Questions on starting an email newsletter for my clients.
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I'm a freelancer, starting an email newsletter for my clients for the first time. I have some questions about email newsletters. So I want to start an email newsletter for these reasons:A client requested that I start an email newsletter with some general tech news and informationI'm always upgrading my offerings, and many of my clients have no idea about that.I want to link to articles on my website to make the website more useful and benefit from the SEO perspective as well.Questions:I have a Mailchimp account. Is that enough to start? Or overkill for about 50 clients? I know how to design HTML emails.Should I be worried that clients will feel it's spammy?Anything particular I should communicate in the first email?Any pitfalls I should be aware of?How often should these things be sent out? Is once a month enough?Anything else I should know? Thanks!
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Answer:
The answer to your questions depends, in part, on the industry(ies) for which you freelance. If it's at all tech-based, I would think that something like Twitter or even Facebook content would be more appropriate (and easier to manage) than an email newsletter. If your clients are more traditional and corporate, perhaps an email newsletter is a good idea. But whatever you do, you want your newsletter/content to get clients (and potential clients) to hire you. Therefore, you need to tailor whatever you send out, either via email, or via social media channels, to your clients' interests. Show your clients that you understand their concerns, problems, etc. And, even more pertinently, offer them a solution, in order that they hire you again or recommend your work to others.
circular at Ask.Metafilter.Com Visit the source
Other answers
If your clients "signed up" for this newsletter just because they happened to be your clients, yes, some of them will feel it's spammy. Do provide a way to unsubscribe or opt out in your first - and every - newsletter. I don't know your business or your clients, but I'd say that once a month is plenty.
ThisKindNepenthe
Mailchimp is very careful about not being spammy. Newsletters subscribers have to opt-in. There is a tiny paragraph at the end that says "you are receiving this e-mail because you have subscribed to [name of newsletter]. You have to provide a physical, snail mail postal address as well.
Baud
Re: KokuRyu's comments- Recipients can reply to MailChimp mails - you just set whatever reply-to email address you like. You can also set the newsletters up to address everyone by their first name.
KateViolet
Thanks, dfriedman. My clients are mostly more traditional and corporate. I plan on tailoring much of the content to a specific audience, but will probably segment it out a bit, since I have some bigger clients who aren't in my primary target audience.
circular
I think that, with 50 "subscribers", Mail Chimp may be a bit overkill, and it also may be a little impersonal. Ensuring your recipients are "opted in" would also be a great idea. I'm not quite sure of the legalities in this case (for mass mailings of thousands or tens of thousands of subscribers we have a process), but sending an initial email with a link for recipients to opt-out might be a good idea (but is it legal?) If I were you, the first email should be personalized; each recipient should be addressed by first name. Let them know that you're planning a regular newsletter, and make sure they're comfortable with that. Since they will not be able to reply to a MailChimp email, provide a link to a Facebook page or something where they can leave feedback. I would even plan a second followup email, in case they don't get back to you. Once a month is plenty, unless there are concrete and immediately understandable and relevant reasons for connecting with them more than that. Some of my clients want me to send out newsletters once a week or something, and I have to tell them gently that if you do that no one will listen to a thing you say.
KokuRyu
It sounds like opt-in from the very beginning is the best idea then. Makes sense to me.
circular
Also backup with a permasite for each newsletter.
infini
infini, is there a recommended way to do that on one's own, or is it best to just use one of the commercial services for it?
circular
All things being equal, for smaller mailing lists (but still much larger than 50!) I've found Campaign Monitor to be a little easier to work with than MailChimp. The content editor is more straightforward, and saves a little time if you're not doing anything too, too complicated.
KokuRyu
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