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	<title>Marketing Archives - Moira Fuller</title>
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	<title>Marketing Archives - Moira Fuller</title>
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		<title>Step-by-step guide to a great newsletter</title>
		<link>https://moirafuller.co.uk/step-by-step-guide-to-a-great-newsletter/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=step-by-step-guide-to-a-great-newsletter</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Moira Fuller]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 29 Apr 2023 07:00:47 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Why&#160;newsletters are&#160;important, how to plan what you&#8217;ll talk about, and how to write&#160;your newsletters in a way that connects with your&#160;customers. Meet Angus. &#160; (He says hi) Angus came into my world earlier this week. He’s a doorstop &#8211; we’ve moved house &#8211; and we have a new door that needs stopping. However, I first [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://moirafuller.co.uk/step-by-step-guide-to-a-great-newsletter/">Step-by-step guide to a great newsletter</a> appeared first on <a href="https://moirafuller.co.uk">Moira Fuller</a>.</p>
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<p></p>



<p><strong>Why&nbsp;newsletters are&nbsp;important, how to plan what you&#8217;ll talk about, and how to write&nbsp;your newsletters in a way that connects with your&nbsp;customers.</strong></p>



<p>Meet Angus.</p>



<p><br>&nbsp;<img loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="440" height="276" src="https://kajabi-storefronts-production.kajabi-cdn.com/kajabi-storefronts-production/file-uploads/blogs/20838/images/7266e4d-1bcf-d25b-ac61-fd768eee248_angus.jpeg"></p>



<p><em>(He says hi)</em></p>



<p><br>Angus came into my world earlier this week.</p>



<p><br>He’s a doorstop &#8211; we’ve moved house &#8211; and we have a new door that needs stopping.</p>



<p><br>However, I first saw Angus *years* ago.</p>



<p>I mean years, it might have been 5-10 yrs ago. Thought he was cool. Didn’t have any doors that needed stopping, so he went somewhere into the grey cells in my brain, under ‘cool things in the world’.</p>



<p><br>The key thing is &#8211; I didn’t get my bank card out for him then.</p>



<p><br>Now…</p>



<p>I have a door that needs stopping, and the first thing I thought of &#8211; from YEARS AGO &#8211; was Angus.</p>



<p><br>So here he is.</p>



<p><br>Why am I telling you this story?</p>



<p><strong>Because some of your customers are like me.</strong></p>



<p>Some of them have your&nbsp;business mentally filed&nbsp;away for a future date.</p>



<p><br>But, for whatever reason &#8211; and there can be many; timing, money &#8211; they haven’t got out their bank card yet.</p>



<p><br>I’ve seen this *so* many times, for myself and with my clients.</p>



<p>When we carry out marketing analysis, we regularly see that some people who’ve been on&nbsp;your&nbsp;newsletter list for 6-12 months, or longer &#8211; do eventually buy.</p>



<p><br>This is why consistency is so important for your business.</p>



<p>To be consistently visible.</p>



<p>To consistently communicate with your audience.</p>



<p><br><strong>Hands down, your newsletter is the best &#8211; most direct way &#8211; to engage with your audience.</strong></p>



<p>You&#8217;re not relying on social media to share your content, where generally about 10% of what you create gets&nbsp;seen by&nbsp;your followers, unless you&#8217;ve paid to advertise to them.</p>



<p>Unless you&#8217;ve ended up in their spam folder, the decision on whether to see your content lies entirely with your audience.</p>



<p><br>So when you’re thinking and planning for the next quarter, make sure your newsletter (and consistently sending one) is in there as a priority.</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading"><strong><br>What on earth do I write about?</strong></h4>



<p><br>We&#8217;ve covered&nbsp;why it’s so important to have a newsletter; to&nbsp;grow one, and connect with your audience.</p>



<p>But the biggest source of resistance&nbsp;to this is generally, &#8216;What on earth do I write about?’</p>



<p><br>Trust me, you’re not the only person to look at a blank page &#8211; or planning document &#8211; and think, ‘Eeep?!’</p>



<p><br>Let’s make it super-simple.</p>



<p>There’s a science and an art to this &#8211; and you can learn to do both quite quickly.</p>



<p><strong><br>The science is to create a formula.</strong></p>



<p>What could you consistently talk about or share?</p>



<p>&#8211; New product launches</p>



<p>&#8211; Case studies of your clients (e.g., as a coach, wedding photographer, illustrator, designer)</p>



<p>&#8211; A sneak peek of your upcoming&nbsp;offers</p>



<p>&#8211; Introduce a new product / element in your business, with the background or story</p>



<p>&#8211; Tips or advice on what you do / sell</p>



<p>This kind of content builds excitement for your&nbsp;business &#8211; piquing interest, and letting your&nbsp;readers see what it might be like to work with you / buy from you.</p>



<p><br><em>Capture ideas &amp; inspiration</em></p>



<p>The more you think about writing for your&nbsp;audience, the more ideas will come to you. Stories, observations &#8211; think of your readers like a friend that you really love &#8211;&nbsp;<em>Oooh, I must tell you this!&nbsp;</em>For example,</p>



<p>&#8211; Talking about seeing a real variety of mushrooms on a walk, and&nbsp;linking to 3 great recipes for (store bought) mushrooms, for a nutritional coach</p>



<p>&#8211; Visiting an artist exhibition, and talking about that experience and moments of inspiration, for a craft workshop studio</p>



<p><em><br>Calls to Action</em></p>



<p>For each topic, think of a call to action at the end.</p>



<p>This doesn&#8217;t need to be &#8216;buy my widget&#8217;, but it could be softer, e.g.,</p>



<p>&#8211; If you&#8217;d like to explore working with me on XYZ, you can learn more here [link].</p>



<p>&#8211; 3-4 relevant images of products (linking to the product pages), at the bottom of your email.</p>



<p><em>Now, from what you’ve chosen, put together a formula for your weekly newsletters, e.g.,</em></p>



<p>Week 1 &#8211;&nbsp;Inspiration / story&nbsp;</p>



<p>Week 2 &#8211;&nbsp;New product promo or offer reminder</p>



<p>Week 3 &#8211;&nbsp;Case Study</p>



<p>Week 4 &#8211;&nbsp;Inspiration / story&nbsp;</p>



<p>Week 5 &#8211; Tips</p>



<p><br>Sound good?</p>



<p>You can do this quickly &#8211; what&nbsp;could your formula look like?</p>



<p><br><em>Then brainstorm ideas for your inspiration&nbsp;&amp; tip posts (you only need&nbsp;a couple a month) and you’ll know what you’ll talk about.</em></p>



<p>If you’re still feeling resistance, set the timer on your phone to an hour and just do it. See what comes to mind. You’re likely to find you have a full 12 months of content planned out in no time.</p>



<p><br><strong>And the art? To write with ease.</strong></p>



<p>If&nbsp;you’re on board with the idea of newsletters being useful, you’ve got some great ideas of things to write about, but now&#8230;</p>



<figure class="wp-block-image"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1200" height="779" src="https://moirafuller.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/image.jpeg" alt="" class="wp-image-3148" srcset="https://moirafuller.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/image.jpeg 1200w, https://moirafuller.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/image-980x636.jpeg 980w, https://moirafuller.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/image-480x312.jpeg 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) and (max-width: 980px) 980px, (min-width: 981px) 1200px, 100vw" /></figure>



<p><em>(the blank page)</em></p>



<p><br>Let&#8217;s get you over the blank page quickly.</p>



<p><br>First a reminder &#8211; what do you want your newsletter to do?</p>



<p>A) Build a relationship with your community &#8211; be friendly, be inspiring, be insightful, be funny, or a mix of these. What makes sense for your business? Pick that tone.</p>



<p>B) Sell your products and services</p>



<p><br>Unless you have a product business with a large stock range, you don’t need to go down the route of a ‘John Lewis’ style email &#8211; full of gorgeous photography and eye-catching clickable headlines.&nbsp;<em>If&nbsp;that is you, gather examples of newsletters you like and look for the&nbsp;commonalities of what you like. Use this as inspiration.</em></p>



<p><br>However,&nbsp;if you want to write a newsletter with a&nbsp;few paragraphs and share a lovely image or two, here&#8217;s how I&#8217;d approach it.</p>



<p>Starting to write is often the trickiest part, so skip it by using bullet points.</p>



<p><strong><br>1) Use the ‘Hello, 1, 2, 3, CTA’ Method&nbsp;</strong>(This works for blog posts too).</p>



<p>Set your blank page up like this:</p>



<p>Hello &#8211;&nbsp;</p>



<p>1 &#8211;&nbsp;</p>



<p>2 &#8211;&nbsp;</p>



<p>3 &#8211;&nbsp;</p>



<p>Call to action &#8211;</p>



<p><br>With your topic, what are the three things, information or ideas&nbsp;you want to tell your audience?&nbsp;They could be separate or build on each other.</p>



<p><br>If you were a fitness coach, writing tips for running in cold weather, it might look like this &#8211;&nbsp;</p>



<p><em>3 Quick tips to make running in cold weather more fun</em></p>



<p>Hello &#8211;&nbsp;</p>



<p>1 &#8211; Warm up first</p>



<p>2 &#8211; Dress for it (quick list of recommendations)</p>



<p>3 &#8211; Have the wind to your back</p>



<p>Call to action &#8211; I&#8217;m opening the doors to my new online fitness programme soon. To get early access when it opens, join my waitlist here.</p>



<p><br><em>Full transparency, I’m not someone who runs outdoors in cold weather. I curse myself when I forget to put the heater on in our garage before using the cross-trainer in there, so if you’re a fitness guru, fill in with your top tips.</em></p>



<p><br><strong>2) Next, think of a small, quick story that adds to &#8211; or you can bookend around &#8211; your three points.</strong></p>



<p>If I was writing the fitness one, the quick story about the cross-trainer in the freezing garage would make it into mine. It doesn’t need to be a 3-act play, just a short nugget that lets people into your world.</p>



<p><br>You can capture these as you think of them throughout your day:</p>



<p>&#8211; The neighbour’s cat that’s practically moved in and sits proudly in your front window, bursting your secret arrangement, the wee scoundrel.&nbsp;(True)</p>



<p>&#8211; The plant that mysteriously stayed alive even though you were rubbish at watering it, until you discovered your best friend quietly watered it every time they came around.&nbsp;(Also true)</p>



<p><br>You get the gist. Those little things that make you smile, jot them down and they might come in handy when you’re next writing.</p>



<p><br>The idea&nbsp;with your newsletter is to build those relationships, and by far the easiest way is to imagine you’re talking to a good friend (who happens to be your ideal customer).</p>



<p>It’s not about being over-familiar, but having a level of ease and comfort in talking to them &#8211; that definitely comes across in your writing.</p>



<p><br><strong>3) Let’s Speak-Type</strong></p>



<p>I’m going to guess that when you’re with someone you really enjoy spending time with, you have no problem talking to them. You chat, it’s easy, the words flow.</p>



<p>So imagine you’re writing your newsletter for&nbsp;<em>that</em>&nbsp;person.</p>



<p><br>You know the little story, you know the three quick things you want to say, and then you’re going to flow into wrapping it up.</p>



<p>But forget writing English essays for now, you’re just going to chat.</p>



<p><br>Speak what you want to say out loud, then type those words. Speak. Type. Speak. Type.</p>



<p>Before you know it, you have that conversation on the page.</p>



<p><br><strong>4) Finally, edit and polish</strong></p>



<p>Now, tidy it up.</p>



<p>Have you wandered off topic? Repeated yourself?</p>



<p>When you read it back, do the words flow?</p>



<p><br>If you can, get someone else to proof read it for typos (a second pair of eyes always helps!) and then share it with your audience.</p>



<p><br>The more you do this, the easier it gets &#8211; and the more your audience get to know, like and trust you.</p>



<p><br>Happy writing!<br></p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large is-resized"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1024" height="497" src="https://moirafuller.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/image-1-1024x497.png" alt="Moira Signature" class="wp-image-3134" style="width:258px;height:125px" srcset="https://moirafuller.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/image-1-1024x497.png 1024w, https://moirafuller.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/image-1-980x475.png 980w, https://moirafuller.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/image-1-480x233.png 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) and (max-width: 980px) 980px, (min-width: 981px) 1024px, 100vw" /></figure>



<p>If you&#8217;d like more content like this in your inbox, join Simplified Strategy, my free&nbsp;weekly email series to create a more spacious and&nbsp;aligned business,&nbsp;tailored&nbsp;around your strengths.&nbsp;You can sign up below.</p>



<p><em>And if you&#8217;d like to explore working with me, you can <a href="https://moirafuller.co.uk/coaching-package/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>learn more about One-to-One Coaching here</strong>.</a></em></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://moirafuller.co.uk/step-by-step-guide-to-a-great-newsletter/">Step-by-step guide to a great newsletter</a> appeared first on <a href="https://moirafuller.co.uk">Moira Fuller</a>.</p>
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