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If you’ve been publishing for
a while, your newsletter content
mix may be static. Maybe each issue includes
the same tired content: one press
release, one “Top Ten Tips” article, and one
“News From Headquarters” feature.
Or maybe your newsletter is still relatively
new, but in the hectic days of
launching it you concentrated on building your
subscriber list and graphic
design, not content. If so, now is the time to
take a hard look at your
newsletter content. Maybe your newsletter content
has been “same old, same old” because you
haven’t really thought about the range
of information your subscribers might like or
new formats for presenting
information. If your in-house experts have been
the source of information, maybe
a guest editor would add spice. Or perhaps
presenting information in the form of
a case study would enliven dull data or make
the theoretical more practical.
What else could
you include in your newsletter?
Here’s a list of 26 content ideas to get you
started. - Editorial. Subscribers welcome
columns written by an in-house or industry
expert.
- Case study.
Readers love
real-life how-to’s that they can apply to their
own business. Case studies
provide valuable specifics: How much did it
cost? What problems did they
encounter? What was the
ROI?
- Photographs.
Don’t forget that all content
doesn’t have to be text. Choose photos that are
worth a thousand words. If you
are using “people” photos, a close-up of a
speaker works better than a
wide-angle shot of a roomful of
attendees.
- Product review.
Readers will appreciate your
informed opinion and unbiased reviews of
everything from software to computer
equipment to packing
materials.
- Interview with an
expert. Spend 15 minutes
talking to an expert and you’ll come up with a
heap of valuable information and
insights you can write up for one or even two
newsletter
articles.
- Profile.
Write about a subscriber or a partner in
each issue of your newsletter.
Profiles enable your subscribers to connect
with your company on a personal
level.
- Behind-the-scenes
spotlight. Give your subscribers a
behind-the-scenes look at the people
responsible for your latest product. Or how
about explaining your company’s fulfillment or
manufacturing
process?
- Advice
column. Write a “Dear Abby” column, with
an expert who solves a
subscriber’s problem. Use actual questions from
subscribers. If necessary, get
the column started with a question you are
often asked.
- Resource list. Let subscribers
know about useful websites, white papers,
books, or training
opportunities.
- Tales
from the trenches. Publish reader
anecdotes about real-life
events, such as convincing a skeptical client
to sign a contract or staffing a
nursing home during a flu epidemic.
- “Winner’s
circle.” Recognize the success of a
subscriber, a partner, or someone in your
industry or
community.
- How-to’s.
Give easy-to-follow instructions for
completing a task,
such as writing a marketing e-mail, or a
project such as purchasing a content
management system.
- Account-specific information. If
your subscribers can “self-serve”
at your web site, let them know of any system
enhancements: “Did you know you
can now track your order
online?”
- Instant information.
Provide easily
downloadable information: a white paper, a
PowerPoint presentation, a
demo.
- Calendar of
events. Include your speaking
engagements, conference presentations, and
product demos on your calendar as well as other
events of interest to your
subscribers.
- Conference coverage. Report on
noteworthy conference sessions,
keynote speakers, and any goodies you
received.
- Networking.
Invite your
subscribers to respond to blog posts, attend
real or online meetings, or join
discussion groups.
- Legal
update. Let your subscribers know about
any changes in laws
or regulations that affect
them.
- Time-sensitive
reminders. Tell subscribers
about important deadlines for grant
applications or proposals,
etc.
- Survey.
Ask subscribers to participate in a
survey or poll, then publish and
interpret the survey results in the next
issue
- Coupon. Give
subscribers a
printable coupon for a product, service, or
consulting
session.
- Industry
update. Post an industry-related news
feed on your site to provide
breaking news.
- Trendspotting. Give subscribers a
heads-up on new trends that will
affect their business or
lifestyle.
- Giveaway or
sweepstake. Offer a premium for
responding, subscribing, or purchasing
something from you. Give away a book, a
special report, a digital camera, or another
gift.
- Testimonial.
Share the praise
your customers shower on your company. Not only
will you build business, you’ll
help subscribers understand all the ways they
might work with
you.
- Successful
project feature. Write a short summary
of a current project that went
well. Tell what you accomplished and how you
did it.
This list
will get you thinking about your
newsletter content in a new way. No doubt your
newsletter team will come up with
other content ideas. But beware! Perhaps
novelist John Steinbeck was thinking of
ideas for newsletter content when he said:
“Ideas are like rabbits. You get a
couple and learn how to handle them, and pretty
soon you have a
dozen.”
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