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How does it feel to be on your list? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Published over 2 years ago • 1 min read

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Hey,

It’s my birthday today so I have little interest in working. Sorry. (Totally not sorry.)

Which means that this week you’re getting a total cheat email. I’m just going to quote myself – hey, if you can’t be indulgent on your birthday, when can you? – and leave you with a question to mull over that is critical for Stage 3 and 4 of the Subscriber Journey we have been mapping out.

Last week I talked a lot about all the things we want and need to do during the onboarding process, but what we need to consider most of all is how those welcome emails, and indeed our regular content, are received by our subscribers. That needs to be our lodestar throughout.

So here’s the indulgent quote from an email a few weeks ago (it really is important enough to repeat):


“Most email lists are run one of two ways.

Type A: you sign up to a newsletter and… nothing happens. You might get an email a few weeks or months later, if it doesn’t drop into Spam, and you might remember who they are… or not.

Type B: you sign up to a newsletter which triggers a tsunami of desperate emails trying to sell you the same thing over and over again, like a broken robot trying to make rent.

There is a happy middle ground, however, one which you can easily plot out once you view things from the perspective of your shiny, new subscriber.

Our reader is confused by Type A newsletters. “Did the subscription work? Or did something break? Was I supposed to get something?” Confusion is never good, and it’s generally followed by something worse: either they are annoyed, or they stop caring altogether and forget who you are.

Type B newsletters are worse again. Our poor reader feels like a lemon being squeezed, that she’s just a walking dollar sign to be exploited. A quick unsubscribe usually follows, possibly even a spam report if the emails are shrill enough.

This is not a tricky tightrope to walk once you have the right mindset, but you basically want to take the radical step of treating subscribers like real human beings.”


And here’s the question, which you should keep asking yourself as you craft your welcome sequences, and write that regular email content:

How does it feel to be on your list?

Dave

P.S. Birthday music this week is Vampire Weekend with Oxford Comma.

Decoders

by David Gaughran

Join 17,000 authors and learn the latest techniques to give your books an edge from advertising, branding, and algorithms, to targeting, engagement, and reader psychology. Get some cool freebies for joining too, like a guide to building your platform and a comprehensive book marketing course. Yes, it's all totally free!

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