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How
to get more ezine subscribers
by Phil Wiley
It's getting
harder and harder to build a decent subscription base for your ezine.
In the old days,
two or three years ago, word of mouth and other free methods were
enough to build your list. But now there is so much competition
that people are already suffering from ezine overload.
One way - and
the best way if you can write well and quickly - is to submit articles
to ezines and websites. But writing well is not something all of
us can do.
But one other
sure-fire way to get new readers is pay for them. Call it advertising
if you like. We all know that advertising works. The big companies
are the ones that spend most on advertising and marketing. The bigger
the promotional budget the bigger the sales.
When I was in
England the other week I read that Walkers Crisps became the countries
biggest selling potato chip last year by spending around $500 million
dollars on advertising. Do you think they'd have reached that coveted
number one spot without spending big on advertising? Of course they
wouldn't.
It stands to
reason that if you advertise your ezine heavily you're going to
get a lot more subscribers than if your ezine remains a little known
secret. ( though whether you retain the new subscribers you "buy"
depends on the quality of your publication )
Here's what
to do:
1. Decide how
much you can afford to spend on promotional activities...on marketing/advertising.
Set aside a budget for buying advertising - whether it's a percentage
of the income you make from your web site, or just money you can
afford to set aside by quitting smoking or something.
2. Buy spots
on Goto and similar pay-per-clickthro search engines. I've listed
a few on the Goto pages I put up at http://www.ozemedia.com/goto.htm
3. Buy advertising
in other ezines. You can find a lot of info on this at Ruth Townsend's
Directory of Ezines at http://www.lifestylespub.com
4. Running an affiliate program where you pay people to send subscribers
to you. Two ezines that used to do this are Bizbot and Web Promote.
I'm not sure how well this works though. I signed up for their affiliate
programs maybe a year ago, but I've never received a check from
either of them so I guess I haven't sent many people their way.
5. Directly
paying for subscribers. And here's the one I'm concentrating on
here...a number of web sites have sprung up which act as newsletter
subscription points. The details of your ezine are entered into
their databases and a subscription form to your ezine is placed
on their web site. You then pay them for each subscriber they send
your way. Most of them charge between 8 and 15 cents for every new
subscriber they get you. And it can work out to be expensive.
With Newsletters
For Free you have to agree to pay for 3000 at $300 a month, if they
can produce that many subscribers for you. One thing to think about
before you start using these services, is that when people find
your ezine through one of these sites the unsubscribe rates may
well be higher than usual.
This is because
people often just check a number of subscribe boxes, then later
realize they've got too much mail, and go back and tick the unsubscribe
boxes. The best way to avoid people leaving your newsletter is to
put out a quality publication.
List
World will get you subscribers for $0.15 each. You can elect
to receive them as individual emails or they can be added via email
commands directly to your list server.
Newsletters
For Free Newsletters for Free charge you 10cents a subscriber.
It's a good professional site with plenty of traffic. The downside
is that you have to agree to pay for at least 3000 a month if they
can send you that many.
You can elect
to have new subscribers sent to you daily, weekly, or monthly, and
you should elect to get them daily. If someone signs up and doesn't
get a welcome letter from you for weeks then they might think you're
spamming them.
Best
Newsletters This site used to charge you $15 a month for 100
subscribers. If they didn't get you 100 new people you didn't pay,
but now they've changed to charging a fee of 8 cents a subscriber.
Cumili
This one works differently by billing you a yearly fee of $100,
but you can reduce this to just $30 if you run two newsletter adverts
for them, plus link to them in your "thanks for subscribing"letter.
You can find a lot of excellent information on building your ezine
list, on how to set ad rates, on how to judge the value of a subscriber
- and a lot more - at Ezine
Tips
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