters. "Why are you doing this in the first place?" he said. "Is
it to generate sales? Provide a service? Or to connect with customers?"
If you have no clear reason for doing an e-newsletter, dont do it just
because everyone else is.
Bill Petrocelli, who co-owns Corte Madera, Californias Book Passage with
his wife, Elaine, told BTW that booksellers shouldnt consider doing
an e-newsletter unless they have a Web site with a searchable database and e-commerce
capabilities (i.e., allowing users to place orders via their Web site). That
way, they can include in the e-newsletter a link to their stores Web site,
where consumers can buy products, he noted.
As with starting anything new, it is important to do some research before launching.
John Evans, president of Lemuria Bookstore in Jackson, Mississippi, recommended
subscribing to all the e-newsletters "you can find" prior to creating
your own.
Katz, as well as a number of booksellers who spoke to BTW, concurred.
"I think that looking at what others have done, both good and bad, is good,"
said Katz. "Get your own sense. Go find newsletters you like and ones you
dont. Compare -- why do you like it? Or not?"
Nicki Leone, the manager and book buyer for Bristol Books in Wilmington, North
Carolina, got right to the point: "Put yourself on the mailing list of
other newsletters and copy the one you like the best."
Timothy Huggins, president of Newtonville Books in Newton, Massachusetts, said,
"Id also read Seth Godins book, Permission Marketing."
Additionally, Katz has penned an eBook, E-Newsletters That Work, available
at www.enewsletterbook.com.
Collecting e-mail addresses. As you are researching
e-newsletters, begin collecting e-mail addresses. This is where the retail store
has a huge advantage over other businesses -- foot traffic. Booksellers should
make use of this and ask for e-mail addresses at every point of customer contact,
said Katz.
"Collect everyones e-mail at the register -- start doing it about
six months before doing your newsletter," said Debbie Weil, publisher of
WordBiz Report, an e-newsletter on how to leverage e-newsletters (www.wordbiz.com),
who also works with companies and organizations to launch and maintain cost-effective
e-mail newsletters. Katz recommended placing a sign-up slip in each book you
sell.
Additionally, you should also have a sign-up box on every page of your Web
site, Weil said, preferably in the upper right- or left-hand corner so the user
does not have to scroll down to find it. "Make it a fill-in box so you
see it and know what it is," she explained. "Dont make [the
user] have to click to go sign up" somewhere else on the site. (BookSense.com
bookstores, for instance, are provided with a template that includes an area
where customers can sign up for the stores, or BookSense.com's, e-newsletter.)
The store also can use off-line methods, such as mailing flyers or postcards
to drive traffic to its Web site, "presuming you are communicating with
them already," Weil said.
Brookline Booksmiths e-newsletter is sent out on a weekly basis. Dana
Brigham, owner and manager of the Brookline, Massachusetts, store, told BTW
that they have sign-up pads for the store e-newsletter at the front desk, and
its mentioned at every store event. Book Passages Elaine Petrocelli
noted that her store collects e-mail addresses from a variety of places: the
stores homepage, in-store, and "anytime someone is upset that they
missed an event, I tell them to sign up for the newsletter," she said.
"We have a sign-up pad at the front desk and in our reading room,"
said Newtonvilles Huggins. "After events, I also have a bookseller
asking people as they are leaving if theyd like to be on our mailing list
for event updates. I also have a sign-up link on our Web site."
The collecting of e-mail addresses begs the question: Do you collect anything
else with it -- such as name or address or phone number or favorite author?
"The more I ask of you, the less likely youll give me anything,"
stressed Katz, who pointed out that, in many cases, the e-newsletter is a way
to communicate with people who are on the verge of becoming a good customer
or not being a customer at all. Asking them for too much information could drive
them the wrong way. Furthermore, a good customer or prospect will, inevitably,
self-identify over time. "Collect just the e-mail address, and make sure
they know its all private," he said. (For the American Booksellers
Foundation for Free Expressions suggested bookstore statement on customer
privacy, click here.)
Huggins further stressed that a bookseller shouldnt collect any e-mail
information unless a commitment is made to do the e-newsletter. "I think
too many places have mailing lists but never really do anything with it,"
he explained.
Most everyone would agree that one of the most important aspects of collecting
e-mail addresses is to be clear in your intentions. Simply put, never send
unsolicited e-mail to a consumer. Furthermore, always ask a customer to
opt-in to your e-newsletter and be sure they know you will not sell your list
to any third party.
E-newsletter vendors and list management. Okay, so youre
collecting e-mail addresses and many of your customers sound excited at the
prospect of an e-newsletter. Now, its time to start making your e-newsletter
a reality. Obviously, this means writing content, which we will talk about in
the next section. The not-so-obvious part -- for those who have never produced
an e-newsletter -- is e-mail list management.
List management (as well as e-newsletter publishing) either can be done in-house
or outsourced to a vendor. Whether or not you outsource to a vendor will depend
on a number of factors: the number of e-mail addresses on your list, how much
time you wish to devote to your in-store e-newsletter (WordBiz Reports
Weil said that, however long you think it will take you to do an e-newsletter,
times that by 10, and youll have a more accurate picture), how computer-savvy
you are, and how much money you plan on investing.
Katz pointed out that, over the past year and a half, its become much
cheaper to outsource an e-mail list. "The vendor houses your names -- its
easily outsourced," he said. Furthermore, an e-newsletter vendor might
charge in the neighborhood of $25 per session (an e-mailing) for 2,500 subscribers.
"Its so cheap, its a no-brainer," he noted. He made special
mention of e-newsletter vendors such as Roving Software, Imakenews, and Subscriber
Mail.
Working with a vendor is fairly simple. Katz explained that you simply put
your e-mail list into an electronic format and upload it to the vendor. And,
if you decide to publish your e-newsletter through the vendor, the vendor gives
you the template and you flow in the content from Microsoft Word.
The most obvious benefit of using a vendor is timesavings, but they also offer
other benefits, said Katz. "Vendors can you give you click-through rates
[the number of subscribers that click on a link in your e-newsletter], open
rates [the number of e-newsletters opened divided by the number of e-newsletters
delivered]," he said. Additionally, since e-mail addresses have a notoriously
short life span, for large lists, it makes sense to have a vendor handle "bounce
management." In other words, removing invalid addresses from the list.
Additionally, for beginners, a vendor can walk you through the whole process,
as was the case when Brookline Booksmiths Brigham started her e-newsletter.
Bristol Books e-mail list numbers approximately 900 people. Leone said
she uses Microsofts bCentral List Builder (www.bcentral.com/products/lb/default.asp)
to manage her e-mail list and to send out her stores e-newsletter. "As
people join, I send [bCentral] a file every other day -- its easy,"
she said. "But dont outsource unless you have a lot of people on
the list. If your bookstore is large enough to have its own servers and applications,
itd probably be cheaper to do it yourself; or if your list is fewer than
500 e-mail addresses, you can manage your list off your home computer."
Both Brookline Booksmith and R.J. Julia Booksellers in Madison, Connecticut,
outsource their e-newsletter management to Topica.com, a leading independent
provider of turnkey solutions for e-newsletter publishers. Lemuria Books outsources
list management to Listserve.
Still, while e-marketing experts recommend outsourcing list management, and
even e-newsletter publishing to a vendor, there are many booksellers who are
doing it all in-house -- and successfully. For one, Newtonville Books
e-newsletter, which has a very good reputation among booksellers, is managed
completely in-house, said Huggins. "I just keep everything in a Netscape
address book and a copy on an Excel file," he said. He added that it takes
about an hour to write and send the store e-newsletter.
It bears repeating that, aside from list management, most of the vendors mentioned
will also handle e-newsletter publishing. Ultimately, deciding to outsource
will depend on how much time you wish to spend creating and managing your e-newsletter
-- and how much money you wish to invest.
E-newsletter content and length. All right, you have your
list (and were assuming that everybody on your list wants to be
there), and youve decided on how much, if any, of the e-newsletter management
you will outsource to a vendor. Now, its time to start writing. This is
where all your research -- looking at other e-newsletters -- should pay off.
Remember, with all the spam out there, you need to write something that will
make your open rate soar, and, of course, develop customer loyalty.
There are two key issues to consider toward this end: the content and the e-newsletter
length. "How do you get [your e-newsletter] to stand out from the crowd?
It has to be useful and relevant to the reader," said Katz, who noted that,
if the e-newsletter is written well, it becomes the voice of the store. "The
owner should write it -- dont give it to a staffer. Dont look at
it as something you throw together and give to the new guy. You want [the
owners] personality in the e-newsletter -- it should be very un-self-promotional."
In the article, "Top Five Tips on Writing Great E-mail Newsletters,"
by Anne Holland (at www.MarketingProfs.com),
the publisher and managing editor of MarketingSherpa.com, Holland noted that
top Internet marketers recommend using a personal and casual tone in an e-newsletter.
She wrote, "[Customers] respond much better to e-newsletters that are written
by one particular individual at a company whom they can get to know over time.
They like little personal comments that could only come from a single human
being, like Dont tell my boss, but I stole his lunch from the office
fridge today! (Thats how one major software firms successful
e-newsletter opened last week in fact.)"
Without question, most booksellers who spoke to BTW described their
e-newsletter tone as being casual -- as if theyre talking personally to
each customer. "Im very chatty," said Bristol Books Leone.
"I put personal stuff in there, like I just got back from vacation
and that seems to help. I get a ton of feedback from customers."
Roxanne Coady, owner and president, R.J. Julia, concurred and said this style
works very well.
On the other hand, Book Passages Elaine Petrocelli said, "What I
think works is keeping it simple. Long, chatty stuff can get people to delete.
We give very direct info, [store events] are our main focus. Our customers know
why they get it. Dont try to be too fancy, because nobody has time for
that."
Whatever tone you choose, everyone agrees: keep your e-newsletter short and
get to the point. "I try to be informative and personal, while also being
conscious of the readers time and energy," said Newtonville Books
Huggins. "Ideally, Id only want to take up a minute or two of the
readers time, and I attach links if more information is desired on the
readers part
. I try to design the newsletter so that it gives brief
and consistent tag lines to give quick indications about what kind of information
will follow. I also keep the design format the same for each newsletter."
WordBiz Reports Weils rule for e-newsletter length is "1,000
words maximum if customers are going to read it on the screen," she said,
and added that, if you know that your customers are printing it out, you might
be able to get away with a longer e-newsletter. "A thousand words is not
very much when you think about it."
"My belief is that it be short enough that I read it [when I open it],
not that Ill read it later -- 600 to 700 words," Katz said. "Thats
all youre looking for."
Finally, as you know from checking your own e-mail, keep in mind that your
customer sees your subject line before he or she sees your e-newsletter. In
her "Top Five Tips" article, Holland stressed that consumers "are
looking for an excuse to delete your e-newsletter -- dont let them! For
example, dont use a subject line reading something like Our October
Newsletter. Instead, use a subject line that engages your readers
attention with an interesting topic or headline from the e-newsletter, such
as Venture Capitalists Explain How to Get Funded or Inside:
Exclusive Interview with Shania Twain!"
"The secret is to write a subject line that grabs your recipients attention
and piques their interest enough to open your e-mail without being so blatantly
promotional that it sounds like spam," stated Rovings E-mail Marketing
Hints and Tips, Volume 1, Issue 4, e-newsletter (www.roving.com/marketing/newsletters/hints-tips/).
"When writing a subject line, think in terms of your offer and your audience
and what few words would most likely get them to open your e-mail."
Finally, you must make it incredibly easy for the recipient to unsubscribe.
"Whatever system you work with, you have to do that," stressed Weil.
Designing the e-newsletter: text or HTML. Why should
you even consider HTML (the coding used to build Web pages)? Simply put, the
use of HTML allows you to add graphics and links to your e-newsletter. Additionally,
as noted earlier, it allows you or your vendor to track click-through and open
rates, key elements for knowing whether or not youre doing a good job
with your e-newsletter. And while a year or so ago, a user might have found
an HTML e-newsletter difficult and slow to open -- often resulting in a deletion
-- today, most users have modems fast enough to handle a simple HTML document.
Just dont make it too graphic-oriented.
"[HTML] is more work," Weil said. "But its a branding
thing. Take your store logo -- why not put that into a store e-newsletter? Its
very powerful. People respond to visual stimuli."
"My belief is that HTML has gotten really easy to do," said Katz,
and noted that HTML adds both professionalism and the stores ability to
brand to an e-newsletter.
Book Passage used to have a text-only e-newsletter, said Bill Petrocelli, "but
it looked so damn dull. We dont use graphics, but we are using bolds and
italics. I havent heard any complaints."
If undecided, the best solution might be to compromise. "Give your customers
the option of receiving messages in text or HTML format," wrote Mischelle
Weedman, director, North American Marketing, NewWorld Commerce, in "12
Tips for Successful eMarketing." "Some people prefer text to graphics.
Give it to them their way."
E-newsletter frequency. Now, you must decide how often
you will send out your e-newsletter. As much as anything with e-newsletters,
testing will help you decide on the right frequency. However, both Katz and
Weil concurred that sending it out less than once a month is not enough to make
your presence felt. After that, its up to you, though, Weil warned, sending
your e-newsletter out once a week is "too much unless you have something
incredible to say." Weil publishes her e-newsletter twice a month.
There are exceptions, of course. For stores that have a lot going on -- maybe
daily author events, classes, or music -- once a week might be the best way
to keep the e-newsletter short and to the point. Experts note that the higher
the frequency the shorter the e-newsletter should be.
Both Newtonville Books and Lemuria Books send their e-newsletters out weekly.
"I send mine
on the same day each week," Huggins said. "I
think the important thing is to build anticipation. To do this, you need to
be sending relevant information and in a consistent manner."
Brookline Booksmiths Brigham decided on a weekly format after two years
of tinkering and trial and error, she said. "We tried once a month with
a longer version," she said. "The main reason we have an e-newsletter
is to get people interested in author events. There was more response to events
in a weekly."
One thing to think about before deciding on the frequency: If you choose to
do a weekly, youll need to have 52 exciting things to write about (i.e.,
52 newsletters for 52 weeks). If you go monthly, you need only 12. If you dont
want to spend a lot of labor working on your e-newsletter, this may be the way
to go. "Better to do it once a month," said Weil, "and you can
always increase the frequency."
Gauging your e-success. As Katz mentioned earlier, odds
are, youll have to tinker with your e-newsletter as you move forward.
And, most likely, the reason youll change the e-newsletter here and there
is because its not as successful as it could be. But how are you judging
the success? Anecdotal feedback? Personal feelings? Open rate? Unsubscribe rate?
All of the above?
Most booksellers who spoke to BTW judged the success of their e-newsletter
via anecdotal feedback, which, Weil said, was a "perfectly acceptable"
method.
"We look for attendance at events," said Brooklines Brigham.
"Our e-mail person was away for a week ,and we got comments from customers,
Where was [the e-newsletter]?"
Newtonvilles Huggins pays attention to how books sell, how events go,
and feedback through e-mail and comments from patrons and publishers. "I
cannot think of a more personal and effective way for me to market my bookstore
to people who are customers, publishers, authors, and such," he said, adding
that his only cost for the newsletter is the time it takes to write and send
it out.
Without question, what differentiates e-newsletters from typical marketing
endeavors is the low cost. Tracking sales numbers and the like does not have
the same urgency as, say, an expensive direct mail effort. Cheap or not, and
while anecdotal feedback may be useful, hard numbers are, too, said both Weil
and Katz. For instance, a bookseller should know if those 10 people that raved
about the e-newsletter were the only ones out of 100 who opened it.
"If 90 percent open, youre doing well," Weil said. "Anything
over 50 percent is considered good." But, she continued, just because they
opened it doesnt mean theyre reading it -- for that reason, it helps
to put links back to your Web site (meaning your e-newsletter needs to be in
an HTML format). Another indicator as to the success of the e-newsletter is
the subscribe and unsubscribe rate. "If a significant percentage of readers
unsubscribe, something is wrong," she said. "If there are a number
of new subscribers -- say people liked it and forwarded it -- thats easy
to measure."
While Katz concurred with Weil and noted there are a number of tracking methods
available to the e-marketer, he added that some e-newsletter benefits are more
intangible. "An e-newsletter is a relationship building tool. [Tracking
its benefits] is similar to asking what is the benefit of training your sales
person to say Thank You."
Posting your e-newsletter. After the e-newsletter is delivered,
it is understandable to think that your work is done, and that its time
to think about next weeks, or months, e-newsletter. Well, youre
half right. While most of the booksellers we spoke to said they didnt
post their e-newsletter on their Web site, both Weil and Katz told BTW,
in no uncertain terms, you should.
"Youre absolutely nuts not to post it to your Web site," said
Weil. "It shows continuity, and people can go and look for items in past
issues. Youre creating content, why not add it to your site?"
"Putting the e-newsletter on the Web site allows you to create an archive,"
said Katz. "It then allows you to reference things you said in the past.
Its a good use of the Internet, and it helps you get found by search engines."
--David Grogan
Topics: Internet, About Bookselling, Marketing,
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