You work hard to attract visitors to your website. Very hard.
A visit to your site means that someone has sorted through the
abyss of the Internet and found you. The mere fact that you
have attracted a new visitor indicates that you are a success
in your search engine placement, word-of-mouth popularity, or
advertising campaign.
Even if your visitor has found your site to be informative and
useful and made a mental note of its value, there is still a
chance they will never return. They may have even bookmarked
your site, but have you taken a look at your bookmarks recently?
You are probably overwhelmed and lost even within your own
privately selected and bookmarked sites.
This is why it is imperative that you are granted permission to
communicate with your visitor in the future -- that they submit
their e-mail address information to you. The development of a
mailing list becomes your bread and butter -- it is the gold
medal you need to succeed on the web.
There are various methods to be employed for obtaining e-mail
addresses, but the most important is to make sure that it is
easy and convenient for visitors to sign up for your newsletter
from EVERY page of your website. This way, anyone who has
visited your site can easily and instantly sign up to receive
future news from you; they no longer have to remember on their
own.
The second most successful way to obtain these names and
addresses is to offer your visitors something in return: a
free e-book download, a contest entry, a giveaway of any kind
will prompt your visitor to sign up.
Thirdly, exchange newsletter promotion with other ezines. These
ads are placed in the newsletters being distributed by other
companies to an audience that you can assume has a similar
demographic base. Exchange your ad space on the basis of your
number of subscribers. For example, if their list has 2,000
subscribers and yours has 1,000, you might consider running
their ad twice in exchange for them running yours once. That
way, you each announce the ad to the same number of people.
Make sure that your ad has specific (and easy) instructions
for people to subscribe to your newsletter.
Once you have developed a mailing list, don't forget to use it!
As obvious as this may seem, it is something that occurs quite
often. People feel they can't write effectively or don't know
what to say in a newsletter. Rest assured that your mailings
can be very brief and consist of very few words. If you are
unsure what your ezine might contain, consider these options:
announce new site enhancements; offer a weekly
inspiration/joke/quote; introduce new products/sales/contests;
share a link to a site that you think your audience would be
interested in viewing. The chances are very good that if you
find it interesting, so will the recipients of your newsletter.
The most important point of your newsletter is that it will
contain your site's URL and remind your hard-earned visitors
that you are there and that you have something of value and
interest to them. Use your mailing lists to keep the visitors
you have worked so hard to attract.