Recent Articles

Stop Annoying People With Your Newsletter
I read a lot of newsletters. Some are great and some are not so great. I put together this article to highlight the five mistakes I see most often in other people's newsletters.

Does Everyone Ignore Your Newsletter?
As Internet marketers we all know how important it is to have a successful newsletter to help us keep in touch with our customers.

What's in an Investment Newsletter?
When an investor receives a newsletter full of stock tips and information, the first instinct is to act quickly on the information in order to make money before anyone else does.

Important Things to Do to Keep Your Opt-in List
Having an opt-in list is not just for sending subscribers your promotional newsletters or catalogs. Your opt-in list should be used to build a relationship with each and every person who joins your list, but you must do...

How To Take The Pain Out Of Publishing Your...
99% of all ezines are not "being a reporter" on current events; that is the first and most important thing to understand.

Do Newsletters Help Your Marketing?
99% of all ezines are not "being a reporter" on current events; that is the first and most important thing to understand.

Goodmail Is A Bad Idea
Goodmail Systems announced that AOL and Yahoo are going to implement their pay-to-play email authentication system.

Will RSS Revolutionize Email Newsletters?
Hamid Shojaee just wrote me about a startup he's formed called Squeet. The service streams RSS feeds via email.

8 Ezine Advertising Mistakes To Avoid
These are several important lessons I've learned regarding Ezine Advertising and Marketing Success. Here are eight mistakes you should avoid...


05.30.06


Employee Newsletters For Small Companies

By Robert F. Abbott

A newsletter for 60 employees? A visitor to the Manager's Guide Web site asked about buying content for a newsletter that would serve a group of 60 professionals; the department responsible would not have time to write a complete newsletter.

I emailed the following response (slightly edited):

You have asked a good question. With 60 employees, your staff is big enough to need a newsletter, but not big enough to make a major spending commitment. On that basis, let me share a few observations with you.

First, while I'm not sure why you want to communicate with these employees, I assume it is to maintain their loyalty and to increase their productivity (both common objectives for employee newsletters ).

To maintain (and perhaps increase) loyalty, I would recommend that you or some other appropriate person sit down once a month and simply write a letter. Think of it as a letter to a friend or colleague, and report any news of interest to them. You might report on hiring, about changes in policy, how to apply for benefits, or any other information they would find useful. Again, I would stress the need for an informal approach, perhaps something mirroring this letter to you. Avoid making it sound like a memo, if possible. And, I would laser print or copy and mail it, rather than use electronic mail.

Turning to productivity, I would not buy articles from third parties unless you come across something that really impresses you. You say these are people are professionals, which suggests to me they will have access to the Net, and probably no end of information already.

Learn More about our dedicated servers

Instead, I would prepare a modest budget and then offer to pay the employees for providing useful tips and articles that their colleagues can use to be more productive. For example, $20 per employee per issue would give you a budget of about $1,200; offer to buy two articles of 500 to 1,000 words for $500 each, and four tips of 100 to 200 words for $50 each. Or if you want to spend $10 per employee, then you could buy one article and two tips. Once you have the material in hand, print and distribute it to the employees. It can be sent with, or separately from, the letter about internal issues.

Finally, you may wish to consider the Hawthorne experiments, which took place in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Researchers set out to find which internal environment changes (such as lighting, etc) increased productivity the most.

They found, to their great surprise, was that productivity went up regardless of the type of change that was made. For example, productivity went up when they increased the amount of light, as expected. But, it also went up when the amount of light was decreased; that was not expected.

All of that led researchers to realize that it was the attention the employees received, not the changes, that made a difference. We now refer to this phenomenon, in which employees respond to the attention they receive, as the Hawthorne Effect.

All of which is a roundabout way of saying that the act of communication is often more important than content or style. As long as you do something, it may be better than nothing.
About the Author:
Download three free chapters from Robert Abbott's book, A Manager's Guide to Newsletters: Communicating for Results; it's the first step toward creating a powerful and sustainable newsletter (and it will help you develop a strong newsletter name, too!)


About NewsletterIndustry
NewsletterIndustry provides the news, expertise and information needed for business to utilize the power of email newsletters. NewsletterIndustry is an expert in The Business of Email Newsletters.

NewsletterIndustry is brought to you by:

WebProNews.com Jayde.com
MarketingNewz.com SalesNewz.com
CareerNewz.com InvestNewz.com
eCommNewz.com WebsiteNotes.com
AdvertisingDay.com ManagerNewz.com



-- NewsletterIndustry is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
© 2006 iEntry Inc. All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy Legal


archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback | submit article