This document provides guidance on creating effective newsletters. It discusses the importance of being authentic and personal in newsletters in order to connect with readers. The author emphasizes clarifying one's mission and speaking honestly, as readers care more about who you are than statistics or accomplishments. It also stresses considering the audience by avoiding insider terms, choosing an appropriate format, and only communicating with those who opt in to receive the newsletter.
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Hackbright Career Services - talk on how to ask for what you want and need. Includes networking tips, encouragement to give a tech talk, how to maintain a growth mindset ...
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Helping non profits make the most out of their websites. Presentation by Madeleine Sugden, Content Manager at KnowHow NonProfit - www.knowhownonprofit.org
Hackbright Career Services - talk on how to ask for what you want and need. Includes networking tips, encouragement to give a tech talk, how to maintain a growth mindset ...
Our world has sped as has our need to make decisions. This velocity impacts our ability to truly think through the problems and opportunities before us. In this paper from Swystun Communications, a return to critical thinking is proposed without necessarily sacrificing the benefits of being quick in business.
Week 2.1 Using The Social Web For Social Change - October Intensive Saturday ...Christopher Allen
Presentation at the October Intensive on Saturday for the BGI (Bainbridge Graduate Institute) course "Using the Social Web for Social Change". Topics included Thank You and Appreciation, Opening Circle, The Firehose & The Iceberg, Community Agreement for Class, Alignment with Other Classes, Review of Weeks 1 & 2, The Online vs Offline Life, The Drexler / Sibbet Team Performance Model, Time Place Model, Four Kinds of Privacy, Questioning the Online Life.
presented at FITC Toronto 2018
More info at http://fitc.ca/event/to18/
Lauren Hom, Hom Sweet Hom
Overview
In early 2016, Lauren packed up her studio in New York City in pursuit of the ultimate form of inspiration: travel. After exploring the world for a year, she was surprised to discover that she didn’t feel more inspired than before. The truth is, she’d actually found more inspiration for her work in her normal, everyday life than in her epic world trip.
That’s not to say that travel can’t be wildly inspiring – it totally can be. But what if she told you that there’s just as much inspiration in fighting with your spouse as there is in traveling the world? Would you believe her if she told you that she’s gotten more inspiration from a night of drinking than a night of watching TED talks? What Lauren hopes to teach you today is that EVERY experience in your life can be used as inspiration. You are the secret source of inspiration you never even knew you had – you just need to know where to look.
Objective
To inspire the audience with stories of how I’ve turned mundane events into powerful creative projects & how they are more than capable of doing the same
Target Audience
Designers and entrepreneurs who want to get more eyes on their work & feel more creatively inspired
Five Things Audience Members Will Learn
Every experience is inspiration – even the bad stuff
There is magic in the mundane
Relatable ideas are shareable ideas
Use your skills to solve your problems & you’ll solve them for others too
The secret to creativity is simply paying attention
No One Cares About Your Content (Yet): WordCamp Miami 2013Cliff Seal
While content as “king” may not be the best analogy, the importance of well-written, useful, textual content cannot be overstated. Tone can affect engagement, keywords can make or break your SEO, length can kill interest–great writing is vital. Content is not just blog posts or “About” pages, it is everything that gives information (including the way the information itself is presented).
You have a great business or cause, but there are countless others just a click away. How do you find the right people to get involved, and how do you make them care?
In this session, we will refresh how you view your own web content by seeing it through the eyes of the user, and we will discuss methods of improving UX by employing simple and effective psychology alongside common-sense SEO. We will also explore how methods of effective in-person conversation can be applied to web content strategy. Then, since better prospects will be finding and reading your content, I will show you how to target your audience, measure the results, and constantly improve your outreach.
Through being both appropriately satirical and data-driven, I take a unique approach to getting content creators to spend some time in the shoes of their audience, revealing some of the absurdities of our assumptions and demonstrating how to challenge and test them. Data, empathy, logic, and optimization, together, always lead to better engagement. More concretely, we will discuss:
- How visitors measure and absorb value when viewing web content (using data, psychology, and theories)
- How real conversation teaches us how to engage with visitors
- How to systematically and sustainably empathize with your target audience
- How to make content memorable through positive emotional interaction
- How to define and focus on your target audience
- How to identify and test your assumptions about user interaction
My few points on what is important about social media, why should you take it seriously and about changing nature of our communication. A background for a 15 min presentation that took place on IntelTalk on 11th Jan 2011 in Prague - see http://www.mediaintel.cz
How to Blog your way to Increased Constituent Engagement and Fundraising4Good.org
The #1 reason people don't give is because they aren't asked. The #1 reason people aren't ready to be asked is because they don't know enough about you, aren't engaged enough with you, and just don't keep you top of mind. A blog can help you change all that. Learn why yesterday's website is today's blog, and steps to take to turn your blog into a powerful constituent engagement tool.
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Now that your new site is up, it’s the time to think for long-term. Next year, will you still be the only champion for change? Or will everyone from leadership to front-line workers embrace the power of digital? Was this web project just short-term relief work to solve itchy problems, or is it part of a pattern of thoughtful, iterative growth? Discover tools, approaches and facilitation tactics to help transform your organization into a culture of digital excellence.
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This blog lists effective steps which should be implemented in order to minimize the adverse impact of Google Phantom algorithm update. These steps improve user experience.
This PPT is about: Personality
-What is Personality
-Theories on Personality
-Examples and creative comparison
-How understanding personalities can become productive at workplace
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Email is a very crucial component of a B2B brand’s marketing strategy. But what are the reasons most B2B brands use email for? How prominently does mobile figure for B2B email? Get answers to all these questions in these cool slides we put together for you…
presented at FITC Toronto 2018
More info at http://fitc.ca/event/to18/
Lauren Hom, Hom Sweet Hom
Overview
In early 2016, Lauren packed up her studio in New York City in pursuit of the ultimate form of inspiration: travel. After exploring the world for a year, she was surprised to discover that she didn’t feel more inspired than before. The truth is, she’d actually found more inspiration for her work in her normal, everyday life than in her epic world trip.
That’s not to say that travel can’t be wildly inspiring – it totally can be. But what if she told you that there’s just as much inspiration in fighting with your spouse as there is in traveling the world? Would you believe her if she told you that she’s gotten more inspiration from a night of drinking than a night of watching TED talks? What Lauren hopes to teach you today is that EVERY experience in your life can be used as inspiration. You are the secret source of inspiration you never even knew you had – you just need to know where to look.
Objective
To inspire the audience with stories of how I’ve turned mundane events into powerful creative projects & how they are more than capable of doing the same
Target Audience
Designers and entrepreneurs who want to get more eyes on their work & feel more creatively inspired
Five Things Audience Members Will Learn
Every experience is inspiration – even the bad stuff
There is magic in the mundane
Relatable ideas are shareable ideas
Use your skills to solve your problems & you’ll solve them for others too
The secret to creativity is simply paying attention
No One Cares About Your Content (Yet): WordCamp Miami 2013Cliff Seal
While content as “king” may not be the best analogy, the importance of well-written, useful, textual content cannot be overstated. Tone can affect engagement, keywords can make or break your SEO, length can kill interest–great writing is vital. Content is not just blog posts or “About” pages, it is everything that gives information (including the way the information itself is presented).
You have a great business or cause, but there are countless others just a click away. How do you find the right people to get involved, and how do you make them care?
In this session, we will refresh how you view your own web content by seeing it through the eyes of the user, and we will discuss methods of improving UX by employing simple and effective psychology alongside common-sense SEO. We will also explore how methods of effective in-person conversation can be applied to web content strategy. Then, since better prospects will be finding and reading your content, I will show you how to target your audience, measure the results, and constantly improve your outreach.
Through being both appropriately satirical and data-driven, I take a unique approach to getting content creators to spend some time in the shoes of their audience, revealing some of the absurdities of our assumptions and demonstrating how to challenge and test them. Data, empathy, logic, and optimization, together, always lead to better engagement. More concretely, we will discuss:
- How visitors measure and absorb value when viewing web content (using data, psychology, and theories)
- How real conversation teaches us how to engage with visitors
- How to systematically and sustainably empathize with your target audience
- How to make content memorable through positive emotional interaction
- How to define and focus on your target audience
- How to identify and test your assumptions about user interaction
My few points on what is important about social media, why should you take it seriously and about changing nature of our communication. A background for a 15 min presentation that took place on IntelTalk on 11th Jan 2011 in Prague - see http://www.mediaintel.cz
How to Blog your way to Increased Constituent Engagement and Fundraising4Good.org
The #1 reason people don't give is because they aren't asked. The #1 reason people aren't ready to be asked is because they don't know enough about you, aren't engaged enough with you, and just don't keep you top of mind. A blog can help you change all that. Learn why yesterday's website is today's blog, and steps to take to turn your blog into a powerful constituent engagement tool.
Creating a Healthy Digital Culture by Kevan Gilbert (Now What? Conference 2015)Blend Interactive
Now that your new site is up, it’s the time to think for long-term. Next year, will you still be the only champion for change? Or will everyone from leadership to front-line workers embrace the power of digital? Was this web project just short-term relief work to solve itchy problems, or is it part of a pattern of thoughtful, iterative growth? Discover tools, approaches and facilitation tactics to help transform your organization into a culture of digital excellence.
How to Recover from Google Phantom 2 | Position2Position2
This blog lists effective steps which should be implemented in order to minimize the adverse impact of Google Phantom algorithm update. These steps improve user experience.
This PPT is about: Personality
-What is Personality
-Theories on Personality
-Examples and creative comparison
-How understanding personalities can become productive at workplace
This Presentation is made as a part of MBA class assessment
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- Google Inc
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What happened to Google in China story?
This Presentation is done as a part of MBA class assessment in 2010.
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- Strategic decision matrix
- Coca Cola's Strategy
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With Google doing so many algorithm changes in last few years SEO has all changed now. Learn all about the next generation of SEO techniques, tips and guidelines to help you get more organic visitors
Rachel Karl, RKO Consulting
It’s time to talk material or "content" as it is commonly called.
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Can AI do good? at 'offtheCanvas' India HCI preludeAlan Dix
Invited talk at 'offtheCanvas' IndiaHCI prelude, 29th June 2024.
https://www.alandix.com/academic/talks/offtheCanvas-IndiaHCI2024/
The world is being changed fundamentally by AI and we are constantly faced with newspaper headlines about its harmful effects. However, there is also the potential to both ameliorate theses harms and use the new abilities of AI to transform society for the good. Can you make the difference?
Between Filth and Fortune- Urban Cattle Foraging Realities by Devi S Nair, An...Mansi Shah
This study examines cattle rearing in urban and rural settings, focusing on milk production and consumption. By exploring a case in Ahmedabad, it highlights the challenges and processes in dairy farming across different environments, emphasising the need for sustainable practices and the essential role of milk in daily consumption.
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In today's digital era, the dynamics of brand perception, consumer behavior, and profitability have been profoundly reshaped by the synergy of branding, social media, and website design. This research paper investigates the transformative power of these elements in influencing how individuals perceive brands and products and how this transformation can be harnessed to drive sales and profitability for businesses.
Through an exploration of brand psychology and consumer behavior, this study sheds light on the intricate ways in which effective branding strategies, strategic social media engagement, and user-centric website design contribute to altering consumers' perceptions. We delve into the principles that underlie successful brand transformations, examining how visual identity, messaging, and storytelling can captivate and resonate with target audiences.
Methodologically, this research employs a comprehensive approach, combining qualitative and quantitative analyses. Real-world case studies illustrate the impact of branding, social media campaigns, and website redesigns on consumer perception, sales figures, and profitability. We assess the various metrics, including brand awareness, customer engagement, conversion rates, and revenue growth, to measure the effectiveness of these strategies.
The results underscore the pivotal role of cohesive branding, social media influence, and website usability in shaping positive brand perceptions, influencing consumer decisions, and ultimately bolstering sales and profitability. This paper provides actionable insights and strategic recommendations for businesses seeking to leverage branding, social media, and website design as potent tools to enhance their market position and financial success.
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Ideal for homeowners, tech enthusiasts, and industry professionals, this presentation provides valuable insights into the trends, benefits, and future developments in smart garage technology. Stay ahead of the curve with our expert analysis and practical tips on implementing smart garage solutions.
Hello everyone! I am thrilled to present my latest portfolio on LinkedIn, marking the culmination of my architectural journey thus far. Over the span of five years, I've been fortunate to acquire a wealth of knowledge under the guidance of esteemed professors and industry mentors. From rigorous academic pursuits to practical engagements, each experience has contributed to my growth and refinement as an architecture student. This portfolio not only showcases my projects but also underscores my attention to detail and to innovative architecture as a profession.
2. 2
WELCOME.
When I joined Youth With A Mission in 2002, I realized that one of my most important tasks, though not in the
“missionary” job description, was communicating with friends, family and supporters about what I was up to. Because
partnerships were essential - in finances, prayer, and encouragement - communication was also essential.
Though many dread this kind of communication, I, as a public speaker and graphic designer by trade, enjoyed
creating newsletters and other forms of communication.
This eBook is my attempt at sharing what I’ve learned through my experience of creating newsletters, as well as my
study on the subject of communication and many conversations with friends and supporters.
This is not a “Biblical basic for fundraising” or a comprehensive look at communication to supporters, but a look at the
process of mass communication, primarily through written email newsletters. I think that if we apply God’s principles
and creativity to our process of communication we’ll produce some cool things, and express his heartbeat through the
very process of writing and designing a newsletter.
If you’re new to “newslettering”, or have been at this gig for years, I hope that you find the following pages
encouraging, inspiring and challenging. I wish you many years of effective and fun communication with those that
care about you.
Enjoy.
3. 3
CONTENTS
2 INTRO | in case you missed it
4 YOU | being yourself
13 YOUR AUDIENCE | bridging the gap
20 THE CREATION PROCESS | how I go about it
28 RESOURCES | helpful books and other goodies
30 THANK YOU
* Note: This ebook is best viewed in Adobe Acrobat.
4. YOU
“Today you are You,
that is truer than true.
There is no one alive
who is Youer than You.”
Dr. Seuss
5. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 5
My favorite newsletters to read as a kid weren't the pretty glossy ones, but a particular
black-and-white with cut-and-pasted-photos newsletter from a relative living in
Mongolia. The newsletters weren't professional or polished, but it was him. Honest and
personal, he drew me into his world.
A friend and long-time non-missionary told me recently that,
"The biggest threat in ministry is the threat of not being yourself."
While this can be true in many areas of life where many people have many different (and often
unrealistic) expectations of you, it is also true of your communication. I always had competing
expectations talking to me. One (like my mom) saying, "Your newsletters are too short! We
want to hear more about how you're doing!" The other saying, "I love short newsletters. Get to
the point, I don't have all day." Whom to please?
When you're communicating with family, friends and supporters, the most important thing
you're communicating is you. At the end of the day, it's who you are that people will love
hearing from, along with your "tone of voice" and your personality.
Consider the following ideas about communicating you.
6. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 6
BE PERSONAL.
Personally ;-), when I sit down to write a newsletter I often feel the pressure to err on the side of being professional rather than
personal. After all, I'm writing to partners who pay our bills, surely they'll want to know that we're busy doing good things, making
good "return" on their investment! And while it's true that we must be accountable, I often find that people care more about how my
family and I are really doing as opposed to a hearing a bunch of stats about our good work.
Seth Godin, in his book Linchpin, talks about the growing importance of bringing humanity to your work. As part of a ministry or non-
profit, much of your work is probably human and personal by nature. Don't lose that! We don't need investing in people, changing
lives and caring for people's needs to start sounding like a job or a task, it must be personal! People will be drawn to you as you be
yourself.
7. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 7
YOUR LIFE IS
FASCINATING.
While you may be staring at your keyboard scrounging for anything interesting to include in your newsletters, realize that your life is
fascinating for the outsider. Assume that your readers are asking, “What is it like being you?”
Malcolm Gladwell, in What the Dog Saw says regarding writing stories,
“The trick to finding ideas [for stories] is to convince yourself that everyone and everything has a story to
tell. I say trick but what I really mean is challenge, because it's a very hard thing to do. Our instinct as
humans, after all, is to assume that most things are not interesting.”
Don’t assume that your life is boring. Find the stories in your life and in those around you that need to be shared.
8. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 8
BE HONEST.
It's easy, especially when doing "the work of the Lord", to beat around the bush, especially when it comes to finances. Hopefully
you're writing to people that care about you (check out Ask Permission in the following section if they don’t), and they'll appreciate
the clear communication. If you're asking people to support you with finances, don't say, "Pray for me, cause I need money." Say what
you mean.
I used to have well-intentioned people ask, "How are you doing with finances?" And I, trying to sound grateful, would say, "Great!" or,
"I always have what I need." These were people wanting to help out and I denied the chance to give.
At the same time, don’t always be asking for money. Make your supporters feel valued for their relationships, not just their wallets.
9. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 9
CLARIFY YOUR
MISSION.
If you’re like me, even if you make communication a priority, you’ll often hear the question, “So what is it that you do exactly?” Before
communicating this with other, it’s important that this is clarified in your own mind before communicating it with others.
A couple years ago we received many of these questions from some of our supporters. We realized that they had been receiving
sound bytes from our lives and work, but had trouble understanding how all these pieces fit together. This was an issue of
communication. It forced us to narrow down our mission and make an effort to communicate it more simply and clearly.
Your audience will find it easier to partner with you when they understand your essential mission.
10. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 10
FIND YOUR VOICE.
Technology is a beautiful thing, but it must always serve your message, not the other way around. With all the technology available,
it's easy to get caught up in making fancy videos or HTML newsletters, but if you're best at writing plain text emails, then for
goodness sake, bless your readers with an amazing plain text email!
For example, one of my friends is playing with creating an audio podcast to communicate with friends, because his most comfortable
mode of communication is verbal.
Though you may find it intimidating, technology is constantly becoming more user-friendly and within reach for most people. For
example, Mail Chimp, with it's fresh and simple approach to HTML newsletters, makes sending cool-looking newsletters easier than
ever. But we'll talk more about the chimp later...
Of course, when considering your method of communication, you must always consider your audience's language. Considering your
audience's language and your own often presents some tension, but that's a good thing as we consider honoring our audience and
communicating effectively. We'll talk about that more in the next section.
11. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 11
PERFECTION NOT
REQUIRED.
If you wait for the perfect newsletter before sending it out, you’ll never send out a newsletter. Writing, design and communication are
all learning processes. Allow yourself to fail and just call it learning. The key to creativity and good newsletters is just doing it.
"One of the difficult lessons every artist must learn is that even the failed pieces are essential."
David Bayles & Ted Orland, Art & Fear
Don’t apologize or make excuses, put yourself out there. You may surprise yourself with your results when imperfection becomes
acceptable.
12. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 12
TRY THIS.
One of the keys of developing your writing ability and your written “personality” is PRACTICE.
Try journaling. You can practice unedited communication and putting your thoughts on paper.
Start a blog. There’s something about blogging, publishing your thoughts for the world to see, that helps define your writing, develop
a habit of written communication, and build your personal confidence. Try it out! Wordpress.com is a good place to start.
Try the “elevator pitch.” The scenario is that you going to meet with someone interested in supporting you and would like to hear
more about your mission. You have prepared all the things you’ll say to introduce him to your work. As you get to his office, he comes
out and says he needs to attend to something urgent, and asks if you could accompany him in the elevator and explain your work
along the way. So you have to ditch the well-planned conversation and give the 30-second version. What would you say? Who are
you and what is your mission? This helps clarify your mission and define the core message of your newsletters.
13. YOUR
AUDIENCE
“It’s always about bridging the distance
between artist and audience to make a real
connection. If there’s no connection, there can
be no conversation.”
Garr Reynolds, author of Presentation Zen
14. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 14
Essential to great communication is connecting with your audience and sharing your message in a way they will understand.
When you're writing a newsletter you must consider who you're writing to and "language" they understand best.
When I got married to my wife, who is from the Netherlands, I faced for the first time the challenge of literally translating our
newsletters into a different language. We received lots of great help from friends, but this was a huge challenge. It takes effort.
Translating your message often isn't easy, but it is worth it. When we made the effort to translate our communications into Dutch, we
received great feedback from our Dutch friends and supporters.
While you may not have to literally translate your communications into another language, you may experience the language gap in
different ways. Here are a couple tips to consider as you craft your next newsletter.
15. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 15
D.U.A.T.Y.A.D.U. ( )
Don't use acronyms
that your audience
doesn't understand.
Every community and workplace has a language of inside jokes, acronyms, and vocabulary of its own, which, for the uninitiated,
might as well be Dutch. The issue we often run into is forgetting that not everyone understands our dialect.
Chip Heath and Dan Heath, in Made to Stick, call this the "Curse of Knowledge." Once you know a language, it's hard to remember
what it was like to not know that language. Once you’re an insider, you can’t remember what it was like being on the outside looking
in.
I used to lead the "Worship, Intercession, Spiritual Warfare and Evangelism" school, and found it super inconvenient to write the long-
hand school name every time I mentioned it in our updates (kinda interrupts the flow). Despite the inconvenience, I always made the
effort to write it out, or at least add a link to the W.I.S.E. school as a footnote for those who want to know more about it.
Another thing to realize is that your audience isn't engaged in your life - and often your newsletters, unfortunately - to the extent you
are. You may have explained what "YWAM" means in the past 3 newsletters, but your audience may be tuning in for the first time in
months. If you don't want them to feel out of the loop make sure you explain yourself.
When you write about your programs, community or mission, remember that you're audience isn't immersed in your daily language.
16. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 16
CONSIDER YOUR
MEDIUM.
Your preferred method of communication, be it video, email, or pop-up-and-dance-around-the-room multimedia experiences, must
come second to your audience's preferences and ease with technology.
This is difficult for me. I love using design-rich media, but find that at times my efforts are not worth the investment for the technical
difficulties they bring for my readers. For those whose email hosts don't receive HTML emails, I am sure to include a link to the
newsletter online. Also, for some of our friends who don't use email at all, I try to make the effort of sending them a paper copy of our
newsletters (ok, my mom helps actually get it into their hands, thanks Mom).
One great comment I once received was, "Your newsletter looked great on my iPod!" While this happened by accident, it reminded
me that some of our readers open our newsletters on small screens. Now I intentionally try to make HTML emails mobile-device
friendly (550 pixels wide is great for mobile devices and most PC users as well, see Resources for the place to find more practical tips).
When we take time to consider our audience's preferences, we show that we care about and respect them. And sometimes actions
speak louder than words....
17. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 17
While we're talking about various mediums, also
consider your time vs value. You can spend 20
hours every month making an amazing newsletter,
but all the effort might go unnoticed by the
majority of your audience, who want the content
more than anything. And, chances are your
supporters aren't donating to you to have you
spend all week making newsletters for them, so
they'll understand if you are trying to use your
time wisely.
David DuChemin, professional photographer and
author of Within the Frame, has this mantra,
"Gear is good. Vision is better."
Basically his point is that photography is about
making great photos, not just having the latest
gear. I think the same principle applies to us as we
design newsletters. Your newsletters may be
pretty, but what really counts is your content. The
design elements should merely support what
you're saying, not be the focus in itself.
*Not David DuChemin, but Ted introduced me to his writing.
18. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 18
ASK PERMISSION.
“Permission marketing is the privilege (not the right) of delivering anticipated, personal and relevant
messages to people who actually want to get them.” Seth Godin, marketer, author, blogger at sethgodin.typepad.com
I know it feels so good to be able to send your newsletter to 100,000 people immediately (you know, all those Facebook “friends” and
any email address you've ever accumulated), but that's not the respectful or wise way to build a newsletter list. Only send your
newsletter to those who want to receive it. Why? Because when people request your newsletter, it means they're bought in, want to
hear about what you're up to, and won't get annoyed when they get your regular mail, they asked for it! Start small when it comes to
your address list, and let it grow over time.
This might sound kinda obvious, but these days our mailboxes and inboxes are filled with companies and people who don’t get that.
Let’s do better.
With that permission comes responsibility. Like don't ever include your readers' email addresses in the "To:" or even "CC:" row when
sending group emails. The "BCC:" (Blind Carbon Copy) works great, or you can use a mail host (see my subtle Mail Chimp plug) that
will do this for you automatically. This is about respect for your readers and general professionalism.
19. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 19
TRY THIS.
Get feedback. Ask a few friends, ideally from a variety of ages and walks of life (people who don’t understand the lingo), for honest
feedback about one of your newsletters. Ask for input directly, seeing as the “let me know what you think” at the bottom of a
newsletter often doesn’t elicit many responses. Ask them for specific feedback regarding length of the newsletter as well as language
used. Even better, sit down with someone as they read your newsletter. You may be surprised at how the simplest things (in your
mind) can be misunderstood, and how your “clear” communication can leave many of your readers in the dark due to the “Curse of
Knowledge.” Keep this feedback from the uninitiated in the back of your mind as you write in the future.
Try the “tapper and listener” exercise. Think of a song. Tap the rhythm of the melody on a table, and have a friend try to guess the song.
Notice that as you tap you’re playing the melody in your head, so it’s impossible not to decipher the taps. For your friend, on the other
hand, who’s not hearing the song, it’s nearly impossible to decipher the taps. The “Curse of Knowledge” at work again. Just don’t tap
Jingle Bells, for some reason my wife guessed that one right away...
21. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 21
Ok, this is the fun part. Get your paper, pencils and crayons, we’re gonna make
ourselves a newsletter!
The following is my process of creating newsletters, as well as some considerations
as you’re writing content and designing your newsletter.
* Creating beautiful newsletters at the age of 3.
22. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 22
MAKE A DEADLINE.
The most important thing in making newsletters is just making them, and regularly. Writing newsletters can be a dreaded activity for
anyone, but it becomes less so when you get into a rhythm with it.
How often should you write? I think it's better to err on the side of shorter newsletters and more of them. People are more likely to
read them when they're short - there’s nothing worse than having your newsletter sent to the “read later” folder simply because the
length is intimidating. Frequent updates will help people feel that they're already in the loop with what you're doing. But don't go
too crazy with frequency. People don't need your daily news (you don't have time for that, and no one needs to know which flavor of
cream cheese you put on your bagel this morning).
Personally, I sent short monthly text emails to financial supporters and close friends, and would send a quarterly HTML newsletter to
our larger email list. At that time I would also create a print version of the HTML email to distribute to those who didn't receive emails,
sometimes the print version would also be included in my home church's weekly bulletin.
23. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 23
COLLECT STORIES.
“Stories have the amazing dual power to simulate and to inspire. And most of the time we don’t even have
to use much creativity to harness these powers - we just need to be ready to spot the good ones that life
generates every day.” Chip Heath & Dan Heath, Made to Stick
You've gotta have something to say, right? In the weeks before your newsletter's set to send, think about what's been going on in
your world and what you'd want to share with others. Think of significant stories or events that paint a picture of your last couple
months and your overall mission. As you're doing this, remember the Curse of Knowledge. Even if you feel as though the last months
have been completely boring, there's probably a lot that you're a part of that would help your readers understand you, your mission,
and how they can pray for and encourage you.
During content-collection time I would usually look for a significant story, such as somebody who's life was changed or a realization
that I had etc. Stories are powerful at painting a picture of your world, and are interesting to read. The facts, numbers and schedules
are necessary too, but stories carry emotion, humanity, and life, and they're happening all around you all the time.
I would usually write my content first, before moving to the design phase. Remember, your newsletter design serves to compliment
and re-enforce your content, not replace it.
My newsletters would usually have this basic outline: overview of what we've been up to the past couple months and what's ahead
(facts), story about someone, a few prayer points, and a thank you.
24. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 24
SIMPLY DESIGN IT.
If I could give one tip when it comes to actually designing your newsletter, it would be to keep it SIMPLE.
Scott McCloud, author of Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art, says this about simplicity in art:
"By stripping down an image to essential meaning, an artist can amplify that meaning."
He was talking about simplicity in comic art, but the same is true of any design, and is important to consider as you put the elements
of your newsletter together. We’ve talked about the priority of your content, and your newsletter design should amplify the things
you want to convey.
While content-collection usually comes first, at this point allow the design and content to play off each other. Restraints of design (as
well as page-size etc) often force changes in content, and help clarify and simplify what you’re trying to say.
It’s also important to consider your audience as you design. I once made the mistake of deciding to compress my newsletter to fit on
a smaller page. It looked great, but I received several comments that the font-size was too small. If your readers can’t actually read it,
you’ve defeated your own purpose!
25. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 25
WHY HTML
I’ve heard many people ask, “How can I put my newsletter inline in an email instead of having to make it an attachment?” The answer
is to create an HTML email. Creating an HTML newsletter allows you to create colorful, image-rich newsletters that show up directly in
the reader’s email window. No more attachments and no more “10 minutes to download” emails.
Of course, the acronym “HTML” itself is enough to scare most non-web developers away, but that needn’t be the case. There are many
HTML email services that help make it easy to create HTML emails with little or no web design experience required.
The best of these is Mail Chimp. I’ve designed and sent HTML emails with several other email services, but Mail Chimp is the most
user-friendly for the price (free!). I highly recommend it. Here’s why...
26. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 26
MONKEY
BUSINESS
6 reasons why Mail Chimp is your friend:
It's free! You can send 3000 emails/month with a free account.
It really is easy to use. When I started using Mail Chimp I also recommended it to a
couple friends who had no HTML experience. Within a couple days I had received
two beautiful newsletters from them. There are also options for including your own
design and customizing templates.
Protect your supporters' privacy. Never accidentally forget the BCC again! Your readers
won't be able to see any other email addresses from others recipients.
They help you. For this eBook I was going to do a tutorial about setting up and using
Mail Chimp, but they already include many video tutorials to help you get started.
Customizable sign-up forms. This makes asking permission easy.
More fun than a barrel of monkeys. With their fresh design and a good sense of
humor, they'll help make "newsletter time" something to look forward to.
27. YOU | YOUR AUDIENCE | THE CREATION PROCESS 27
TRY THIS.
Just do it. Of course, once again, the key to making amazing newsletters is DOING IT. Sit down and make one! Good luck.
Start a Mail Chimp account. Head over to mailchimp.com and sign up for your free account. You can start things off by importing your
mailing list or, if you haven’t already, now may be a great time to ask permission from your readers. Send a link to your sign up form.
Don’t worry if your list shrinks a bit.
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RESOURCES.
BOOKS ABOUT COMMUNICATION
Made to Stick | Chip Heath & Dan Heath | This is a great book on effective communication. Also check out their
resources at madetostick.com.
Presentation Zen | Garr Reynolds | Though writing specifically about presentations and smart PowerPoints, Garr shares
principles of simplicity that are essential for any form of communication. Also visit Garr’s blog, presentationzen.com.
Seth Godin | Seth first introduced me to the concept “permission marketing.” Check out his blog,
sethgodin.typepad.com, and his books, especially his newest, Linchpin. Also check out his talk at TED about a new way
of marketing, called “Tribes.”
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MORE RESOURCES.
TIPS FOR HTML NEWSLETTERS
Mail Chimp Resources | mailchimp.com/resources | Find great Email Marketing Tips and free HTML Email Templates
here. It’s great stuff.
MY NEWSLETTERS
Check out a few of our newsletters from 2009.
SPRING 2009 | Email brentandanna.com/mailing/2009/spring/spring2009.html
Print (PDF, printed on half of an 8.5X11) brentandanna.com/mailing/2009/spring/spring-2009.pdf
SUMMER 2009 | Email brentandanna.com/mailing/2009/summer/summer2009.html
Print (PDF, printed on half of an 8.5X11) brentandanna.com/mailing/2009/summer/summer-2009.pdf
Also visit my blog, blog.brentmanke.com, for more thoughts about communication.
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THANK YOU.
Thanks to Ace, Ted, Marcos, Antonio, Donevon, Kev, Casey, Pi-Peter, Merel, Nathan, for all the resource-sharing,
inspiration, encouragement, and great conversations about communication.
Thanks to our supporters on both sides of the pond for great feedback on our communications and being part of the
conversation.
Thanks YWAM Denver for 8 great years.
Liefs, thanks for your encouragement and listening to all my rabblings.