Publishing Your First E-mail Newsletter
by Joanne Glasspoole
I’ve been an “e-publisher” for a couple of years now. Publishing an e-mail newsletter (e.g., E-zine) is a fabulous way to market your web site. But getting started takes planning, hard work and commitment.
First, you need to decide on the subject of your E-zine. The subject, ideally, should complement the subject of your web site. Next, you need to establish a schedule for sending out your publication (e.g., weekly, monthly, quarterly), and then, more importantly, you need to meet your deadlines.
To ensure your E-zine gets read, it is crucial that you provide information that is original, informative and beneficial to your readers. You need to make your readers hungry for your content. Your content, however, is not your only consideration. You also have to consider the format you send your content in.
When I decided to publish my first E-zine in 1999, I copied ideas from the E-zines I liked and respected. There are thousands of E-zines on the web, but the really good ones are rare gems, because they are formatted nicely, contain no spelling or grammar mistakes, are professionally written, provide original content that you won’t find in ten other E-zines, and they are fun to read.
One of the first mistakes I made when I began contemplating the design of my newsletter’s template was to use my word processor. Although the formatting stayed true in Outlook Express, when I viewed the newsletter in AOL, it was a mass of unformatted text that ran on forever with funky characters and was completely unreadable. I was aghast. With my “tail between my legs,” I sent an apology to my subscribers and immediately scrapped my word processor for E-zine publishing.
For your E-zine to display correctly in e-mail, you cannot rely on word wrap. When I edit my e-mail newsletters, I manually insert line breaks at 65 characters. It’s a pain, but it is the only way to ensure your E-zine is readable in all e-mail packages. Otherwise, your reader ends up getting a long, rambling e-mail message with no line breaks that makes no sense.
Although HTML newsletters are becoming more and more popular, I still opt for the good, old-fashioned text format. If you want to offer HTML newsletters to your subscribers, that’s cool. Give them the option. But if they’re using an older e-mail client that doesn’t support HTML, you might as well delete your message before you send it, because they won’t be able to read it.
I recommend formatting your e-mail newsletter as a text file. Do not use word processing functions, such as bullets, bold face and italics, because the formatting is lost if your reader’s e-mail software doesn’t support rich text.
Instead of MS Word, I use a text editor called NoteTab Light to format my E-zine. It’s a free download and works great because you can set your margins to 65 characters (or whatever you choose) and NoteTab Light does the line breaks for you with a few keystrokes.
To download NoteTab Light, visit www.zdnet.com
NoteTab Light is highly customizable. To change your user settings, click on View > Options. Take a look at all of the settings and configure to your liking. To configure the column wrap, go to Documents, check “Wrap to Column” and put 65 in the box. Then when you close out of there, click Document > Update Column Wrap, and, poof, your document will be correctly formatted at 65 character per line. (Note: You may need to make minor revisions to your layout, but it’s easier than retyping.)
Once you have a format that meets your specifications, I recommend that you set up a template to use in NoteTab Light for future issues. It’ll make your job much easier and quicker. I use templates for everything, including my e-mail newsletters.
For more information about e-publishing, visit the following resources on the Web:
www.epdigest.com
www.ezine-tips.com
About the author: Joanne Glasspoole is an accomplished web designer who specializes in developing search engine friendly web sites. Her clients include small businesses and nonprofit organizations in Minneapolis/St. Paul. www.glasspoole.com
Copyright © Joanne Glasspoole. All rights reserved.
| DISCLAIMER: The content provided in this article is not warranted or guaranteed by Developer Shed, Inc. The content provided is intended for entertainment and/or educational purposes in order to introduce to the reader key ideas, concepts, and/or product reviews. As such it is incumbent upon the reader to employ real-world tactics for security and implementation of best practices. We are not liable for any negative consequences that may result from implementing any information covered in our articles or tutorials. If this is a hardware review, it is not recommended to open and/or modify your hardware. |
More Newsletter Marketing Articles
More By Developer Shed
developerWorks - FREE Tools! |
David Barnes, Lead Evangelist for IBM Emerging Internet Technologies will discuss aspects of Web 2.0 that bring value to corporations, academia, and government. He'll also discuss IBM's vision around Web 2.0, including the importance of remixability and consumability. The discussion will culminate with examples of various IBM Software Group solutions you can use to get ahead of the Web 2.0 adoption curve. FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
Poor Requirements Management capabilities in an Enterprise have been linked to excessive project failures, escalating IT costs, and failure to deliver competitive advantage into the marketplace. Join Brianna M Smith from IBM Rational and learn about how successful organizations align IT and Business stakeholders through collaborative processes and tools for effective requirements management, and how an integrated approach across the IT lifecycle can provide unparalleled visibility and traceability to ensure that project teams are delivering on the business vision by "doing the right things" and "doing things right." FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
Download a free trial version of IBM Rational Software Analyzer Developer Edition V7.0 to identify bug defects earlier in the software development cycle. Rational Software Analyzer is an extensible software development solution that reduces the expense of bug-fixes by enabling static analysis code reviews and bug identification very early in the development cycle. FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
Visit IBM developerWorks to download a free trial version of IBM Rational Business Developer V7.1. Rational Business Developer offers rapid and simplified development of business applications and services through Enterprise Generation Language (EGL) tools, generating Java or mainframe solutions while shielding developers from technical complexities. FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
Visit IBM developerWorks to download a free trial version of WebSphere Extended Deployment Compute Grid, which lets you schedule, execute, and monitor batch jobs. Because online transaction processing and batch jobs execute simultaneously on the same server resources, you can avoid costly duplication of resources. Compute Grid supports job types of Java transactional batch, compute-intensive and a new type called "native execution", which enables non-Java workloads to run on distributed end points. FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
Join us for this web seminar to learn how you can defend your web applications from attack. Learn about the 3 most common web application attacks, including how they occur and what can be done to prevent them. We’ll also discuss manual versus automated approaches for scanning and identifying web application vulnerabilities and how IBM Rational AppScan, an automated vulnerability scanner, can help you automate more of what you are doing manually today. FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
XML has become a common way of storing business data as flat files and many data server vendors including IBM have provided ways to store this data within relational database systems. Increasingly collections of XML files are accessed like databases using an xQuery and other XML standard mechanisms. Businesses find the need to combine the traditional tabular structured data with XML formatted data. In this webcast, you’ll learn about IBM’s WebSphere Federation Server technology, which provides users with the ability to integrate these two data formats. FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
Visit IBM developerWorks to try the IBM SOA Sandbox for people. The SOA Sandbox for people provides a trial environment with the necessary tooling and components required to enable consistent human and process interaction and collaboration, showing how you can improve user experience and business productivity. FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
Whether you are creating new applications or modifying existing ones, managing integration of new components with traditional z/OS elements is a critical part of building and deploying modern applications. Listen to this webcast to see how IBM can help you optimize your development process using an IDE like Rational Developer for System z that integrates with management tools, such as ClearCase to manage your application development on mainframes. FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
Explore how Rational and WebSphere software enable enterprise documentation in SOA environments. Specifically, a new integration between IBM WebSphere® Business Modeler and IBM Rational® Method Composer software can help technical writers more easily keep enterprise operations manuals in sync with changes that are made to business processes, resulting in more accurate and timely documentation that benefits the entire enterprise. FREE! Go There Now!
|
|
|
|
All FREE IBM® developerWorks Tools! |