Email newsletter FAQs

Contributor - Tim Watson

Group of employees sat around a table reading an email newsletter on their mobile devices

15 FAQs on email marketing and email newsletters.

  1. Why should I send an email newsletter?
  2. What are the advantages of email over other marketing channels?
  3. What should I include in an email newsletter?
  4. How often should I send an email newsletter?
  5. How can I measure the success of my email newsletter?
  6. How long should my email newsletter be?
  7. When should I send an email newsletter?
  8. Should I send graphic email newsletters or simple plain text only emails?
  9. How do I ensure the email newsletter displays correctly?
  10. How do I know if my email newsletters are reaching subscribers' inboxes?
  11. Who should I say the email newsletter is from?
  12. What makes a good email newsletter subject line?
  13. What is dynamic content in an email newsletter?
  14. What does 'above the fold' mean?
  15. What must I include in my email newsletter?

1. Why should I send an email newsletter?

Email is the most cost-effective and highest ROI (return on investment) marketing medium. Its best application is for customer retention, marketing to your in-house list.

However, take care not to consider email low value just because it's cheap. Failing to take care with your email marketing strategy will be detrimental to your relationship with your customers. Put the same care, effort and focus on your email as if it was a costly direct mail.

2. What are the advantages of email over other marketing channels?

Email provides excellent measurability. No longer do you need to guess how people will react to your marketing messages. With email, you can measure who opens and clicks on your email. This not only means you know who in your audience is engaged but also what information is interesting and of value to them.

The measurability gives the data necessary to allow optimisation and improvement in your marketing. You can test different messages and improve marketing based on facts. This means no more endless discussions - you can do it, test it and find out what works best.

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3. What should I put into an email newsletter?

Your content is what will keep your customers reading your email. After they sign up, they will read your next two or three emails. If they like the content they will continue reading, but if they don't they will unsubscribe or emotionally unsubscribe. Emotional unsubscribing is when someone will not bother to actually unsubscribe but will continue to receive your newsletter and will simply hit delete without even skimming it.

The most effective newsletters deliver information of interest and value to the reader without being full of marketing and sales speak. Today's readers are sceptics. Don't talk about yourself and how good your company and products are. If you provide thoughtful, helpful and insightful information that is of value to your readers on its own, then you will build your relationship and trust so that they will become interested in your products, services and spending money with you.

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4. How often should I send an email newsletter?

It needs to be regular enough so you are not forgotten and not so frequent that your readers feel spammed. Monthly is very common and anything between two weeks and two months is reasonable. Be consistent; don't send two emails in three weeks and then none for six weeks.

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5. How can I measure the success of my email newsletter?

The fundamental metrics are 'delivery', 'open' and 'unique click' rates, expressed as percentages. All good email marketing software and specialist agencies will provide these statistics.

  • Delivery is the ratio of the number of emails that didn't bounce to the number of emails sent.
  • Open rate is the ratio of number of people opening to number of emails delivered.
  • Unique click rate is the ratio of people who clicked links to the number of emails delivered.

Good results are over 95% for delivery, 30% for opens and over 10% for clicks. However, response rates vary widely. The most significant aspects are campaign data quality and value of content. Campaign data quality here includes the accuracy of match of your message to the target audience and the audience history. If you are sending the tenth email this month for which there is a low match to readers' interests, then don't expect a good response.

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6. How long should my email newsletter be?

Content should be short, scannable and in small chunks. Readers spend just seconds skimming over emails, picking up on general keywords and topics. if they spot something relevant they will slow down and read more carefully. Start by writing your email, then remove half the words and then review and remove some more. You'll be getting close then to having just the key information.

But where do you put the full details that you want to share? Link from the short, scannable email text to landing pages that contain the full articles and information.

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7. When should I send an email newsletter?

The perfect time to send your email is when your reader is going through their emails and they have no unread emails left. This is, of course, much easier said than done but it is a guiding principle.

For many campaigns, the prime time is between 10am and 4pm, Monday to Friday. Your list and email content will affect the ideal send time. The best approach is to test different send times to see what works for your audience.

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8. Should I send graphic email newsletters or simple plain text only emails?

Graphic emails with appropriate use of layout, images, colour and fonts perform better than plain text emails in almost all instances. Graphic emails are created using HTML, the same language used for web pages.

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9. How do I ensure the email newsletter displays correctly?

You will need to ensure your email displays correctly in major email clients. Having your HTML email created by an email coding expert is a good first step. The rules of acceptable HTML are different for emails and for web pages, so don't be tempted to get a webmaster with no email experience to do it for you.

You, or your email coder, should test that it works with common email platforms. There are third party services that can check the email displays correctly and this speeds up the process. Some email service providers can also provide such tools.

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10. How do I know if my email newsletters are reaching subscribers' inboxes?

There are many factors that affect deliverability. Using a good email service provider will mean the specialist technical issues around deliverability are managed. You will still be responsible for campaigning issues that affect deliverability.

Use an inbox delivery confirmation checking service to verify you are not getting spam filtered and, if you are, seek advice from your service provider. Inbox delivery confirmation services are available from third parties or via a good email service provider.

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11. Who should I say the email newsletter is from?

The 'email from' name - that is, the name the reader sees in their inbox when they receive the email - is a very important human filtering factor when deciding to open an email.

Emails which come from your boss or partner get treated differently from emails from someone you've never heard of. So, the 'from' name should be a name your reader is likely to identify with. It should only be the name of a real person if you are sure the reader will recognise the name. If not, then use your company name.

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12. What makes a good email newsletter subject line?

The purpose of the subject line is to persuade someone to give you another 20 seconds of their attention and get them to open and scan the body of your email. It is not to explain the whole contents of the email or your offer.

An example of a bad subject line is 'March Newsletter'. This tells the reader nothing about what is in the newsletter or why they should be interested. Just as bad would be 'Buy product X now'. Before asking someone to buy, you need to give them a reason to want to buy. You can't do all of that in the subject line.

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13. What is dynamic content in an email newsletter?

Dynamic content is a block of content that is only included in your newsletter for some recipients, not all. The information that is relevant to the recipient is added 'dynamically' as the email is sent.

Dynamic content is a way to improve content relevance. For example, dynamic content could be used to:

  • Include different content depending on the lifecycle stage of the customer. A new subscriber, for example, needs to be treated differently from a regular customer.
  • Supply content based on preferences expressed by the recipient. If you have many products or services, you can include information on only those your customer has expressed an interest in.

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14. What does 'above the fold' mean?

In email terms, 'above the fold' means the part of the email seen in the preview window or the part you can read before scrolling down.

It's an important part of the email as it is seen first. Unless it hits home, it is unlikely someone will read further. It needs to have headlines and text to drive people into the email body.

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15. What must I include in my email newsletter?

You need to obey the laws relevant to your country. In the USA, that means Can-Spam, and in Europe, the Directives on Electronic Communications.

For more information see:

The key items are relevant permission and inclusion of an unsubscribe link, your company registration number, place of registration and registered office.

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contributor

Tim Watson

Tim Watson has more than eight years’ experience in B2B and B2C email marketing, helping blue chip brands with successful email marketing. He is an elected member of the UK DMA Email Council and active participant of the Best Practice and Legal hub.

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